Hypatia of Alexandria: The Woman History Rewrote

In this episode of pplpod, we explore the life, work, and violent death of Hypatia of Alexandria, the mathematician, astronomer, and Neoplatonist philosopher whose legacy became one of the most distorted stories in ancient history. Drawing from historical sources and surviving accounts, the discussion traces Hypatia’s upbringing within Alexandria’s intellectual elite under her father Theon, her rise as a celebrated public philosopher, and her role teaching advanced mathematics, astronomy, and philosophy to students across the Roman world. The episode examines how Hypatia transformed difficult mathematical and astronomical texts into accessible teaching systems while becoming one of the most respected public intellectuals of late antiquity.

The episode also examines the deadly political and religious struggle that engulfed Alexandria during the early fifth century. As tensions escalated between the Roman governor Orestes and Bishop Cyril, Hypatia became the target of a coordinated smear campaign portraying her as a dangerous pagan sorceress manipulating political power through astrology and magic. The discussion follows the mob murder that ended her life in 415 AD, the political consequences that followed, and the centuries of mythmaking that transformed Hypatia into everything from a Christian saintly figure to an Enlightenment martyr for science. Through philosophy, politics, religion, and historical memory, the episode reveals how one of antiquity’s most brilliant thinkers was repeatedly rewritten by later generations to fit entirely different agendas.

Key topics covered:

• Hypatia’s upbringing in Alexandria and her education under Theon

• Neoplatonism, philosophy, mathematics, and ancient astronomy

• The political conflict between Orestes and Bishop Cyril

• The mob murder of Hypatia in 415 AD and its aftermath

• How later centuries transformed Hypatia into competing political and cultural symbols

Source credit: Research for this episode included transcript materials and supporting historical sources accessed 6/10/2026. Content is summarized and adapted for commentary and educational use.

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