Hedibia, a lady in Gaul
Hedibia (EDIBIA), a lady
in Gaul, who corresponded with St. Jerome (then at Bethlehem) c. 405. She
was descended from the Druids, and held the hereditary office of priests of Belen
(= Apollo) at Bayeux. Her grandfather and father (if majores is to be taken
strictly) Patera and Delphidius (the names being in each case derived from their
office) were remarkable men. Of Patera, Jerome says in his Chronicle, under
a.d. 339, "Patera rhetor Romae gloriosissime
docet."
436Delphidius was a writer in prose and verse and a celebrated
advocate. Ammianus Marcellinus (xviii. 1) tells of his pleading before the emperor
Julian. Both became professors at Bordeaux (Ausonius, Carmen, Prof. Burd.
iv. and v.). The wife and daughter of Delphidius became entangled in the Zoroastrian
teaching of Priscillian, and suffered death in the persecution of his followers
(Sulp. Sev. Hist. Sac. ii. 63, 64; Prosper Aquit. Chron.; Auson.
Carmen, v.). Hedibia was a diligent student of Scripture, and, finding
no one to assist her, sent, by her friend Apodemius, a list of questions to Jerome.
He answered them in a long letter (Ep. 120, ed. Vall.). We hear of her
again as a friend of Artemia, wife of Rusticus, on whose account she again wrote
to Jerome (Ep. 122, ed. Vall.).
[W.H.F.]