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Horsiesius

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Saint

Horsiesius
Bornearly 4th century AD
Egypt
ResidenceSheneset
Diedc. 387
Upper Egypt
Venerated inCoptic Orthodox Church
InfluencesPachomius the Great

Horsiesius(also spelledHorsiesios) was a 4th-century Egyptian Christian monk who served as the head of thePachomian monasteriesfrom 346 to 350 AD, and again from 368 to 387 AD. He is canonized as a saint by theCoptic Orthodox Church.[1]

Life

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Immediately before the death ofPachomius the Great,Horsiesius served as the superior ofShenesetMonastery. After Pachomius's death, Petronius appointed Horsiesius as the superior of theKoinoniauntil 350, when he resigned and was replaced byTheodorus of Tabennese.When Theodorus died in 368, Horsiesius again became the superior of theKoinonia.Horsesius remained as the superior until his death in 387 or sometime afterwards.[2]

Writings

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TheTestament of Horsiesiusis Horsiesius's best-known work. In 404,Jerometranslated theTestament of Horsiesiusinto Latin (titledLiber Horsiesii). InCoptic,there are also 7 catecheses and 4 letters attributed to Horsiesius.[2]: 158 

TheTestament of Horsiesiushas been translated into English by Armand Veilleux (1982).[3]

References

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  1. ^"Horsiesios, Saint".Claremont Coptic Encyclopedia.Retrieved2024-06-05.
  2. ^abHarmless, William (2004).Desert Christians: An Introduction to the Literature of Early Monasticism.Oxford: Oxford University Press.doi:10.1093/0195162234.ISBN978-0-19-516222-6.
  3. ^Veilleux, Armand (1982).Pachomian Koinonia III.Cistercian Studies 47. Kalamazoo, MI: Cistercian Publications.
Preceded by Superior of
theKoinonia

346–350
Succeeded by