
You're Dead to Me Hypatia of Alexandria: mathematician, martyr and feminist icon
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Mar 6, 2026 Olga Koch, comedian and quickfire wit. Professor Edith Hall, classics scholar and ancient history expert. They discuss Hypatia’s life in late antique Alexandria. They cover her education, mathematical and astronomical work, the tense politics with Cyril and Orestes, her brutal murder, and her long afterlife as a symbol and feminist icon.
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Hypatia Threw A Sanitary Pad At A Harassing Student
- A likely apocryphal story says a love-struck student harassed Hypatia and she threw a soaking sanitary pad at him to rebuke material attraction.
- The anecdote illustrates her Neoplatonist teaching about loving the ideal form, not the body.
Most Ancient Writings Were Lost So Hypatia's Works Disappeared
- Very little of ancient writing survives; perhaps only 1–5% reached us, which explains why none of Hypatia's own works remain.
- Loss occurred through centuries of selective copying in monasteries and later transmission gaps.
Hate Shows Hypatia's Real Influence In Alexandria
- Hypatia's prominence is measurable by the intensity of hostility she provoked from Christian factions, implying significant public authority.
- Christian antipathy framed her as a pagan threat and targeted her influence over civic leaders.

