History of Gnosticism — Origins to Modern Times

10 articles in this section ⏱ 1 min read
About This Section

Gnosticism emerged in the 1st century AD from the intersection of Jewish apocalypticism, Platonic philosophy, and early Christianity. It flourished across the Mediterranean world in the 2nd and 3rd centuries, was systematically suppressed by the proto-orthodox church, survived in medieval movements like the Cathars, and was rediscovered in the 20th century through the Nag Hammadi Library. This section traces that entire arc.

New here? Start with: The Discovery of Nag Hammadi →
The 1945 discovery that transformed everything we know about Gnostic history.
1st c. AD When Gnosticism first emerged
180 AD Irenaeus writes Against Heresies
1209 Albigensian Crusade begins
1945 Nag Hammadi Library discovered

10 Articles in This Section

01 Origins of Gnosticism Where Gnosticism came from — Jewish, Platonic, and Christian roots. 02 Gnosticism in the Early Christian World Gnostic schools in Rome, Alexandria, and Antioch — 100–300 AD. 03 The Heresiologists Irenaeus, Tertullian, Epiphanius — the men who tried to destroy Gnosticism. 04 The Origins of Christianity How proto-orthodox Christianity emerged and why Gnosticism lost. 05 Gnosticism & Judaism Jewish roots of Gnostic thought — merkabah mysticism, apocalyptic. 06 Gnosticism & Platonism How Plato's philosophy shaped the Gnostic universe. 07 Gnosticism & Zoroastrianism Persian dualism's influence on Gnostic thought. 08 Gnosticism in the Middle Ages Bogomils, Cathars — medieval heirs of the Gnostic tradition. 09 Gnosticism in Modern Times From Nag Hammadi to Jung to Philip K. Dick — the modern revival. 10 Nag Hammadi & Early Christianity What the discovery revealed about the diversity of early Christianity.

The history of Gnosticism is also the history of its suppression. Most Gnostic texts were deliberately destroyed after the proto-orthodox church consolidated power in the 4th century. What survived did so by accident — buried in Egyptian sand, preserved in hostile quotations by heresiologists, or copied by medieval communities who did not know what they were preserving.

Articles for all 10 listed topics are coming. The section will build from earliest origins through the modern period.