Category
page 1Donatists
Donatus Magnus
founder of Donatism
Ticonius
Ticonius, also spelled Tyconius or Tychonius (active 370–390 AD), was a major theologian of 4th-century North African Latin Christianity. He was a Donatist writer whose conception of the City of God influenced St. Augustine of Hippo (who wrote a book on the same topic).
Robba
thumb|Epitaph of Robba, which reads: 'Memorial of Robba, consecrated servant of God, sister of Honoratus bishop of Aquae Sirensis; having succumbed to the mutiny of the traditores, she earned the dignity of a martyr; she was fifty years old and gave up the spirit on the eighth day of the [[calends of April in the year 395 of the province [434 CE]']]
Parmenian
Parmenian (Latin: Parmenianus; died ca. 392) was a North African Donatist bishop, the successor of Donatus in the Donatist bishopric of Carthage. He wrote several works defending the rigorist views of the Donatists and is recognized as "the most famous Donatist writer of his day", but none of his writings have survived.