Living in a Man's World: The Untimely & Brutal Death of Hypatia (2024)

Living in a Man's World: The Untimely & Brutal Death of Hypatia (1)

Updated 1 March, 2019 - 01:59 Riley Winters

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Hypatia was a philosopher, mathematician, and astronomer who lived in a man’s world in 4th century Alexandria. Times were turbulent and the brutal and sudden end to Hypatia’s life shows just how difficult it was to be a great thinker in that period of history. As a woman with such strong skills and knowledge she was soon turned into a scapegoat for politicians.

The 4th century saw the formal and official transition of the Roman Empire from a wholly pagan state to a shared pagan and Christian entity. In many places, however, Christianity was starting to come out ahead—particularly in the eastern Roman Empire. Alexandria, Egypt was at the center of this struggle. It was a place where there was an amalgamation of pagans, Jews, and Christians sharing one space. Into this religious conflict walked Hypatia, a female scholar and the head of the Platonic school in Alexandria, who met an untimely death in the most brutal and unjust of circ*mstances.

Hypatia's life is most commonly seen through the lives of the two men in charge of Alexandria during her life: pagan governor Orestes and Bishop Cyril. It was in their life stories that Hypatia was written about, and it is only later literature that attempted to piece together her story outside of the politics of these two men. The evidence of her beginnings stem from two ancient sources: Socrates of Scholasticus, writing only a few years after she died, and John of Nikiu, writing a few hundred years later. Though these men write of Hypatia in relation to Orestes and Cyril, they provide the two most widely circulated theories of who she was during her lifetime, and thus serve as two of the best references.

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Who was Hypatia?

Born around 355 AD, Hypatia was the daughter of Theon, a mathematician, astronomer, and the last attested member of the Alexandrian Museum. Her father decided he wanted to make her into “a perfect human being”, so when he saw her interest in science and math he educated her on these subjects and likely encouraged her to expand her knowledge abroad as well. By the time she turned 31, Hypatia was a major academic force in Alexandria. Hypatia has been credited with writing commentaries on the geometry of Apollonius of Perga’s Conics and the number theory of Diophantus of Alexandria’s Arithmetic. She also worked on an astronomical table, which may have been a revision of one of her father’s projects. Unfortunately, all of her original work has been lost.

Her strong skills in teaching, preserving, and commentating on ancient texts helped her become the leading teacher of a Platonic school in Egypt, tutoring students in both astronomy and the philosophy of Plato and Plotis. It has also been argued that she was the leading mathematician and astronomer in her time. Philostorgius, a historian of the Church and contemporary of Hypatia has written that she “introduced many to the mathematical sciences” and “became much better than her master in the art of observation of the stars.” Her new observations on the motion of the stars were then presented in a way that was “accessible to men and women of her time, explaining her new observations in an original work entitled Astronomical Canon.”

But her popularity, religious beliefs, and the subjects she taught partly explain why she was later targeted by the Christians of Alexandria—a woman with such knowledge and intellectual skill was considered dangerous in this period. But her death was not solely because of her teachings. The current political struggle between the head of the church of Alexandria (Cyril) and the head of the government (Orestes) needed a scapegoat; since Hypatia was already making waves in society, she was seen as the easiest and best target.

Living in a Man's World: The Untimely & Brutal Death of Hypatia (2)

Hypatia teaching a class. (Image source)

Religious Turmoil

The conflict between Orestes and Cyril was a religious one. Orestes remained a pagan follower with what seemed to be a close, protective relationship with the Jewish community in the city; while Cyril, on the other hand, was a wholly Christian man. As the story goes, the two men were already feuding because of Cyril's attempt to push ecclesiastical reforms throughout Alexandria. Their feud came to a head, however, when Orestes issued an edict dictating the rules of the Jewish dancing exhibitions, a particularly sore subject between the two men. A Christian under Cyril, Heirax, applauded the edict and was then accused by the Jews of having been sent to the hearing to anger and provoke them. To appease his subjects, Orestes had Heirax openly tortured and killed. But the Jews were indeed upset, and unfortunately for Orestes, took matters into their own hands.

In anger, the Jews of the city fooled the Christians into believing their church was ablaze in the middle of the night. According to both Socrates and John, when the Christians fled to the streets to save their beloved sanctuary, they were slaughtered. The result: the Jews were stripped of their worldly goods and banished by Cyril, and Orestes was attacked—supposedly by five hundred monks. It was only after one of these monks, Ammonius, was declared a martyr upon his death that the Christians themselves realized the terrible irony of his martyrdom title. It was at this moment that Hypatia's life was stolen and rewritten to play the part of scapegoat.

Hypatia the Scapegoat

According to John of Nikiu, Hypatia was not merely a philosopher and scholar. She was a woman of magical wiles who practiced ‘Satanic charms’ and had enchanted the governor Orestes. It seemed that Orestes was known to bring Hypatia into his confidence often, evidenced by numerous ancient and medieval scholars, and because of this the Christians and John of Nikiu seemed to believe that she was behind all the actions and decisions of Orestes. John of Nikiu claims, in a sense, that she charmed Orestes to do her bidding.

Living in a Man's World: The Untimely & Brutal Death of Hypatia (3)

Illustration from an 1899 edition of Charles Kingsley's 1853 novel Hypatia. Picture shows Hypatia performing a pagan ritual. (Public Domain)

Hypatia of Alexandria’s Horrifying Death

Both Socrates Scholasticus and John of Nikiu—and nearly every other text that describes Hypatia's life—tell the same story of her end, of the actions the Christians took to silence her "power" over Orestes. Hypatia was hunted down and kidnapped by a magistrate called Peter and his fellow Christians and taken to the church at Caesareum. Brutally, she was stripped of her clothes and beaten with tiles or oyster shells and supposedly skinned alive with those very same oyster shells. Then, Hypatia was either ripped to shreds or dragged through the streets until she died. Regardless of the specifics, both men describe a murder so brutal, so callous, that it is obvious Hypatia was treated more like an animal up for the slaughter than a human being accused of wronging the government. Whether or not she had worked closely with Orestes, the way of her death was horrific and undeserved.

