Thursday, July 2, 2026

Traces of Hadrian in Porphyry a fictive purple man from Tyre

 



by

Damien F. Mackey

  

Well, I saw the thing comin' out of the sky
It had a-one long horn and one big eye (Ooh!)
I commenced to shakin' and I said, "Ooh-eee!
It looks like a purple people eater to me!"

 

It was a one-eyed, one-horned, flyin' purple people eater
(One-eyed, one-horned, flyin' purple people eater)
A one-eyed, one-horned, flyin' purple people eater
Sure looks strange to me (One eye?)

 

Well, he came down to Earth and he laid in a tree
I said, "Mr. Purple People Eater, don't eat me!"
I heard him say in a voice so gruff:
"I wouldn't eat you 'cause you're so tough"

 

It was a one-eyed, one-horned, flyin' purple people eater
One-eyed, one-horned, flyin' purple people eater ….

I said, "Mr. Purple People Eater, what's your line?"
He said, "It's eatin' purple people and it sure is fine
But that's not the reason that I came to land
I wanna get a job in a rock and roll band".

 

That is about as real, I think, as Porphyry gets, joining a conga line of ancient fictitious composite characters (e.g. philosophers), such as for instance:

 

Thales of Miletus

 

First philosopher, Thales, likely a Greek borrowing from Joseph of Egypt

 

(3) First philosopher, Thales, likely a Greek borrowing from Joseph of Egypt

 

Apollonius of Tyana and Philo

 

Apollonius of Tyana, like Philo, a fiction

 

(3) Apollonius of Tyana, like Philo, a fiction

 

Socrates

 

‘Socrates’ as a Prophet

 

(3) ‘Socrates’ as a Prophet

 

Buddha

 

Buddha partly based on Moses

 

(3) Buddha partly based on Moses

 

and many, many more.

 

These are generally characters about whom we read that phrase repeated ad nauseam: “Little is known about …”.

 

In some cases these supposedly ground-breaking thinkers wrote absolutely nothing, or, at least, have left us nothing of any writings that they might have scribbled down.

 

Thales of Miletus | Biography & Facts | Britannica

“No writings by Thales survive, and no contemporary sources exist. Thus, his achievements are difficult to assess. Inclusion of his name in the canon of the legendary Seven Wise Men led to his idealization, and numerous acts and sayings, many of them no doubt spurious, were attributed to him, such as “Know thyself” and “Nothing in excess”.”

 

apollonius of tyana little is known - Search

The life of Apollonius of Tyana is shrouded in mystery and legend. While he is often compared to Jesus Christ due to his miraculous acts and ascetic lifestyle, the historical record of his life is sparse. Most of what is known comes from the Life of Apollonius, a fictional biography written by Philostratus …”.

 

Philo of Alexandria (Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy)

“It is impossible to give precise dates for Philo’s birth. The consensus is that he lived between the end of the first century BCE and the middle of the first century CE …”. 

 

Ancient Fact File: Socrates — The Bristorian

“Little is known about [uh, oh] his early life”.

“Since he never wrote anything down, most of what we know about the ancient Greek philosopher is from the writings of his students Plato and Xenophon. This has given rise to an issue known as the Socratic Problem - contradicting accounts of Socrates’ personality and life make it difficult to ascertain who he really was”.

 

Gautama Buddha - Encyclopedia of Buddhism

“Scholars are hesitant to make unqualified claims about the historical facts of the Buddha's life. Most accept that he lived, taught and founded a monastic order, but do not accept many of the details contained in traditional biographies. …. In her biography of the Buddha, Karen Armstrong writes, “It is obviously difficult, therefore, to write a biography of the Buddha that meets modern criteria, because we have very little information that can be considered historically sound ...”.”

 

Porphyry of Tyre (c. 234-305 AD, conventional dating with double question marks) largely fits this same, vague typos:

 

Porphyry (Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy)

“Little is known with certainty about [uh, oh] his life, except what can be gleaned from his own account of Plotinus’ life, the Life of Plotinus. There is an account of his life in Eunapius’ Lives of Philosophers and Sophists but this account clearly depends on the Life of Plotinus and has little reliable to add”. 

