Sylvia, sister of Flavius Rufinus
Sylvia (Silvania), sister of Flavius Rufinus, consul in 392 and
prefect of the East under Theodosius and Arcadius. A work written by her was discovered
at Arezzo in 1885, bound up with an unpublished work of St. Hilary of Poictiers
(de Mysteriis). It contained 2 hymns and an account of a journey in the East.
M. Ch. Kohler gave an analysis of the text in Bibl. de l’Ecole des Chartres,
and M. Gamurrini discussed its authorship in a paper before the Academy of Christian
Archaeology at Rome (cf. Revue Critique, May 25, 1885, p. 419). It has since
been shown by M. Fératin that the pilgrim author is Etheria, a Spanish nun, mentioned
by the monk Valerius (Migne, Patr. Lat. lxxxvii. 421). It has been generally
quoted, however, as the Peregrinatio Silviae. It is of the highest interest from
its account of the services at Jerusalem at the time (c. 385 ). Important
extracts from it are given in Duchesne's Origines du Culte Chrétien, of which
a good trans. by Mrs. McClure has been pub, by S.P.C.K. Cf. also F. Cabrol, Les
Eglises de Jerusalem; la discipline et la liturgae au IVmé Siècle, Etude
sur la Peregrinatio Salviae.
[G.T.S. AND H.W.]