Palladius of Galatia was bishop of Helenopolis in Bithynia, and a devoted disciple of Saint
Palladius was born in Galatia in 363 or 364, and dedicated himself to the monastic life in 386 or a little later. He sojourned to Egypt to meet the prototypical Christian monks, the Desert Fathers, for himself. In 388 he arrivied in Alexandria and about 390 he passed on to Nitria, and a year later to a district in the desert known as Cellia, from the multitude of its cells, where he spent nine years, first with Macarius of Alexandria and then with Evagrius Ponticus. At the end of the time, his health having broken down, he went to Palestine in search of a cooler climate. In 400 he was ordained bishop of Helenopolis in Bithynia, and soon became involved in the controversies which centred round St.
External links
- [1] Introduction to the (public Domain) 1918 English Translation of the Lausiac History
- Greek Opera Omnia by Migne Patrologia Graeca with analytical indexes
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