Certainty: 0 Lazaros of Galesion & women (c. 1042)
When Bartholomaios and another monk went out on monastery business, they spent the night at a layman's house, but his wife seduced the other monk. Batholomaios thought he would have killed the woman if he had a knife; on their return to the monastery, Lazaros knew of these thoughts. A nun who wished to go to Jerusalem put on a man's clothes and visited Lazaros as she passed Ephesos. After speaking to her, he called her back, said he knew of her disguise and persuaded her to return to her convent. She later told the story to the monk Neophytos. As soon as a female visitor saw Lazaros on his pillar, she started beating her breast and weeping for her sins. She confessed to him, managed to kiss his face, then left in peace. A priest's wife whom her husband abused polluted his wine with blood to send him mad, on the advice of an evil woman, to have grounds for divorce. But the priest used the wine in the eucharist, thus purifying it. When the woman realised what had happened, she went to Lazaros, who advised the monastic life for both of them. Another priest's wife tried to seduce a monk who entered her house, but he saved himself by invoking Lazaros' name. He advised the mother of one of his monks to become a nun, which she did. Another woman offered the monk Esaias only bread and an egg. When she realised her stinginess, she approached Esaias and Lazaros, who taught her to practise true hospitality. A widow in Constantinople had great faith in Lazaros, and sheltered two of his monks in her house when they visited the capital. She looked after one of them when he was attacked by a demon