265, 304, 305, 307, 310-312, 315, 320, 368-371, 406, 505, 518 Evagrius Scholasticus, the Church his- torian, 378, 393
Evangelus, of Assuras, 207 Evangelus, a priest, 489 Evaristus, S., Pope, 37
Evethius, Bishop of Ephesus, 295 Exsecutores, 193
Fabian, S., Pope: called by S. Cyprian, "That good man, my colleague," 5; his martyrdom, 79, 459; other refer- ence to, 78
Fabius, Bishop of Antioch, 80 Facundus, of Hermiane, 414 Faustinus, Bishop of Lyons, 55, 56 Faustinus, Bishop of Potentia, papal legate in Africa, 143, 168, 184-186, 190, 191, 193, 207, 376, 492 Felicianus Pastor, 212 Felicissimus, a Carthaginian deacon, who became a leader of schismatic laxists, 94, 154, 446-448 Felix, Bishop of Bisica Lucana, 456 Felix, Bishop of Merida, successor to Martialis, 59, 60, 452
Felix II., Pope: canonized by the Roman Church, 287; other refer- ences to, 28, 135, 271, 276, 279, 285- 287, 434, 484
Felix III., Pope: his formal excom- munication of the East, 409; other references to, 183, 359, 376-379, 381- 385, 409, 410, 414 Felix, Bishop of Trier, 58 Felix, Bishop of Uthina, 464 Fénelon, Archbishop of Cambrai, 28 Ferrandus, a Carthaginian deacon, 205 Festal Index, 233 Festus, Porcius, 43 Fialon, M. Eugène, 299
Firmilian, S., of Caesarea in Cappa- docia on rebaptizing heretics, 62; his letter published and in part trans- lated by S. Cyprian, 67, 458; his sanctity, 68; his letter to S. Cyprian, extracts from, 68, 69; holds that all bishops inherit the promise to S. Peter, 104; was excommunicated by Pope Stephen, 72-77, 225; other references to, 17, 64, 437, 438, 454, 456, 460, 463, 471
Flacillus, Bishop of Antioch, 227, 229
Flavian I., S., Bishop of Antioch: the legend about his supposed perjury, 503-505; where and when he was consecrated bishop, 505-506; other references to, 166, 176, 227, 248, 256, 308, 320, 338, 341, 346, 348, 349, 354, 364-368, 370-372, 380, 502, 503, 507-509, 539
Flavian II., S., Patriarch of Antioch, (A.D. 498-512), 388, 391, 396, 418 Flavian I., S., of Como, 405 Flavian II., S., of Como, 405 Flavian, S., Bishop of Constantinople, 354-356, 377, 428
Flavianus, prefect of the praetorium of Italy, 525, 526
Fleury, Cardinal de, 87
Fleury, the historian, thinks that S. Leo excommunicated S. Hilary of Arles,
Florentius, Bishop of Puteoli, 528 Forbes, Bishop of Brechin, 476 Fortia d'Urban, 337
Fortunatian, Bishop of Aquileia, 434, 484
Fortunatianus, Bishop of Assuras, 451 Fortunatianus, Bishop of Neapolis, 207, 209, 210
Fortunatianus, Bishop of Sicca, 208 Fortunatus, an African bishop, probably of the Proconsular province, 207,
Fortunatus, a schismatic bishop at Carthage, 50, 51, 154, 446-449 Fortunatus, probably to be identified with the Bishop of Thuccaboris of that name, 81, 82, 471 Franzelin, Cardinal: on apostolicity as a necessary mark of a doctrine of the faith, 430; other references to, 276, 281
Fravitas, Patriarch of Constantinople, 384, 385
Freppel, Mgr., 458
Fritigern, a Visigothic chief, 331
Funk, Dr., his translation of convenire ad, 25; other references to, 29, 265, 442, 45I
Gabinius, King of the Quadi, 515 Gabriel, S., the Archimandrite, 388, 392
Galla Placidia, Empress, 200 Garnier, Père, S.J., 168 Gaudentius, S., of Brescia, 48 Gaudentius, of Naïssus, 157
Gaul: till about A.D. 400, no metro- politans in, 56, 149, 483; relation of Church of Rome to Church of, in third century, 451
