Cyprian

The Cyprian who appears 7 times in this collection as a recipient of letters is most likely a later figure sharing the famous name — possibly a deacon or minor cleric referenced in the correspondence of one of the major collections. The name Cyprian remained popular in North Africa and Italy for centuries after the martyrdom of the great bishop of Carthage. The letters to this Cyprian contribute to our understanding of the broader networks of communication that sustained the late antique and early medieval church.
0
Letters sent
12
Letters received
12
Total letters
3
Correspondents

Top correspondents

All letters (12)

From Cyprian of Carthagec. 249
cyprian carthage #16
From Cyprian of Carthagec. 250
cyprian carthage #18
From Cyprian of Carthagec. 250
cyprian carthage #25
From Cyprian of Carthagec. 251
cyprian carthage #29
From Cyprian of Carthagec. 251
cyprian carthage #30
From Cyprian of Carthagec. 253
cyprian carthage #49
From Cyprian of Carthagec. 257
cyprian carthage #74
From Cyprian of Carthagec. 257
cyprian carthage #79
From Jeromec. 417

Cyprian had visited Jerome at Bethlehem and had asked him to write an exposition of Psalm XC. in simple language such as might be readily understood. With this request Jerome now complies, giving a very full account of the psalm, verse by verse, and bringing the treasures of his learning and especially his knowledge of Hebrew to bear upon it.

jerome #140
From Pope Gregory the Greatc. 593

Gregory to Cyprian, Deacon and Rector of Sicily. It has been reported to us that a native of the province of Lucania, Petronilla by name, was converted through the exhortation of the bishop Agnellus, and that all her property, though she had it in her own power, she nevertheless bestowed on the monastery which she entered even by a special deed...

gregory great #4006
From Pope Gregory the Greatc. 594

Gregory to Cyprian, deacon and rector of the patrimony of Sicily. Concerning the Manicheans who are on our possessions I have frequently admonished your Love to press them with the utmost diligence, and recall them to the Catholic faith. If, then, the time requires it, make enquiries in person, or, if other business does not allow this, through ...

gregory great #5008
From Pope Gregory the Greatc. 594

I received your letters of most bitter import about the death of the Lord Maximianus in the month of November. And he indeed has reached the rewards he longed for, but the unhappy people of the city of Syracuse is to be commiserated as not having been counted worthy to have such a pastor long. Accordingly let your Love take anxious heed that su...

gregory great #5017