The monastery of Agali, probably dedicated to Saints Cosmas and Damian, was founded around 590/600 in the vicinity of Toledo.
[2] In the rest of Spain there was "an older tradition of individual or family asceticism, represented by voluntary celibacy and the setting up of private monastic households".
While bishop, Justus sent a now lost treatise to his eventual successor Richila, but its contents are unknown.
[3] In 636, Justus was succeeded by Eugenius II, another monk of Agali and student of Helladius, who had followed his teacher to Toledo in 615.
[3] Agali constituted a major cluster of ecclesiastical activity for the last century of the existence of Visigothic Spain.