Letter 47

Synesius of CyreneTheotimus|c. 411 AD|synesius cyrene

To Theotimus.

Consider Peter as well: the scourge of Pentapolis, a man who breaks its laws without method. God knows this, and so does Dioscurides. But Peter is far more shameless — he simply seizes whatever property he wants and makes it his own. Then when the case comes to court, he buys a favorable verdict by spending a fraction of what he stole.

[The letter continues with Synesius describing the corruption of local officials and asking Theotimus to intervene on behalf of the victims.]

Modern English rendering for readability. See the 19th-century translation or original Latin/Greek for scholarly use.

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