Patrologia Graeca


The Patrologia Graeca is an edited collection of writings by the Christian Church Fathers and various secular writers, in the Greek language. It consists of 161 volumes produced in 1857-1866 by J. P. Migne's Imprimerie Catholique, Paris. It includes both the Eastern Fathers and those Western authors who wrote before Latin became predominant in the Western Church in the 3rd century, e.g. the early writings collectively known as the Apostolic Fathers, such as the First and Second Epistle of Clement, the Shepherd of Hermas, Eusebius, Origen, and the Cappadocian Fathers Basil the Great, Gregory of Nazianzus, and Gregory of Nyssa.
The 161 volumes are bound as 166. An important final volume, which included some supplements and a full index, was never published, as the plates were destroyed in a fire at the printer.
The first series contained only Latin translations of the originals. The second series contains the Greek text with a Latin translation. The texts are interlaced, with one column of Greek and a corresponding column on the other side of the page that is the Latin translation. Where the Greek original has been lost, as in the case of Irenaeus, the extant Greek fragments are interspersed throughout the Latin text. In one instance, the original is preserved in Syriac only and translated into Latin. Quite often, information about the author is provided, also in Latin.
A Greek, D. Scholarios, added a half-published list of the authors and subjects, and began a complete table of contents. In 1912, Garnier Frères, Paris, published a Patrologia Graeca index volume, edited by Ferdinand Cavallera.

List of volumes

As with the Patrologia Latina, the authors are in chronological order, spanning the period from the earliest Christian writers to the Fall of Constantinople.

pre-Nicaean

4th century

5th century

6th century

7th century

8th century

9th century

10th century

11th century

12th century

13th century

14th century

15th century

Republication

A new edition has been prepared by the Centre for Patristic Studies, Athens. It comprises additional supplements: introductions, bibliographies, biographical summaries, detailed tables of contents and hagiographic passages.

Citations