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Pope St. Boniface I
Elected 28 December, 418; d. at Rome, 4 September, 422. Little is known of
his life antecedent to his election. The Liber Pontificalis
calls him a Roman,
and the son of the presbyter Jocundus. He is believed to have been ordained by
Pope Damasus I (366-384) and to have served as representative of Innocent I at
Constantinople (c. 405).
At he death of Pope Zosimus, the Roman Church entered into the fifth of the
schisms, resulting from double papal elections, which so disturbed her peace
during the early centuries. Just after Zosimus's obsequies, 27 December, 418, a
faction of the Roman clergy consisting principally of deacons seized the Lateran
basilica and elected as pope the Archdeacon Eulalius. The higher clergy tried to
enter, but were violently repulsed by a mob of adherents of the Eulalian party.
On the following day they met in the church of Theodora and elected as pope,
much against his will, the aged Boniface, a priest highly esteemed for his
charity, learning, and good character. On Sunday, 29 December, both were
consecrated, Boniface in the Basilica of St. Marcellus, supported by nine
provincial bishops and some seventy priests; Eulalius in the Lateran basilica in
the presence of the deacons, a few priests and the Bishop of Ostia, who was
summoned from his sickbed to assist at the ordination. Each claimant proceeded
to act as pope, and Rome was thrown into tumultuous confusion by the clash of
the rival factions. The Prefect of Rome, Symmachus, hostile to Boniface,
reported the trouble to the Emperor Honorius at Ravenna, and secured the
imperial confirmation of Eulalius's election. Boniface was expelled from the
city. His adherents, however, secured a hearing from the emperor who called a
synod of Italian bishops at Ravenna to meet the rival popes and discuss the
situation (February, March, 419). Unable to reach a decision, the synod made a
few practical provisions pending a general council of Italian, Gaulish, and
African bishops to be convened in May to settle the difficulty. It ordered both
claimants to leave Rome until a decision was reached and forbade return under
penalty of condemnation. As Easter, 30 March, was approaching , Achilleus,
Bishop of Spoleto, was deputed to conduct the paschal services in the vacant
Roman See. Boniface was sent, it seems, to the cemetery of St. Felicitas on the
Via Salaria, and Eulalius to Antium. On 18 March, Eulalius boldly returned to
Rome, gathered his partisans, stirred up strife anew, and spurning the prefect's
orders to leave the city, seized the Lateran basilica on Holy Saturday (29 March),
determined to preside at the paschal ceremonies. The imperial troops were
required to dispossess him and make it possible for Achilleus to conduct the
services. The emperor was deeply indignant at these proceedings and refusing to
consider again the claims of Eulalius, recognized Boniface as legitimate pope (3
April, 418). The latter re-entered Rome 10 April and was acclaimed by the people.
Eulalius was madeBishop either of Nepi in Tuscany or of some Campanian see,
according to the conflicting data of the sources of the Liber Pontificalis
.
The schism had lasted fifteen weeks. Early in 420, the pope's critical illness
encouraged the artisans of Eulalius to make another effort. On his recovery
Boniface requested the emperor (1 July, 420) to make some provision against
possible renewal of the schism in the event of his death. Honorius enacted a law
providing that, in contested Papal elections, neither claimant should be
recognized and a new election should be held.
