stylite

[ stahy-lahyt ]
/ ˈstaɪ laɪt /

noun Ecclesiastical History.

one of a class of solitary ascetics who lived on the top of high pillars or columns.

Origin of stylite

1630–40; < Late Greek stȳlī́tēs, equivalent to stŷl(os) pillar + -itēs -ite1

OTHER WORDS FROM stylite

sty·lit·ic [stahy-lit-ik] /staɪˈlɪt ɪk/, adjective

Example sentences from the Web for stylite

  • Simeon the Stylite comes down from his pillar-top, and chaffers in the market-place with common folks.

  • He stopped, some paces from the column, and began to examine the stylite, wiping his face meanwhile with the skirt of his toga.

    Thais |Anatole France
  • This old monk was St. Luke the Stylite, appearing in vision.

    Curiosities of Olden Times |S. Baring-Gould
  • A Stylite might have contented himself there; Gilliatt, more luxurious in his requirements, wanted something more commodious.

    Toilers of the Sea |Victor Hugo

British Dictionary definitions for stylite

stylite
/ (ˈstaɪlaɪt) /

noun

Christianity one of a class of recluses who in ancient times lived on the top of high pillars

Derived forms of stylite

stylitic (staɪˈlɪtɪk), adjective

Word Origin for stylite

C17: from Late Greek stulitēs, from Greek stulos a pillar