CRISTO RAUL. READING HALL THE DOORS OF WISDOM |
THE HISTORY OF THE POPES |
PLATINA'S LIBER PONTIFICALIS ON THE POPES OF THE FIFTH CENTURY
INNOCENTIUS I. A.D. 402-417.
INNOCENTIUS, an Alban, son of Innocentius, was bishop in part of the reign
of Theodosius, who, with great conduct and singular despatch,
overcame the usurper Maximus, and at Aquileia, whither he had fled, retaliated
upon him the death of Gratian,—a fate which the good Bishop Martinus had
foretold to Maximus himself, when he was going, against all right and justice,
to invade Italy, having drained Britain of its military forces, and left it an
easy prey to the Scots and Picts. Moreover, Theodosius, relying wholly upon the
Divine aid, in a very short time defeated not only Andragatius,
Maximus's general, and Victor his son, but Argobastus and Eugenius, two other usurpers; which was the occasion of that strain of the
poet Claudian upon this Emperor's success :
Darling of Heaven, with whom the skies combine,
And the confederate winds in battle join!
He was not only a great soldier, but a very pious and devout man, as
appears by his carriage upon the repulse he found at the Church of Milan; for,
being forbidden entrance by Ambrose the bishop of it, till he should have
repented of a certain crime committed by him, he so well resented the bishop's
plain dealing with him, that he frankly gave him thanks for it, and completed
his course of penance for the fact that had been the occasion of it. By his
Empress Flaccilla he had two sons, Arcadius and Honorius. Being once in a great
transport of rage against the citizens of Thessalonica for their having killed
a soldier, or, as others say, a magistrate of his, all the clergy of Italy were
scarce able to keep him from destroying the whole city upon that provocation.
But afterwards coming to himself, and understanding the matter better, being
convinced of his error, he both bewailed the fact which he had only willed, but
not executed, and also made a law that the punitive decrees of princes should
be deferred for three days, that so they might have space left for compassion
or retraction. It is reported of him that, when at any time he was in a sudden
heat of anger, he would force himself to repeat over distinctly all the letters
of the alphabet, that so in the meantime his anger might evaporate. It is said
also that he contracted a great friendship with one John, an Anchorite, whose
advice he always used, both in war and peace. But in the fiftieth year of his
age he died at Milan.
Innocentius, improving the opportunity of such a peaceable state of affairs and so propitious
a prince, made several constitutions concerning matters of the Church. He
appointed that every Saturday should be a
fast, because our blessed Saviour lay in the grave, and His
disciples fasted on that day. He made
certain laws concerning the Jews and pagans, and for the regulation of monks. By the consent of
Theodosius he banished from the city and
confined to a monastic life the Cataphrygian heretics of the gang of Montanus,
Priscilla, and Maximilla. Moreover, he condemned
the heresy of Pelagius and
Coelestinus, who preferred free-will before the Divine grace, and asserted, that men by their own natural
strength were able to perform the laws of
God; against whom St Austin wrote largely. But Pelagius
persisting obstinately in his opinions
against all conviction, went into Britain and infected the whole island with his errors, being
assisted by Julian, his companion and
confederate in that wicked design. He also
consecrated the church of Gervasius and Protasius, erected and beautified at the cost of a lady named
Vestina, whose goods and jewels, bequeathed
by will, were sold according to a just appraisement, and employed to that
purpose. This church was endowed with
several estates both in houses and land
within and without the city, and the cure of it, and that of St Agnes, given to Leopardus and Paulinus, two presbyters. In his time lived
Apollinarius, Bishop of Laodicea (from
whom the Apollinarians had their name and original), a man vehement and subtle at disputation;
who maintained, that our Saviour at His incarnation took only a body, not a soul; but being pressed
hard with arguments to the contrary,
he at length granted that He had indeed an animal soul but not a rational one, that being
supplied by His divinity,—an opinion which had been
before exploded by Damasus and Peter, Bishop of
Alexandria. But Martianus, Bishop of
Barcelona, a man eminent for his chastity and eloquence, was very orthodox in matters of faith, and
a great opposer of the Novatian heresy. Cyril also, Bishop of Jerusalem, who
before had been several times deposed and as often restored, at length, under
Theodosius the Emperor, held his episcopal dignity peaceably and without
interruption eight years together, and became a great writer. Euzoius, who in his youth had been co-disciple to Gregory
Nazianzen at Cesarea, under Thespesius the rhetorician, took a vast deal of pains in amending and rectifying the
corrupted copies of the works of Origen and Pamphilus, and was himself a
considerable author. At the same time Hieronymus, a presbyter living in
Bethlehem, was a very successful propagator of Christianity, as appears by his
writings. Now also the Synod of Bordeaux condemned the doctrine of Priscillian,
a heresy patched up out of the tenets of the Gnostics and Manichees,
of whom we have spoken above. Our Innocentius, having at four ordinations made
thirty presbyters, twelve deacons, fifty-four bishops, died and was buried July
the 28th. He sat in the chair fifteen years, two months, twenty-five days and
by his death the see was vacant twenty- two days.
Z O S I M U S. a.d. 417-418.
ZOSIMUS, a Grecian, his father's name Abraham, lived during the reign of
Arcadius and Honorius, who succeeded their father Theodosius, in the Empire.
