E05139: Procopius of Caesarea, in his On Buildings, reports that the emperor Justinian (r. 527-565) built a shrine of *Mary Theotokos, Mother of God (S00033) within the palace at Carthage (north Africa) and one of *Prime (female saint of Carthage, S01895) outside the palace; both after 534. Written in Greek at Constantinople, in the 550s.
online resource
posted on 2018-02-27, 00:00authored byjulia
Procopius, On Buildings, 6.5.1-11
Procopius gives a brief account of Vandal destruction in Africa (particularly of city-walls) and refers to the successful reconquest under Belisarius (which he has already described in the Wars).
'7 He [Justinian] restored all the dismantled strongholds in Libya, every one of them, and he also added a great many new ones himself. 8 First, then, he cared for Carthage, which now, very properly, is called Justiniane, rebuilding the whole circuit-wall, which had fallen down, and digging around it a moat which it had not had before. 9 He also dedicated shrines, one to the Mother of God in the palace, and one outside this to a certain local saint, Saint Prima. 10 Furthermore, he built stoas on either side of what is called the Maritime Forum, and a public bath, a fine sight, which they have named Theodorianae, after the Empress. 11 He also built a monastery on the shore inside the circuit-wall, close to the harbour which they call Mandracium, and by surrounding it with very strong defences he made it an impregnable fortress.'
Text: Haury 1913. Translation: Dewing 1940.
History
Evidence ID
E05139
Saint Name
Mary, Mother of Christ : S00033
Prime, saint venerated in Phoenicia : S01895
Literary - Other narrative texts (including Histories)
Language
Greek
Evidence not before
550
Evidence not after
561
Activity not before
534
Activity not after
561
Place of Evidence - Region
Constantinople and region
Place of Evidence - City, village, etc
Constantinople
Place of evidence - City name in other Language(s)
Constantinople
Constantinople
Κωνσταντινούπολις
Konstantinoupolis
Constantinopolis
Constantinople
Istanbul
Major author/Major anonymous work
Procopius
Cult activities - Places
Cult building - independent (church)
Cult activities - Non Liturgical Practices and Customs
Saint as patron - of a community
Cult Activities - Protagonists in Cult and Narratives
Monarchs and their family
Source
Procopius of Caesarea, (c. 500 – c. 560/561 AD) was a soldier and historian from the Roman province of Palaestina Prima. He accompanied the Roman general Belisarius in the wars of the Emperor Justinian (527-565). He wrote the Wars (or Histories), On Buildings and the Secret History.
On Buildings is a panegyric in six books. It lists, and sometimes describes, the buildings erected or renovated by the emperor Justinian throughout the empire (only on Italy is there no information). The bulk of these are churches and shrines dedicated to various saints; the Buildings is therefore a very important text for the evidence it provides of the spread of saintly cults by the mid 6th c.
On Buildings dates from the early 550s to c. 560/561; a terminus post quem is 550/551 as the text mentions the capture of Topirus in Thrace by the Slavs in 550 and describes the city walls of Chalkis in Syria built in 550/551; a probable terminus ante quem is 558 when the dome of Hagia Sophia in Constantinople collapsed, which is not mentioned in the book; or before 560 when the bridge on the river Sangarius was completed, as Procopius reports on the start of works. On Buildings thus belongs to the later years of Justinian’s reign. The work is not finished and is probably Procopius’ last work. It glorifies Justinian, depicting him as a great builder and an emperor restlessly transforming the state, expanding and reforming it, destroying paganism, extirpating heresy, and re-establishing the firm foundations of the Christian faith (Elsner 2007: 35).
More on the text: Downey 1947; Elsner 2007; Greatrex 1994 and 2013.
Overview of the text:
Book 1.
Constantinople and its suburbs
Book 2.
Frontier provinces of Mesopotamia and Syria.
Book 3.
Armenia, Tzanica, and the shores of the Black Sea.
Book 4.
Illyricum and Thrace (the Balkans).
Book 5.
Asia Minor, Syria, and Palestine.
Book 6.
North Africa, from Alexandria to central Algeria.
