Hinweise zur Catholic Encyclopedia
St. Simeon Stylites the Elder
St. Simeon was the first and probably the most famous of the long succession
of stylitoe, or pillar-hermits
, who during more than six centuries acquired by
their strange form of asceticism a great reputation for holiness throughout
eastern Christendom. If it were not that our information, in the case of the
first St. Simeon and some of his imitators, is based upon very reliable
first-hand evidence, we should be disposed to relegate much of what history
records to the domain of fable; but no modern critic now ventures to dispute the
reality of the feats of endurance attributed to these ascetics. Simeon the Elder,
was born about 388 at Sisan, near the northern border of Syria. After beginning
life as a shepherd boy, he entered a monastery before the age of sixteen, and
from the first gave himself up to the practice of an austerity so extreme and to
all appearance so extravagant, that his brethren judged him, perhaps not
unwisely, to be unsuited to any form of community life. Being forced to quit
them he shut himself up for three years in a hut at Tell-Neschin, where for the
first time he passed the whole of Lent without eating or drinking. This
afterwards became his regular practice, and he combined it with the
mortification of standing continually upright so long as his limbs would sustain
him. In his later days he was able to stand thus on his column without support
for the whole period of the fast. After three years in his hut, Simeon sought a
rocky eminence in the desert and compelled himself to remain a prisoner within a
narrow space less than twenty yards in diameter. But crowds of pilgrims invaded
the desert to seek him out, asking his counsel or his prayers, and leaving him
insufficient time for his own devotions. This at last determined him to adopt a
new way of life. Simeon had a pillar erected with a small platform at the top,
and upon this he determined to take up his abode until death released him. At
first the pillar was little more than nine feet high, but it was subsequently
replaced by others, the last in the series being apparently over fifty feet from
the ground. However extravagant this way of life may seem, it undoubtedly
produced a deep impression on contemporaries, and the fame of the ascetic spread
through Europe, Rome in particular being remarkable for the large number of
pictures of the saint which were there to be seen, a fact which a modern writer,
Holl, represents as a factor of great importance in the development of image
worship (see the Philotesia in honour of P. Kleinert, p. 42-48). Even on the
highest of his columns Simeon was not withdrawn from intercourse with his fellow
men. By means of a ladder which could always be erected against the side,
visitors were able to ascend; and we know that he wrote letters, the text of
some of which we still possess, that he instructed disciples, and that he also
delivered addresses to those assembled beneath. Around the tiny platform which
surmounted the capital of the pillar there was probably something in the nature
of a balustrade, but the whole was exposed to the open air, and Simeon seems
never to have permitted himself any sort of cabin or shelter. During his earlier
years upon the column there was on the summit a stake to which he bound himself
in order to maintain the upright position throughout Lent, but this was an
alleviation with which he afterwards dispensed. Great personages, such as the
Emperor Theodosius and the Empress Eudocia manifested the utmost reverence for
the saint and listened to his counsels, while the Emperor Leo paid respectful
attention to a letter Simeon wrote to him in favour of the Council of Chalcedon.
Once when he was ill Theodosius sent three bishops to beg him to descend and
allow himself to be attended by physicians, but the sick man preferred to leave
his cure in the hands of God, and before long he recovered. After spending
thirty-six years on his pillar, Simeon died on Friday, 2 Sept., 459 (Lietzmann,
p. 235). A contest arose between Antioch and Constantinople for the possession
of his remains. The preference was given to Antioch, and the greater part of his
relics were left there as a protection to the unwalled city. The ruins of the
vast edifice erected in his honour and known as Qal `at Sim `ân (the mansion of
Simeon) remain to the present day. It consists of four basilicas built out from
an octagonal court towards the four points of the compass. In the centre of the
court stands the base of St. Simeon's column. This edifice, says H.C. Butler,
unquestionably influenced contemporary and later church building to a marked
degree
(Architecture and other Arts, p. 184). It seems to have been a supreme
effort of a provincial school of architecture which had borrowed little from
Constantinople.
St. Simeon's life is principally known to us from an account by THEODORET, who was a contemporary; also from the biography of a disciple Antonius and from a more or less independent Syriac source. All these materials have been edited by LIETZMANN in HARNACK AND GEBHARDT, Texte und Untersuchungen, XXXII (Berlin, 1906), no. 4; Acta SS., Jan., I, 234-74. See also DELEHAYE in Revue des questions historiques, LVII (1895), 52-103; STOKES in Dict. Christ. Biog., s.v., Simeon (12) Stylites; HOLL in Philotesia P. Kleinert zum 70. Geburtstag (Leipzig, 1907). Upon the architecture of Qal `at Sim `ân see BUTLER, Architecture and other Arts of Syria (New York, 1904), 184-93; DE VOGöE, Syrie centrale, I (Paris, 1885), 141-54; JULLIEN, Sinai et Syrie (Lille, 1893), 246-61; LECLERCQ in CABROL, Dict. d'arch. chrét. I, 2380-88.
Heiligenlexikon als USB-Stick oder als DVD
Unterstützung für das Ökumenische Heiligenlexikon
Artikel kommentieren / Fehler melden
Suchen bei amazon: Bücher über Catholic Encyclopedia - St. Simeon Stylites the Elder
Wikipedia: Artikel über Catholic Encyclopedia - St. Simeon Stylites the Elder
Fragen? - unsere FAQs antworten!
Impressum - Datenschutzerklärung
korrekt zitieren: Artikel
Die Deutsche Nationalbibliothek verzeichnet das Ökumenische Heiligenlexikon in der Deutschen Nationalbibliografie; detaillierte bibliografische Daten sind im Internet über https://d-nb.info/1175439177 und https://d-nb.info/969828497 abrufbar.