Pope
Benedict I
Of the first Pontiff who bore the name of Benedict practically nothing is known. The
date of his birth is unknown; he d. 30 July, 579. He was a Roman and the son of Boniface,
and was called Bonosus by the Greeks (Evagrius, Hist., V, 16). The ravages of the Lombards
rendered it very difficult to communicate with the emperor at Constantinople, who claimed
the privilege of confirming the election of the popes. Hence there was a vacancy of nearly
eleven months between the death of John III and the arrival of the imperial confirmation
of Benedict's election, 2 June, 575. He reigned four years, one month, and twenty-eight
days. Almost the only act recorded of him is that he granted an estate, the Massa
Veneris, in the territory of Minturnae, to Abbot Stephen of St. Mark's "near the
walls of Spoleto" (St. Gregory I, Ep. ix, 87, I. al. 30). Famine followed the
devastating Lombards, and from the few words the Liber Pontificalis has about Benedict, we
gather that he died in the midst of his efforts to cope with these difficulties. He was
buried in the vestibule of the sacristy of the old basilica of St. Peter. In an ordination
which he held in December he made fifteen priests and three deacons, and consecrated
twenty-one bishops.
The most important source for the history of the first nine popes who bore the name of
Benedict is the biographies in the Liber Pontificalis, of which the most useful edition is
that of Duchesne, Le Liber Pontificalis (Paris, 1886-92), and the latest that of Mommsen,
Gesta Pontif. Roman. (to the end of the reign of Constantine only, Berlin, 1898). Jaffé,
Regesta Pont. Rom. (2d ed., Leipzig, 1885), gives a summary of the letters of each pope
and tells where they may be read at length. Modern accounts of these popes will be found
in any large Church history, or history of the City of Rome. The fullest account in
English of most of them is to be read in Mann, Lives of the Popes in the Early Middle Ages
(London, 1902, passim).
HORACE K. MANN
Transcribed by Kryspin J. Turczynski
The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume II
Copyright © 1907 by Robert Appleton Company
Online Edition Copyright © 1999 by Kevin Knight
Imprimatur. +John M. Farley, Archbishop of New York
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