The
Desert Fathers were early Christian
hermits,
ascetics, and
monks who lived mainly in the
Scetes desert of Egypt beginning around the
third century AD. The
Apophthegmata Patrum is a collection of the writings of some of the early desert monks and nuns, representing the Divine Wisdom they received, still in print as
Sayings of the Desert Fathers. The most well known was
Anthony the Great, who moved to the desert in 270–271 and became known as both the father and founder of desert monasticism. By the time Anthony died in 356, thousands of monks and nuns had been drawn to living in the desert following Anthony's example — his biographer,
Athanasius of Alexandria, wrote that "the desert had become a city." The Desert Fathers had a major influence on the development of Christianity.