Talk:Basil of Caesarea

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from: Nuovo Dizionario Patristico and di antichità cristiane, Milano 2006-2008. Edizioni San Paolon, Milano 2010.

Dizionario di letteratura patristica, un cura di A. Di Berardino, M. Simonetti y Giorgio Fedalto, Edizioni San Paolo, Milano 2007. Di Berardino A. (ed.), Concili della chiesa antica,

https://www.oca.org/saints/lives/2024/01/30/100350-synaxis-of-the-ecumenical-teachers-and-hierarchs-basil-the-great

Aristocratic by culture and sense of responsibility as well as by the immense landed properties in Pontus and Armenia, Basil, born around 330, completed brilliant studies of rhetoric (including philology, philosophy and administration) in Caesarea, Constantinople and Athens, where he formed a close friendship with Gregory of Nazianzus. Since childhood he had received a solid Christian education, especially from his grandmother, Macrina senior. After the death of his father, in 358, he renounced his career, sold his goods, asked for baptism and retired to Annesi, in a family property on the Iris, with his mother and sister Macrina junior; he had been preceded by his elder brother Naucratius and to some extent had shared this way of life, until his marriage, also his younger brother Gregory of Nyssa

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Coms23 (talk) 02:29, 2 February 2024 (UTC)[reply]

Please use inline citations, you can learn more at Wikipedia:Citing sources. MathXplore (talk) 02:39, 2 February 2024 (UTC)[reply]