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Pope St. Gregory I (the Great
)
Doctor of the Church; born at Rome about 540; died 12 March 604. Gregory
is certainly one of the most notable figures in Ecclesiastical History. He has exercised in many respects a momentous influence on the doctrine, the organization, and the discipline of the Catholic Church. To him we must look for an explanation of the religious situation of the Middle Ages; indeed, if no account were taken of his work, the evolution of the form of medieval Christianity would be almost inexplicable. And further, in so far as the modern Catholic system is a legitimate development of medieval Catholicism, of this too Gregory may not unreasonably be termed the Father. Almost all the leading principles of the later Catholicism are found, at any rate in germ, in Gregory the Great.(F.H. Dudden,Gregory the Great, 1, p. v).
This eulogy by a learned non-Catholic writer will justify the length and elaboration of the following article.
I. FROM BIRTH TO 574
Gregory's father was Gordianus, a wealthy patrician, probably of the famous
gens Amicia, who owned large estates in Sicily and a mansion on the Caelian Hill
in Rome, the ruins of which, apparently in a wonderful state of preservation,
still await excavation beneath the Church of St. Andrew and St. Gregory. His
mother Silvia appears also to have been of good family, but very little is known
of her life. She is honoured as a saint, her feast being kept on 3 November.
Portraits of Gordianus and Silvia were painted by Gregory's order, in the atrium
of St. Andrew's monastery, and a pleasing description of these may be found in
John the Deacon (Vita, IV, lxxxiii). Besides his mother, two of Gregory's aunts
have been canonised, Gordianus's two sisters, Tarsilla and Æmiliana, so that
John the Deacon speaks of his education as being that of a saint among saints.
Of his early years we know nothing beyond what the history of the period tells
us. Between the years 546 and 552 Rome was first captured by the Goths under
Totila, and then abandoned by them; next it was garrisoned by Belisarius, and
besieged in vain by the Goths, who took it again, however, after the recall of
Belisarius, only to lose it once more to Narses. Gregory's mind and memory were
both exceptionally receptive, and it is to the effect produced on him by these
disasters that we must attribute the tinge of sadness which pervades his
writings and especially his clear expectation of a speedy end to the world. Of
his education, we have no details. Gregory of Tours tells us that in grammar,
rhetoric and dialectic he was so skilful as to be thought second to none in all
Rome, and it seems certain also that he must have gone through a course of legal
studies. Not least among the educating influences was the religious atmosphere
of his home. He loved to meditate on the Scriptures and to listen attentively to
the conversations of his elders, so that he was devoted to God from his youth
up
. His rank and prospects pointed him out naturally for a public career, and
he doubtless held some of the subordinate offices wherein a young patrician
embarked on public life. That he acquitted himself well in these appears certain,
since we find him about the year 573, when little more than thirty years old,
filling the important office of prefect of the city of Rome. At that date the
brilliant post was shorn of much of its old magnificence, and its
responsibilities were reduced; still it remained the highest civil dignity in
the city, and it was only after long prayer and inward struggle that Gregory
decided to abandon everything and become a monk. This event took place most
probably in 574. His decision once taken, he devoted himself to the work and
austerities of his new life with all the natural energy of his character. His
Sicilian estates were given up to found six monasteries there, and his home on
the Caelian Hill was converted into another under the patronage of St. Andrew.
Here he himself took the cowl, so that he who had been wont to go about the
city clad in the trabea and aglow with silk and jewels, now clad in a worthless
garment served the altar of the Lord
(Greg. Tur., X, i).
II. AS MONK AND ABBOT (C. 574-590)
There has been much discussion as to whether Gregory and his fellow-monks at
St. Andrew's followed the Rule of St. Benedict. Baronius and others on his
authority have denied this, while it has been asserted as strongly by Mabillon
and the Bollandists, who, in the preface to the life of St. Augustine (26 May),
retract the opinion expressed earlier in the preface to St. Gregory's life (12
March). The controversy is important only in view of the question as to the form
of monasticism introduced by St. Augustine into England, and it may be said that
Baronius's view is now practically abandoned. For about three years Gregory
lived in retirement in the monastery of St. Andrew, a period to which he often
refers as the happiest portion of his life. His great austerities during this
time are recorded by the biographers, and probably caused the weak health from
which he constantly suffered in later life. However, he was soon drawn out of
his seclusion, when, in 578, the pope ordained him, much against his will, as
one of the seven deacons (regionarii) of Rome. The period was one of acute
crisis. The Lombards were advancing rapidly towards the city, and the only
chance of safety seemed to be in obtaining help from the Emperor Tiberius at
Byzantium. Pope Pelagius II accordingly dispatched a special embassy to Tiberius,
and sent Gregory along with it as his apocrisiarius, or permanent ambassador to
the Court of Byzantium. The date of this new appointment seems to have been the
spring of 579, and it lasted apparently for about six years. Nothing could have
been more uncongenial to Gregory than the worldly atmosphere of the brilliant
Byzantine Court, and to counteract its dangerous influence he followed the
monastic life so far as circumstances permitted. This was made easier by the
