) The result was the first full-length narrative of the world history written from a Christian point of view. According to
Paul Maier,
Herodotus was the father of history and Eusebius of Caesarea is the father of ecclesiastical history. In the early 5th century, two advocates in
Constantinople,
Socrates Scholasticus and
Sozomen, and a bishop,
Theodoret of
Cyrrhus, Syria, wrote continuations of Eusebius's account, establishing the convention of
continuators that would determine to a great extent the way
history was written for the next thousand years. Eusebius's
Chronicle, which attempted to lay out a comparative
timeline of pagan and Old Testament history, set the model for the other historiographical genre, the medieval
chronicle or
universal history. Eusebius had access to the
Theological Library of
Caesarea and made use of many ecclesiastical monuments and documents, acts of the martyrs, letters, extracts from earlier Christian writings, lists of bishops, and similar sources, often quoting the originals at great length so that his work contains materials not elsewhere preserved. It is therefore of historical value, though it pretends neither to completeness nor to the observance of due proportion in the treatment of the subject-matter. Nor does it present in a connected and systematic way the history of the early Christian Church. It is to no small extent a vindication of the Christian religion, though the author did not primarily intend it as such. Eusebius has been often accused of intentional falsification of the truth . Other scholars, while admitting that his judging of persons or facts is not entirely unbiased, push back on claims of intentional fabrication as "quite unjust." ==Plan of the work==