Pope
St. Leo II
Pope (682-83), date of birth unknown; d. 28 June, 683. He was a Sicilian, and son of
one Paul. Though elected pope a few days after the death of St. Agatho (10 June, 681), he
was not consecrated till after the lapse of a year and seven months (17 Aug., 682). Under
Leo's predecessor St. Agatho, negotiations had been opened between the Holy See and
Emperor Constantine Pogonatus concerning the relations of the Byzantine Court to papal
elections. Constantine had already promised Agatho to abolish or reduce the tax which for
about a century the popes had had to pay to the imperial treasury on the occasion of their
consecration, and under Leo's successor he made other changes in what had hitherto been
required of the Roman Church at the time of a papal election. In all probability,
therefore, it was continued correspondence on this matter which caused the delay of the
imperial confirmation of Leo's election, and hence the long postponement of his
consecration. The most important act accomplished by Leo in his short pontificate was his
confirmation of the acts of the Sixth Oecumenical Council (680-1). This council had been
held in Constantinople against the Monothelites, and had been presided over by the legates
of Pope Agatho. After Leo had notified the emperor that the decrees of the council had
been confirmed by him, he proceeded to make them known to the nations of the West. The
letters which he sent for this end to the king and to the bishops and nobles of Spain have
come down to us. In them he explained what the council had effected, and he called upon
the bishops to subscribe to its decrees. At the same time he was at pains to make it clear
that in condemning his predecessor Honorius I, he did so, not because he taught heresy,
but because he was not active enough in opposing it. In accordance with the papal mandate,
a synod was held at Toledo (684) in which the Council of Constantinople was accepted.
The fact that Ravenna had long been the residence of the emperors or of their
representatives, the exarchs, had awakened the ambition of its archbishops. They aspired
to the privileges of patriarchs and desired to be autocephalous, i.e. free from the direct
jurisdiction of the pope, considered as their primate. As they could not succeed in
inducing the popes to agree to their wishes, they attempted to secure their accomplishment
by an imperial decree recognizing them as autocephalous. But this did not prove sufficient
to enable the archbishops to effect their purpose, and Leo obtained from Constantine
Pogonatus the revocation of the edict of Constans. On his side, however, Leo abolished the
tax which the archbishops had been accustomed to pay when they received the pallium. And
though he insisted that the archbishops-elect must come to Rome to be consecrated, he
consented to the arrangement that they should not be obliged to remain in Rome more than
eight days at the time of their consecration, and that, while they were not to be bound to
come again to Rome themselves in order to offer their homage to the pope, they were each
year to send a delegate to do so in their name. Perhaps because he feared that the
Lombards might again ravage the catacombs, Leo transferred thence many of the relics of
the martyrs into a church which he built to receive them. This pope, who is called by his
contemporary biographer both just and learned, is commemorated as a saint in the Roman
Martyrology on 28 June.
[Note: The feast of Saint Leo II was formerly observed on 3 July with the rank
of a semi-double.]
Liber Pontificalis, ed. DUCHESNE, I (Paris, 1886), 359 sqq.; VILLANUNO, Summa Concil.
Hispaniae, I (Barcelona, 1850), 310 sq.; Acta SS., June, V, 375 sqq.; MANN, Lives of the
Popes, I (London, 1902), pt. II, 49 sqq.
HORACE K. MANN
Transcribed by Herman F. Holbrook
O Saint Leo, and all ye holy Pontiffs, pray for us.
The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume IX
Copyright © 1910 by Robert Appleton Company
Online Edition Copyright © 1999 by Kevin Knight
Nihil Obstat, October 1, 1910. Remy Lafort, Censor
Imprimatur. +John M. Farley, Archbishop of New York
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