Hypatia of Alexandria (c.350-415 CE) was a mathematician, astronomer, and philosopher who taught in the Egyptian city of Alexandria during the late Roman Empire. She was the daughter of the mathematician Theon, a scholar connected to the great library of Alexandria, and she received an exceptional education in the mathematical and philosophical traditions of the Greek-speaking world. By her maturity she was a renowned teacher in the Neoplatonist tradition, giving public lectures and leading a private circle of students that included Christians, pagans, and members of the wealthy families of the eastern Roman Empire. She is known to have written commentaries on the great mathematical texts of her time, including Diophantus's Arithmetica, Apollonius's Conics, and Ptolemy's Almagest, and to have worked closely with her father on the preservation and editing of earlier mathematical works. Her own writings do not survive; we know her through letters from her students, particularly Synesius of Cyrene, who became a Christian bishop but continued to honour her as his intellectual guide. Alexandria in her lifetime was politically and religiously turbulent. In 415 CE she was killed by a Christian mob in the streets of the city, in circumstances that have been debated by historians ever since. Her death has been remembered for sixteen centuries as a marker of something lost.
Hypatia matters for several reasons that do not always sit comfortably together. As a philosopher and mathematician, she represents a substantial tradition of women's learning in the ancient Mediterranean that has often been obscured. She taught openly in a major city, advised politicians, and was respected as an intellectual authority by men and women, Christians and pagans. Her life offers a counterexample to the assumption that educated women in public life are a modern invention. As a mathematician, she worked in a vibrant tradition that preserved, transmitted, and extended the mathematical achievements of earlier centuries. The commentaries she and her father produced on earlier mathematical texts helped to carry Greek mathematics into the Islamic world and eventually back into medieval Europe. Her death has become a symbol with more than one meaning. In some tellings, she is a martyr of reason murdered by religious fanaticism. In others, her killing was one incident in a complex political conflict whose religious framing has been overstated. Both readings contain something true and something oversimplified. Her story forces careful thinking about how we remember violence, how we construct heroes and martyrs, and how we recover the histories of women in learning.
Michael Deakin's Hypatia of Alexandria: Mathematician and Martyr (2007, Prometheus Books) is clear and balanced.
The entry on Hypatia in the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy offers a reliable free introduction.
Relevant letters of Synesius and passages from Socrates Scholasticus are widely available in translation online through resources such as the Internet Medieval Sourcebook.
Maria Dzielska's Hypatia of Alexandria (1995, Harvard University Press) is the foundational modern scholarly study and carefully sifts the ancient sources.
The Life and Legend of an Ancient Philosopher (2017, Oxford University Press) is the most recent substantial biography and treats both her life and her long reception history.
Alan Cameron's chapter on Hypatia in his work on Alexandrian mathematics is essential.
Hypatia's death marked the end of classical learning and the beginning of the Dark Ages.
This dramatic story has been popular for centuries but does not match the historical record. Mathematical, philosophical, and scientific work continued in Alexandria and other cities of the eastern Mediterranean long after 415 CE. The great library of Alexandria had declined gradually over centuries through a series of losses. Christian scholars continued to study classical philosophy, and the Neoplatonist tradition in which Hypatia worked continued for over a century after her death. The idea that her killing extinguished ancient learning is a symbolic narrative rather than a historical one, shaped by later generations who wanted her death to mark a clear end of an era.
Hypatia was killed for being a scientist or for opposing Christianity.
The ancient sources give a more complicated picture. Her killing took place in the context of a political conflict between the Roman governor Orestes, to whom she was close, and the Christian patriarch Cyril. The violence drew in religious, political, and factional tensions that had been building in Alexandria for years. She was not killed because she taught mathematics or philosophy; Christian bishops respected her teaching and sent her their sons. She was killed because her public association with one side of a political dispute made her a target. The simpler story of science versus religion flattens what was actually a more particular and political event.
We have substantial surviving works by Hypatia.
None of Hypatia's own writings have survived. She is known to have collaborated on commentaries with her father Theon and to have written or contributed to commentaries on mathematical works by Diophantus, Apollonius, and Ptolemy, but these works are not preserved under her name. Everything we know about her comes from what others wrote about her or from the traces of her work that may be visible in later mathematical texts. Any account of her thought must acknowledge this gap. Claims that she wrote this or said that should be treated carefully: often the underlying evidence is thin or attributed to her only in later sources.
Hypatia was an atheist or secularist in the modern sense.
This is an anachronism. The categories atheist and secularist as we understand them are modern. Hypatia worked within the Neoplatonist tradition, which was deeply religious in a philosophical way: Neoplatonists believed in a hierarchy of divine reality culminating in the One, engaged in contemplative practices aimed at ascent toward the divine, and took religion seriously as a subject of thought. She was probably not a Christian and is sometimes identified as a pagan, but her philosophical framework was not opposed to religion as such. Reading her as a rationalist opponent of religion projects a later conflict back onto an ancient figure who would not have recognised the terms.
For the late antique intellectual world Hypatia inhabited: Edward J. Watts's City and School in Late Antique Athens and Alexandria (2006, University of California Press) is the standard study.
Christopher Haas's Alexandria in Late Antiquity (1997, Johns Hopkins University Press) remains authoritative.
The second half of Watts's 2017 biography traces how Hypatia has been remembered from her own time to the present. For the letters of Synesius in translation: the edition by Augustine Fitzgerald (1926) remains useful.
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