These divided the government between them, Arcadius ruling in the east,
and Honorius in the west, though Theodosius had left them to the tuition of
three of his generals, who, as their guardians and protectors, were to manage
affairs in their minority; Ruffinus in the east, Stilico in the west, and Gildo in Africa. But they, moved
with ambition and a thirst after greatness, and not doubting to get the
advantage of the young princes, set up every one for himself. Against Gildo,
who was engaged in a rebellion in Africa, his injured and incensed brother,
Mascezel, is sent with an army, and soon defeats and puts him to flight, who
not long after died, either through grief or by poison. And Mascezel himself,
being so puffed up with this success, that he falls into a great contempt of
God and cruelty towards men, is killed by his own soldiers. Ruffinus also, who endeavoured to possess himself of the
empire of the east, is surprised and punished by Arcadius. At this time Rhadaguisus, King of the Goths, invaded Italy, and laid all
waste with fire and sword wherever he came; but, by the Roman army, under the
command of Stilico, he was vanquished and slain on
the mountains of Fiesoli. Him Alaricus succeeded,
whom Stilico, to work his own ambitious designs, very
much countenanced and assisted, when he might have conquered him. But in the
end, Alaricus being now at Polentia, on his way to
Gaul, part of which Honorius had granted to him and his followers to inhabit,
had disturbance given him by one Saul, a Hebrew by birth and religion, whom Stilico to the foul breach of articles had sent with a
party for that purpose. It was an easy matter to surprise and disorder the
Goths, who little suspected any such practices, and were peaceably celebrating
the feast of Easter. But the day following, Alaricus engaging with them slew
Saul, and made a universal slaughter of his men, and then changing his former
course towards Gaul, moves against Stilico and the
Roman army. These he overcame, and then after a long and grievous siege, takes the
city of Rome itself, A.U.C. 1163, A.D. 411. Notwithstanding this success,
Alaricus exercised so much moderation and clemency, that he commanded his
soldiers to put as few to the sword as might be, and particularly to spare all
that should fly for refuge to the churches of St Peter and St Paul. After three
days' plunder he leaves the city (which had suffered less damage than was
thought, very little of it being burnt), and marches against the Lucani and Bruti, and having
taken and sacked Cosenza, he there dies. Whereupon the Goths with one consent
made his kinsman, Athaulphus, his successor; who,
returning to Rome with his army, was so wrought upon by the Emperor Honorius's
sister, Galla Placidia, whom he had married, that he restrained his soldiers
from committing any further outrages, and left the city to its own government.
He had it certainly once in his purpose to have razed to the ground the then
city of Rome, and to have built a new one which he would have called Gotthia, and have left to the ensuing emperors his own
name, so that they should not any longer have had the title of Augusti, but Athaulphi. But Placidia not only brought his mind off from
that project, but also prevailed with him to enter into a league with Honorius
and Theodosius the Second, the son of Arcadius.
Zosimus, notwithstanding all these disturbances, made several ecclesiastical
constitutions; allowed the blessing of wax-tapers on
the Saturday before Easter in the several parishes; forbade the clergy to frequent public
drinking-houses (though allowing them all innocent liberty among themselves), or any servant to be
made a clergyman, because that order
ought to consist of none but free and ingenuous persons. Whereas now, not only servants and bastards,
but the vile off-spring of the most
flagitious parents are admitted to that
dignity, whose enormities will certainly at long-run prove fatal to the Church. It is said that Zosimus at
this time sent Faustinus, a bishop, and
two presbyters of the city, to the council
of Carthage, by them declaring that no debates concerning ecclesiastical affairs ought to be managed
anywhere without permission of the Church of Rome. During his pontificate lived Lucius, a
bishop of the Arian faction, who wrote certain
books upon several subjects. Diodorus also, Bishop of Tarsus, during his being a presbyter of
Antioch, was a great writer; following the
sense of Eusebius, but not able to reach
his style for want of skill in secular learning. Tiberianus likewise, who had been accused
together with Priscillian, wrote an apology to
free himself from the suspicion of heresy. Evagrius, a man of smart and brisk parts, translated into
Latin "The Life of St Anthony", written in Greek by Athanasius. Ambrosius of
Alexandria, a scholar of Didymus, wrote a large volume against Apollinarius. At
this time flourished those two famous
bishops, Theophilus of Alexandria, and John of
Constantinople, for the greatness of his eloquence deservedly surnamed Chrysostom, who so far prevailed
upon Theodorus and Maximus, two
co-disciples of his, that they left their
masters, Libanius the rhetorician, and Andragatius the philosopher, and became
proselytes to Christianity. This Libanius, lying now at the point of death,
being asked whom he would leave successor in his school, made answer, that he
desired no other than Chrysostom, were he not a Christian. At this time the
decrees of the council of Carthage, being sent to Zosimus, were by him
confirmed, and thereby the Pelagian heresy condemned throughout the world. Some
tell us that Petronius, Bishop of Bononia, and Possidonius, an African bishop, had now gained a mighty reputation
for sanctity; that Primasius wrote largely against
the heresies to Bishop Fortunatus; and that Proba, wife to Adelphus the
proconsul, composed an historical poem of our Saviour's life, consisting wholly of Virgilian verse, though others attribute the honour of this performance to Eudoxia, Empress of
Theodosius the younger. But certainly the most learned person of the age he
lived in was Augustinus, St Ambrose's convert, Bishop of Hippo in Africa, a
most strenuous defender of the Christian faith, both in discourse and writing.
As for Zosimus, having ordained ten presbyters, three deacons, eight bishops,
he died, and was buried in the Via Tiburtina, near
the body of St Laurence the martyr, December 26th. He sat in the chair one
year, three months, twelve days, and by his death the see was vacant eleven
days.
BONIFACIUS I. a.d. 419-422.
BONIFACE, a Roman, son of Jucundus, a
presbyter, was bishop in the time of Honorius.
At this time a great dissension arose among the clergy, for though
Boniface was chosen bishop in one church of the city by one party, yet Eulalius
was elected and set up against him by a contrary faction in another. This, when
Honorius, who was now at Milan, came to understand, at the solicitation of his
sister Placidia, and her son Valentinian, they were both banished the city. But
about seven months after Boniface was recalled, and confirmed in the pontifical
dignity.
