Excerpts From Eusebius
THE LIFE OF
CONSTANTINE THE GREAT
THE DRAGON CAST INTO THE ABYSS BY THE 'CHRISTIAN EMPIRE' |
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Chapter III
Of his Picture surmounted by a Cross and
having beneath it a Dragon
and
besides this, he caused to be painted on a lofty tablet, and set up in
the front of the portico of his palace, so as to be visible to all, a
representation of the salutary sign placed above his head, and below it
that hateful and savage adversary of mankind, who by means of the
tyranny of the ungodly had wasted the Church of God, falling headlong,
under the form of a dragon, to the abyss of destruction. For the sacred
oracles in the books of God’s prophets have described him as a dragon
and a crooked serpent; and for this reason the emperor thus publicly
displayed a painted resemblance of the dragon beneath his own and his
children’s feet, stricken through with a dart, and cast headlong into
the depths of the sea.
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