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Living in a Man's World: The Untimely & Brutal Death of Hypatia (4)

"Death of the philosopher Hypatia, in Alexandria" from the book ‘Vies des savants illustres, depuis l'antiquité jusqu'au dix-neuvième siècle’, by Louis Figuier, first published 1866. [Note: this picture has a racist overtone and should not be seen as an accurate representation of Hypatia’s killers. However, it does reflect the historical descriptions of Hypatia being dragged through the street]. (Public Domain)

Despite this, the majority of Hypatia's life has been written about in relation to how her death impacted on the city of Alexandria in the 4th century, not about the injustice of her murder or her accomplishments. While she was alive, she was known as a great female philosophical leader. But in history, she is most remembered for the role she was accused of playing in the political struggle between two overconfident, religiously warring men. With her death, many scholars believe the cultural scales in Alexandria tipped: John of Nikiu proclaimed that the final threads of pagan idolatry ended with her, while modern scholars believe that classical and Alexandrian culture completely deteriorated. Regardless of whether this belief is true, whether Hypatia can truly be identified as the end of the height of Alexandrian society, her death did create a political and religious shift throughout Alexandria and the eastern Roman Empire.

Still Finding Out More About Hypatia

In 2018, it was published that three Italian mathematicians, Canio Benedetto, Stefano Isola, and Lucio Russo of the University of Tor Vergata in Rome, decided to discover a little more about Hypatia’s life. Although her date of death is documented, no one was certain exactly which year Hypatia was born. The three mathematicians collected dates and temporal constraints from historical records, turned that information into a mathematical function, and then used probability to find out when she was most likely to have been born. Their result gives Hypatia’s year of birth as 355 AD, with a 90% chance it occurred 350 and 360. That means that Hypatia died when she was around the age of 60.

Top Image: ‘Hypatia’ by Alfred Seifert, 1901. Source: Public Domain

By Riley Winters

References

Dzielska, Maria. Hypatia of Alexandria. trans. F. Lyra. (Harvard University Press: Connecticut, 1996.)

Charles, R. H., The Chronicle of John, Bishop of Nikiu: Translated from Zotenberg's Ethiopic Text (New Jersey: Evolution Publishing, 2007.)

FitzGerald, A., The Letters of Synesius of Cyrene (London: Oxford University Press, 1926.)

Schaefer, Francis. "St. Cyril of Alexandria and the Murder of Hypatia", The Catholic University Bulletin 8, 1992. pp. 441–453.

Scholasticus, Socrates. Historia Ecclesiastica (NuVision Publications, LLC: South Dakota, 2013.)

Whitfield, Bryan J. "The Beauty of Reasoning: A Reexamination of Hypatia and Alexandria". The Mathematics Educator, 1995. pp. 14–21. Accessed November 2, 2014.

Zielinski, Sarah. "Hypatia, Ancient Alexandria’s Great Female Scholar." Smithsonian Magazine. March 14, 2010. Accessed November 2, 2014. http://www.smithsonianmag.com/womens-history/hypatia-ancient-alexandrias-great-female-scholar-10942888/?page=1.

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    Comments

    Pete Wagner wrote on 3 January, 2023 - 13:51

    People don’t change. There remains that ruthless, soul-lesscomponent to humanity, as well astheproclivity of those types to produce what we now call‘fake news’. So if there is an equivalent to Hypatia today, who is it? Woman likeDarya Dugina, or somebody hated enough for the truth/power of their voice to assassinate? Of course, there are many more men than women who fall into that high-risk category, and thus are wise to be very cautious..

    Nobody gets paid to tell the truth.

    Tabletop wrote on 6 April, 2019 - 07:33

    Rachael Weisz played Hypatia in Agora. It was a limited release in 2009 I now understand why. Seems to have been historically accurate other than Weisz being much younger.

    My opinion it is worth the time spent watching.

    M. M. Sands wrote on 22 May, 2017 - 05:59

    Gee. What a unique story: a woman who uses her brain is accused of witchcraft to explain her influence (couldn't possibly be because she had a better idea), is used as a scapegoat, is brutally tortured and then killed. Sounds like things haven't changed much, really. Unique? Not so much.

    kaystiel wrote on 27 December, 2014 - 14:39

    the first I heard of Hypatia was in the original tv series Cosmos by Carl Sagan, and she is remembered as a scientist, scholar and philosopher today, if you know the images you post are inaccurate (at least a few are Victorian), how about trying to source closer to her lifetime don't post them.

    TomZ wrote on 18 November, 2014 - 05:21

    Christianity rose to power through a series of LAWS enacted by Constantine and his successors which ultimately outlawed paganism and under penalty of death. It wasn't a contest, it was the STATE deciding the new religion of the empire would be christianity and all others would be persecuted or killed. It was never the 'message of the gentle prince of peace' which gave christianity its appeal. It was the threat of DEATH.

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    Riley

    Riley Wintersis a Pre-PhD art historical, archaeological, and philological researcher who holds a degree in Classical Studies and Art History, and a Medieval and Renaissance Studies minor from Christopher Newport University. She is also a graduate of Celtic and Viking... Read More

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