Pope
St. Zachary
(ZACHARIAS.)
Reigned 741-52. Year of birth unknown; died in March, 752. Zachary sprang from a Greek
family living in Calabria; his father, according to the "Liber Pontificalis",
was called Polichronius. Most probably he was a deacon of the Roman Church and as such
signed the decrees of the Roman council of 732. After the burial of his predecessor
Gregory III on 29 November, 741, he was immediately and unanimously elected pope and
consecrated and enthroned on 5 December. His biographer in the "Liber
Pontificalis" describes him as a man of gentle and conciliatory character who was
charitable towards the clergy and people. As a fact the new pope always showed himself to
be shrewd and conciliatory in his actions and thus his undertakings were very successful.
Soon after his elevation he notified Constantinople of his election; it is noticeable that
his synodica (letter) was not addressed to the iconoclastic Patriarch Anastasius
but to the Church of Constantinople. The envoys of the pope also brought a letter for the
emperor. After the death of Leo III (18 June, 741) his successor was his son Constantine
V, Copronymus. However, in 742 Constantine's brother-in-law Artabasdus raised a revolt
against the new emperor and established himself in Constantinople; thus when the papal
envoys reached Constantinople they found Artabasdus the ruler there. As late as 743 the
papal letters were dated from the year of the reign of Constantine V; in 744, however,
they are dated form the year of the reign of Artabasdus. Still the papal envoys do not
seem to have come into close relations with the usurper at Constantinople, although the
latter re-established the worship of images. After Constantine V had overthrown his rival,
the envoys of the pope presented to him the papal letter in which Zachary exhorted the
emperor to restore the doctrine and practice of the Church in respect to the worship of
images. The emperor received the envoys in a friendly manner and presented the Roman
Church with the villages of Nympha and Normia (Norba) in Italy, which with their
territories extended to the sea.
When Zachary ascended the throne the position of the city and Duchy of Rome was a very
serious one. Luitprand, King of the Lomabards, was preparing a new incursion into Roman
territory. Duke Trasamund of Spoleto, with whom Pope Gregory III had formed an alliance
against Luitprand, did not keep his promise to aid the Romans in regaining the cities
taken by the Lombards. Consequently Zachary abandoned the alliance with Trasamund and
sought to protect the interests of Rome and Roman territory by personal influence over
Luitprand. The pope went to Terni to see the Lombard king who received him with every mark
of honour. Zachary was able to obtain from Luitprand that the four cities of Ameria,
Horta, Polimartium, and Blera should be returned to the Romans, and that all the
patrimonies of the Roman Church that the Lombards had taken from it within the last thirty
years, should be given back; he was also able to conclude a truce for twenty years between
the Roman Duchy and the Lombards. A chapel to the Saviour was built in the Church of St.
Peter at Rome in the name of Luitprand, in which the deeds respecting this return of
property were placed. After the pope's return, the Roman people went in solemn procession
to St. Peter's to thank God for the fortunate result of the pope's efforts. Throughout the
entire affair the pope appears as the secular ruler of Rome and the Roman territory. In
the next year Luitprand made ready to attack the territory of Ravenna. The Byzantine
exarch of Ravenna and the archbishop begged Pope Zachary to intervene. The latter first
sent envoys to the Lombard king, and when these were unsuccessful he went himself to
Ravenna and from there to Pavia to see Luitprand. The pope reached Pavia on the eve of the
feast of Sts. Peter and Paul. He celebrated the vigil and the feast of the princes of the
Apostles at Pavia, and was able to induce the king to abandon the attack on Ravenna and to
restore the territory belonging to the city itself. Luitprand died shortly after than and
after his first successor Hildebrand was overthrown, Ratchis became King of the Lombards.
The pope was on the best of terms with him. In 749 the new king confirmed the treaty of
peace with the Roman Duchy. The same year Ratchis abdicated, with his wife and daughter
took the monastic vows before the pope, and all three entered the monastic life.
In 743 Pope Zachary held a synod at Rome which was attended by sixty bishops. This
synod issued fourteen canons on various matters of church discipline. On this occasion the
pope took up the question of the impediments to marriage of relationship in the fourth
degree, in regard to which the Germans claimed to have obtained a dispensation from Pope
Gregory II. The year previous Zachary had written on this point to the bishops and kings
of that province. An active correspondence was kept up between Zachary and St. Boniface.
