Julianus, missionary priest to the Nubians
Julianus (73), missionary priest to the
Nubians in the reign of Justinian. John of
Ephesus (R. Payne Smith's trans. pp. 251 seq.)
and Bar-hebraeus (in Asseman. Bibl. Or. ii.
330) give an account of him. He was an old
man of great worth, and one of the clergy in
attendance on Theodosius, the Monophysite
patriarch of Alexandria, then residing at Constantinople.
Julian had long desired to
Christianize the Nobadae or Nubians, a
wandering people E. of the Thebais and beyond
the limits of the empire, which they
greatly harassed. The empress Theodora
warmly encouraged the undertaking and consulted
Justinian about it, who became interested
but objected to Julian as a Monophysite,
and named another instead, whilst Theodora
persisted in favouring Julian. John of
Ephesus describes fully the rival missions and
the triumph of the empress's schemes. Julian
reached the Nubian court first, won over the
king and secured the rejection of the emperor's
envoy when he arrived. Thus the Nubians
were gained to the Monophysite creed and to
the jurisdiction of Theodosius. After labouring
there two years Julian placed Theodore, a
Thebaid bishop, in charge and returned to Constantinople,
where he soon afterwards died.
For the subsequent history of the mission see
LONGINUS.
[T.W.D.]