<p>The pop-legend for the Europeanized Hypatia as a beautiful young virgin scientist comes to us through 1600 years of hearsay gossip and assumptions legitimized by Voltaire and other Age of Enlightenment anticlerical thinkers. &nbsp;</p><p><br></p><p>This tabloid-like legend is summarized in Wikipedia as such:</p><p><br></p><p><em>&nbsp;Hypatia born c. 350-370; died 415 AD often called Hypatia of Alexandria was a Greek mathematician astronomer inventor and philosopher in Egypt then a part of the Eastern Roman Empire. &nbsp;She was the head of the Neoplatonic school at Alexandria where she taught philosophy and astronomy. A pagan Hypatia was murdered by a Christian mob known as the Parabalani after being accused of exacerbating a conflict between two prominent figures in Alexandria: the Prefect Orestes and the bishop Cyril of Alexandria.</em></p><p><br></p><p>The past to which Hypatia of Alexandria belongs i.e. the 4<sup>th</sup> and 5<sup>th</sup> centuries of the Roman Empire of Late Antiquity is to us today a foreign country. We may study written languages and other artifacts from that period but not living it we remain tourists in a foreign land. Like all sightseers our assessment of long bygone times and places is often subject to our own beliefs and ignorance.&nbsp;The Wikipedia description above is in fact rife with both our modern beliefs and overwhelming ignorance.</p><p><br></p><p>We are told for example Hypatia of Alexandria was brutally murdered in the year 415 A.D.. &nbsp;Notably there were no eyewitnesses on record nor was there a <em>corpus delicti</em> nor was there any official inquiry or investigation into the supposed homicide. &nbsp;By modern standards this presumptive crime remains unsolved because it is based solely upon hearsay and rumor well after the putative event. &nbsp;Everything about Hypatia's death whether in 415 A.D. or any other time is a mystery. The same is true for the rest of her life before this.</p><p><br></p><p>In fact because Hypatia left scant trace of herself [See my The Case of Hypatia of Alexandria presented at the 2018 Hawaii International Conference of Art &amp; Literature] we must conclude the legend is mainly bogus. Until that is the discovery of these Alexandria scrolls which tell the story of Hypatia in her own words by her own hand!</p><p><br></p><p>So who was Hypatia of Alexandria? This much is clear: She was mixed race; bisexual; and an entrepreneur. Also revealed is she was stalked by a psychopathic serial killer who was a prominent member of the clergy.</p>
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