In the meantime, Athaulphus dying, Vallias was made king of the Goths, who, being terrified by
the judgments inflicted on his people, restored Placidia, whom he had always
used very honourably, to her brother Honorius, and
entered into a league with him, giving very good hostages for the confirmation
of it; as did also the Alanes, Vandals, and Suevians.
This Placidia Honorius gave in marriage to Constantius, whom he had declared
Caesar, who had by her a son named Valentinian; but she being afterwards banished
by her brother, went into the East with her sons Honorius and Valentinian.
Our Boniface ordained that no woman, though a nun, should touch the
consecrated pall or incense: and that no servant or debtor should be admitted
into the clergy. Moreover, he built an oratory upon the ground where St
Felicitas the martyr was buried, and very much adorned her tomb. During his pontificate
flourished divers famous men, especially Hierom, a
presbyter, son of Eusebius, born at a town called Stridon,
seated in the confines of Dalmatia and Hungaria, but demolished
by the Goths. It is not to my purpose to rehearse how great benefit the Church
of God reaped from his life and writings, since he is known to have been a
person of extraordinary sanctity, and his works are had in so great honour and esteem, that no author is more read by learned
men than he. He died at Bethlehem on the last day of September in the ninety-first
year of his age. Besides him there were also Gelasius, successor to Euzoius in the bishopric of Caesarea Palestinae,
a man of excellent parts; Dexter, son of Pacianus, who
compiled an history inscribed to St Hierom;
Amphilochius, who wrote concerning the Holy Ghost in an elegant style; and
Sophronius, commended by St Hierom for his learned
book of the "Destruction of Serapis". It is said also that at this time Lucianus, a
presbyter, directed by a divine revelation,
found out the sepulchres of St Stephen the
proto-martyr, and Gamaliel, St Paul's master, of which he gave an account to all the churches by an
epistle in Greek, which was afterwards
translated into Latin by Abundus, a Spaniard, and sent to Orosius. Some likewise tell
us that John Cassianus and Maximine,
two very learned men, lived in this age; but though it be doubtful of them, it is not so concerning
Eutropius, St Austin's scholar, who, in a handsome style, epitomised the Roman history, from the
building of the city to his own times; and
who, moreover, wrote to his two sisters, recluses, concerning chastity, and the love of religion; to whom
we may add Juvenal, the Bishop of
Constantinople, and Heros, a disciple of
St Martin, the wrongfully deposed Bishop of Aries, both men of great reputation for sanctity. As
for Boniface himself, having at one ordination made thirteen presbyters,
three deacons, thirty-six bishops, he died October 25th, and was buried in the
Via Salaria, near the body of St Felicitas the martyr. He sat in the chair
three years, eight months, seven days. Boniface being dead, some of the clergy
recalled Eulalius, but he either, through indignation at his former repulse, or
from contempt of worldly greatness, disdained the revocation, and died the year
following. The see was then vacant nine days.
CAELESTINUS I. a.d. 422-432.
CAELESTINE, a Campanian, lived in the times of Theodosius the younger.
This Theodosius, upon the death of that excellent prince Honorius, creates the
son of his aunt Placidia, Valentinian, Caesar, and commits to his charge the
Western Empire, who, being immediately, by the universal consent of all Italy
acknowledged their emperor, and actually entering upon the government at
Ravenna, was wonderfully prosperous in subduing the enemies of the Roman state,
and particularly John the usurper. In the meantime the Vandals, Alemans and
Goths, a barbarous and savage people, passing over out of Spain into Africa,
under the conduct of their king Gensericus, not only
miserably depopulated and harassed that province with fire and sword, but also
corrupted the Catholic faith there with the mixture of Arianism, and banished
some orthodox bishops; during which troubles St Augustine, Bishop of Hippo,
died in the third month of the siege of that city, August 28th, in the
seventy-seventh year of his age. The Vandals having taken Carthage, sailed to
Sicily, and made the like havoc in that island; as also did the Picts and Scots
in the island of Britain. In this extremity the Britains implored the aid of Aetius, a patrician and a famous soldier, but he not only
denied them his assistance, but having other ambitious designs to carry on,
solicited the Huns to invade Italy. The Britains being thus deserted by Aetius, call over the Saxons or English to their help,
whom they soon found more their enemies than assistants; for being in a little
time overrun by them, they lost both their country and their name. While these
things were transacting, Theodosius, dying at Constantinople in the
twenty-seventh year of his and his uncle Honorius's reign, Bleda and Atilla,
two brothers, kings of the Huns, invading Illyricum, laid waste and burned all
places to which they came.
Notwithstanding our Caelestine ordained
several rites appertaining to divine worship, as that, besides the epistle and gospel before the Mass, the Psalms
of David should be sung by all
alternately. Martinus Cassinas tells us, that the Psalm Judica me Deus, "Give sentence with me, O God,
and defend my cause," &c., which is
used at the beginning of the sacrifice, was introduced by him; as likewise the Gradual is
ascribed to him. Many other ecclesiastical
constitutions he made, to be seen in the
archives of the Church. He also dedicated and enriched the Julian church. At this time Nestorius,
Bishop of Constantinople, endeavoured to sow a new error in the Church, asserting that Christ was
born of the Virgin Mary a mere man, and
that the Divinity was conferred upon him of merit. To this impious doctrine Cyril, Bishop of
Alexandria, and our Caelestine,
opposed themselves very strenuously. For in a synod
of two hundred bishops, held at Ephesus, Nestorius himself, and the heresy denominated from
him, together with the Pelagians, who were great favourers of the Nestorian party, were by universal
consent condemned in thirteen canons levelled against
their foolish opinions. Moreover, Celestine sent Germanus, Bishop of Auxerre,
into England to oppose the Pelagian heresy, and reduce the inhabitants to the
orthodox faith; and Palladius, whom he had made a bishop, to the Scots, who desired to be
instructed in the Christian religion. And indeed
it cannot be denied but that, by his endeavours and the industry of those whom he employed to that purpose, a great
part of the west were converted to Christianity. It is said that at this time
the devil assumed human shape, and pretended
himself to be Moses, and imposed upon a multitude of
Jews, by undertaking to conduct them
out of the island of Crete into the land of promise through the sea, as upon dry land, in
imitation of the ancient miracle wrought for
that people at the Red Sea. Many of them
followed this false Moses, and perished in the waters, those only being reported to have been saved
who presently owned Christ to be the
true God. Our Caelestine having, at three Decembrian ordinations, made thirty-two presbyters, twelve deacons,
sixty-two bishops, died, and was buried in the cemetery of Priscilla, in the
Via Salaria, April 6th. He sat in the chair ten years, ten months, seventeen
days, and by his death the see was vacant twenty-one days.
