Pope
Constantine
Consecrated 25 March, 708; d. 9 April, 715; a Syrian, the son of John, and "a
remarkably affable man". The first half of his reign was marked by a cruel famine in
Rome, the second by an extraordinary abundance. For some time he had trouble with Felix,
Archbishop of Ravenna, whom he had himself consecrated. Relying on the secular power, the
new bishop refused to offer the pope due obedience. It was only after he had tasted of
dire misfortune that Felix submitted. Constantine received as pilgrims two Anglo-Saxon
kings, Coenred of Mercia and Offa of the East Saxons. They both received the tonsure in
Rome and embraced the monastic life. (Bede, Hist. eccl., V, xix, xx.) St. Egwin, Bishop of
Worcester, went to Rome along with them and obtained from the pope various privileges for
his monastery of Evesham. ("Chron. Abbat. de Evesham", in R. S.; "St. Egwin
and his Abbey of Evesham", London, 1904.) The extant documents regarding this
monastery which bear this pope's name are all spurious. (They are to be found in Haddan
and Stubbs, "Councils", III, 281.) But his privilege for the monasteries of
Bermondsey and Woking (ibid., 276) may be genuine.
In 692 the Emperor Justinian II had caused to assemble the so-called Quinisext or
Trullan Council. At this assembly, which was attended only by Greek bishops, 102 canons
were passed, many of which established customs opposed to those of Rome. By canon xiii the
celibacy of the Greek secular clergy became a thing of the past; and by canon xxxvi, a
further step was taken in the direction of rendering the Patriarch of constantinople quite
independent of the Holy See. Justinian made every effort to secure the adhesion of the
popes to these decrees. But one after another they all refused. At length he sent an order
to Constantine to repair to Constantinople. Leaving behind him, according to the custom at
the time, the archpriest, the archdeacon, and the Primicerius, or chief of the
notaries, to govern the Church in his absence, he set sail for the East (709) with a
number of bishops and clergy. Wherever his vessel touched, he was, by Justinian's orders,
received with as much honour as the emperor himself. He entered Constantinople in triumph,
and at Justinian's request crossed over to Nicomedia, where he was then residing. Strange
to say, this cruel prince received the pope with the greatest honour, prostrating himself
before him and kissing his feet. After receiving Holy Communion at the hands of the pope,
he renewed all the privileges of the Roman Church. Exactly what passed between them on the
subject of the Quinisext Council is not known. It would appear, however, that Constantine
approved those canons which were not opposed to the true Faith or to sound morals, and
that with this qualified approval of his council the emperor was content.
Soon after Constantine's return to Rome (Oct., 711), Justinian II was dethroned by
Philippicus Bardanes. The new emperor strove to revive Monothelism, and sent a letter to
the pope which the latter caused to be examined in a synod and condemned. Further, as the
emperor burnt the Acts of the Sixth General Council, restored to the diptychs the names
which that council had caused to be erased, re-erected their images, and removed the
representation of the council which was hanging in front of the palace, the pope and the
people of Rome placed in the portico of St. Peter's a series of representations of the six
general councils, and refused to place the new emperor's name on their charters or their
money. They also declined to place his statue, according to custom, in the official chapel
of St. Cęsarius on the Palatine, the site of which has just been discovered (1907), or to
pray for him in the Canon of the Mass. To punish the Romans for these daring measures, a
new duke was sent to Rome, and they would no doubt have had much to suffer but for the
opportune deposition of Philippicus by the orthodox Anastasius (Whitsun Eve, 713). The new
emperor made haste to dispatch to Rome, through the Exarch Scholasticus, a letter in which
he professed his orthodoxy and his adhesion to the Sixth General Council, which had
condemned Monothelism. Constantine also received a letter from John, the Patriarch of
Constantinople, acknowledging that the "apostolical pre-eminence of the Pope is to
the whole Church, what the head is to the body", and that "according to the
canons he is the head of the Christian priesthood". John assured the pope that, while
cooperating with the Emperor Philippicus, he had always been orthodox at heart, and that
the decree, drawn up at the council in which the heretical emperor had hoped to
re-establish Monothelism (712), was really orthodox in sense, although not apparently so
in words. (See John's letter in the epilogue of the Deacon Agatho, in Mansi, "Coll.
Conc.", XII, 192.)
Among other distinguished men who came to Rome in the days of Constantine was Benedict,
Archbishop of Milan. He came not only to pray at the shrines of the Apostles, for he was a
man of such remarkable holiness that he was distinguished for it in all Italy (Paul the
Deacon, Hist., VI, xxix), but also to discuss with the pope as to whose immediate
jurisdiction belonged the Church of Pavia. At one time, certainly in the fifth century,
the bishops of Pavia were subject to the bishops of Milan and were consecrated by them.
For some reason, perhaps because the Lombards made Pavia their capital, its bishops had
ceased to be dependent on those of Milan, and had become directly subject to the popes.
Accordingly, when it had been proved to Benedict that for some long time at least they had
been consecrated at Rome, he definitely surrendered his claim to jurisdiction over them.
The visit of a pope to a city at any distance from Rome being so comparatively rare, the
people of several places at which Constantine touched in his journey to and from
Constantinople were only too pleased to be able to avail themselves of the opportunity of
getting him to consecrate a bishop for them. It is on record that he consecrated twelve in
this way, and, at the customary times and places, no less than sixty-four.
Lib. pontificalis, ed. DUCHESNE, 389; MANN, Lives of the Popes (London,
St. Louis, 1902), I, pt. II, 127 sqq.
HORACE K. MANN
Transcribed by WGKofron
With thanks to St. Mary's Church, Akron, Ohio
The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume IV
Copyright © 1908 by Robert Appleton Company
Online Edition Copyright © 1999 by Kevin Knight
Nihil Obstat. Remy Lafort, Censor
Imprimatur. +John M. Farley, Archbishop of New York
The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume IV
Copyright © 1908 by Robert Appleton Company
Online Edition Copyright © 1999 by Kevin Knight
Nihil Obstat. Remy Lafort, Censor
Imprimatur. +John M. Farley, Archbishop of New York
|