Pope St. Miltiades
The year of his birth is not known; he was elected pope in either 310 or 311; died 10
or 11 January, 314. After the banishment of Pope Eusebius (q.v.) The Roman See was vacant
for some time, probably because of the complications which has arisen on account of the
apostates (lapsi), and which were not cleared up by the banishment of Eusebius and
Heraclius. On 2 July, 310 or 311, Miltiadea (the name is also written Melchiades), a
native of Africa, was elevated to the papacy. There is some uncertainty as to the exact
year, as the "Liberian Catalogue of the Popes" (Duchesne, "Liber
Pontificalis", I, 9) gives 2 July, 311, as the date of the consecration of the new
pope (ex die VI non. iul. a cons. Maximiliano VIII solo, quod fuit mense septembri
Volusiano et Rufino); but in contradiction to this the death of the pope is said to have
occurred on 2 January, 314, and the duration of the pontificate is given as three years,
six months and eight days; possibly owing to the mistake of a copyist, we ought to read
"ann. II" instead of "ann. III"; and therefore the year of his
elevation to the papacy was most probably 311. About this time (311 or 310), an edict of
toleration signed by the Emperors Galerius, Licinius, and Constantine, put an end to the
great persecution of the Christians, and they were permitted to live as such, and also to
reconstruct their places of religious worship (Eusebius, "Hist. Eccl.", VIII,
xvii; Lactantius, "De mortibus persecutorum", xxxiv). Only in those countries of
the Orient which were under the sway of Maximinus Daia did the Christians continue to be
persecuted. The emperor now gave Pope Miltiades in Rome the right to receive back, through
the prefect of the city, all ecclesiastical buildings and possessions which had been
confiscated during the persecutions. The two Roman deacons, Strato and Cassianus, were
ordered by the pope to discuss this matter with the prefect, and to take over the church
properties (Augustinus, "Breviculus collationis cum Donatistis", iii, 34); it
thus became possible to reorganize thoroughly the ecclesiastical administration and the
religious life of the Christians in Rome.
Miltiades caused the remains of his predecessor, Eusebius, to be brought back from
Sicily to Rome, and had them interred in a crypt in the Catacombs of St. Callistus. In the
following year the pope witnessed the final triumph of the Cross, through the defeat of
Maxentius, and the entry into Rome of the Emperor Constantine (now converted to
Christianity), after the victory at the Milvian Bridge (27 October, 312). Later the
emperor presented the Roman Church with the Lateran Palace, which then became the
residence of the pope, and consequently also the seat of the seat of the central
administration of the Roman Church. The basilica which adjoined the palace or was
afterwards built there became the principal church of Rome. In 313 the Donatists (q.v.)
came to Constantine with a request to nominate bishops from Gaul as judges in the
controversy of the African episcopate regarding the consecration in Carthage of the two
bishops, Cæcilian and Majorinus. Constantine wrote about this to Miltiades, and also to
Marcus, requesting the pope with three bishops from Gaul to give a hearing in Rome, to
Cæcilian and his opponent, and to decide the case. On 2 October, 313, there assembled in
the Lateran Palace, under the presidency of Miltiades, a synod of eighteen bishops from
Gaul and Italy, which, after thoroughly considring the Donatist controversy for three
days, decided in favor of Cæcilian, whose election and consecration as Bishop of Carthage
was declared to be legitimate. In the biography of Miltiades, in the "Liber
Pontificalis", it is stated that at the time Manichæans were found in Rome; this was
quite possible as Manichæism began to be spread in the West in the fourth century. The
same source attributes to this pope a decree which absolutely forbade the Christians to
fast on Sundays or on Thursdays, "because these days were observed by the heathen as
a holy fast". This reason is remarkable; it comes most likely from the author of the
"Liber Pontificalis" who with this alleged decree traces back a Roman custom of
his own time to an ordinance of Miltiades. The "Liber Pontificalis" is probably
no less arbitrary in crediting this pope with a decree to the effect that the Oblation
consecrated at the Solemn Mass of the pope (by which is meant the Eucharistic Bread)
should be taken to the different churches in Rome. Such a custom actually existed in Rome
(Duchesne, "Christian Worship," London, 1903, 185); but there is nothing
definite to show that it was introduced byMiltiades, as the "Liber Pontificalis"
asserts.
After his death, on 10 or 11 January (the Liberian Catalogue" give it as III id.
jan.; the "Depositio Episcoporum" as IIII id. jan.), 314, Miltiades was laid to
rest in the Catacomb of St. Callistus and he was venerated as a saint. De Rossi regards as
highly probably his [this] location of this pope's burial-chamber (Roma Sotterranea, II,
188 sq.). His feast was celebrated in the fourth century, on 10 January, according to the
"Martyrologium Hieronymianum". In the present "Roman Martyrology" it
occurs on 10 December.
Liber Pontificalis, ed Duchesne, I, l68-196; Urbain Ein Martyrologium der christl.
Gemeinde zu Rom (Leipzig, 1901), 118-119; Langen, Geschichte der römischen Kirche, I, 328
sqq.; Allard, Histoire des persécutions, V, 200, 203; Duchesne, Histoire ancienne de
l'Eglise, II, 96, 97, 110-112.
J.P. KIRSCH
Transcribed by M. Anne McCay
The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume X
Copyright © 1911 by Robert Appleton Company
Online Edition Copyright © 1999 by Kevin Knight
Nihil Obstat, October 1, 1911. Remy Lafort, S.T.D., Censor
Imprimatur. +John Cardinal Farley, Archbishop of New York