“Porphyry was a prolific author who wrote about a whole range of topics. There are some sixty works attributed to him, but most of them are now lost or survive in mere fragments”. “In reality we do not know anything with certainty about where he lived in the latter half of his life”.

 

Those Hadrianic traces –

(remember that we are comparing a real historical figure to a shadowy, fictional one)

 

Information here about Porphyry taken from:

Porphyry (Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy)

 

Considered randomly, there is:

 

-         a strong Tyre connection

 

“Porphyry … was a Neoplatonist philosopher born in Tyre in Phoenicia”.

“… Porphyry … a common name in Tyre, the city of purple”.

 

Antiochus ‘Epiphanes’/Hadrian had such a close association with Tyre - “The emperor Hadrian also awarded Tyre the title of metropolis, "mother city"” - that I have identified him as Ezekiel’s:

 

The Fallen King of Tyre

 

(6) The Fallen King of Tyre

 

-         a cultural/political connection with a Longinus, and Athens

 

“Porphyry … studied with Longinus in Athens …”.

 

Hadrian, too, in his alter ego guise as Trajan:

 

Hadrianus Traianus Caesar – Trajan transmutes to Hadrian

 

(9) Hadrianus Traianus Caesar – Trajan transmutes to Hadrian

 

was connected to a Longinus:

Legions of the Dacian Wars - World History Encyclopedia

“In the summer of 104 CE, Decebalus learned that Trajan was rebuilding his forces along the Danube and wanted to know the emperor’s plans. Meeting with Trajan’s legate in Dacia, Pompeius Longinus, to supposedly discuss further peace plans, the king instead chose to hold Longinus as his prisoner”.

 

And, regarding Hadrian and Athens:

Emperor Hadrian: The Roman Visionary Who Transformed Athens - The Acropolis Of Athens

“Among Rome’s many emperors, Emperor Hadrian stands out as a leader with an extraordinary appreciation for Greek culture. Unlike his predecessors, who saw Athens as merely a provincial city within the vast empire, Hadrian revitalized it, ensuring its legacy endured.

His love for Greek philosophy, art, and traditions led him to transform Athens into a thriving cultural and intellectual hub once again. Through his grand architectural projects, including the Olympieion, Hadrian’s Library, and Hadrian’s ArchEmperor Hadrian reshaped Athens’ landscape, blending Roman imperial ambition with Greek classical elegance.

 

-         a cultural connection with Rome

 

“Porphyry … studied with … Plotinus in Rome …”.

 

The emperor Hadrian, as king Antiochus ‘Epiphanes’:

 

Time to consider Hadrian, that ‘mirror-image’ of Antiochus Epiphanes, as also the census emperor Augustus

 

(7) Time to consider Hadrian, that 'mirror-image' of Antiochus Epiphanes, as also the census emperor Augustus

 

“[Antiochus Epiphanes] had been a hostage in Rome before he became king of Syria …” (I Maccabees 1:10).

 

Hadrian | Biography & Facts | Britannica

“The new emperor remained at Rome for three years. ….

Returning to the west coast in 124, he sailed to Athens and finally reached Rome again in 125. …. Hadrian spent another three years in Rome, but in 128 he set forth again. After a visit to North Africa, he went to Athens …”. 

 

Instead of the influence of a Plotinus, with Hadrian we have a favourably disposed empress, Plotina: Hadrian | Biography & Facts | Britannica

“The greatest single political figure behind the emperor Trajan was the man who had masterminded his elevation, Lucius Licinius Sura. Hadrian enjoyed Sura’s favour, and, as long as he was alive, Hadrian prospered. Trajan’s wife, Plotina, seems also to have been close to Sura and a partisan of Hadrian”. 

