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| Paul is again ejected from the Church by Constantius, in consequence of the Slaughter of Hermogenes, his General. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter XIII.—Paul is
again ejected from the Church by Constantius, in consequence of the
Slaughter of Hermogenes, his General.
Intelligence of these
proceedings reached the ears of the Emperor Constantius, whose
residence was then at Antioch. Accordingly he ordered his general
Hermogenes, who had been despatched to Thrace, to pass through
Constantinople on his way, and expel Paul from the church. He, on
arriving at Constantinople, threw the whole city into confusion,
attempting to cast out the bishops; for sedition immediately arose from
the people in their eagerness to defend the bishop. And when Hermogenes
persisted in his efforts to drive out Paul by means of his military
force, the people became exasperated as is usual in such cases; and
making a desperate attack upon him, they set his house on fire, and
after dragging through the city, they at last put him to death. This
took place in the consulate279
279342 a.d. This assassination
of Hermogenes was evidently recorded in that portion of Am.
Marcellinus’ work which has been lost; at least a record of it is
referred to in that author’s Rerum Gestarum, XIV. x. 2
(ed. Eyssenhart).
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of the two Augusti,—that is to say, the third
consulship,—Constantius, and the second of Constans: at which
time Constans, having subdued the Franks, compelled them to enter into
a treaty of peace with the Romans. The Emperor Constantius, on being
informed of the assassination of Hermogenes, set off on horseback from
Antioch, and arriving at Constantinople immediately expelled Paul, and
then punished the inhabitants by withdrawing from them more than 40,000
measures of the daily allowance of wheat which had been granted by his
father for gratuitous distribution among them: for prior to this
catastrophe, nearly 80,000 measures of wheat brought from Alexandria
had been bestowed on the citizens.280
280On the gratuitous distribution of grain or bread
practised under Constantine and later under Theodosius, see Cod.
Theod. XIV. tit. XVI., and cf. Eunap. Aedes. par. 22.
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He hesitated, however, to ratify281
281Cf. Bingham, Christ. Antiq. IV. xi. 19, on
the control over the appointment of bishops by the emperor at this
time.
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the appointment of Macedonius to the bishopric of that city, being
irritated against him not only because he had been ordained without his
own consent; but also because on account of the contests in which he
had been engaged with Paul, Hermogenes, his general, and many other
persons had been slain. But having given him permission to minister in
the church in which he had been consecrated, he returned to
Antioch.
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