Cyril of Alexandria: Against Julian
Introduction and Translation
Edward Jeremiah author Aaron P Johnson editor Matthew R Crawford editor
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Cambridge University Press
Publishing:31st Jul '25
£150.00
This title is due to be published on 31st July, and will be despatched as soon as possible.

The first full translation into English of this monumental treatise responding to the most sophisticated ancient critique of Christianity.
In this book Cyril, bishop of Alexandria, presented a detailed and learned rebuttal of the Emperor Julian's critique of Christianity in his Against the Galileans, composed sixty years earlier in 362/363. This is the first full translation of the work into English.In 362/363 the Roman emperor Julian composed a treatise titled Against the Galileans in which he set forth his reasons for abandoning Christianity and returning to devotion to the traditional Greco-Roman deities. Sixty years later Cyril, bishop of Alexandria, composed a response. His resulting treatise Against Julian would dwarf the size of Julian's original work and in fact serves as our primary source for the fragments of it that have survived. Julian's treatise was the most sophisticated critique of Christianity to have been composed in antiquity and Cyril's rebuttal was equally learned. The Christian bishop not only responded directly to Julian's own words but drew upon a wide range of ancient literature, including poetry, history, philosophy, and religious works to undermine the emperor's critiques of the Christian Bible and bolster the intellectual legitimacy of Christian belief and practice. This is the first full translation of the work into English.
ISBN: 9781108485692
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
662 pages