 

-         interest in philosophy, an influential thinker

 

“Porphyry … became a follower of the latter’s [Plotinus] version of Platonism”.

“Porphyry wrote in just about every branch of learning practiced at the time but only a portion of his large output is extant. Porphyry was an influential thinker”. 

 

Emperor Hadrian: Rome’s Visionary Builder, Philosopher, and Heart | Bubbly Living

“[Hadrian’s] journeys weren’t just political; they were philosophical quests. He was deeply influenced by Stoic and Epicurean thought and was known for writing poetry and engaging with scholars. His leadership style blended intellect and introspectioncuriosity and culture. In Hadrian, Rome had not only an emperor but a thinker, whose governance echoed his philosophical pursuits”.

 

-         called ‘Basileus’

 

“[Porphyry’s] name was ‘Malcus’, ‘king’ in his native tongue, hence he became ‘Basileus’ (‘king’) in Greek.

 

Hadrian’s alter ego,

Wikipedia

Antiochus IV Epiphanes, also known as Antiochus IV Basileus, was a significant figure in the history of the Seleucid Empire”. 

-         highly religious and superstitious (magic)

 

“In his monumental study, La vie de Porphyre (1913), Bidez portrayed the young Porphyry as someone prone to religion and superstition”.

 

“Porphyry did not reject magic outright … but he seems to have restricted its efficacy to the sphere of nature and not to have regarded it as a means to establish contact with the intelligible realm as philosophy could do”.

 

From Emperor and Author: The Writings of Julian ‘the Apostate’, p. 307 (edited by Nicholas J. Baker-Brian, Shaun Tougher):

Hadrian is teased as a stargazer who was forever prying into ineffable mysteries (311d). La Bletterie was prompted to remark that much the same could be said of Julian [the Apostate]: he and Hadrian were both ‘full of zeal for idolatry’, ‘superstitious […] astrologers wanting to know everything, so constantly inquisitive as to be accused of magic‘. And the likeness did not end there: Julian, assuredly, ‘did not have the infamous [homosexualvices of Hadrian […], but he had almost all his [other] faults and absurdities‘; both of them were ‘fickle, obstinate, and vain of soul’….

 

Chapter 18: Hadrian (A.D. 117–138) | Ecclesiastical History

“The reign of Hadrian presents a paradox. Admired as a cultured intellectual and brilliant administrator, this emperor remains morally enigmatic and religiously elusive”.

 

Against Christianity

 

I had already, some time ago now, identified the Seleucid (Greek) tyrant king, Antiochus ‘Epiphanes’, with the emperor Hadrian even before reading of a Jewish legend according to which Hadrian was he who presided over the martyrdom of the woman and her seven sons in 2 Maccabees 7 – narrated in the text as king Antiochus.

“Nameless in 4 Maccabees, the mother is dubbed … Hannah … in the rabbinic tradition …. The tyrant in the rabbinic versions, however, is not Antiochus Epiphanes but Hadrian: “Hadrian came and seized upon a widow …”.” Stephen D. Moore.

 

So, the Greek king Antiochus ‘Epiphanes’ was the inveterate Grecophile - the supposedly Roman emperor - Hadrian.

 

Some of these Jewish legends can be real game changers!

 

I took the matter further by tentatively suggesting that the martyred woman, traditionally known as Hannah, was the same as the widowed prophetess Anna of Luke 2:36-38, who had seen the Christ Child, “and spoke about the child to all who were looking forward to the redemption of Jerusalem”.

 

Such a vibrant connection is possible only when, as in my greatly revised chronology, the era of Antiochus ‘Epiphanes’ and Judas Maccabeus is collapsed into the period of the Nativity:

 

Merging the Maccabean with the Herodian Age

 

(7) Merging the Maccabean with the Herodian Age

 

That dramatic re-casting of early Christianity now enables for the Seleucid king Antiochus ‘Epiphanes’ to have been a persecutor of those who had actually seen, or proclaimed, the Christ Child.

