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SOZOMEN

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Originally appearing in Volume V25, Page 525 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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SOZOMEN  , the name of a famous 5th-

century church historian .
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Hermias Salamanes (Salaminius) Sozomenus (c . 400-443) came of a wealthy
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family of
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Palestine, and it is exceedingly probable that he himself was born and brought up there—in Gaza or the neighbourhood . What he has to tell us of the
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history of South Palestine was derived from oral tradition . His grandfather, he tells us, lived at Bethel, near Gaza, and became a Christian, probably under Constantius, through the influence of Hilarion, who had miraculously healed an acquaintance of the grandfather, one Alaphion . Both men with their families became zealous Christians . The historian's grandfather became within his own circle a highly esteemed interpreter of Scripture, and held fast his profession even in the time of Julian . The descendants of the wealthy Alaphion founded churches and convents in the
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district, and were particularly active in promoting monasticism . Sozomen himself had conversed with one of these, a very old man . He tells us that he was brought up under monkish influences and his history bears him out . As a man he retained the impressions of his youth, and his
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great
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work was to be also a monument of his reverence for the monks in general and for the disciples of Hilarion in particular . After studying law in
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Beirut he settled down as an advocate in Constantinople, where he wrote his EKKkrlaLavrLKrl 'Ivropia about the
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year 440 .

The nine books of which it is composed begin with

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Constantine (323) and come down to the
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death of Honorius (423); but according to his own statement he intended to continue it as far as the year 439 (see the Dedication of the work) . From Sozomen himself (iv . 17), and statements of his excerptors Nicephorus and
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Theophanes, it can be made out that the work did actually come down to that year, and that consequently it has reached us only in a mutilated condition, at least
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half a
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book being wanting (Giildenpenning, Theodoros von Kyrrhos, p . 12 seq., holds that Sozomen himself suppressed the end of his work) . A flattering and bombastic dedication to
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Theodosius II. is prefixed . When compared with the history of the ecclesiastical historian
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Socrates (q.v.), it is plainly seen to be a
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plagiarism from that work, and that on a large scale . Some three-fourths of the materials, essentially in the same arrangement, have been appropriated from his predecessor without his being named, the other
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sources to which Sozomen was indebted being expressly cited . But it is to his credit that he has been himself at the trouble to refer to the
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principal sources used by Socrates (Rufinus, Eusebius, Athanasius, Sabinus, the collections of epistles, Palladino), and has not unfrequently supplemented Socrates from them; and also that he has used some new authorities, in particular sources
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relating to
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Christianity in
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Persia and to the history of Arianism, monkish histories, the Vila Martini of Sulpicius, and
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works of Hilarius . The whole of the ninth book is
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drawn from
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Olympiodorus . It is probable that Sozomen did not approve of Socrates's freer attitude towards Greek science, and that he wished to
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present a picture in which the clergy should be still further glorified and monasticism brought into still stronger prominence . In Sozomen everything is a shade more ecclesiastical —but only a shade—than in Socrates . Perhaps also he wrote for the monks in Palestine, and could be sure that the work of his predecessor would not be known .

Sozomen is an inferior Socrates . What in Socrates still betrays some vestiges of

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historical sense, his moderation, his reserve in questions of dogma, his impartiality—all this is wanting in Sozomen . In many cases he has repeated the exact words of Socrates, but with him they have passed almost into mere phrases . The
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chronological scrupulosity of the earlier writer has made no impression on his follower; he has either wholly omitted or inaccurately repeated the chronological data . He writes more wordily and diffusely . In his characterizations of persons, borrowed from Socrates, he is more dull and colourless . After Socrates he has indeed repeated the caution not to be too rash in discerning the
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finger of
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God ; but his way of looking at things is throughout mean and rustic . Twosouls inhabit his book; one, the better, is borrowed from Socrates; another, the worse, is his own . Evidence of a boundless credulity with regard to all sorts of monkish fables is to be met with every-where . It must, however, be noted that for the period from Theodosius I. onward he has emancipated himself more fully from Socrates and has followed Olympiodorus in
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part, partly also oral tradition ; and here his statements possess greater value . Sozomen also wrote an Epitome of History from the Ascension of Christ to the defeat of
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Licinius (323) which is not now extant (see his History, i . I) .

For bibliography see the

article on the church historian, SOCRATES . Most of the
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editions and discussions named there cover Sozomen as well (the
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volume of Hussey's edition containing Sozomen appeared in 186o) . The latest
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English
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translation, revised by Hartranft, is published in the Nicene and
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Post-Nicene Fathers, and series, vol. ii . In addition see Nolte in the Tithing . Quartalschr . (1861), p . 417 sqq.; C. de Boor, " Zur Kenntniss der Handschriften der Griech . Kirchenhistoriker," in Zeitschrift fur Kirchengeschichte, vi . 478 sqq.; Sarrazin, " De Sozomeni historia num integra sit," in the Commentationes philologae jenenses, i . 165 sqq.; Rosenstein, " Krit . Untersuchungen fiber d . Verhaltniss zwischen Olympiodor,
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Zosimus and Sozomen," in Borsch. z. deutschen Gesch., vol. i.; Batiffol, " Sozomene et Sabinos," in Byzant .

Zeitschr. vii . 265 sqq . (A . HA.; A . C .

End of Article: SOZOMEN
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