The latter in his zealous labours had organized the Church in the German territories, and
while doing this had kept in close connection with the Papal See. Early in 742, soon after
his elevation, Zachary received a letter from Boniface in which the saint expressed his
full submission to the possessor of the Chair of Peter and requested then confirmation of
the three newly established Bishoprics of Wurzburg, Buraburg, and Erfurt; Boniface also
sought authority to hold a synod in France and to suppress abuses in the lives of the
clergy. The pope confirmed the three dioceses and commissioned Boniface to attend, as
papal legate, the Frankish synod which Karlmann wished to hold. In a later letter Zachary
confirmed the metropolitans of Rouen, Reims, and Sens appointed by Boniface, and also
confirmed the condemnation of the two heretics Adelbert and Clement. Various questions in
which the pope and Boniface disagreed were discussed in letters. In 745 was held the
general synod for the Frankish kingdom called by Pepin and Carloman. Here decrees were
passed against unworthy ecclesiastics, and the two heretics, Adelbert and Clement, were
again condemned. Boniface sent a Frankish priest to Rome to make a report to the pope, and
the latter held on 25 October, 745, a synod at the Lateran at which, after exhaustive
investigation, an anathema was pronounced against the two heretics. Zachary forwarded the
acts of the synod with a letter to Boniface. Pepin and the Frankish bishops sent a list of
questions respecting the discipline of the clergy and of the Christian population to Pope
Zachary, and the latter answered in a letter of 746 in which decisions respecting the
various points are given. These decisions were communicated to Boniface so that he might
make them generally known at a Frankish synod. The following year, 747, Carloman resigned
his authority and the world, went to Rome, and was received by Pope Zachary into a
monastic order. At first he lived in the monastery on the Soracte, later at Monte Cassino.
Thanks to the efforts of St. Boniface all the Frankish bishops were now agreed in
submission to the See of St. Peter. Zachary sent still other letters to the bishops of
Gaul and Germany, and also to Boniface as the papal legate for the Church of this region.
Boniface was constantly in intercourse with Rome both by letters and envoys and sent
important questions to the pope for decision. An important proof of the recognition by the
Franks of the high moral power of the papacy is shown by the appeal to papal authority on
the occasion of the overthrow of the Merovingian dynasty. Pepin's ambassadors, Bishop
Burkard of Wurzburg and Chaplain Folrad of St. Denis, laid the question before Zachary:
whether it seemed right to him that one should be king who did not really possess the
royal power. The pope declared that this did not appear good to him, and on the authority
of the pope Pepin considered himself justified in having himself proclaimed King of the
Franks (cf. BONIFACE, SAINT; and PEPIN THE SHORT). The ecclesiastical activity of the pope
also extended to England. Through his efforts the Synod of Cloveshove was held in 747 for
the reform of church discipline in accordance with the advice given by the pope and in
imitation of the Roman Church.
Zachary was very zealous in the restoration of the churches of Rome to which he made
costly gifts. He also restored the Lateran palace and established several large domains as
the settled landed possessions (domus cultoe) of the Roman Church. The pope
translated to the Church of St. George in Velabro the head of the martyr St. George which
was found during the repairs of the decayed Lateran Palace. He was very benevolent to the
poor, to whom alms were given regularly from the papal palace. When merchants from Venice
bought slaves at Rome in order to sell them again to the Saracens in Africa, the pope
bought all the slaves, so that Christians should not become the property of heathens. Thus
in a troubled era Zachary proved himself to be an excellent, capable, vigorous, and
charitable successor of Peter. He also carried on theological studies and made a
translation of the Dialogues of Gregory the Great into Greek, which was largely circulated
in the East. After his death Zachary was buried in St. Peters.
Liber Pontificalis, ed. DUCHESNE, I, 426-39; JAFFE, Regesta Pontificum Romanorum (2nd
ed.), I, 262-70; LANGEN, Geschichte der romischen Kirche, II (Bonn, 1885), 628-49; HEFELE,
Konziliengeschichte, III, passim; NURNBERGER, Die romische Synode vom Jahre 743 (Mainz,
1898). Cf. also the bibliography to BONIFACE, SANT; and PEPIN THE SHORT.
J.P. KIRSCH
Transcribed by Thomas M. Barrett
Dedicated to Pope St. Zachary
The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume XV
Copyright © 1912 by Robert Appleton Company
Online Edition Copyright © 1999 by Kevin Knight
Nihil Obstat, October 1, 1912. Remy Lafort, S.T.D., Censor
Imprimatur. +John Cardinal Farley, Archbishop of New York
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