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    <front>
        <journal-meta>
            <journal-id>TMR</journal-id>
            <journal-title-group>
                <journal-title>The Medieval Review</journal-title>
            </journal-title-group>
            <issn pub-type="epub">1096-746X</issn>
            <publisher>
                <publisher-name>Indiana University</publisher-name>
            </publisher>
        </journal-meta>
        <article-meta>
            <article-id pub-id-type="publisher-id">23.10.14</article-id>
            <title-group>
                <article-title>23.10.14, Parker, Symeon Stylites the Younger and Late Antique Antioch</article-title>
            </title-group>
            <contrib-group>
                <contrib contrib-type="author">
                    <name>
                        <surname>Benjamin Garstad</surname>
                        <given-names/>
                    </name>
                    <aff>MacEwan University</aff>
                    <address>
                        <email>garstadb@macewan.ca</email>
                    </address>
                </contrib>
            </contrib-group>
            <pub-date publication-format="epub" date-type="pub" iso-8601-date="2022">
                <year>2023</year>
            </pub-date>
            <product product-type="book">
                <person-group>
                    <name>
                        <surname>Parker, Lucy</surname>
                        <given-names/>
                    </name>
                </person-group>
                <source>Symeon Stylites the Younger and Late Antique Antioch: From Hagiography to History</source>
                <series>Oxford Studies in Byzantium</series>
                <year iso-8601-date="2022">2022</year>
                <publisher-loc>Oxford, UK</publisher-loc>
                <publisher-name>Oxford University Press (OUP)</publisher-name>
                <page-range>Pp. xvi, 270</page-range>
                <price>$105 (hardback)</price>
                <isbn>978-0-19-286517-5 (hardback)</isbn>
            </product>
            <permissions>
                <copyright-statement>Copyright 2023 Trustees of Indiana University. Indiana University provides the information contained in this file for non-commercial, personal, or research use only. All other use, including but not limited to commercial or scholarly reproductions, redistribution, publication or transmission, whether by electronic means or otherwise, without prior written permission of the copyright holder is strictly prohibited.</copyright-statement>
            </permissions>
        </article-meta>
    </front>
    <body>
        <p>Lucy Parker has written a lucid and useful study of how a pillar-saint, one of the
            sanctified celebrities of the sixth century, was perceived and presented not so much
            practising asceticism as establishing his authority as a mediator between God and men.
            As I finished her book, I realized that the niggling complaint that had been in the back
            of my mind while I read it, that she never discussed the practicalities of living atop a
            column for years on end, let alone leading a monastic community from that perch, was
            altogether beside the point. For Symeon Stylites’ monks, for visitors and supplicants,
            for the wider world, and perhaps especially for his hagiographer, he existed ascended
            and isolated, that much closer to God, visibly and spiritually, with no consideration
            for bodily impediments--and that is how we must try to understand him. Parker’s book is
            an immense help in that effort, indicating the purposes and problems behind our sources,
            the sermon collection attributed to Symeon, the <italic>Life</italic> of the Saint, and
            the <italic>Life</italic> of his mother Martha, and assessing the context and
            reliability of these sources that give us access to a remarkable sixth-century figure
            and his society.</p>
        
        <p>Parker judiciously begins her study by sketching the history of Antioch and its
            surrounding countryside in the sixth century. But this is not merely a perfunctory
            backdrop to a recital of the life of Symeon Stylites the Younger (<italic>c</italic>.
            521-592). Parker emphasizes the natural and military disasters that beset Antioch over
            the course of the saint’s life. These are difficult to correlate with the signs of
            economic prosperity or decline, she shows, and so have come to be discounted as causal
            factors in contemporary social conflicts. These disasters, however, exacerbated tensions
            between rich and poor, rulers and ruled, as well as ideological disputants, and raised
            questions beyond people’s livelihood about the reasons disasters occurred and the
            ability of holy men to intercede with God on their public’s behalf. And, as Parker goes
            on to demonstrate throughout the rest of her book, these are the questions addressed by
            the saint and his hagiographer throughout their written work.</p>
        
        <p>For most late antique holy men, we must depend on saint’s lives to gain a picture of
            them, but in the case of the Younger Symeon we also have a collection of thirty sermons
            ascribed to him. Parker reviews the arguments for and against their authenticity and
            cautiously concludes that even if the sermons were not certainly written by Symeon,
            which is a strong possibility, that at the very least they were composed early and by an
            individual whose trustworthiness and commitment to Symeon’s monastery and cult were
            accepted by his hagiographer. Her analysis of the content of the sermons is even more
            incisive and instructive. She underscores three themes in particular: the ceaseless
            combat between monks and demons that characterizes the ascetic life, the stark contrast
            between heaven and hell as ultimate destinies and present realities, and the opposition
            between rich and poor not only on the economic plane, but also as representatives of
            paganism and Christianity respectively. Symeon laid claim to special insight on these
            themes--and so to the attention of his audience--through the visions vouchsafed to him
            by God. But his treatment of each also demonstrates his capacity to imbue his sermons
            with an urgency found in all effective preaching and, far from a desire to act as a
            peacemaker, his willingness to exploit social and cultural divisions to bolster his own
            position.</p>
        
