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Valesians

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Valesians were a Christian sect that advocated self-castration. The sect was founded by Valens (of Bacetha Metrocomia;[1] not to be confused with the Roman Emperor of the same name), an Arabian philosopher who established the sect sometime in the second century AD.[2] They were notorious for forcibly castrating travelers whom they encountered and guests who visited them.[3]

They are known chiefly from the Panarion of Epiphanius of Salamis, which describes how disciples of the sect were not allowed to eat meat until they had been castrated, because those who are not castrated might be tempted to lust by eating certain foods. According to the Panarion, their views on authorities and powers were similar to those of Sethianism or of the Archontics.[4]

Their doctrine was condemned as heresy by the Synod of Achaia[5] in approximately 250 AD.[3] The sect appears in The Temptation of Saint Anthony by Flaubert.

See also

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  • Skoptsy, a Russian sect advocating the same ideas

References

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  1. ^ Wellman, Paul Iselin (1953). The Female (a novel). Doubleday. p. 308.
  2. ^ The London Encyclopaedia. Vol. 22. 1829. p. 311.
  3. ^ a b William Smith; Samuel Cheetham (1880). Encyclopedic Dictionary of Christian Antiquities. J.B. Burr Publishing Company. p. 243.
  4. ^ Epiphanius of Salamis. Panarion. p. 4.38.1–4.
  5. ^ Edward B. Pusey (1857). The Councils of the Church. p. 59.