Hypatia of Alexandria has long been remembered as a martyr for philosophy, science, and reason. Yet the historical woman behind the legend has often been obscured by centuries of interpretation. Drawing on contemporary correspondence, ecclesiastical histories, and Neoplatonic testimony, Dr. Erik Gray reconstructs the world in which Hypatia lived: a city where imperial officials, bishops, and organized urban groups struggled for authority in the decades after Christianity became dominant in the Roman Empire. In this environment, Hypatia functioned not merely as a philosopher, but as a trusted intermediary within elite networks of power. Her violent death in 415 CE was not simply the destruction of a thinker, but the collapse of mediation in a city under strain. Over time, the event was reshaped into competing narratives of martyrdom, triumph, and cultural loss. This book returns Hypatia to the historical record - not as symbol, but as a real person operating within a turbulent political landscape. It offers a careful, source-based portrait of one of late antiquity's most consequential figures and tragedies.
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