Melania the younger, daughter of Publicola
Melania (2), daughter of Publicola son of MELANIA
(1); born at Rome c. 383. She married Pinianus when
exceedingly young, yielding to the wish of her father, though she
was already imbued with the ascetic teachings of her grandmother,
then living at Jerusalem. The young husband and wife were induced
by Melania the elder in 397 to take a vow of continence, but
refused to separate. They accompanied the grandmother from Rome
(a.d. 408) to Sicily and
Africa; but, when she returned to Jerusalem, they remained at Sagaste,
attaching themselves to the bp. Alypius and enjoying the friendship of
Augustine. On the death of the elder Melania the still considerable
remains of her estates became the property of her granddaughter. She
gave away those in Gaul and Italy, but kept those in Sicily, Spain, and
Africa; and this led to the attempt of the people of Hippo to induce PINIANUS
to become a priest of their church. In the scene in which a promise was
exacted from them to remain at Hippo, Melania shewed great courage. When
through the rapacity of the rebel count Heraclian she was denuded of
her property, and thus set free from the promise to remain at Hippo,
she accompanied her husband to Egypt, and, after staying among the
monastic establishments of the Thebaid and visiting Cyril at Alexandria,
eventually went to Palestine, and, together with her mother Albina,
settled at Bethlehem in 414. There they attached themselves to Jerome,
and to the younger Paula, who then presided over the convent. Their
ascetic convictions had so developed that they now accepted that
separation which the elder Melania had vainly urged in her lifetime.
Pinianus became the head of a monastery and Melania entered a convent. By
the settlement of Melania at Bethlehem the feud was extinguished
which had separated the followers of Rufinus from those of Jerome;
and although in his letter to Ctesiphon (cxxiii. 3, ed. Vall., date
415) Jerome still has a bitter expression about the elder Melania,
in his last wetter to Augustine (cxliii. 2, ed. Vall.) in 419, Albina,
Pinianus, and Melania are joined with Paula in their reverential
greetings. Their intercourse with Augustine continued, and in answer to
their questions on the Pelagian controversy he wrote his treatise On
Grace and Original Sin, a.d.
418. Melania apparently lived on for many years. Photius says
that
718she came to Constantinople in 437 and obtained
his conversion and baptism at the hands of Proclus. Palladius,
Hist. Laus. 119, 121; Augustine, Epp. 125, 126, and
de Grat. Christi, ii. and xxxii., Surius, p. 380, Dec. 31;
Photius, Cod. 53, p. 44.
[W.H.F.]