Boniface's reign was marked by great zeal and activity in disciplinary
organization and control. He reversed his predecessor's policy of endowing
certain Western bishops with extraordinary papal vicariate powers. Zosimus had
given to Patroclus, Bishop of Arles, extensive jurisdiction in the provinces of
Vienna and Narbonne, and had made him an intermediary between these provinces
and the Apostolic See. Boniface diminished these primatial rights and restored
the metropolitan powers of the chief bishops of provinces. Thus he sustained
Hilary, Archbishop of Narbonne, in his choice of a bishop of the vacant See of
Lodeve, against Patroclus, who tried to intrude another (422). So, too, he
insisted that Maximus, Bishop of Valence, should be tried for his alleged crimes,
not by a primate, but by a synod of the bishops of Gaul, and promised to sustain
their decision (419). Boniface succeeded to Zosimus's difficulties with the
African Church regarding appeals to Rome and, in particular, the case of
Apiarius. The Council of Carthage, having heard the representations of Zosimus's
legates, sent to Boniface on 31 May, 419, a letter in reply to the commonitorium
of his predecessor. It stated that the council had been unable to verify the
canons which the legates had quoted as Nicene, but which were later found to be
Sardican. It agreed, however, to observe them until verification could be
established. This letter is often cited in illustration of the defiant attitude
of the African Church to the Roman See. An unbiased study of it, however, must
lead to no more extreme conclusion than that of Dom Chapman: it was written in
considerable irritation, yet in a studiously moderate tone
(Dublin Review. July,
1901, 109-119). The Africans were irritated at the insolence of Boniface's
legates and incensed at being urged to obey laws which they thought were not
consistently enforced at Rome. This they told Boniface in no uncertain language;
yet, far from repudiating his authority, they promised to obey the suspected
laws, thus recognizing the pope's office as guardian of the Church's discipline.
In 422 Boniface received the appeal of Anthony of Fussula who, through the
efforts of St. Augustine, had been deposed by a provincial synod of Numidia, and
decided that he should be restored if his innocence be established. Boniface
ardently supported St. Augustine in combating Pelagianism. Having received two
Pelagian letters calumniating Augustine, he sent them to him. In recognition of
this solicitude Augustine dedicated to Boniface his rejoinder contained in
Contra duas Epistolas Pelagianoruin Libri quatuor
.
In the East he zealously maintained his jurisdiction over the ecclesiastical provinces of Illyricurn, of which the Patriarch of Constantinople was trying to secure control on account of their becoming a part of the Eastern empire. The Bishop of Thessalonica had been constituted papal vicar in this territory, exercising jurisdiction over the metropolitans and bishops. By letters to Rufus, the contemporary incumbent of the see, Boniface watched closely over the interests of the Illyrian church and insisted on obedience to Rome. In 421 dissatisfaction expressed by certain malcontents among the bishops, on account of the pope's refusal to confirm the election of Perigines as Bishop of Corinth unless the candidate was recognized by Rufus, served as a pretext for the young emperor Theodosius II to grant the ecclesiastical dominion of Illyricurn to the Patriarch of Constantinople (14 July, 421). Boniface remonstrated with Honorius against the violation of the rights of his see, and prevailed upon him to urge Theodosius to rescind his enactment. The law was not enforced, but it remained in the Theodosian (439) and Justinian (534) codes and caused much trouble for succeeding popes. By a letter of 11 March, 422, Boniface forbade the consecration in Illyricum of any bishop whom Rufus would not recognize. Boniface renewed the legislation of Pope Soter, prohibiting women to touch the sacred linens or to minister at the burning of incense. He enforced the laws forbidding slaves to become clerics. He was buried in the cemetery of Maximus on the Via Salaria, near the tomb of his favorite, St. Felicitas, in whose honor and in gratitude for whose aid he had erected an oratory over the cemetery bearing her name. The Church keeps his feast on 25 October.
Liber Pontificalis, ed. DUCHESNE (Paris, 1886), 1, pp. lxii, 227-229; JAME, Regesta Romanorum Pontificum (Leipzig, 1885), 1, 51-54; Acta SS., XIII, 62*; LIX, 605 - 616; BARONIUS, Annales (Bar-le-Duc, 1866), VII, 152-231; TILLEMONT, Mémoires (Venice, 1732), XII, 385-407; 666-670; P.L., XVIII, 397-406; XX, 745-792; HEFELE, Conciliengeschichte and translation, §§ 120, 122; DUCHESNE, Fastes Episcopaux de l'Ancienne Gaul (Paris, 1894), I 84-109; Les Eglíses Séparées (Paris, 1905), 229-279; BUCHANAN in Dict. Christ. Biog., s.v.; GREGORIUS-HAMILTON, Hist. of Rome in the Middle Ages (London, 1894), I, 180-181.
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