fact that several of his brethren from St. Andrew's accompanied him to
Constantinople. With them he prayed and studied the Scriptures, one result of
which remains in his Morals
, or series of lectures on the Book of Job,
composed during this period at the request of St. Leander of Seville, whose
acquaintance Gregory made during his stay in Constantinople. Much attention was
attracted to Gregory by his controversy with Eutychius, Patriarch of
Constantinople, concerning the Resurrection. Eutychius had published a treatise
on the subject maintaining that the risen bodies of the elect would be
impalpable, more light than air
. To this view Gregory objected the palpability
of Christ's risen body. The dispute became prolonged and bitter, till at length
the emperor intervened, both combatants being summoned to a private audience,
where they stated their views. The emperor decided that Gregory was in the right,
and ordered Eutychius's book to the burned. The strain of the struggle had been
so great that both fell ill. Gregory recovered, but the patriarch succumbed,
recanting his error on his death bed. Mention should be made of the curious fact
that, although Gregory's sojourn at Constantinople lasted for six years, he
seems never to have mastered even the rudiments of Greek. Possibly he found that
the use of an interpreter had its advantages, but he often complains of the
incapacity of those employed for this purpose. It must be owned that, so far as
obtaining help for Rome was concerned, Gregory's stay at Constantinople was a
failure. However, his period as ambassador taught him very plainly a lesson
which was to bear great fruit later on when he ruled in Rome as pope. This was
the important fact that no help was any longer to be looked for from Byzantium,
with the corollary that, if Rome and Italy were to be saved at all, it could
only be by vigorous independent action of the powers on the spot. Humanly
speaking, it is to the fact that Gregory had acquired this conviction that his
later line of action with all its momentous consequences is due.
In the year 586, or possibly 585, he was recalled to Rome, and with the
greatest joy returned to St. Andrew's, of which he became abbot soon afterwards.
The monastery grew famous under his energetic rule, producing many monks who won
renown later, and many vivid pictures of this period may be found in the
Dialogues
. Gregory gave much of his time to lecturing on the Holy Scriptures
and is recorded to have expounded to his monks the Heptateuch, Books of Kings,
the Prophets, the Book of Proverbs, and the Canticle of V+Canticles. Notes of
these lectures were taken at the time by a young student named Claudius, but
when transcribed were found by Gregory to contain so many errors that he
insisted on their being given to him for correction and revision. Apparently
this was never done, for the existing fragments of such works attributed to
Gregory are almost certainly spurious. At this period, however, one important
literary enterprise was certainly completed. This was the revision and
publication of the Magna Moralia
, or lectures on the Book of Job, undertaken
in Constantinople at the request of St. Leander. In one of his letters (Ep., V,
liii) Gregory gives an interesting account of the origin of this work. To this
period most probably should be assigned the famous incident of Gregory's meeting
with the English youths in the Forum. The first mention of the event is in the
Whitby life (c, ix), and the whole story seems to be an English tradition. It is
worth notice, therefore, that in the St. Gall manuscript the Angles do not
appear as slave boys exposed for sale, but as men visiting Rome of their own
free will, whom Gregory expressed a desire to see. It is Venerable Bede (Hist.
Eccl., II, i) who first makes them slaves. In consequence of this meeting
Gregory was so fixed with desire to convert the Angles that he obtained
permission from Pelagius II to go in person to Britain with some of his
fellow-monks as missionaries. The Romans, however, were greatly incensed at the
pope's act. With angry words they demanded Gregory's recall, and messengers were
at once dispatched to bring him back to Rome, if necessary by force. These men
caught up with the little band of missionaries on the third day after their
departure, and at once returned with them, Gregory offering no opposition, since
he had received what appeared to him as a sign from heaven that his enterprise
should be abandoned. The strong feeling of the Roman populace that Gregory must
not be allowed to leave Rome is a sufficient proof of the position he now held
there. He was in fact the chief adviser and assistant of Pelagius II, towards
whom he seems to have acted very much in the capacity of secretary (see the
letter of the Bishop of Ravenna to Gregory, Epp., III, lxvi, Sedem apostolicam,
quam antae moribus nunc etiam honore debito gubernatis
). In this capacity,
probably in 586, Gregory wrote his important letter to the schismatical bishops
of Istria who had separated from communion with the Church on the question of
the Three Chapters (Epp., Appendix, III, iii). This document, which is almost a
treatise in length, is an admirable example of Gregory's skill, but it failed to
produce any more effort than Pelagius's two previous letters had, and the schism
continued.
The year 589 was one of widespread disaster throughout all the empire. In
Italy there was an unprecedented inundation. Farms and houses were carried away
by the floods. The Tiber overflowed its banks, destroying numerous buildings,
among them the granaries of the Church with all the store of corn. Pestilence
followed on the floods, and Rome became a very city of the dead. Business was at
a standstill, and the streets were deserted save for the wagons which bore forth
countless corpses for burial in common pits beyond the city walls. Then, in
February, 590, as if to fill the cup of misery to the brim, Pelagius II died.
