Online Encyclopedia

PELAGIUS I

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V21, Page 62 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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PELAGIUS I  ., pope from 555 to 561, was a
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Roman by birth, and first appears in
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history at Constantinople in the rank of deacon, and as apocrisiarius of Pope
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Silverius, whose over-throw in favour of
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Vigilius his intrigues promoted . Vigilius continued him in his
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diplomatic appointment, and he was sent by the emperor Justinian in 542 to
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Antioch on ecclesiastical business; he afterwards took
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part in the synod at Gaza which deposed Paul of Alexandria . He had amassed some
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wealth, which on his return to Rome he so employed among the poor as to secure for himself
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great popularity; and, when Vigilius was summoned to
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Byzantium in 544, Pelagius, now archdeacon, was
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left behind as his vicar, and by his tact in dealing with Totila, the
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Gothic invader, saved the citizens from
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murder and outrage . He appears to have followed his master to Constantinople, and to have taken part in the Three Chapters controversy; in 553, at all events, he signed the " constitutum " of Vigilius in favour of these, and for refusing, with him, to accept the decrees of .the fifth general council (the 2nd of Constantinople, 553) shared his exile . Even after Vigilius had approved the comdemnation of the Three Chapters, Pelagius defended them, and even published a
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book on the subject . But when Vigilius died (
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June 7, 555), he accepted the council, and allowed himself to be designated by Justinian to succeed the
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late pope . It was in these circumstances that he returned to Rome; but most of the clergy, suspecting his orthodoxy, and believing him to have had some share in the removal of his predecessor, shunned his fellowship . He enjoyed, however, the support of Narses, and, after he had publicly purged himself of complicity in Vigilius's
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death in the church of St Peter, he met with toleration in his own immediate diocese . The rest of the western bishops, however, still held aloof, and the episcopate of Tuscany caused his name to be removed from the diptychs . This elicited from him a circular, in which he asserted his
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loyalty to the four general
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councils, and declared that the hostile bishops had been guilty of
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schism . The bishops of
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Liguria and Aemilia, headed by the archbishop of Milan, and those of Istria and Venice, headed by Paulinus of
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Aquileia, also withheld their fellowship; but Narses resisted the appeals of Pelagius, who would have invoked the secular arm .
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Childebert, king of the Franks, also refused to interfere .

Pelagius died on the 4th of

March 561, and was succeeded by John III .

End of Article: PELAGIUS I
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