 

Thus we have the Christian martyrdoms of the emperor Hadrian, the alter ego of Antiochus ‘Epiphanes’, having a Maccabean flavour:

 

Hadrianic patterns of martyrdom

 

(7) Hadrianic patterns of martyrdom

 

Consider, for instance, the extraordinary account of Saint Sophia and her children, in which “Antiochus” is here an official serving the emperor Hadrian:

 

Saint Sophia

 

“An official named Antiochus denounced them to the emperor Hadrian …

who ordered that they be brought to Rome. Realizing that they would be taken

before the emperor, the holy virgins prayed fervently to the Lord Jesus Christ,

asking that He give them the strength not to fear torture and death.

When the holy virgins and their mother came before the emperor,

everyone present was amazed at their composure. They looked

as though they had been brought to some happy festival,

rather than to torture”.

 

This story bears remarkable parallels to that of the widow-martyr, Hannah,

in 2  and 4 Maccabees, especially in my revised context according to which

Antiochus IV ‘Epiphanes’ was Hadrian:

 

Now it all gets really bizarre.

 

Porphyry of Tyre - Wikipedia

In his later years, [Porphyry] married Marcella, a student of philosophy and a widow with seven children” (emphasis added). 

 

I rest my case.

 

The amorphous Porphyry is traditionally considered to have been opposed to Christianity, but intellectually, and not to any bloodthirsty degree:

Porphyry (Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy)

Against the Christians is perhaps Porphyry’s best known title. Of this large work only some fragments have survived”.

“Somewhat disappointingly, perhaps, the fragments from Against the Christians do not exhibit deep metaphysical disagreements; they are mostly concerned with particular, non-philosophical claims made in the Bible and by Christians that Porphyry finds incredible and objectionable”.

 

Nothing as sadistic and violent as in the case of the people-eating tyrant in purple, Antiochus ‘Epiphanes’/Hadrian, of whom Porphyry appears to be just a vague shadow.

 

 

 

Tuesday, June 30, 2026

Trump clearly out of step with core teachings of Christianity

 


 

Amid that decline, Williams argued that there has been "a surprise political player" contributing to Trump's lame-duck downfall: "Chicago-born Pope Leo XIV."

 

Fox News analyst says Pope has exposed Trump as 'flailing lame-duck'

Story by Thomas Kika

 

President Donald Trump is firmly in decline as a "flailing lame-duck," and according to one Fox News analyst, his high-profile feud with Pope Leo XIV has contributed significantly to his loss of support from all but his most devoted base.

 

Juan Williams is a longtime political analyst for Fox News, serving as one of the highly conservative network's few Democratic voices, and one who is not shy about speaking out critically against Trump. In a Monday morning piece for The Hill, Williams wrote that Trump is "sinking deep into disapproval with voters outside his far-right base," with his numbers sinking into "negative territory on the war in Iran, on the economy, and on immigration."

 

Amid that decline, Williams argued that there has been "a surprise political player" contributing to Trump's lame-duck downfall: "Chicago-born Pope Leo XIV."

"With the midterms approaching, the first American pope’s defiant opposition to Trump is coming into view as contributing to Trump’s status as a flailing lame-duck," Williams wrote. "Pope Leo is clear in saying Trump is out of step with Christianity’s core teachings: concern for the poor, skepticism of the rich, embrace of the refugees, and love for thy neighbor. These teachings are diametrically opposed to Trump starting war with Iran."

 

Williams further highlighted an April social media post from the Pope's official X account: “God does not bless any conflict. Anyone who is a disciple of Christ, the Prince of Peace, is never on the side of those who once wielded the sword and today drop bombs.”

 

Despite initially attempting to celebrate and take credit for the first-ever American Pope, Trump has since been engaged in a bitter and often one-sided feud with the Catholic leader, taking personal offense to his remarks calling for immigrants to be treated with dignity and opposing war. In response, the Pope has continued to issue statements construed as direct attacks against Trump's rhetoric, while mostly avoiding ever directly referring to the president.