The choice of a successor lay with the clergy and people of Rome, and without
any hesitation they elected Gregory, Abbot of St. Andrew's. In spite of their
unanimity Gregory shrank from the dignity thus offered him. He knew, no doubt,
that its acceptance meant a final good-bye to the cloister life he loved, and so
he not only refused to accede to the prayers of his fellow citizens but also
wrote personally to the Emperor Maurice, begging him with all earnestness not to
confirm the election. Germanus, prefect of the city, suppresses this letter,
however, and sent instead of it the formal schedule of the election. In the
interval while awaiting the emperor's reply the business of the vacant see was
transacted by Gregory, in commission with two or three other high officials. As
the plague still continued unabated, Gregory called upon the people to join in a
vast sevenfold procession which was to start from each of the seven regions of
the city and meet at the Basilica of the Blessed Virgin, all praying the while
for pardon and the withdrawal of the pestilence. This was accordingly done, and
the memory of the event is still preserved by the name Sant' Angelo
given to
the mausoleum of Hadrian from the legend that the Archangel St. Michael was seen
upon its summit in the act of sheathing his sword as a sign that the plague was
over. At length, after six months of waiting, came the emperor's confirmation of
Gregory's election. The saint was terrified at the news and even meditated
flight. He was seized, however, carried to the Basilica of St. Peter, and there
consecrated pope on 3 September, 590. The story that Gregory actually fled the
city and remained hidden in a forest for three days, when his whereabouts was
revealed by a supernatural light, seems to be pure invention. It appears for the
first time in the Whitby life (c. vii), and is directly contrary to the words of
his contemporary, Gregory of Tours (Hist. Franc., X, i). Still he never ceased
to regret his elevation, and his later writings contain numberless expressions
of strong feeling on this point.
III. AS POPE (590-604)
Fourteen years of life remained to Gregory, and into these he crowded work
enough to have exhausted the energies of a lifetime. What makes his achievement
more wonderful is his constant ill-health. He suffered almost continually from
indigestion and, at intervals, from attacks of slow fever, while for the last
half of his pontificate he was a martyr to gout. In spite of these infirmities,
which increased steadily, his biographer, Paul the Deacon, tells us he never
rested
(Vita, XV). His work as pope is of so varied a nature that it will be
best to take it in sections, although this destroys any exact chronological
sequence. At the very outset of his pontificate Gregory published his Liber
pastoralis curae
, or book on the office of a bishop, in which he lays down
clearly the lines he considers it his duty to follow. The work, which regards
the bishop pre-eminently as the physician of souls, is divided into four parts.
He points out in the first that only one skilled already as a physician of the
soul is fitted to undertake the supreme rule
of the episcopate. In the second
he describes how the bishop's life should be ordered from a spiritual point of
view; in the third, how he ought to teach and admonish those under him, and in
the fourth how, in spite of his good works, he ought to bear in mind his own
weakness, since the better his work the greater the danger of falling through
self-confidence. This little work is the key to Gregory's life as pope, for what
he preached he practiced. Moreover, it remained for centuries the textbook of
the Catholic epioscopate, so that by its influence the ideal of the great pope
has moulded the character of the Church, and his spirit has spread into all
lands.
(1) Life and Work in Rome
As pope Gregory still lived with monastic simplicity. One of his first acts
was to banish all the lay attendants, pages, etc., from the Lateran palace, and
substitute clerics in their place. There was now no magister militum living in
Rome, so the control even of military matters fell to the pope. The inroads of
the Lombards had filled the city with a multitude of indigent refugees, for
whose support Gregory made provision, using for this purpose the existing
machinery of the ecclesiastical districts, each of which had its deaconry or
office of alms
. The corn thus distributed came chiefly from Sicily and was
supplied by the estates of the Church. The temporal needs of his people being
thus provided for, Gregory did not neglect their spiritual wants, and a large
number of his sermons have come down to us. It was he who instituted the
stations
still observed and noted in the Roman Missal (see STATIONS). He met
the clergy and people at some church previously agreed upon, and all together
went in procession to the church of the station, where Mass was celebrated and
the pope preached. These sermons, which drew immense crowds, are mostly simple,
popular expositions of Scripture. Chiefly remarkable is the preacher's mastery
of the Bible, which he quotes unceasingly, and his regular use of anecdote to
illustrate the point in hand, in which respect he paves the way for the popular
preachers of the Middle Ages. In July, 595, Gregory held his first synod in St.
Peter's, which consisted almost wholly of the bishops of the suburbicarian sees
and the priests of the Roman titular churches. Six decrees dealing with
ecclesiastical discipline were passed, some of them merely confirming changes
already made by the pope on his own authority.
Much controversy still exists as to the exact extent of Gregory's reforms of the Roman Liturgy. All admit that he did make the following modifications in the pre-existing practice:
- In the Canon of the Mass he inserted the words
diesque nostros in tua pace disponas, atque ab aeterna damnatione nos eripi, et in electorum tuorum jubras grege numerari
; - he ordered the Pater Noster to be recited in the Canon before the breaking of the Host;
- he provided that the Alleluia should be chanted after the Gradual out of paschal time, to which period, apparently, the Roman use had previously confined it;
- he prohibited the use of the chasuble by subdeacons assisting at Mass;
- he forbade deacons to perform any of the musical portions of the Mass other than singing the Gospel.
Beyond these and some few minor points it seems impossible to conclude with certainty what changes Gregory did make. As to the much-disputed question of the Gregorian Sacramentary and the almost more difficult point of his relation to the plain song or chant of the Church, for Gregory's connection with which matters the earliest authority seems to be John the Deacon (Vita, II, vi, Xvii), see GREGORIAN CHANT; SACRAMENTARY. There is no lack of evidence, however, to illustrate Gregory's activity as manager of the patrimony of St. Peter. By his day the estates of the Church had reached vast dimensions. Varying estimates place their total area at from 1300 to 1800 square miles, and there seems no reason for supposing this to be an exaggeration, while the income arising therefrom was probably not less than $1,500,000 a year. The land lay in many places - Campania, Africa, Sicily, and elsewhere - and, as their landlord, Gregory displayed a skill in finance and estate management which excites our admiration no less than it did the surprise of his tenants and agents, who suddenly found that they had a new master who was not to be deceived or cheated. The management of each patrimony was carried out by a number of agents of varying grades and duties under an official called the rector or defensor of the patrimony. Previously the rectors had usually been laymen, but Gregory established the custom of appointing ecclesiastics to the post. In doing this he probably had in view the many extra duties of an ecclesiastical nature which he called upon them to undertake. Thus examples may be found of such rectors being commissioned to undertake the filling up of vacant sees, holding of local synods, taking action against heretics, providing for the maintenance of churches and monasteries, rectifying abuses in the churches of their district, with the enforcing of ecclesiastical discipline and even the reproof and correction of local bishops. Still Gregory never allowed the rectors to interfere in such matters on their own responsibility. In the minutiae of estate management nothing was too small for Gregory's personal notice, from the exact number of sextarii in a modius of corn, or how many soluli went to one golden pound, to the use of false weights by certain minor agents. He finds time to write instructions on every detail and leaves no complaint unattended to, even from the humblest of his multitude of tenants. Throughout the large number of letters which deal with the management of the patrimony, the pope's determination to secure a scrupulously righteous administration is evident. As bishop, he is the trustee of God and St. Peter, and his agents must show that they realize this by their conduct. Consequently, under his able management the estates of the Church increased steadily in value, the tenants were contented, and the revenues paid in with unprecedented regularity. The only fault ever laid at his door in this matter is that, by his boundless charities, he emptied his treasury. But this, if a fault at all, was a natural consequence of his view that he was the administrator of the property of the poor, for whom he could never do enough.
(2) Relations with the Suburbicarian Churches
As patriarchs of the West the popes exercise a special jurisdiction over and above their universal primacy as successors of St. Peter; and among Western churches, this jurisdiction extends in a most intimate manner over the churches of Italy and the isles adjacent. On the mainland much of this territory was in the hands of the Lombards, with whose Arian clergy Gregory was, of course, not in communion. Whenever opportunity offered, however, he was careful to provide for the needs of the faithful in these parts, frequently uniting them to some neighboring diocese, when they were too few to occupy the energies of a bishop. On the islands, of which Sicily was by far the most important, the pre-existing church system was maintained. Gregory appointed a vicar, usually the metropolitan of the province, who exercised a general supervision over the whole church. He also insisted strongly on the holding of local synods as ordered by the Council of Nicaea, and letters of his exist addressed to bishops in Sicily, Sardinia, and Gaul reminding them of their duties in this respect. The supreme instance of Gregory's intervention in the affairs of these dioceses occurs in the case of Sardinia, where the behaviour of Januarius the half-witted, aged Metropolitan of Cagliari, had reduced the church to a state of semi-chaos. A large number of letters relate to the reforms instituted by the pope (Epp., II, xlvii; III, xxxvi; IV, ix,xxiii-xxvii, xxix; V, ii; IX, i, xi, ccii-cciv; XIV, ii). His care over the election of a new bishop whenever a vacancy occurs is shown in many cases, and if, after his examination of the elect, which is always a searching one, he finds him unfitted for the post, he has no hesitation in rejecting him and commanding another to be chosen (Epp., I, lv, lvi; VII, xxxviii; X, vii). With regard to discipline the pope was specially strict in enforcing the Church's laws as to the celibacy of the clergy (Epp., I, xlii, 1; IV. v, xxvi, xxxiv; VII, i; IX, cx, ccxviii; X, xix; XI, lvi a; XIII, xxxviii, xxxix); the exemption of clerics from lay tribunals(Epp., I, xxxix a; VI, xi, IX, liii, lxxvi, lxxix; X, iv; XI, xxxii; XIII, 1); and the deprivation of all ecclesiastics guilty of criminal or scandalous offences (Epp., I, xviii, xlii; III, xlix; IV, xxvi; V, v, xvii, xviii; VII, xxxix; VIII, xxiv; IX, xxv; XII, iii, x, xi; XIV, ii). He was also inflexible with regard to the proper application of church revenues, insisting that others should be as strict as he was in disposing of these funds for their proper ends (Epp., I, x, lxiv; II, xx-xxii; III, xxii; IV, xi; V, xii, xlviii; VIII, vii; XI, xxii, lvi a; XIII, xlvi; XIV, ii).