Gelasius, of Cyzicus, an untrustworthy historian, 138, 478
Gelasius, Pope, 89, 183, 335, 359, 361, 377, 382-385, 396, 409, 410, 416, 499 Gelzer, 171
Generosus, a Christian gentleman of Cirta, IOI
Genethlius, Bishop of Carthage, 207 Genitive of apposition, S. Cyprian's use of, 466
Gordius, a Carthaginian priest, who joined the party of Felicissimus, 447 Gore, Mr., 52, 63, 88, 115, 118, 443, 489
Gorgonius, a bishop, 264 Goyau, M., 486
Gratian, the canonist, 154, 493 Gratian, Emperor: his rules for the trial of Western bishops, 145-148; other references to, 144, 149-151, 153-157, 178, 195, 306, 328, 329, 331, 337, 340, 342, 349, 350, 485- 488, 510-526, 528, 532, 534, 538, 539, 541, 542 Gratry, Père, 28, 382
Gratus, S., Bishop of Carthage, 185 Gregory, S., the elder, father of S. Gregory Nazianzen, 239, 301 Gregory, Bishop of Elvira, 200 Gregory, S., Nazianzen: his inter- pretation of the Pasce oves, 127; the date of his twenty-second oration, 501-502; other references to, 61, 165, 179, 239, 241, 253, 315, 321, 341, 342, 363, 386, 440, 503, 504, 529-531, 534-536, 538 Gregory, S., Nyssen: a passage in his funeral oration on S. Meletius, dis- cussed, 256-257; other references to, 68, 94, 136, 160, 165, 166, 179, 223, 238, 247, 329, 335, 363 Gregory I., S., Pope, 52, 148, 350, 371
Gregory VII., Pope, 48, 371 Gregory, S., Thaumaturgus, 68, 179, 238
Gregory, S., of Tours, 55 Grotius, 443
Guardian, The, 41, 188
Hammond, Mr. C. E., 99 Hammond, Dr. Henry, 442 Hardouin, Père, S.J., 532 Harnack, 43, 48, 49, 236, 443 Hartel, 464
Headlam, Mr. A. C., 444
Hefele, Bishop of Rottenburg, 58, 77, 130, 141, 142, 145, 154, 155, 162, 165, 168, 175, 189, 205, 229, 243, 250, 265, 206, 280, 281, 285-287, 306, 325, 326, 334, 351, 359, 382, 417, 453, 455, 458, 480, 481, 484, 491, 510, 519, 522, 528 Hegesippus, 32, 45-47 Helenus, Bishop of Tarsus, 75 Heliodorus, a friend of S. Jerome, who became Bishop of Altinum, 162 Helladius, Bishop of Caesarea in Cap- padocia, 335
Hemmer, The Abbé, 265 Henoticon, The, 377, 378, 390 Henry, a clerk, living (circa 1100) in the abbey of Pomposa, 511 Hesperius, the son of Ausonius, 524, 525, 528
Hesychius, the lexicographer, 125 Hesychius, Bishop of Salona, 335 Hesychius, S., the Theologian, 113,
Hilarian fragment, the sixth, three
letters in, their genuineness not above suspicion, 286, 287 Hilary, S., Bishop of Arles: his con- troversy with S. Leo, 196-202; pre- sided at the Council of Besançon, 197; begged S. Leo not to break the canons, 198; shocked S. Leo by his plainness of speech in assert- ing the independence of the Church in Gaul, 199; "would not suffer himself to be subject to the blessed Apostle Peter," 199; was put under arrest, 199; did not communicate with S. Leo while in Rome, 199; was perhaps excommunicated by S. Leo, 199; died in the odour of sanctity, 201; is commemorated in the Roman Martyrology, 202 Hilary, the deacon, the leader of the more extreme Luciferians, 273 Hilary, S., Bishop of Poitiers: de- scribes the blasphemies of Eudoxius, 158; from 357 to 363 probably held no communion with Liberius, 272; on the true Vicar of Christ, 407; other references to, 229, 230, 236, 240, 253, 255, 258, 260, 261, 264, 270, 272-274, 276, 278, 281, 282, 284, 286, 292, 320, 334, 497 Hilary, S., Pope: vehemently attacked S. Mamertus, 200; other reference to, 377
Hildebrand. See Gregory VII.
