Cosmas the Monk

This article is about the 7th-century monk from Sicily. For the 6th-century Byzantine geographer who sailed to India, see Cosmas Indicopleustes. For other people named 'Cosmas', see Cosmas (disambiguation).

Cosmas the Monk was a 7th-century clergyman who features in Chalcedonian traditions. Any knowledge of Cosmas comes from the notably unreliable[1] 10th-century hagiography of John of Damascus.

He was a Saracen scholar who became the teacher to John of Damascus and his foster brother. To the Chalcedonians he is known as Cosmas the Sicilian (fl. late 7th century).[2] a Saracen slave rescued from execution in 664AD in Sicily by a judge from Damascus called Ibn Mansur, the Father of John of Damascus who employed him as the tutor of John [3] and his orphan foster brother Cosmas of Maiuma[4] who became the Poet of the Holy City. Apparently, John's father met Cosmas, a Saracen who knew Greek, on the shores of Sicily when the latter was about to be executed.[2] He was crying loudly and when asked why a monk would cry in the face of death, answered that he was bemoaning the loss of the knowledge he had gathered, "for he knew nearly everything under the sun." In response, John's father (a judge) had him released and appointed him as tutor for his son.[5]

References

  1. "St. John Damascene". Catholic Encyclopedia. New Advent. 1913. Retrieved 19 October 2011.
  2. 1 2 Sahas, Daniel C. (1972). John of Damascus on Islam: The "Heresy of the Ishmaelites". Brill. pp. 39–40. ISBN 978-90-04-03495-2.
  3. Fortescue, Adrian (1908). The Greek Fathers. Catholic Truth Society. p. 242.
  4. Biedermann, H.M. (1999). "Kosmas v. Majuma". Lexikon des Mittelalters 5. J.B. Metzler. p. 1458.
  5. James, Croake (1892). Curiosities of Christianity. London: Methuen. p. 515.


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