Cæsarius, brother of Gregory

Caesarius (c. 330–369) was the younger brother of Gregory of Nazianzus and a physician who served at the imperial court in Constantinople. He appears 9 times in this collection as a recipient of letters from Basil of Caesarea, reflecting the close family connections between the Cappadocian Fathers. Caesarius's career as a court physician placed him at the intersection of secular and Christian worlds, and his correspondence with Basil reveals the social networks that linked Cappadocian Christians in the capital and the provinces.
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Letters sent
11
Letters received
11
Total letters
3
Correspondents

Top correspondents

All letters (11)

From Basil of Caesareac. 358

Thanks to God for showing forth His wonderful power in your person, and for preserving you to your country and to us your friends, from so terrible a death. It remains for us not to be ungrateful, nor unworthy of so great a kindness, but, to the best of our ability, to narrate the marvellous works of God, to celebrate by deed the kindness which ...

basil caesarea #26
From Basil of Caesareac. 360

Who will give me wings like a dove? Or how can my old age be so renewed that I can travel to your affection, satisfy my deep longing to see you, tell you all the troubles of my soul, and get from you some comfort in my affliction? For when the blessed bishop Eusebius fell asleep, we were under no small alarm lest plotters against the Church of ...

basil caesarea #47
From Basil of Caesareac. 360

How am I to dispute with you in writing? How can I lay hold of you satisfactorily, with all your simplicity? Tell me; who ever falls a third time into the same nets?

basil caesarea #58
From Basil of Caesareac. 360

Formerly I was glad to see my brother. Why not, since he is my brother and such a brother? Now I have received him on his coming to visit me with the same feelings, and have lost none of my affection.

basil caesarea #60
From Basil of Caesareac. 361

1. I have received the letter of your holiness, by the most reverend brother Helenius, and what you have intimated he has told me in plain terms. How I felt on hearing it, you cannot doubt at all.

basil caesarea #71
From Basil of Caesareac. 367

You have undertaken a kindly and charitable task in getting together the captive troop of the insolent Glycerius (at present I must so write), and, so far as in you lay, covering our common shame. It is only right that your reverence should undo this dishonour with a full knowledge of the facts about him. This grave and venerable Glycerius of yo...

basil caesarea #169
From Basil of Caesareac. 367

I wrote to you, not long ago, about Glycerius and the virgins. Even now they have not returned, but are still hesitating, how and why I know not. I should be sorry to charge this against you, as though you were acting thus to bring discredit on me, either because you have some ground of complaint against me, or to gratify others.

basil caesarea #171
From Augustine of Hippoc. 405
augustine hippo #38
From Augustine of Hippoc. 405
augustine hippo #87
From Pope Gregory the Greatc. 599

Grace to you and peace from God the Father [and] our [Lord] Jesus Christ. I am pleased to think, O holy pope, that it will seem to you nothing extravagant to be interrogated about Easter, according to that canticle, Ask your father, and he will show you; your elders and they will tell you Deuteronomy 32:7. For, though on me, who am indeed a trif...

gregory great #9127