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The Death of Hypatia

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Locations

Ancient Alexandria Alexandria
Egypt
31° 23' 28.1688" N, 30° 45' 42.1884" E
Alexandria, Egypt
Egypt
31° 10' 18.066" N, 30° 3' 8.6904" E

 

Death

Believed to have been the reason for the strained relationship between the Imperial Prefect Orestes and the Bishop Cyril, Hypatia attracted the ire of a Christian population eager to see the two reconciled. One day in March 415, during the season of Lent, her chariot was waylaid on her route home by a Christian mob, possibly Nitrian monks led by a man identified only as Peter, who is thought to be Peter the Reader, Cyril's assistant. The Christian monks stripped her naked and dragged her through the streets to the newly Christianised Caesareum church, where she was brutally killed. Some reports suggest she was flayed with ostraca(potsherds) and set ablaze while still alive, though other accounts suggest those actions happened after her death.

Date: 
Sun, 03/01/0415 - 12:00pm