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Dionysius Exiguus
The surname EXIGUUS, or The Little
, adopted probably in self-deprecation
and not because he was small of stature; flourished in the earlier part of the
sixth century, dying before the year 544. According to his friend and
fellow-student, Cassiodorus (De divinis Lectionibus, c. xxiii), though by birth
a Scythian, he was in character a true Roman and thorough Catholic, most learned
in both tongues - i.e., Greek and Latin - and an accomplished Scripturist. Much
of his life was spent in Rome, where he governed a monastery as abbot. His
industry was very great and he did good service in translating standard works
from Greek into Latin, principally the Life of St. Pachomius
, the Instruction
of St. Proclus of Constantinople
for the Armenians, the De opificio hominis
of St. Gregory of Nyssa, the history of the discovery of the head of St. John
the Baptist. The translation of St. Cyril of Alexandria's synodical letter
against Nestorius, and some other works long attributed to Dionysius are now
acknowledged to be earlier and are assigned to Marius Mercator.
Of great importance were the contributions of Dionysius to the science of
canon law, the first beginnings of which in Western Christendom were due to him.
His Collectio Dionysiana
embraces (1) a collection of synodal decrees, of
which he has left two editions: - (a) Codex canonum Ecclesiæ Universæ
. This
contains canons of Oriental synods and councils only in Greek and Latin,
including those of the four cumenical councils from Nicæa (325) to Chalcedon
(451). - (b) Codex canonum ecclesiasticarum
. This is in Latin only; its
contents agree generally with the other, but the Council of Ephesus (431) is
omitted, while the so-called Canons of the Apostles
and those of Sardica are
included, as well as 138 canons of the African Council of Carthage (419). - (c)
Of another bilingual version of Greek canons, undertaken at the instance of Pope
Hormisdas, only the preface has been preserved. (2) A collection of papal
Constitutions (Collectio decretorum Pontificum Romanorum) from Siricius to
Anastasius II (384-498).
In chronology Dionysius has left his mark conspicuously, for it was he who
introduced the use of the Christian Era (see CHRONOLOGY) according to which
dates are reckoned from the Incarnation, which he assigned to 25 March, in the
year 754 from the foundation of Rome (A. U. C.). By this method of computation
he intended to supersede the Era of Diocletian
previously employed, being
unwilling, as he tells us, that the name of an impious persecutor should be thus
kept in memory. The Era of the Incarnation, often called the Dionysian Era, was
soon much used in Italy and, to some extent, a little later in Spain; during the
eighth and ninth centuries it was adopted in England. Charlemagne is said to
have been the first Christian ruler to employ it officially. It was not until
the tenth century that it was employed in the papal chancery (Lersch,
Chronologie, Freiburg, 1899, p. 233). Dionysius also gave attention to the
calculation of Easter, which so greatly occupied the early Church. To this end
he advocated the adoption of the Alexandrian Cycle of nineteen years, extending
that of St. Cyril for a period of ninety-five years in advance. It was in this
work that he adopted the Era of the Incarnation.
DIONYSIUS, works in P.L., LXVII, and the testimony of CASSIODORUS, ibid, LXX. See also MAASEN, Quellen der Lit. des can. Rechts im Abendlande (Graz, 1870); BARDENHEWER, Gesch. der altkirch. Lit. (Freiburg im Br., 1902).
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