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Tertullian's character was an indication of his home town: intense, restless, with the same intellectual extravagance and fanatical violence. Carthage, destroyed by the Romans, was rebuilt by its new masters. An indispensable port for Africa, Carthage was constantly buzzing with boats coming into port from all over the world. Tertullian's activity was just as impressive. His treatises were so numerous that they couldn't all be copied. They were about the most diverse subjects, and always written in a hurry. The newly-converted Christian assailed the pagans with his arguments and drew swords with heretics. Morality— an married life in particular — became a subject that preoccupied him more and more. In this domain, his attitude was rigorous and intransigent. But he did not neglect the sacraments: he was the first person to offer an authentic treatise on baptism and penitence and he remains forever the founder of the Latin dogma: it was he who elaborated the concept of person to designate the Father, Son and the Holy Spirit. How could a man with such a brilliant mind have been so unforgiving in his judgements, insulting to his adversaries? Let's begin find out...