{469} AS the direct object of the foregoing Volume was to exhibit the doctrine, temper, and conduct of the Arians in the fourth century rather than to write their history, there is much incidental confusion in the order in which the events which it includes are brought before the reader. However, in truth, the chronology of the period is by no means clear, and the author may congratulate himself that, by the scope of his work, he is exempt from the necessity of deciding questions relative to it, on which ancient testimonies and modern critics are in hopeless variance both with themselves and with each other.
Accordingly, he has chosen one authority, the accurate Tillemont, and followed him almost throughout. Here, however, he thinks it well to subjoin some tables on the subject, taken from the Oxford Library of the Fathers, which delineate the main outline of the history, while they vividly illustrate the difficulty of determining in detail the succession of dates.
PRINCIPAL EVENTS
BETWEEN A.D. 325 AND
A.D. 381,
IN CHRONOLOGICAL ORDER
1. From 325 to 337
(Mainly from Tillemont.)
2. From 337 to 342
3. From 342 to 351
(Mainly from Tillemont.)
4. From 351 to 361
{473}
5. From 361 to 381
(From Tillemont.)
The events in italics are grounded on an hypothesis of
the authors who introduce them, that Athanasius made two journeys to
Rome, which they adopt in order to lighten the difficulties of the
chronology.
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Newman Reader Works of John Henry Newman
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