 

"While Trump slides in the polls, the pope has climbed to be the most popular leader among Americans with a 57 percent favorability, according to Gallup," Williams added.

"The Economist-YouGov polling has the pope with a net favorability of plus 32 while Trump has a rating of negative 22. Most Catholics, regardless of religious observance or demographic group, view Pope Leo favorably. That includes Catholics who regularly attend Mass and those who seldom or never do, according to Pew."

 

He contined: "When asked about Trump’s approach to Pope Leo in a June survey by the Pew Research Center, far more Catholics say Trump has been too critical of Leo (51 percent) than say he hasn’t been critical enough (4 percent). Trump’s response to the pontiff is to share offensive memes on social media suggesting he should be pope. He also falsely claimed that Pope Leo wants Iran to have a nuclear weapon. That’s not true, Mr. President."

 

Williams concluded with an argument that, in a political age "focused on the high cost of daily life, the rising power of super-rich autocrats and the dominance of artificial intelligence," voters in the U.S. are beginning to yearn for "the pope’s old-school Catholic teachings," as opposed to Trump's way of doing things.

"That hunger is far greater than support for Trump’s new wing on the White House, his bumbling renovation of the reflecting pool or building a golden archway entrance to Washington," he wrote. "Trump seems to have met his judgment day courtesy of the Chicago kid who became pope."

 

Fox News analyst says Pope has exposed Trump as 'flailing lame-duck'

 

 

 

 

Monday, June 22, 2026

Feeding wars instead of the hungry

 



 

Pope Leo asserted that access to food is “a fundamental human right

grounded in the dignity of every person”.

  

Pope Leo slams world leaders who 'feed' wars instead of the hungry

 

 

Story by Joshua McElwee

 

Pope Leo on Monday accused world leaders of "feeding" wars instead of the hungry, declaring global priorities "badly skewed".

 

The pontiff, who has been outspoken on political issues in recent months, said governments should increase spending on combating hunger and avoid subjecting food aid to geopolitical limits.

"Conflicts are 'fed' more readily than people are nourished," the first US pope said during his visit to the World Food Programme (WFP) headquarters.

 

He said this "reflects not only operational shortcomings but also a fundamental imbalance in political and moral priorities." Leo, who drew President Donald Trump's ire earlier this year after criticising the Iran war, did not mention any specific leaders.

 

The WFP is the largest provider of food aid worldwide. Its biggest donor is the US, which announced a new $800 million contribution last week, following earlier cuts by President Donald Trump that more than halved planned US funding.

 

Pope Leo XIV holds his speech during a visit to the UN World Food Programme headquarters (Getty)

 

After his address, Pope Leo held a virtual call with WFP workers in several countries, including Venezuela and Lebanon. He lamented that humanitarian crises globally are being relegated to a "secondary place among international priorities".

 

He criticised countries for "increasingly allocated their resources towards national security, economic growth and domestic stability, disregarding the close link between these issues and multilateral cooperation".

 

Cindy McCain, who resigned as the agency's director earlier this year for health reasons, welcomed Leo to the WFP.

 

The organisation warned last week that acute food insecurity would worsen for millions across 13 countries between June and November, due to conflict, funding shortages, and climate shocks. Receiving no direct UN funding, the WFP is seeking $13 billion in donations for 2026.

 

Pope Leo asserted that access to food is "a fundamental human right grounded in the dignity of every person". He concluded that alleviating hunger not only assists those in need but also tackles the underlying causes of geopolitical instability, saying: "Food security is an essential component of global and integral security."

 

Independent readers are independently-minded global citizens. They are not defined by traditional demographics or profiles, but by their attitudes. In today’s increasingly fragmented world, communities value real facts and frank opinions delivered first-hand from a non-biased news brand that they can trust. Armed with information and inspiration, Independent readers are empowered and equipped to take a stand for the things they believe in.

 

Pope Leo slams world leaders who 'feed' wars instead of the hungry