Chapter I
The Life of
Eusebius.
§ 1. Sources and Literature
Acacius, the pupil and successor of Eusebius in the bishopric of
Cæsarea, wrote a life of the latter (Socr. H. E. II. 4)
which is unfortunately lost. He was a man of ability (Sozomen H.
E. III. 2, IV. 23) and had exceptional opportunities for producing
a full and accurate account of Eusebius’ life; the disappearance
of his work is therefore deeply to be regretted.
Numerous notices of Eusebius are
found in the works of Socrates, Sozomen, Theodoret, Athanasius, Jerome,
and other writers of his own and subsequent ages, to many of which
references will be made in the following pages. A collection of these
notices, made by Valesius, is found in English translation on p. 57 sq.
of this volume. The chief source for a knowledge of Eusebius’
life and character is to be found in his own works. These will be
discussed below, on p. 26 sq. Of the numerous modern works which treat
at greater or less length of the life of Eusebius I shall mention here
only those which I have found most valuable.
Valesius: De vita scriptisque Eusebii Diatribe (in his edition of
Eusebius’ Historia Eccles.; English version in
Cruse’s translation of the same work).
Cave:
Lives of the Fathers, II. 95–144 (ed. H. Cary, Oxf.
1840).
Tillemont: Hist. Eccles. VII. pp. 39–75 (compare also his
account of the Arians in vol. VI.).
Stroth:
Leben und Schriften des Eusebius (in his German translation of
the Hist. Eccles.).
Closs:
Leben und Schriften des Eusebius (in his translation of the same
work).
Danz:
De Eusebio Cæsariensi, Historiæ Eccles. Scriptore, ejusque
fide historica recte æstimanda, Cap. II.: de rebus ad
Eusebii vitam pertinentibus (pp. 33–75).
Stein:
Eusebius Bischof von Cæsarea. Nach seinem Leben, seinen
Schriften, und seinem dogmatischen Charakter dargestellt
(Würzburg, 1859; full and valuable).
Bright,
in the introduction to his edition of Burton’s text of the
Hist. Eccles. (excellent).
Lightfoot (Bishop of Durham): Eusebius of Cæsarea, in Smith
and Wace’s Dictionary of Christian Biography, vol. II. pp.
308–348. Lightfoot’s article is a magnificent monument of
patristic scholarship and contains the best and most exhaustive
treatment of the life and writings of Eusebius that has been
written.
The student may be referred
finally to all the larger histories of the Church (e.g. Schaff,
vol. III. 871 sqq. and 1034 sq.), which contain more or less extended
accounts of Eusebius.E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH