The interpolator who added the excerpt to John of Damascus's sermon specifies that he is excerpting from chapter 40 of the third book of the
Euthymiac History. This interpolation was made early in the history of the text and so achieved a wide distribution. According to the excerpt, at the time of the
council of Chalcedon in 451, the Emperor
Marcian and Empress
Pulcheria asked Patriarch
Juvenal of Jerusalem to have relics of
Mary, mother of Jesus, sent to
Constantinople. Juvenal replied that there were no bodily relics of Mary. Three days after Mary's
Dormition, one of the apostles arrived and asked to see inside
her tomb. When it was opened, her body was no longer there, only
her funeral shroud. Upon being told this, the imperial couple requested the garment and, after his return, Juvenal had it sent to Constantinople, where it was placed in
a church in Blachernae. The account of the Dormition in the
Euthymiac History belongs to the so-called "late apostle" tradition, a collection of independent legends that relate how one apostle arrived late and did not witness the Dormition. Although often called
Thomas, that name does not appear to have been in the
Euthymiac History. It has been suggested that Juvenal may have invented the doctrine of the Assumption to guard the body of Mary against imperial expropriation, but there is no evidence for the existence of Mary's body as a relic or place of pilgrimage. That a robe purportedly belonging to Mary arrived in Constantinople in a casket at some point before the 7th century is certain, and the
Euthymiac History may contain an accurate account of its origin. The speech of Juvenal contains a long quotation from the
Pseudo-Dionysian Divine Names. ==References==