SIXTUS III. a.d. 432-440.
SIXTUS the Third, a Roman, son of Sixtus, lived in the time of
Valentinian, who, being governor of the Western Empire, entered into a league
with Gensericus, king of the Vandals, whom he
permitted to inhabit part of Africa, confining themselves within certain
boundaries agreed upon between them. Genseric being afterwards instigated by
the Arians, became very zealous in propagating their errors, and violently
persecuted the orthodox bishops. And Valentinian going to Constantinople, and
there marrying Theodosius's daughter, the Vandals in the meantime, under
Genseric's conduct, retook and sacked Carthage in the five hundred and
eighty-fourth year since its first being in the hands of the Romans. While
these things were transacting in Africa, Attila, King of the Huns, not
contented to have invaded the two Hungaries,
miserably harasses Macedonia, Mysia, Achaia, and the Thraces;
and then, that he might have no sharer in the kingdom, puts to death his
brother Bleda. Soon after, his growing ambition prompts him to endeavour the gaining of the western Empire; and therefore
getting together in a very little time a great army, he begins his march upon
that design. This Aetius having intelligence of, forthwith sends ambassadors to
Toulouse to King Theodoric to strike up a peace, with whom so strict a league
was concluded, that they both jointly engage in the war against Attila, at a
common charge and with equal forces. The Romans and Theodoric had for their
auxiliaries the Alanes, Burgundians, Franks, Saxons, and indeed almost all the
people of the west. At length Attila comes upon them in the fields of
Catalonia, and battle is joined with great valour and
resolution on either side. The fight was long and sharp; a voice being
overheard, none knowing from whence it came, was the occasion of putting an end
to the dispute. In this engagement were slain on both sides eighteen thousand
men, neither army flying or giving ground. And yet it is said that Theodoric,
Father of King Thurismond, was killed in this action.
Sixtus had not long enjoyed the pontificate before he was publicly accused by one Bassus; but
in a synod of fifty-seven bishops he
made such a defence of himself, that he was by them all with one consent
acquitted. Bassus, his false accuser, was, with the
consent of Valentinian and his mother Placidia, excommunicated and condemned to banishment, but with
this compassionate provision, that at
the point of death the Viaticum of the blessed
sacrament should not be denied him; the forfeiture of his estate was adjudged,
not to the Emperor, but the Church. It is
said that in the third month of his exile he died, and that our Bishop Sixtus did with his own hands wrap
up and embalm his corpse, and then
bury it in St Peter's church. Moreover,
Sixtus repaired and enlarged the church of the Blessed Virgin, which was anciently called by the name ot Liberius, near
the market place of Livia, then had the name of St Mary at the manger, and last of all was called
St Maries the Great. That Sixtus did very
much beautify and make great
additions to it, appears from the inscription on the front of the first arch in these words, Xystus Episcopus Plebi Dei; for, according to the Greek
orthography, the name begins with X and y,
though by custom it is now written Sixtus with S and i. To this church this bishop was
very liberal and munificent; among other
instances adorning with porphyry stone the ambo or desk where the gospel and epistles are read.
Besides what he did himself, at his persuasion
the Emperor Valentinian also was very
liberal in works of this nature. For over the Confessory of St Peter, which he richly adorned, he placed the image of our Saviour in gold
set with jewels, and renewed those silver
ornaments in the Cupola of the Lateran Church which the Goths had taken way. Some are of an opinion that
in his time one Peter, a Roman
presbyter, by nation a Slavonian, built the
Church of St Sabina upon the Aventine, not far from the monastery of St Boniface, where St Alexius is
interred. But I rather think this to have
been done in the pontificate of Cselestine the first, as appears from an
inscription in heroic verse, yet
remaining, which expresses as much. It is said also, that at this time flourished Eusebius of Cremona and
Philip, two scholars of St Hierom, both very elegant writers, as also Eucherius, Bishop of Lyons, a man
of great learning and eloquence, and Hilarius, Bishop of Arles, a pious man,
and of no mean parts. Our Sixtus having employed all his estate in the building
and adorning of churches, and relieving the poor, and having made twenty-eight
presbyters, twelve deacons, fifty- two bishops, died, and was buried in a vault
in the Via Tiburtina, near the body of St Laurence.
He was in the chair eight years, nine days, and by his death the see was vacant
twenty-two days.
LEO I. THE GREAT a.d. 440-461.