(3) Relations with Other Churches
With regard to the other Western Churches limits of space prevent any
detailed account of Gregory's dealings, but the following quotation, all the
more valuable as coming from a Protestant authority, indicates very clearly the
line he followed herein: In his dealings with the Churches of the West, Gregory
acted invariably on the assumption that all were subject to the jurisdiction of
the Roman See. Of the rights claimed or exercised by his predecessors he would
not abate one tittle; on the contrary, he did everything in his power to
maintain, strengthen, and extend what he regarded as the just prerogatives of
the papacy. It is true that he respected the privileges of the Western
metropolitans, and disapproved of unnecessary interference within the sphere of
their jurisdiction canonically exercised. … But of his general principle there
can be no doubt whatever
(Dudden, I, 475). In view of later developments
Gregory's dealings with the Oriental Churches, and with Constantinople in
particular, have a special importance. There cannot be the smallest doubt that
Gregory claimed for the Apostolic See, and for himself as pope, a primacy not of
honor, but of supreme authority over the Church Universal. In Epp., XIII, l, he
speaks of the Apostolic See, which is the head of all Churches
, and in Epp., V,
cliv, he says: I, albeit unworthy, have been set up in command of the Church.
As successor of St. Peter, the pope had received from God a primacy over all
Churches (Epp., II, xlvi; III, xxx; V, xxxvii; VII, xxxvii). His approval it was
which gave force to the decrees of councils or synods (Epp., IX, clvi), and his
authority could annul them (Epp., V, xxxix, xli, xliv). To him appeals might be
made even against other patriarchs, and by him bishops were judged and corrected
if need were (Epp., II, l; III, lii, lxiii; IX, xxvi, xxvii). This position
naturally made it impossible for him to permit the use of the title Ecumenical
Bishop assumed by the Patriarch of Constantinople, John the Faster, at a synod
held in 588. Gregory protested, and a long controversy followed, the question
still at issue when the pope died. A discussion of this controversy is needless
here, but it is important as showing how completely Gregory regarded the Eastern
patriarchs as being subject to himself; As regards the Church of
Constantinople,
he writes in Epp., IX, xxvi, who can doubt that it is subject
to the Apostolic See? Why, both our most religious lord the emperor, and our
brother the Bishop of Constantinople continually acknowledge it.
At the same
time the pope was most careful not to interfere with the canonical rights of the
other patriarchs and bishops. With the other Oriental patriarchs his relations
were most cordial, as appears from his letters to the patriarchs of Antioch and
Alexandria.
(4) Relations with the Lombards and the Franks
Gregory's consecration as pope preceded by a few days only the death of
Authari, King of the Lombards, whose queen, the famous Theodelinde, then married
Agilulf, Duke of Turin, a warlike and energetic prince. With Agilulf and the
Dukes Ariulf of Spoleto and Arichis of Benevento, Gregory soon had to deal, as,
when difficulties arose, Romanus, the exarch, or representative, of the emperor,
preferred to remain in sulky inactivity at Ravenna. It soon became clear that,
if any successful resistance was to be made against the Lombards, it must be by
the pope's own exertions. How keenly he felt the difficulty and danger of his
position appears in some of the earliest letters (Epp., I, iii, viii, xxx); but
no actual hostilities began till the summer of 592, when the pope received a
threatening letter from Ariulf of Spoleto, which was followed almost immediately
by the appearance of that chief before the walls of Rome. At the same time
Arichis of Benevento advanced on Naples, which happened at the moment to have no
bishop nor any officer of high rank in command of the garrison. Gregory at once
took the surprising step of appointing a tribune on his own authority to take
command of the city (Epp., II, xxxiv), and, when no notice of this strong action
was taken by the imperial authorities, the pope conceived the idea of himself
arranging a separate peace with the Lombards (Epp., II, xlv). No details of this
peace have come down to us, but it seems certain that it was actually concluded
(Epp., V, xxxvi). Dr. Hodgkin (Italy and her Invaders, v, 366) pronounces
Gregory's action herein to have been wise and statesmanlike, but, at the same
time, undoubtedly ultra vires, being quite beyond any legal competency then
possessed by the pope, who thus made a memorable stride towards complete
independence
. Gregory's independent action had the effect of rousing up Romanus
the exarch. Wholly ignoring the papal peace, he gathered all his troops,
attacked and regained Perugia, and then marched to Rome, where he was received
with imperial honours. The next spring, however, he quitted the city and took
away its garrison with him, so that both pope and citizens were now more
exasperated against him than before. Moreover, the exarch's campaign had roused
the Northern Lombards, and King Agilulf marched on Rome, arriving there probably
some time in June, 593. The terror aroused by his advance is still mirrored for
us in Gregory's HomilieEine Homilie (von griech.„ὁμιλεῖν”, „vertraut miteinander reden”) ist eine Art von Predigt. Während eine Predigt die Großtaten Gottes preist (lat. „praedicare”, „preisen”) und Menschen für den Glauben begeistern will, hat die Homilie lehrhaften Charakter. s on the Prophet Ezechiel, which were delivered at this
time. The siege of the city was soon abandoned, however, and Agilulf retired.
The continuator of Prosper (Mon. Germ. SS. Antiq., IX, 339) relates that Agilulf
met the pope in person on the steps of the Basilica of St. Peter, which was then
outside the city walls, and being melted by Gregory's prayers and greatly moved
by the wisdom and religious gravity of this great man, he broke up the seige of
the city
; but, in view of the silence both of Gregory himself and of Paul the
Deacon on the point, the story seems scarcely probable. In Epp., V, xxxix,
Gregory refers to himself as the paymaster of the Lombards
, and most likely a
large payment from the papal treasury was the chief inducement to raise the
seige. The pope's great desire now was to secure a lasting peace with the
Lombards, which could only be achieved by a proper arrangement between the
imperial authorities and the Lombard chiefs. On Queen Theodelinde, a Catholic
and a personal friend, Gregory placed all his hopes. The exarch, however, looked
at the whole affair in another light, and, when a whole year was passed in
fruitless negotiations, Gregory began once again to mediate a private treaty.
Accordingly, in May, 595, the pope wrote to a friend at Ravenna a letter (Epp.,
V, xxxiv) threatening to make peace with Agilulf even without the consent of the
Exarch Romanus. This threat was speedily reported to Constantinople, where the
exarch was in high favour, and the Emperor Maurice at once sent off to Gregory a
violent letter, now lost, accusing him of being both a traitor and a fool. This
letter Gregory received in June, 595. Luckily, the pope's answer has been
preserved to us (Epp., V, xxxvi). It must be read in its entirety to be
appreciated fully; probably very few emperors, if any, have ever received such a
letter from a subject. Still, in spite of his scathing reply, Gregory seems to
have realized that independent action could not secure what he wished, and we
hear no more about a separate peace. Gregory's relations with the Exarch Romanus
became continually more and more strained until the latter's death in the year
596 or early in 597. The new exarch, Callinicus, was a man of far greater
ability and well disposed towards the pope, whose hopes now revived. The
official peace negotiations were pushed on, and, in spite of delays, the
articles were at length signed in 599, to Gregory's great joy. This peace lasted
two years, but in 601 the war broke out again through an aggressive act on the
part of Callinicus, who was recalled two years later, when his successor,
Smaragdus, again made a peace with the Lombards which endured until after
Gregory's death. Two points stand out for special notice in Gregory's dealings
with the Lombards: first, his determination that, in spite of the apathy of the
imperial authorities, Rome should not pass into the hands of some half-civilized
Lombard duke and so sink into insignificance and decay; second, his independent
action in appointing governors to cities, providing munitions of war, giving
instructions to generals, sending ambassadors to the Lombard king, and even
negotiating a peace without the exarch's aid. Whatever the theory may have been,
there is no doubt about the fact that, besides his spiritual jurisdiction,
Gregory actually exercised no small amount of temporal power.
Of Gregory's relations with the Franks there is no need to write at length, as the intercourse he established with the Frankish kings practically lapsed at his death, and was not renewed for about a hundred years. On the other hand he exercised a great influence on Frankish monasticism, which he did much to strengthen and reshape, so that the work done by the monasteries in civilizing the wild Franks may be attributed ultimately to the first monk-pope.
(5) Relations with the Imperial Government
The reign of Gregory the Great marks an epoch in papal history, and this is
specially the case in respect to his attitude towards the imperial Government
centered at Constantinople. Gregory seems to have looked upon Church and State
as co-operating to form a united whole, which acted in two distinct spheres,
ecclesiastical and secular. Over this commonwealth were the pope and the emperor,
each supreme in his own department, care being taken to keep these as far as
possible distinct and independent. The latter point was the difficulty. Gregory
definitely held that it was a duty of the secular ruler to protect the Church
and preserve the peace of the faith
(Mor., XXXI, viii), and so he is often
found to call in the aid of the secular arm, not merely to suppress schism,
heresy, or idolatry, but even to enforce discipline among monks and clergy (Epp.,
I, lxxii; II, xxix; III, lix; IV, vii, xxxii; V, xxxii; VIII, iv; XI, xii,
xxxvii; XIII, xxxvi). If the emperor interfered in church matters the pope's
policy was to acquiesce if possible, unless obedience was sinful, according to
the principle laid down in Epp. XI, xxix; Quod ipse [se imperator] fecerit, si
canonicum est, sequimur; si vero canonicum non est, in quantum sine peccato
nostro, portamus.
In taking this line Gregory was undoubtedly influenced by his
deep reverence for the emperor, whom he regarded as the representative of God in
all things secular, and must still be treated with all possible respect, even
when he encroached on the borders of the papal authority. On his side, although
he certainly regarded himself as superior in place and rank
to the exarch
(Epp., II, xiv), Gregory objected strongly to the interference of ecclesiastical
authorities in matters secular. As supreme guardian of Christian justice, the
pope was always ready to intercede for, or protect anyone who suffered unjust
treatment (Epp., I, xxxv, xxxvi, xlvii, lix; III, v; V, xxxviii; IX, iv, xlvi,
lv, cxiii, clxxxii; XI, iv), but at the same time he used the utmost tact in
approaching the imperial officials. In Epp., I, xxxix a, he explains for the
benefit of his Sicilian agent the precise attitude to be adopted in such matters.
Still, in conjunction with all this deference, Gregory retained a spirit of
independence which enabled him, when he considered it necessary, to address even
the emperor in terms of startling directness. Space makes it impossible to do
more than refer to the famous letters to the Emperor Phocas on his usurpation
and the allusions in them to the murdered Emperor Maurice (Epp., XIII, xxxiv,
xli, xlii). Every kind of judgement has been passed upon Gregory for writing
these letters, but the question remains a difficult one. Probably the pope's
conduct herein was due to two things: first, his ignorance of the way in which
Phocus had reached the throne; and second, his view that the emperor was God's
representative on earth, and therefore deserving of all possible respect in his
official capacity, his personal character not coming into the question at all.
It should be noted, also, that he avoids any direct flattery towards the new
emperor, merely using the exaggerated phrases of respect then customary, and
expressing the high hopes he entertains of the new regime. Moreover, his
allusions to Maurice refer to the sufferings of the people under his government,
and do not reflect on the dead emperor himself. Had the empire been sound
instead of in a hopelessly rotten state when Gregory became pope, it is hard to
say how his views might have worked out in practice. As it was, his line of
strong independence, his efficiency, and his courage carried all before them,
and when he died there was no longer any question as to who was the first power
in Italy.
(6) Missionary Work
Gregory's zeal for the conversion of the heathen, and in particular of the Angles, has been mentioned already, and there is no need to dwell at length on the latter subject, as it has been fully treated under AUGUSTINE OF CANTERBURY, SAINT. In justice to the great pope, however, it must be added that he lost no opportunity for the exercise of his missionary zeal, making every effort to root out paganism in Gaul, Donatism in Africa, and the Schism of the Three Chapters in North Italy and Istria. In his treatment of heretics, schismatics, and pagans his method was to try every means - persuasions, exhortations, threats - before resorting to force; but, if gentler treatment failed, he had no hesitation in accordance with the ideas of his age, in resorting to compulsion, and invoking the aid of the secular arm therein. It is curious, therefore, to find him acting as a champion and protector of the Jews. In Epp., I, xiv, he expressly deprecates the compulsory baptism of Jews, and many instances appear in which he insists on their right to liberty of action, so far as the law permitted, both in civil affairs and in the worship of the synagogue (Epp., I, xxxiv; II, vi; VIII, xxv; IX, xxxviii, cxcv; XIII, xv). He was equally strong, however, in preventing the Jews from exceeding the rights granted to them by the imperial law, especially with regard to the ownership by them of Christian slaves (Epp., II, vi; III, xxxvii; IV, ix, xxi; VI, xxix; VII, xxi; VIII, xxi; IX, civ, ccxiii, ccxv). We shall probably be right, therefore, in attributing Gregory's protection of the Jews to his respect for law and justice, rather than to any ideas of toleration differing from those current at the time.
(7) Gregory and Monasticism
Although the first monk to become pope, Gregory was in no sense an original
contributor to monastic ideals or practice. He took monasticism as he found it
established by St. Benedict, and his efforts and influence were given to
strengthening and enforcing the prescriptions of that greatest of monastic
legislators. His position did indeed tend to modify St. Benedict's work by
drawing it into a closer connection with the organization with the organization
of the Church, and with the papacy in particular, but this was not deliberately
aimed at by Gregory. Rather he was himself convinced that the monastic system
had a very special value for the Church, and so he did everything in his power
to diffuse and propagate it. His own property was consecrated to this end, he
urged many wealthy people to establish or support monasteries, and he used the
revenues of the patrimony for the same purpose. He was relentless in correcting
abuses and enforcing discipline, the letters on such matters being far too
numerous for mention here, and the points on which he insists most are precisely
those, such as stability and poverty, on which St. Benedict's recent legislation
had laid special stress. Twice only do we find anything like direct legislation
by the pope. The first point is that of the age at which a nun might be made
abbess, which he fixes at not less than sixty years
(Epp., IV, xi),. The
second is his lengthening of the period of novitiate. St. Benedict had
prescribed at least one year (Reg. Ben., lviii); Gregory (Epp., X, ix) orders
two years, with special precautions in the case of slaves who wished to become
monks. More important was his line of action in the difficult question of the
relation between monks and their bishop. There is plenty of evidence to show
that many bishops took advantage of their position to oppress and burden the
monasteries in their diocese, with the result that the monks appealed to the
pope for protection. Gregory, while always upholding the spiritual jurisdiction
of the bishop, was firm in support of the monks against any illegal aggression.
All attempts on the part of a bishop to assume new powers over the monks in his
diocese were condemned, while at times the pope issued documents, called
Privilegia, in which he definitely set forth certain points on which the monks
were exempt from episcopal control (Epp., V, xlix; VII, xii; VIII, xvii; XII, xi,
xii, xiii). This action on Gregory's part undoubtedly began the long progress by
which the monastic bodies have come to be under the direct control of the Holy
See. It should be mentioned that in Gregory's day the current view was that
ecclesiastical work, such as the cure of souls, preaching, administering the
sacraments, etc., was not compatible with the monastic state, and in this view
the pope concurred. On the other hand a passage in Epp., XII, iv, where he
directs that a certain layman should be tonsured either as a monk or a
subdeacon
, would suggest that the pope held the monastic state as in some way
equivalent to the ecclesiastical; for his ultimate intention in this case was to
promote the layman in question to the episcopate.
