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St. Anastasia
This martyr enjoys the distinction, unique in the Roman liturgy, of having a
special commemoration in the second Mass on Christmas day. This Mass was
originally celebrated not in honour of the birth of Christ, but in commemoration
of this martyr, and towards the end of the fifth century her name was also
inserted in the Roman canon of the Mass. Nevertheless, she is not a Roman saint,
for she suffered martyrdom at Sirmium, and was not venerated at Rome until
almost the end of the fifth century. It is true that a later legend, not earlier
than the sixth century, makes Anastasia a Roman, though even in this legend she
did not suffer martyrdom at Rome. The same legend connects her name with that of
St. Chrysogonus, likewise not a Roman martyr, but put to death in Aquileia,
though he had a church in Rome dedicated to his honour. According to this
Passio
, Anastasia was the daughter of Praetextatus, a Roman vir illustris, and
had Chrysogonus for a teacher. Early in the persecution of Diocletian the
Emperor summoned Chrysogonus to Aquileia where he suffered martyrdom. Anastasia,
having gone from Aquileia to Sirmium to visit the faithful of that place, was
beheaded on the island of Palmaria, 25 December, and her body interred in the
house of Apollonia, which had been converted into a basilica. The whole account
is purely legendary, and rests on no historical foundations. All that is certain
is that a martyr named Anastasia gave her life for the faith in Sirmium, and
that her memory was kept sacred in that church. The so-called Martyrologium
Sieronymianum
(ed. De Rossi and Duchesne, Acta SS., 2 November) records her
name on 25 December, not for Sirmium alone, but also for Constantinople, a
circumstance based on a separate story. According to Theodorus Lector (Hist.
Eccles., II, 65), during the patriarchate of Gennadius (458-471) the body of the
martyr was transferred to Constantinople and interred in a church which had
hitherto been known as Anastasis
(Gr. Anastasis, Resurrection); thenceforth
the church took the name of Anastasia. Similarly the cultus of St. Anastasia was
introduced into Roman from Sirmium by means of an already existing church. As
this church was already quite famous, it brought the feast of the saint into
especial prominence. There existed in Rome from the fourth century, at the foot
of the Palatine and above the Circus Maximus, a church which had been adorned by
Pope Damasus (366-384) with a large mosaic. It was known as titulus Anastasix
,
and is mentioned as such in the Acts of the Roman Council of 499. There is some
uncertainty as to the origin of this name; either the church owes its foundation
to and was named after a Roman matron Anastasia, as in the case of several other
titular churches of Rome (Duchesne), or it was originally an Anastasis
church
(dedicated to the Resurrection of Christ), such as existed already at Ravenna
and Constantinople; from the word Anastasis
came eventually the name titulus
Anastasix
(Grisar). Whatever way this happened, the church was an especially
prominent one from the fourth to the sixth century, being the only titular
church in the centre of ancient Rome, and surrounded by the monuments of the
city's pagan past. Within its jurisdiction was the Palatine where the imperial
court was located. Since the veneration of the Sirmian martyr, Anastasia,
received a new impetus in Constantinople during the second half of the fifth
century, we may easily infer that the intimate contemporary relations between
Old and New Rome brought about an increase in devotion to St. Anastasia at the
foot of the Palatine. At all events the insertion of her name into the Roman
Canon of the Mass towards the end of the fifth century, show that she then
occupied a unique position among the saints publicly venerated at Rome.
Thenceforth the church on the Palatine is known as titulus sanctx Anastasix
,
and the martyr of Sirmium became the titular saint of the old fourth-century
basilica. Evidently because of its position as titular church of the district
including the imperial dwellings on the Palatine this church long maintained an
eminent rank among the churches of Rome; only two churches preceded it in honour:
St. John Lateran, the mother-church of Rome, and St. Mary Major. This ancient
sanctuary stands today quite isolated amid the ruins of Rome. The commemoration
of St. Anastasia in the second Mass on Christmas day is the last remnant of the
former prominence enjoyed by this saint and her church in the life of Christian
Rome.
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