LEO, a Tuscan, son of Quintianus, lived at the time when Attila, having
returned into Hungary from the fight of Catalonia, and there recruited his
army, invaded Italy, and first set down before Aquileia, a frontier city of
that province, which held out a siege of three years. Despairing hereupon of
success, he was just about to raise the leaguer, when observing the storks to
carry their young ones out of the city into the fields, being encouraged by
this omen, he renews his batteries, and making a fierce assault, at length
takes the miserable city, sacks and burns it, sparing neither age nor sex, but
acting agreeably to the title he assumed to himself of being God's scourge. The
Huns having hereby gained an inlet into Italy, overrun all the country about Venice,
possessing themselves of the cities, and demolishing Milan and Pavia. From
hence Attila marching towards Rome, and being come to the place where the Menzo
runs into the Po, ready to pass the river, the holy Bishop Leo, out of a tender
sense of the calamitous state of Italy and of the city of Rome, and with the
advice of Valentinian, goes forth and meets him, persuading him not to proceed
any further, but to take warning by Alaricus, who, soon after his taking that
city, was, by the judgment of God, removed out of the world. Attila takes the
good bishop's counsel, being moved thereunto by a vision which he saw, while
they were discoursing together, of two men (supposed to be St Peter and St
Paul) brandishing their naked swords over his head, and threatening him with
death, if he were refractory. Desisting therefore from his design, he returns
into Hungary, where not long after he was choked with his own blood violently
breaking out at his nostrils, through excess of drinking.
Leo returning to the city, applies himself wholly to the defence of the Catholic faith, which was now violently
opposed by several kinds of heretics, but
especially by the Nestorians and
Eutychians. Nestorius, Bishop of Constantinople, affirmed the blessed Virgin to be mother, not of God,
but of man only, that so he might make the
humanity and divinity of Christ to be
two distinct persons, one the son of God, the other the son of man. But Eutyches, Abbot of Constantinople,
that he might broach an heresy in
contradiction to the former, utterly
confounded the divine and human nature of Christ, asserting them to be one, and not at all to be
distinguished. This heresy being condemned by
Flavianus, bishop of Constantinople, with the consent of Theodosius, a synod is
called at Ephesus, in which Dioscorus,
bishop of Alexandria, being president,
Eutyches was restored, and Flavianus censured. But Theodosius dying, and his successor Marcianus,
proving a friend to the orthodox doctrine,
Leo calls a council at Chalcedon,
wherein by the authority of six hundred and thirty bishops, it was decreed as an Article of Faith, that
there are two natures in Christ, and that one
and the same Christ is God and man;
by which consequently, both Nestorius and Eutyches, the pestilent patron of the Manichees, were condemned. Moreover, the books of the Manichees were publicly
burnt; and the pride and heretical opinions of Dioscorus discountenanced and
suppressed. In the meantime, Valentinian
being treacherously murdered, Maximus usurps the empire, and against her will marries Eudoxia, the
widow of Valentinian. Upon this occasion,
the Vandals being called out of Africa,
Genseric being their leader, force their entrance into the city of Rome, throw the body of Maximus, who
had keen killed in the tumult by one
Ursus, a Roman soldier, into the river
Tiber, plunder and burn the city, pillage the churches, and refuse to hearken to Bishop Leo begging them
whatever spoils they carried away only to
spare the city itself and the temples.
However, on the fourteenth day from their entrance into Rome they left it, and taking away with them
Eudoxia and her daughter, with a great
number of other captives, they returned into
Africa. Leo being now very intent upon making good the damages sustained from
this people, prevailed upon Demetria, a pious virgin, to build upon her own
ground in the Via Latina, three miles from the city, a church to St Stephen;
and did the same himself in the Via Appia in honour of St Cornelius. The churches which had been in any part ruined, he repaired,
and those of the sacred vessels belonging to them which had been bruised and
broken, he caused to be mended, and those which had been taken away to be made
anew; moreover, he built three apartments in the churches of St John, St Peter,
and St Paul; appointed certain of the Roman clergy, whom he called Cubicularii, to keep and take charge of the sepulchres of the Apostles; built a monastery near St
Peter's; introduced into the canon of the mass the clause Hoc sanctum sacrificium, this holy sacrifice, &c., and ordained
that no recluse should be capable of receiving the consecrated veils, unless it
did appear that she had preserved her chastity spotless for the space of forty
years. But while the good man was employed in these things, there started up of
a sudden the heresy of the Acephali, so-called because they were a company of
foolish, undisciplined schismatics, or, if it be not a quibble, because they
wanted, both brains and head. These men decried the council of Chalcedon, denied
the propriety of two substances in Christ, and asserted that there could be but
one nature in one person. But our Leo abundantly confuted their absurd
doctrines in his elegant and learned epistles written to the faithful upon that
argument. Men of note in his time were Prosper of Aquitain,
a learned man, and Mamertus, bishop of Vienne, who, as it is said, was the
first that appointed pro- cessionary supplications, or litanies, upon the
occasion of the frequent earthquakes with which Gaul was at that time very much
afflicted. To conclude, Leo, having ordained eighty-one presbyters, thirty-one
deacons, and eighty-one bishops, died, and was buried in the Vatican, near St
Peter, April the 10th. He sat in the chair twenty-one years, one month,
thirteen days, and by his death the see was vacant eight days.
HILARIUS I. a.d. 461-468.
HILARIUS, a Sardinian, the son of Crispinus, continued in the chair till
the time of the Emperor Leo, who being chosen Emperor upon the death of
Marcianus, creates his son, of his own name, Augustus. During his reign the
Roman State suffered very much by reason of certain ambitious men, who endeavoured to get the government into their own hands. And
Genseric, the Vandal king, being tempted with so fair an opportunity, sails out
of Africa into Italy with design to gain the empire for himself. Leo having
intelligence hereof, sends Basilicus a patrician,
with a mighty fleet, to the assistance of Anthemius, the emperor of the west.
These two, with joint force and courage, meet Genseric near Populonia,
and force him to an engagement at sea, in which being routed with a great
slaughter of his men, he was glad to make an inglorious flight into Africa
again. In the meantime, Ricimer, a Patrician, having on the mountains of Trent
conquered Biorgus, king of the Alanes, and being
puffed up with that victory, was purposed to attempt the city of Rome, had not
Epiphanius, bishop of Pavia, made him and Anthemius friends.
Hilary, notwithstanding this confused state of things, did not neglect the care of
ecclesiastical affairs, for he ordained that no bishop should choose his own successor (a
constitution which belongs as well to all other
ecclesiastical degrees as that of
Episcopacy); he also made a decretal which he dispersed throughout Christendom; and wrote certain epistles
concerning the Catholic faith, by which the three synods of Nice, Ephesus, and Chalcedon were
confirmed, and the heretics Eutyches,
Nestorius, and Dioscorus, with their adherents, condemned. In the baptistry of
the Lateran church he built three
oratories, which were adorned with gold and precious stones, their gates of brass covered with wrought
silver; those he dedicated to St John Baptist, St
John Evangelist, and St Cross. In the last of these was
reposited some of the wood of the cross,
enclosed in gold and set with jewels, and a golden agnus upon a pillar of onyx. He added moreover the oratory of St Stephen, built two
libraries adjoining, and founded a
monastery. I shall not here recite the almost numberless donations which he made
to several churches of gold, silver, marble, and jewels. Some tell us that
Germanus, bishop of Auxerre, and Lupus, bishop of Troys, lived in his time,
both great supporters of the Christian cause, which was now very much
undermined by the endeavours of the Gentiles and Pelagians. Gennadius, also bishop of Constantinople, did
great service to the church by the integrity of his life and the excellency of
his parts and learning. During the pontificate of our Hilary, Victorinus of Aquitain, a famous arithmetician, reduced the Easter
account to the course of the moon, far outdoing Eusebius and Theophilus, who
had attempted it before him. And among those that flourished at this time, by
some is reckoned Merline, the famous English bard, concerning whom we are told
more than enough. As for Hilary himself, having performed the duty of a good
bishop, both in building and adorning of churches, and also in teaching,
admonishing, censuring, and giving alms where need required, and having also
ordained twenty-five presbyters, five deacons, twenty-two bishops, he died, and
was buried in the sepulchre of St Laurence, near the
body of Bishop Sixtus. He sat in the chair seven years, three months, ten days,
and by his death the see was vacant ten days.
SIMPLICIUS I. a.d. 468-483.
SIMPLICIUS, son of Castinus, born at Tivoli,
was bishop during the reigns of Leo the second, and Zeno.
For Leo the first falling sick, makes choice of Leo the second, son of
Zeno Isauricus, and his own nephew by Ariadne, his
sister, to be his successor, who, not long after being seized by a violent
distemper, and apprehending himself to be at the point of death, leaves the
empire to his father Zeno. In the meantime Odoacer, invading Italy with a great
army of his Heruli and Turingians,
conquers and takes prisoner, Orestes, a noble Roman, near Pavia, and then
causes him to be put to death in the sight of his whole army at Placentia.
Hereupon Zeno, pitying the calamitous state of Italy, speedily sends Theodoric,
king of the Goths, a man whom he had before very much esteemed, with a mighty
force to oppose him, who, having in a pitched battle, not far from Aquileia,
near the river Sontio, overcome Odoacer's captains,
and having oftentimes the like success against Odoacer himself, at length he
besieged him three years together in Ravenna, and reduced him to that
extremity, that, with the advice of John, the bishop of that city, he consented
to admit Theodoric as his partner in the empire. But the day following both
Odoacer and his son were contrary to promise and agreement slain, by which
means Theodoric possessed himself of the government of all Italy without any
opposition.
In the meantime Simplicius dedicated the churches of St Stephen the protomartyr, on Mons
Coelius, and that of St Andrew the
apostle, not far from St Maries the Great, in which there appear to this day some footsteps of
antiquity, which I have many a time beheld
with sorrow for their neglect, to whose
charge such noble piles of building now ready to fall are committed. That this church was of his founding
appears by certain verses wrought in mosaic
work which I have seen in it. He
dedicated also another church to St Stephen, near the Licinian Palace, where the Virgin's body had been
buried. He also appointed the weekly waitings of the presbyters in their turns at the churches of St Peter, St Paul, and
St Laurence the martyr, for the receiving of penitents, and baptising of proselytes. Moreover, he divided
the city among the presbyters into five precincts or regions; the first of St
Peter, second, St Paul, third, St
Laurence, fourth, St John Lateran, fifth, St
Maria Maggiore. He also ordained that no clergyman should hold a benefice of
any layman, a constitution which was
afterwards confirmed by Gregory and other Popes. At this time the Bishop of Rome's primacy was
countenanced by the letters of Acacius, Bishop
of Constantinople, and Timothy, a
learned man, in which they beg him to censure Peter Mongus ("the
stammerer"), Bishop of Alexandria, an asserter of the Eutychian heresy. Which was
accordingly done, but with proyiso,
that he should be received into the communion of
the church again, if within a certain time prefixed he retracted his errors. Some say, that during his
pontificate lived Remigius, Bishop of Reims,
who (as history tells us) baptised Clodoveus,
the French king. Now also Theodorus, Bishop of Syria wrote largely against
Eutyches, and compiled ten books of ecclesiastical history in imitation of
Eusebius Caesariensis. At this time almost all Egypt was infected with the
heretical doctrine of Dioscorus, concerning whom we have already spoken; and
Huneric, King of the Vandals, a zealot for the Arian faction, raised a
persecution against the orthodox Christians in Africa. Upon this, Eudoxia,
niece to Theodosius, a Catholic lady, and wife to Huneric, left her heretical
husband upon pretence of a pilgrimage to Jerusalem to
perform a vow which she had made; but upon so long a journey, the effect of
which proved intolerable to the tenderness of her sex she there soon died. It
is said that at this time were found the bones of the prophet Elisha, which
were carried into Alexandria, as also the body of St Barnabas the apostle,
together with the gospel of St Matthew, written with his own hand. As for
Simplicius himself, having by his constitutions and donations very much
promoted the interest of the Church of Rome, and having at several ordinations
made fifty-eight presbyters, eleven deacons, eighty-six bishops, he died, and
was buried in St Peter's church on the second day of March. He was in the chair
fifteen years, one month, seven days, and by his death the see was vacant
twenty-six days.
