Eusebius (sophist)
Eusebius, also known as Eusebius the Arabian was an Arab sophist and tutor of the 4th century AD. known to had been active in Antioch during the reign of emperor Constantine I (306–337). According to the Suda, Eusebius was a rival of the sophist Ulpianus, presumably at the city of Antioch.[1][2] Eusebius has sometimes been misidentified with another figure by the name of Eusebius Pittacas, bishop of Emesa.[3]
References
- John R. Martindale, A. H. M. Jones and John Morris (eds.), The Prosopography of the Later Roman Empire: Volume I, AD 260–395 (Cambridge University Press, 1971), p. 301.
- Suda Online: Eusebios.
- Woods, David (2003). "AMMIANUS MARCELLINUS AND BISHOP EUSEBIUS OF EMESA". The Journal of Theological Studies. 54 (2): 585–591. ISSN 0022-5185.
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