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St. Olympias
Born 360-5; died 25 July, 408, probably at Nicomedia. This pious, charitable,
and wealthy disciple of St. John Chrysostom came from an illustrious family in
Constantinople. Her father (called by the sources Secundus or Selencus) was a
Count
of the empire; one of her ancestors, Ablabius, filled in 331 the
consular office, and was also praetorian prefect of the East. As Olympias was
not thirty years of age in 390, she cannot have been born before 361. Her
parents died when she was quite young, and left her an immense fortune. In 384
or 385 she married Nebridius, Prefect of Constantinople. St. Gregory of
Nazianzus, who had left Constantinople in 381, was invited to the wedding, but
wrote a letter excusing his absence (Ep. cxciii, in P.G., XXXVI, 315), and sent
the bride a poem (P.G., loc. cit., 1542 sqq.). Within a short time Nebridius
died, and Olympias was left a childless widow. She steadfastly rejected all new
proposals of marriage, determining to devote herself to the service of God and
to works of charity. Nectarius, Bishop of Constantinople (381-97), consecrated
her deaconess. On the death of her husband the emperor had appointed the urban
prefect administrator of her property, but in 391 (after the war against Maximus)
restored her the administration of her large fortune. She built beside the
principal church of Constantinople a convent, into which three relatives and a
large number of maidens withdrew with her to consecrate themselves to the
service of God. When St. John Chrysostom became Bishop of Constantinople (398),
he acted as spiritual guide of Olympias and her companions, and, as many
undeserving approached the kind-hearted deaconess for support, he advised her as
to the proper manner of utilizing her vast fortune in the service of the poor
(Sozomen, Hist. eccl.
, VIII, ix; P.G., LXVII, 1540). Olympias resigned herself
wholly to Chrysostom's direction, and placed at his disposal ample sums for
religious and charitable objects. Even to the most distant regions of the empire
extended her benefactions to churches and the poor.
When Chrysostom was exiled, Olympias supported him in every possible way, and
remained a faithful disciple, refusing to enter into communion with his
unlawfully appointed successor. Chrysostom encouraged and guided her through his
letters, of which seventeen are extant (P.G., LII, 549 sqq.); these are a
beautiful memorial of the noble-hearted, spiritual daughter of the great bishop.
Olympias was also exiled, and died a few months after Chrysostom. After her
death she was venerated as a saint. A biography dating from the second half of
the fifth century, which gives particulars concerning her from the Historia
Lausiaca
of Palladius and from the Dialogus de vita Joh. Chrysostomi
, proves
the great veneration she enjoyed. During he riot of Constantinople in 532 the
convent of St. Olympias and the adjacent church were destroyed. Emperor
Justinian had it rebuilt, and the prioress, Sergia, transferred thither the
remains of the foundress from the ruined church of St. Thomas in Brokhthes,
where she had been buried. We possess an account of this translation by Sergia
herself. The feast of St. Olympias is celebrated in the Greek Church on 24 July,
and in the Roman Church on 17 December.
Vita S. Olympiadis et narratio Sergiae de eiusdem translatione in Anal. Bolland. (1896), 400 sqq., (1897), 44 sqq.; BOUSQUET, Vie d'Olympias la diaconesse in Revue de l'Orient chret. (1900), 225 sqq.; IDEM, Recit de Sergia sur Olympias, ibid. (1907), 255 sqq.; PALLADIUS, Hist. Lausiaca, LVI, ed. BUTLER (Cambridge, 1904); Synaxarium Constantinopol., ed. DELAHAYE, Propylaeum ad Acta SS., November (Brussels, 1902), 841-2; MEURISSE, Hist. d'Olympias, diaconesse de Constantinople (Metz, 1670); VENABLES in Dict. Christ. Biog., s.v. See also the bibliography of JOHN CHRYSOSTOM, SAINT.
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