Discussion
The building-works recorded here were carried out after the successful reconquest from the Vandals of the central provinces of North Africa in 534. According to his account here, Justinian prioritised work in Carthage, which indeed seems likely (Cameron 1985, 182).
The palace-church of the Theotokos may well have been the great sanctuary within the palace where the military commander Solomon later found shelter from mutineers, as described by Procopius in his Wars (4.13.37). Its precise location is unclear, though Alexandre Lézine (1968, 177-180) identifies it with the remains of a basilica discovered on the Bursa Hill.
The Saint Primē (presumably Prima in Latin), to whom Justinian built a shrine outside Carthage, is obscure. A Prima is mentioned in the Martyrologium Hieronymianum in two different long lists of martyrs of Mauretania: venerated on 17 October (S04989) and on 2 December (S05039). But Mauretania, at the western end of the Maghreb, is some distance from Carthage (which was in the province of Proconsularis), so our Prima is unlikely to have been the same martyr as the woman (or women) listed in the Hieronymianum.
Further reading:
Pringle 1981, vol. 1, 172-177.
Bibliography
Edition:
Haury, J., Procopii Caesariensis opera omnia, vol. 4: Περι κτισματων libri VI sive de aedificiis (Leipzig: Teubner, 1962-64).
Translations and Commentaries:
Compagnoni, G.R., Procopio di Cesarea, Degli Edifici. Traduzione dal greco di G. Compagnoni (Milan: Tipi di Francesco Sonzogno, 1828).
Dewing, H.B., Procopius, On Buildings. Translated into English by H.B. Dewing, vol. 7 (London: William Heinemann, New York: Macmillan, 1940).
Grotowski, P.Ł., Prokopiusz z Cezarei, O Budowlach. Przełożył, wstępem, objaśnieniami i komentarzem opatrzył P.Ł. Grotowski (Warsaw: Proszynski i S-ka, 2006).
Roques, D., Procope de Césarée. Constructions de Justinien Ier. Introduction, traduction, commentaire, cartes et index par D. Roques (Alessandria: Edizioni dell'Orso, 2011).
Veh, O., and Pülhorn, W. (eds.), Procopii opera. De Aedificiis. With a Commentary by W. Pülhorn (Munich: Heimeran, 1977).
Further Reading:
Cameron, A., “Procopius 7,” in: J.R. Martindale (ed.), The Prosopography of the Later Roman Empire, vol. 2: A.D. 395-527 (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1980).
Cameron, A., Procopius and the Sixth Century (Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press, 1985).
Downey, G.A., “The Composition of Procopius’ ‘De Aedificiis,” Transactions of the American Philological Association 78 (1947), 171-183.
Elsner, J., “The Rhetoric of Buildings in De Aedificiis of Procopius,” in: L. James (ed.), Art and Text in Byzantine Culture (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2007), 33-57.
Feissel, D., “Les édifices de Justinien au témoignage de Procope et de l'épigraphie,” Antiquité Tardive 8 (2008), 81-104.
Frend, W.H.C., “The Early Christian Church in Carthage,” J.H. Humphrey (ed.), Excavations at Carthage. Conducted by the University of Michigan, vol. 3 (Ann Arbor: Kelsey Museum, 1976), 21-40.
Goodchild, R.G., and Ward Perkins, J.B., “The Christian Antiquities of Tripolitania,” Archaeologia 95 (1953), 1-82.
Greatrex, G., “The Dates of Procopius’ Works,” Byzantine and Modern Greek Studies 18 (1994), 101-14.
Greatrex, G., “The Date of Procopius Buildings in the Light of Recent Scholarship,” Estudios bizantinos 1 (2013), 13-29.
Lézine, A., Carthage-Utique. Études d'architecture et d'urbanisme (Paris: Éditions du Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, 1968).
Pringle, D., The Defence of Byzantine Africa from Justinian to the Arab Conquest, vol. 1 (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1981).
Rubin, B., Procopius von Kaisareia (Stuttgart: Druckenmüller, 1954 = Paulys Realencyclopädie der Classischen Altertumswissenschaft, Neue Bearbeitung, Stuttgart 1957, vol 23.1, col. 273-599).