Himerius, Bishop of Tarraco, 181, 197, 273, 485
Hincmar, Archbishop of Rheims, 52 Hippolytus, S., 47, 65, 441, 445 Hispana. See Collectio Hispana Hodgkin, Dr., 331, 506, 515 Hogan, Dr., 425
Holstenius, Lucas, librarian of the Vatican, 484
Homer, Iliad of, quoted by S. Basil, 163, 164
Homilies, Clementine, 41, 443, 444 Honoratus, S., of Lerins, 152 Honoratus, S., of Marseilles, the dis- ciple and biographer of S. Hilary of Arles, 198, 199, 201
Honoratus, a Mauritanian bishop, 522 Honoratus, Bishop of Thucca, 456 Honoratus, S., of Vercellae, 265, 494 Honorius, Emperor, 209, 513 Honorius, Pope, 398, 399, 478 Horace, 466
Hormisdas, Pope urges Emperor to use force to compel obedience to papal demands, 401; other refer- ences to, 93, 172, 183, 212, 359-361, 377, 388, 389, 391, 398, 400–404, 409, 411-424, 520
Hormisdas, a prefect of the praetorium, 355
Hort, Dr., 116, 237, 241, 248, 291, 292, 355, 356, 353, 442 Hosius, Bishop of Cordova, 137, 138, 142, 143, 166, 169-172, 230, 239, 276, 376, 479
Hugo de S. Caro, Cardinal, 442 Hurter, Father, S.J., 74 Hyginus, S., Pope: discussion whether
he was eighth or ninth Roman bishop, 38, 39; other references to, 15, 37
Hylas, a freedman of the elder Melania and a friend of S. Jerome, 310 Hypatius, prefect of the praetorium of Italy, 525, 526, 528
Ibas, Bishop of Edessa, 168, 405 Iconium, Council of (A.D. 230), 462 Ifland, 338
Ignatius, S., Bishop of Antioch, 429, 435
Ihm, Professor, of Halle, 510, 515 Illyricum, Eastern, praetorian prefec- ture of, administered from 362 to 379 by the Prefect of Italy, 150, 524; papal vicariate in, created, 157 Illyricum, Western, Council in (A.D. 375), 307
Importunus, Bishop of Besançon, 197 Innocent, a lay friend of S. Jerome, 310
Innocent I., S., Pope, 157, 158, 179,
180, 182, 183, 206-210, 265, 379, 481 Innocent III., Pope, 2, 371 Interpolations, in S. Cyprian's treatise De Catholicae Ecclesiae unitate, 87, 89, 122
Ireland, Church of, not Romanized till twelfth century, 155
Irenaeus, S., Bishop of Lyons: ad- monished Pope Victor, 15-18; the famous passage about the Roman Church in the treatise Contra omnes haereticos by, 19-35; probably con- secrated at Rome, 20, 21; office for his feast in Roman breviary, 28; knew nothing about papal in- fallibility, 35; says nothing about devolution of primacy from S. Peter to Roman bishops, 37; did not be- lieve that S. Peter was Bishop of Rome, 37; his numbering of the Roman bishops, 37-39; his descrip- tion of the Church of Jerusalem, 52; other references to, 32, 45, 49, 51, 75, 429, 440-442
Irenion, S., Bishop of Gaza, 291, 292 Isaac, a converted Jew who relapsed
into Judaism and is identified by Dom Morin with Ambrosiaster, 520, 521, 523, 538, 541
Ischyras, a pseudo-presbyter in Egypt, 170
Isidore, S., a priest of Alexandria, 371, 372
Israel, analogy between organization of, and organization of Church, 219- 221; position of the high priest in,
Ithacians, schism of, 58
James, S., the brother of the Lord: was first Bishop of Jerusalem, 41, 44 ; was ranked among the apostles, 112; in Jerusalem took precedence of S. Peter, 113; was called by Rufinus "the bishop of the apostles," 113; was called by S. Hesychius "the exarch of the apostles," 113; presided at the Council of Jerusalem, 113-116; is represented in Clementine romance as S. Peter's superior, 443 James I., King of England, on S. Peter's primacy, 475 Jansenists, The, 251
Jansenius, Bishop of Ypres, 332 Januarius, Bishop of Caralis, 148 Januarius, Bishop of Gisipa, 207, 209 Javolenus, Priscus, 6