FELIX III. a.d. 483-492
FELIX, by birth a Roman, son of Felix a presbyter, was bishop from the
time of Odoacer, whose power in Italy lasted fourteen years, till the reign of
Theodoric, who, though he made Ravenna the seat of the empire, yet the city of
Rome was much indebted to his bounty. For he rebuilt the sepulchre of Octavius, exhibited shows to the people according to ancient custom,
repaired the public building and churches, and indeed neglected nothing that
became a good and generous prince. And to confirm and establish the empire, he
married Andefleda, daughter of Clodoveus,
King of France, and gave in marriage his sister to Huneric, king of the
Vandals, and one of his daughters to Alaric, king of the Visigoths, and the
other to King Gondibate.
Felix, now fully understanding that Peter the Stammerer, the Eutychian, who had been banished
for his heretical opinions upon the complaint and at the desire of Acacius, was
by the same Acacius recalled from exile, suspected that there was a private
agreement between them, and therefore excommunicated them both by the authority
of the Apostolic see, which was confirmed in a Synod of the orthodox.
NOTE:
This is not very accurately stated. The emperor Zeno, with the assist ance of Acacius, patriarch of
Constantinople, put forth in the year 482 the Henoticon ("bond of Union"), a
document intended, by comprehensiveness of statement, to reconcile the various
parties that were dividing the church. But it did not satisfy the Nestorians or
Eutychians, and Pope Felix III, who succeeded to
the Roman Popedom next year, indignantly repudiated it, declaring that the
emperor was taking upon him to make articles
of faith. He further wrote to Acacius charging him with having expelled the lawful bishop of Alexandria, John
Palaia, in order to put the Eutychian Peter in his
place. Acacius replied that Felix had been misinformed by John, and that Peter was both duly
chosen and orthodox. There is no evidence of Zeno's
certificate of his "penitence." Thereupon Felix sent his two legates, and they were induced,
whether by fair or foul means, to
assent to Acacius's action. This was a very critical moment between the east
and west. The primacy of the Roman Pontiffs had come to be recognised, as the
bishops of the chief city of the world, and they had begun since the days of Innocent I to rest their
claims on the purely religious ground of their succession from St Peter. But
the Bishops of Constantinople had not admitted such a claim, and Acacius, who
was watching the gradual downfall of the western
empire, saw, in imagination, Constantinople rising to the foremost place, and
himself as Primal Pontiff. Hence he assumed the
title for Constantinople of "Mother of all Christians and of the Orthodox Religion."
Pope Simplicius had protested, but his protest is lost. There was therefore a
good deal of bitterness already existing when this new quarrel arose. Felix on the return of Messenus and Vitalis not only excommunicated them, but Acacius. He was
encouraged thus to flout the imperial authority by
the successes of Odoacer in the west, though he did
not venture to include Zeno, the prime mover, in his ban, but instead even addressed him in
terms of adulation. One of the monks of Constantinople who was on the Roman side, audaciously
pinned the Pope's sentence upon the robe of Acacius
as he was proceeding to the altar to celebrate holy
communion. Acacius calmly proceeded with the service until the due moment
arrived, when he suddenly turned, and in a calm but ringing voice uttered a counter ban against Felix. The
schism lasted forty years; neither party would give
way; the great eastern patriarchs of Antioch,
Jerusalem, Alexandria, continued in communion with Acacius, and he held his see until his
death).—Ed.
But three years after, the emperor Zeno testifying that they were
penitent, Felix sends two bishops, Messenus and
Vitalis, with full power, upon enquiry into the truth of their repentance, to
absolve them. These legates arriving at the city Heraclea, were soon corrupted
with bribes, and neglected to actaccording to their
commission. Whereupon Felix, out of a just indignation, having first called a
council upon that occasion, excommunicates them too, as Simoniacs and betrayers of the trust reposed in them, though Messenus,
who confessed his fault, and begged time to evince the sincerity of his
repentance, had it accordingly granted him. The same Felix also built the
church of St Agapetus, near that of St Laurence, and ordained that churches
should be consecrated by none but bishops. It is said that at this time
Theodorus, a Greek presbyter, wrote against the heretics a book of the Harmony
of the Old and New Testaments; and some reckon among the men of note in this
age, the learned and famous divine John Damascene, who wrote the Book of
Sentences, imitating therein Gregory Nazianzene,
Gregory Nyssene, and Didymus of Alexandria, and
compiled also certain treatises of medicine, in which he gives an account of
the causes and cure of diseases. Our Felix, having at two Decembrian ordinations made twenty- eight presbyters, five deacons, thirty bishops, died,
and was buried in the church of St Paul. He sat in the chair eight years,
eleven months, seventeen days; and by his death the see was vacant five days.
GELASIUS I. a.d. 492-496.
GELASIUS, an African, son of Valerius, was bishop of Rome at the time
when Theodoric made war upon his wife's father, Clodoveus,
the French king, for that he had slain his daughter's husband, Alaric, king of
the Visigoths, and seized Gascoigne. They were both allied to him by marriage;
but the cause of Alaric seemed to him the more just, and therefore he preferred
his son-in-law before his father-in-law. And gaining the victory over the
French in a very important battle, he recovers Gascoigne, and undertakes the
present government of it till Almaric, the son of Alaric, should come to age.
