sculpture, maybe of
Hippolytus of Rome, found in 1551 and used for the attribution of the
Apostolic Tradition The section of the
Alexandrine Sinodos, rediscovered in the 19th century, which was given the name of
Egyptian Church Order, was identified with the lost
Apostolic Tradition attributed to
Hippolytus of Rome by Edward von der Goltz in 1906, and later by
Eduard Schwartz in 1910 and by R.H. Connolly in 1916. This attribution was unanimously accepted by the scholars of that period, and became well-recognized through the works of
Gregory Dix, in particular his famous
The Shape of the Liturgy (1943, 1945). In addition to the above, according to Paul Bradshaw, the attribution to Hippolytus was based on the following data: • the name Hippolytus is present in later
Ancient Church Orders clearly derived from the text of the
Apostolic Tradition, the
Canons of Hippolytus and
The Constitutions through Hippolytus. • the term "apostolic tradition" itself is found on both the first and last page of the text. • in 1551
Pirro Ligorio found an
ancient Roman marble statue of a seated figure near
Campo Verano in
Rome and moved it to the
Vatican Library where it still is. On one surface of the chair was a calendar carved in Greek
paschal cycle, which remembered the one attributed to Hippolytus, and on another surface the titles of numerous writings, some of them by Hippolytus, and one named "On the
charismata—Apostolic Tradition". This brought the scholars to presume the existence of a writing named
Apostolic Tradition by Hippolytus. More recently, the attribution of the
Apostolic Tradition to Hippolytus of Rome has come under substantial criticism. According to several scholars, the
Apostolic Tradition is a work written by another priest named Hippolytus, but who probably lived in
Alexandria, or it contains material of separate sources ranging from the middle second to the fourth century. • the title engraved on the statue refers to
charismata also, but the
Apostolic Tradition does not deal with this topic; ==Content==