Jebb, Professor, Sir Richard, 462 Jerome, S., describes the worldliness of the Roman clergy, 137; some details of his early history, 161; faults in, pointed out by Father
Bottalla, 161, 249, 250; his famous letter to Damasus, 162; the early age at which he wrote that letter, 162, 163; that letter does not in its teaching represent the apostolic tra- dition, 165; was misled by Damasus into joining the Eustathians, 165; it was apparently at his petition that Damasus' letter Per filium meum was written, 316, 499, 500; on the true Vicar of Christ, 407; meaning of a passage in his treatise against Jovinian, 488-489; his faith became in time purified, 489; other references to, 16, 18, 45, 66, 100, 119, 131-135, 152, 166, 227, 239, 242, 248, 249, 258, 260, 261, 264, 269, 270, 273, 284, 286, 303, 304, 309-315, 335, 338, 340, 363, 368, 386, 439, 442, 481, 484, 523, 527 Jerusalem, Church of: the variations
of its influence, II; its lack of civil importance, II; S. James its first bishop, 41, 44; the mother-church of the whole world, 52; its bishop- ric regarded by some as a higher dignity than the apostolate, 112, 113; the growth of its authority, 130; it finally acquired patriarchal jurisdiction, 130, 155; "no one dares to separate himself from " it, 401; was not quartodeciman in the time of S. Firmilian, 438 Jerusalem, Councils of: (circa A.D. 50), 113-116, 447; (A.D. 518), 359, 393 John, S., the Apostle and Evangelist: constituted S. Polycarp, Bishop of Smyrna, 10, 40, 45; kept Easter in the quartodeciman way, 14, 15; one of the founders of the Church of Ephesus, 22; did not teach papalism to S. Polycarp, 35; was Bishop of Ephesus, 40; is regarded by S. Augustine as the symbol of the Church Triumphant, 86, 101; other reference to, 36 John Angeloptes, Bishop of Ravenna, 148
John I., Bishop of Antioch, 390, 428 John, S., the Chuzibite, 388, 393 John II., S., Bishop of Como, 405 John III., S., Bishop of Como, 405 John II., Patriarch of Constantinople,
359, 360, 388, 390, 397-401, 412, 417, 420, 421
John, Bishop of Elche in Spain, 415, 417
John II., Bishop of Jerusalem, 130 John III., Patriarch of Jerusalem, 359 John, Bishop of Nicopolis, 360 John I., Pope, 395
John II., Pope, 361
John Scholasticus, a schismatic pa-
triarch of Constantinople, 143, 173, 174
John, S., the Silentiary, 389, 394, 396 John, a monk of Syria Secunda, 419 John Talaia. See Talaia
Jordanes, the Gothic historian, 331, 515 Josephus, on the civil precedence of Antioch, 12
Jovian, Emperor, 235, 272, 273, 288, 291, 293, 294, 497, 498 Jovinian, a heretic, 488, 489 Jubaianus, a Mauritanian bishop, 66, 84, 85, 92, 115, 467, 469 Julian the Apostate, Emperor, 258,259, 267, 288, 493
Julian, Bishop of Cos, 167, 168 Julian, Cardinal, 212
Julianus, a celebrated jurist, 173 Julius, S., Pope, 135, 141-143, 171, 204, 229-231, 233, 234, 238, 434, 480, 481, 503 Jungmann, Professor, of Louvain: on the fundamental importance of the theory of S. Peter's supposed Roman episcopate, 36; on the substantial orthodoxy of the majority of the Semi-Arians, 240; other references to, 46, 77, 454, 458 Justel, Henri, 173, 176 Justin, Emperor, 390, 394, 396, 397, 401, 403, 414, 420, 423 Justin Martyr, S., 32 Justinian, Emperor, 143, 174, 390, 401, 403, 317, 525
Juvenal, Bishop of Jerusalem, 130, 377
Leo I., Emperor, 358, 403 Leo I., S., Pope: did not claim any inherent right to preside at Ecumenical Council, 167-169; his controversy with S. Hilary of Arles, 196-202; obtained a rescript in favour of the authority of the Roman see from Valentinian III., 200, 201, 376; spoke of S. Hilary as a man of holy memory," 202; other references to, 12, 100, 104, 128, 130, 172, 183, 357, 359, 360, 371, 376- 378, 397, 399, 411, 428, 481, 483, 512
