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| The Bishops of Rome and of Alexandria under the Same Emperor. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter IV.—The Bishops of Rome
and of Alexandria under the Same Emperor.989
In the
third year of the same reign, Alexander,990
990 On
Alexander, see above, chap. 1, note 4. |
bishop of Rome, died after holding office ten years. His successor was
Xystus.991
991 Known
as Sixtus I. (Sixtus, or Sistus, being the Latin form of the name) in
the list of Roman bishops. He was supposed to be the author of a
collection of religious and moral maxims, which were widely read in the
ancient Church and are mentioned by many of the Fathers. His authorship
was disputed by Jerome and others, and the work from that time on was
commonly assigned to a heathen author, until recently some voices have
again been heard in favor of the authorship of Bishop Sixtus (notably
de Lagarde and Ewald). See Schaff’s Church Hist. II. p.
703 sq.
He is, according to
Lipsius, the first Roman bishop whose dates we have any means of
ascertaining, and it may be assumed that he was the first one that
occupied an episcopal position in Rome; and yet, even in his time, the
monarchical episcopate can hardly have been established in its full
sense. In the next chapter we are told that he held office ten years;
and this figure, which is supported by most of the ancient catalogues,
may be accepted as approximately correct. The date of his accession
given here by Eusebius cannot, however, be correct; for, as Lipsius has
shown (Chron. de röm. Bischöfe, p. 183 sq.) he must
have died at least as early as 126 a.d.
(possibly as early as 124), so that his accession took place not later
than 116; that is, before the death of Trajan. Like most of the other
early Roman bishops he is celebrated as a martyr in the martyrologies,
but the fact of his martyrdom rests upon a very late and worthless
tradition. | About the same time Primus, bishop of
Alexandria, died in the twelfth year of his episcopate,992
992 On
Primus, see chap. 1, note 4. Eusebius contradicts his own dates here.
For in chap. 1 he says that Alexander of Rome and Primus of Alexandria
became bishops at the same time; but according to this chapter,
Alexander died at the close of the tenth year of his episcopate, and
Primus in the twelfth year of his. Eusebius may have used the word
“about” advisedly, to cover considerable ground, and may
have grouped the two bishops together simply for convenience’
sake. No reliance is to be placed upon the dates in any
case. | and was succeeded by Justus.993
993 We
know nothing about Justus except that he ruled eleven years, according
to the next chapter. If Primus died in the twelfth year of his
episcopate, as Eusebius says in this chapter, and entered upon his
office in the twelfth year of Trajan, as he says in chapter 1, Justus
must have become bishop about 120 a.d., in the
third or fourth year of Hadrian. It must be remembered, however, that
all of these dates are historically worthless. | E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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