        <p>The themes Parker identifies in the sermons recur in the <italic>Life of Symeon Stylites
                the Younger</italic>, the longest saint’s life to survive from before the Arab
            conquest. Parker is undaunted by the sheer bulk of the <italic>Life</italic> or the
            special problems it presents, and an excellent study of this neglected work is the core
            of her book. She deftly handles questions of authorship and date at the outset, giving
            reasons for seeing the <italic>Life</italic> as the work of a member of Symeon’s
            monastery written fairly shortly after the saint’s death. She also shows that the
                <italic>Life</italic> is not chiefly concerned with the preeminent figures of the
            day, emperors and patriarchs--perhaps a disappointment to political historians--or with
            the Christological controversies that dominate our retrospective view of Christian life
            and thought in this period. Rather, the <italic>Life</italic> emerges from her study as
            a response to criticisms of the saint, challenges to his authority, and especially
            doubts about his capability as an effective intercessor between God and his supplicants,
            all occasioned by the invasions, earthquakes, and plagues that befell the region of
            Antioch in the sixth century. These concerns highlight the new and different position
            that the holy man had assumed since Antony’s withdrawal from the world. Symeon Stylites
            the Younger had assumed responsibility, on account of his special relationship with God,
            for the safety and well-being not only of individual petitioners, but also of his home
            city and the whole region that included Antioch and his Wonderful Mountain. When
            disaster struck, the mercy and justice of God, Symeon’s compassion for his people, his
            relationship with God, and his identity as a holy man could all be called into question.
            Parker shows that it was these questions that dictated the content and structure of the
                <italic>Life</italic>, involving the author, no less than Symeon himself, in
            complicated and sometimes contradictory explanations of theodicy, prayer, and the nature
            of holiness. Even the miracles attributed to Symeon--the <italic>Life</italic> contains
            so many that it has been read as a miracle collection rather than hagiography--are seen
            as a counterargument against accusations of Symeon’s ineffectiveness. The hagiographer
            is revealed as intent on depicting Symeon positioned between God and man, his position
            atop a pillar receding into the background of a conversation conducted on the spiritual
            plane, one fraught with peril for the saint’s reputation.</p>
       
        <p>The <italic>Life of Martha</italic> is an adjunct to the <italic>Life of Symeon Stylites
                the Younger</italic>, much as the cult of its subject, the saint’s mother, was an
            adjunct to Symeon’s own cult. As a saint, even a female saint, Martha was somewhat
            anomalous, since her story did not depend on the usual tropes of harlot turned saint,
            pious lady bountiful, or cloistered nun. Her saintliness was nevertheless assured by the
            miracles associated with her, especially after her death. These miracles stood as proof
            of the efficacy of her life of dutiful and reverent liturgical observation, upon which
            she posthumously insisted in the performance of her own cult. In Parker’s reliable
            handling, the emphasis on the liturgy, sacraments, and healing miracles--notably for
            individuals rather than whole populations--represents a reorientation of the paradigm of
            personal sanctity, another response to doubts and questions raised by a time of crisis.
            The saint’s devotees are offered not only multiple avenues to salvation, but also a
            model of holiness that is easier for them to imitate. Rather than the impossibly
            rigorous asceticism of her son, Martha’s example offered reassurance to those who
            dutifully attended to the liturgy and clung to the sacraments.</p>
        
        <p>Parker ends by setting the two <italic>Lives</italic> in their hagiographical context.
            Hagiographers had advanced increasingly extravagant claims for their saints’ power and
            so made them responsible, no less than the emperors, for the safety of the Empire.
            Consequently, the natural disasters and battlefield defeats that came thick and fast in
            the sixth and seventh centuries brought about accusations that they had failed to
            protect the faithful. As Parker puts it, “disasters provoked questions about causation,
            divine providence, and the special status of the empire, which Christian authors from
            diverse backgrounds sometimes struggled to answer. Hagiographers, however, faced
            particular challenges, since they had not only to tackle the question of theodicy but
            also to show how their saints were positioned between the will of God and the will of
            their supplicants” (195). She presents the <italic>Life of Symeon</italic> and the
                <italic>Life of Martha</italic> as two different responses to these challenges.
            Symeon’s hagiographer, apparently taking his cue from the saint himself, assumes a
            combative stance, exculpating his hero by blaming the sinfulness of the people for their
            suffering, identifying scapegoats in the wealthy elite of Antioch with their pagan ways,
            as well as other outsider groups, and experimenting with different--and not always
            consistent--modes of Old Testament exegesis. The author of the <italic>Life of
                Martha</italic>, by contrast, reduced the scope and ambitions of his claims for the
            saint and concentrated on individual healing miracles and liturgical practice. Either
            approach might offer an effective answer to the doubts raised about the role of holy men
            and women in an empire in crisis.</p>
        
        <p>Lucy Parker deals with difficult and involved concepts in clear, comprehensible prose,
            free of jargon. She does not lean on theories, banging square pegs into round holes, or
            on potentially inappropriate approaches borrowed from other disciplines. She starts with
            the textual evidence and brings forward more evidence to explain its peculiarities and
            salient features. Parker has written a novel book that comprehensively surveys the topic
            and its problems and blazes new trails toward understanding it. But she has also written
            a sturdy book that will stand the test of time and remain the principal work on Symeon
            Stylites the Younger for the foreseeable future.</p>
    </body>
</article>
