Codex 31
[Theodoret, Ecclesiastical History]
Read the Ecclesiastical Historyof Theodoret.[1] Of all the writers mentioned his style is best suited for history. It is generally clear, dignified, and free from redundancies, although he sometimes employs metaphors that are too bold, almost insipid. He gives a fuller account of the proceedings of the second council [2] than other historians, who merely bestow a cursory notice upon them, as if they were unwilling to say much about it. However, even he does not give all the details. He begins his Historywith the heresy of Arius and goes down to the reign of Theodosius the Younger, and the death of Theodore,[3] at the time when Sisinnius was bishop of Constantinople.