Ambrose of Alexandria
AMBROSE OF ALEXANDRIA: Friend of Origen; d. about 250. Attracted by Origen’s fame
as a teacher, he visited his school about 212, and
was converted by Origen from the Valentinian
heresy to the orthodox faith (Eusebius, Hist. eccl.,
VI. xviii. 1). He was a sufferer during the
persecution under Maximinus in 235 (Eusebius,
Hist. eccl., VI. xxviii.), and is last mentioned in Origen’s
Contra Celsum, which the latter wrote at the
solicitation of Ambrose. He was wealthy and
provided his teacher with books for his studies and
secretaries to lighten the labor of composition
(Eusbius, Hist. eccl., VI. xxiii. 1-2; Jerome,
De vir. ill., lvi.). Origen often speaks of him in terms
of affection as a man of education and literary and
scholarly tastes. All of his works written after
218 are dedicated to Ambrose.