Antony of Egypt
251 CE–356 CE · Pispir (Outer Mountain)
Antony of Egypt (c. 251–356) was an Egyptian Christian ascetic widely regarded as the father of Christian monasticism, who withdrew progressively deeper into the desert to pursue a life of prayer, fasting, and spiritual combat. Born to a wealthy Egyptian Christian family near Heracleopolis Magna in Middle Egypt, he renounced his inheritance around age eighteen to twenty after hearing Matthew 19:21 read aloud in church, and spent decades in solitary retreat at Pispir on the Nile and later at the remote Inner Mountain near the Red Sea. His biography, the Vita Antonii, written by Athanasius of Alexandria shortly after his death (c. 360), became the archetypal ascetic biography and was instrumental in spreading the monastic ideal across the Greek- and Latin-speaking worlds. Antony left seven letters whose original Coptic text survives only in fragments; the most complete witnesses are a Georgian translation and a Latin translation, and they are remarkable for their theological sophistication on the soul's return to God. The eremitic communities that gathered around his example gave rise to a tradition of desert monasticism that shaped both Eastern and Western Christian spirituality for centuries.
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Koma (near Heracleopolis Magna)Egypt
What they did here
Born c. 251 in the village of Koma in Middle Egypt to a prosperous Egyptian Christian family; renounced his estate around age eighteen to twenty after hearing Matthew 19:21 in church.
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