Leo II., S., Pope, 398
Leo IV., Pope, 174
Leo XIII., Pope, 164, 433 Leontius, Bishop of Antioch, 227, 232, 233, 234, 253, 283 Lessius, S.J., 425
Libellus, The, of Hormisdas, 398-403,
412, 413, 419; its various forms, 414-417; many Eastern bishops avoided signing it, 421-424 Liberatus, Archdeacon of Carthage, 168
Liberius, Pope; heroically withstood
the Emperor Constantius, 135; with- drew in 357 his communion from S. Athanasius, 135, 270, 283; com- promised the faith, 135, 162, 271; styled by some "Saint Liberius," 265; the chief share in the pacification of 362, not to be attributed to, 266- 274; escaped banishment after Coun- cil of Ariminum, 271; was in 362 still out of communion with S. Atha- nasius, 271; rehabilitation of, by S. Athanasius, 272; his letter to the bishops of Italy, 272; Sozomen's account of the fall of, 275-287; signed an express repudiation of the ὁμοούσιον, 281; did not grant his communion to S. Meletius during the last year of his life, 293-295; other references to, 28, 31, 136, 230, 232-234, 259, 260, 292, 296, 297, 320, 434, 437, 484, 498 Liber Pontificalis, 38, 48, 70, 414, 520, 521
Libosus, Bishop of Vaga, 456 Lightfoot, Bishop of Durham: on S. Linus and S. Ânencletus, 5; on the date of the Clementine romance, 49; on the variations in S. Peter's posi- tion, 114; on the influence of the Clementine romance at Rome, 444; other references to, 38, 40-46, 112, 227, 351, 371, 435, 443, 445, 459, 460, 480 Linus, S., Pope : a monarchical
bishop, 5; received episcopate from S. Peter and S. Paul, 21, 38; was first bishop of Rome, 37, 39; date of the consecration of, 38, 43, 44; other references to, 39, 45, 116, 445 Liturgy of S. James: its interpretation of "the rock," 99 Lockhart, Father, 28
Lucentius, Bishop of Asculum, one of S. Leo's legates at Chalcedon, 167 Lucianic creed, one of the creeds promulgated in 341 by the Council of Antioch, 280
Lucifer, Bishop of Caralis in Sardinia : consecrated Paulinus to be bishop of the Eustathians at Antioch, 159, 264; fell away into schism, 159, 265; baseless theory ascribing status of a papal legate to, 267, 493-496; other references to, 235, 257, 260, 261, 263, 273, 288, 303, 352, 368, 369, 454
Lucius, an Arian bishop of Alexandria, 336
Lucius, Bishop of Verona, 434 Lucius, Pope, 5
Lugo, Cardinal de, S.J., 430 Lumper, 430
Lupus, Christianus, 194, 424
Lyons, only see in Celtic Gaul at first, 16, 55
Maassen, 30, 139, 173, 185, 205, 212, 434, 499, 500 Macedonius I., Bishop of Constanti- nople and heresiarch, 240, 307, 330 Macedonius II., S., Patriarch of Con- stantinople (A.D. 495-511), 387, 388, 390, 396, 397, 399, 400, 402, 409, 410, 412, 416, 418
Macedonius, a Magister officiorum, 485 Macedonius, Bishop of Mopsuestia, 233 Macrina, S., the elder, S. Basil's grandmother, 238
Macrina, S., the younger, S. Basil's sister, 238
Magnus, an African Christian, 78, 79 Maistre, M. de, 98, 99, 116, 118, 194 Maldonatus, S.J., 223
Malnory, the Abbé, 179 Mamachi, Thomas Maria, O. Praed., 126
Mamertus, S., of Vienne, 200
Manning, Cardinal, 25, 111, 112, 286 Mansi, Archbishop of Lucca: on S. Cyprian's excommunication, 74, 75; other references to, 145, 164, 206, 437, 462, 496, 510, 522
Maran, Dom, O.S.B., 67, 69, 77, 229, 240, 244, 245, 267, 276, 281, 289, 290, 294, 295, 300, 306, 308, 316, 318, 321, 322, 327, 333, 363, 430, 457, 458, 463, 468, 496
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