| Claudius Apolinarius,1 bishop of Hierapolis in Phrygia, a successor of Papias, was a very active apologetic and polemic writer about a.d. 160-180. He took a leading part in the Montanist and Paschal controversies. Eusebius puts him with Melito of Sardis among the orthodox writers of the second century, and mentions four of his �many works� as known to him, but since lost, namely an �Apology� addressed to Marcus Aurelius (before 174). �Five books against the Greeks� �Two books on Truth.� �Two books against the Jews.� He also notices his later books �Against the heresy of the Phrygians� (the Montanists), about 172. | |