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Works Eusebius of Caesarea (260-339) Vita Constantini The Life of the blessed Emperor Constantine
Book II.

Chapter XXVII.--How the Persecution became the Occasion of Calamities to the Aggressors.

"From the causes I have described, grievous wars arose, and destructive devastations. Hence followed a scarcity of the common necessaries of life, and a crowd of consequent miseries: hence, too, the authors of these impieties have either met a disastrous death of extreme suffering, or have dragged out an ignominious existence, and confessed it to be worse than death itself, thus receiving as it were a measure of punishment proportioned to the heinousness of their crimes. 1 For each experienced a degree of calamity according to the blind fury with which he had been led to combat, and as he thought, defeat the Divine will: so that they not only felt the pressure of the ills of this present life, but were tormented also by a most lively apprehension of punishment in the future world. 2


  1. Compare Lactantius, On the deaths of the persecutors (De M. P.), and the Church History of Eusebius. ↩

  2. Literally "beneath the earth," referring of course to the Graeco-Roman conception of Hades. ↩

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The Life of the blessed Emperor Constantine
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Introduction to the Life of Constantine

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Faculty of Theology, Patristics and History of the Early Church
Miséricorde, Av. Europe 20, CH 1700 Fribourg

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