The same Theodoric to his conquest of Italy added that of Sicily, Dalmatia, Liburnia, Illyricum, Gallia Narbo- nensis, and Burgundy. He also walled round the city
of Trent, and to secure Italy from a foreign invasion, upon the frontiers of
it, near Aosta, placed the Heruli, whose king, being
yet a minor, he made his adopted son.
Gelasius in the meantime condemns to banishment all the Manichees that should be found in the city, and causes
their books to be publicly burnt near St Mary's Church. And being satisfied of
the repentance of Messenus, who had given in his
retractation in writing, at the request of the synod he absolved him, and
restored him to his bishopric. But having intelligence that several murders and
other notorious outrages were committed in the Greek churches by the factious
followers of Peter Mongus and Acacius, he forthwith
sends his legates thither, with commission to excommunicate for ever all those who
did not immediately recant their errors; a new and unusual severity, whereas
the primitive church was wont to wait long in hopes that separatists would at
length return to her bosom. At this time John, Bishop of Alexandria, an
orthodox prelate, and who had been very much persecuted by these seditious people,
fled for refuge to the Bishop of Rome, who very kindly and courteously received
him. The churches which Gelasius consecrated were, that of St Euphemia the
martyr in Tivoli, that of St Nicander and Eleutherius in the Via Labicana, and that of St Mary in the Via Laurentina, twenty
miles from Rome. He had a great love and honour for
the clergy, and was very liberal and charitable to the poor. He delivered the
city of Rome from many dangers, and particularly from that of dearth and
scarcity. He composed hymns in imitation of St Ambrose, published five books
against Eutyches and Nestorius, and two against Arius, made very elegant and grave
orations, and wrote weighty and learned epistles to his friends of the
household of faith; all which works of his are at this time to be seen in the
public libraries. Some tell us that he excommunicated Anastasius, successor to
Zeno in the eastern empire, for favouring Acacius and
other heretics; which is an argument as clear as the sun, that the Bishop of
Rome has power to excommunicate any prince who is erroneous in the faith, if he
continue refractory after admonition. The same course likewise he took with the
Vandals and their king, who, being infected with the Arian heresy, proved now
very cruel and barbarous persecutors of the orthodox. At the beginning of his
pontificate lived Germanus and Epiphanius, the latter Bishop of Pavia, the
former of Capua; men who by the authority which the sanctity their lives had
gained them, and by their humble and obliging deportment, wrought so much upon
the minds of the barbarous invaders, that afflicted Italy fared the better for
their sakes. At the same time also, Lannociatus,
Abbot of Chartres, with Aurelianus and Mezentius of Poictiers, persons of great piety and learning, gained so
much ground in Gaul, that they persuaded Clodoveus the French king, and his queen, Crocildis, to become
Christians, and to undertake the protection of the Catholic faith throughout
their dominions; though some attribute this honour to
Remigius, as hath been already said. Gelasius, having ordained thirty-two
presbyters, two deacons, sixty-seven bishops, died, and was buried in St
Peter's Church, November 21st. He was in the chair four years, eight months,
seventeen days; and by his death the see was vacant seven days
ANASTASIUS II. a.d. 496-498.
ANASTASIUS the Second, a Roman, son
of Fortunatus, was contemporary with the Emperor Anastasius. At which time
Thorismund, king of the Vandals, shut up the churches of the orthodox clergy,
and banished one hundred and twenty bishops into the Island of Sardinia. It is
reported also that one Olympius, an Arian bishop, having publicly in the baths
at Carthage declared his detestation of the doctrine of the Trinity, was
immediately smitten, and his body burnt with three flashes of lightning. And
when Barbas, another bishop of the same faction, was going to baptize a certain
person in this form of words : "Barbas baptizeth thee in the name of the Father, by the Son, and in the Holy Ghost," it is
said the water disappeared; which miracle so wrought upon the man who was to be
baptized, that he immediately came over to the orthodox.
It was this Bishop Anastasius, as some writers tell us, who excommunicated the Emperor
Anastasius for favouring Acacius; though afterwards being himself seduced by
the same heretic, and endeavouring privately to recall him from exile, he thereby very much
alienated the minds of his clergy, who
for that reason, and also because, without the consent of the Catholics, he communicated with
Photinus, a deacon of Thessalonica, and an
assertor of the Acacian heresy, withdrew themselves from him. It is generally
reported that, the Divine vengeance pursuing him for this apostasy, he died
suddenly; and some say that the particular manner of his death was that, going
to ease nature, he purged out his bowels into the privy.
In his time Fulgentius an African, Bishop of Ruspae,
though he were among the other orthodox bishops of Africa banished into
Sardinia by Thorismund, yet neglected nothing that might contribute to the
propagating of the Catholic faith, whether by exhortation, preaching, or
admonition. He likewise published several books of the Trinity, of free-will,
and the rule of faith; and, besides the several elegant and grave homilies he
made to the people, he wrote against the Pelagian heresy. The learned
Hegesippus also, who composed monastical constitutions, and in an elegant style
wrote the life of St Severinus the abbot, was at this time very serviceable to
the Church. Moreover, Faustus, a Gallican bishop, was now a considerable
writer; but among all his works, the most in esteem was his tract against
Arius, wherein he maintains the persons in the Trinity to be co-essential. He
wrote also against those who asserted any created being to be incorporeal,
demonstrating both by the judgment of the fathers, and from the testimonies of
holy writ, that God only is purely and properly incorporeal. But I shall here
conclude the pontificate of Anastasius, who, at one Decembrian ordination, having made twelve presbyters and sixteen bishops, was buried in St
Peter's Church, November 19th. He sat in the chair one year, ten months, twenty
four days; and by his death the see was vacant four days.
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