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In page Aelia Eudocia:

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Eudocia returned to Jerusalem in circa 443, where she lived for the last part of her life. In Jerusalem she focused on her writing.[citation needed] She nevertheless retained great influence. She also rekindled her relation with her former ward Peter the Iberian as well as with Melania the Younger, a famous ascetic.[1] She died an Orthodox Christian in Jerusalem on 20 October 460,[2] having devoted her last years to literature.[3] She was buried in Jerusalem in the Church of Saint Stephen,[4] one of the churches she had herself built in Jerusalem;[5] modern St. Stephen's Basilica now stands at the site. The empress never returned to the imperial court in Constantinople, but "she maintained her imperial dignity and engaged in substantial euergetistic programs."[6]