(XYSTUS).
Consecrated 31 July, 432; d. 440. Previous to his accession he was prominent among the
Roman clergy and in correspondence with St. Augustine. He reigned during the Nestorian and
Pelagian controversies, and it was probably owing to his conciliatory disposition that he
was falsely accused of leanings towards these heresies. As pope he approved the Acts of
the Council of Ephesus and endeavoured to restore peace between Cyril of Alexandria and
John of Antioch. In the Pelagian controversy he frustrated the attempt of Julian of
Eclanum to be readmitted to communion with the Catholic Church. He defended the pope's
right of supremacy over Illyricum against the local bishops and the ambitious designs of
Proclus of Constantinople. At Rome he restored the Basilica of Liberius, now known as St.
Mary Major, enlarged the Basilica of St. Lawrence-Without-the-Walls, and obtained precious
gifts from the Emperor Valentinian III for St. Peter's and the Lateran Basilica. The work
which asserts that the consul Bassus accused him of crime is a forgery. He is the author
of eight letters (in P.L., L, 583 sqq.), but he did not write the works "On
Riches", "On False Teachers", and "On Chastity" ("De
divitiis", "De malis doctoribus", "De castitate") attributed to
him. His feast is kept on 28 March.
DUCHESNE (ed.), Lib. Pont., I (Paris, 1886), 126-27, 232-37; BARMBY in Dict. Christ.
Biog., s. v. Sixtus (3); GRISAR, History of Rome and the Popes, tr. CAPPADELTA, I (St.
Louis, 1911), nos. 54, 135, 140, 144, 154.
N.A. WEBER
The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume XIV
Copyright © 1912 by Robert Appleton Company
Online Edition Copyright © 1999 by Kevin Knight
Nihil Obstat, July 1, 1912. Remy Lafort, S.T.D., Censor
Imprimatur. +John Cardinal Farley, Archbishop of New York