(8) Death, Canonization, Relics, Emblem
The last years of Gregory's life were filled with every kind of suffering.
His mind, naturally serious, was filled with despondent forebodings, and his
continued bodily pains were increased and intensified. His sole consolation was
the hope that death would come quickly
(Epp., XIII, xxvi). The end came on 12
March, 604, and on the same day his body was laid to rest in front of the
sacristy in the portico of St. Peter's Basilica. Since then the relics have been
moved several times, the most recent translation being that by Paul V in 1606,
when they were placed in the chapel of Clement V near the entrance of the modern
sacristy. There is some evidence that the body was taken to Soissous in France
in the year 826, but probably only some large relic is meant. Venerable Bede
(Hist. Eccl., II, i) gives the epitaph placed on his tomb which contains the
famous phrase referring to Gregory as consul Dei. His canonization by popular
acclamation followed at once on his death, and survived a reaction against his
memory which seems to have occurred soon afterwards. In art the great pope is
usually shown in full pontifical robes with the tiara and double cross. A dove
is his special emblem, in allusion to the well-known story recorded by Peter the
Deacon (Vita, xxviii), who tells that when the pope was dictating his HomilieEine Homilie (von griech.„ὁμιλεῖν”, „vertraut miteinander reden”) ist eine Art von Predigt. Während eine Predigt die Großtaten Gottes preist (lat. „praedicare”, „preisen”) und Menschen für den Glauben begeistern will, hat die Homilie lehrhaften Charakter. s
on Ezechiel a veil was drawn between his secretary and himself. As, however, the
pope remained silent for long periods at a time, the servant made a hole in the
curtain and, looking through, beheld a dove seated upon Gregory's head with its
beak between his lips. When the dove withdrew its beak the holy pontiff spoke
and the secretary took down his words; but when he became silent the servant
again applied his eye to the hole and saw the dove had replaced its beak between
his lips. The miracles attributed to Gregory are very many, but space forbids
even the barest catalogue of them.
(9) Conclusion
It is beyond the scope of this notice to attempt any elaborate estimate of
the work, influence, and character of Pope Gregory the Great, but some short
focusing of the features given above is only just. First of all, perhaps, it
will be best to clear the ground by admitting frankly what Gregory was not. He
was not a man of profound learning, not a philosopher, not a conversationalist,
hardly even a theologian in the constructive sense of the term. He was a trained
Roman lawyer and administrator, a monk, a missionary, a preacher, above all a
physician of souls and a leader of men. His great claim to remembrance lies in
the fact that he is the real father of the medieval papacy (Milman). With regard
to things spiritual, he impressed upon men's minds to a degree unprecedented the
fact that the See of Peter was the one supreme, decisive authority in the
Catholic Church. During his pontificate, he established close relations between
the Church of Rome and those of Spain, Gaul, Africa, and Illyricum, while his
influence in Britain was such that he is justly called the Apostle of the
English. In the Eastern Churches, too, the papal authority was exercised with a
frequency unusual before his time, and we find no less an authority than the
Patriarch of Alexandria submitting himself humbly to the pope's commands
. The
system of appeals to Rome was firmly established, and the pope is found to veto
or confirm the decrees of synods, to annul the decisions of patricarchs, and
inflict punishment on ecclesiastical dignitaries precisely as he thinks right.
Nor is his work less noteworthy in its effect on the temporal position of the
papacy. Seizing the opportunity which circumstances offered, he made himself in
Italy a power stronger than emperor or exarch, and established a political
influence which dominated the peninsula for centuries. From this time forth the
varied populations of Italy looked to the pope for guidance, and Rome as the
papal capital continued to be the centre of the Christian world. Gregory's work
as a theologian and Doctor of the Church is less notable. In the history of
dogmatic development he is important as summing up the teaching of the earlier
Fathers and consolidating it into a harmonious whole, rather than as introducing
new developments, new methods, new solutions of difficult questions. It was
precisely because of this that his writings became to a great extent the
compendium theologiae or textbook of the Middle Ages, a position for which his
work in popularizing his great predecessors fitted him well. Achievements so
varied have won for Gregory the title of the Great
, but perhaps, among our
English-speaking races, he is honoured most of all as the pope who loved the
bright-faced Angles, and taught them first to sing the Angels' song.
HIS WRITINGS
Genuine, Doubtful, Spurious
Of the writings commonly attributed to Gregory the following are now admitted
as genuine on all hands: Moralium Libri XXXV
; Regulae Pastoralis Liber
;
Dialogorum Libri IV
; Homiliarum in Ezechielem Prophetam Lobri II
;
Homiliarum in Evangelia Libri II
; Epistolarum Libri XIV
. The following are
almost certainly spurious: In Librum Primum Regum Variarum Expositionum Libri
VI
; expositio super Cantica Canticorum
; Expositio in VII Psalmos
Poenitentiales
; Concordia Quorundam Testimoniorum S. Scripturae
. Besides the
above there are attributed to Gregory certain liturgical hymns, the Gregorian
Sacramentary, and the Antiphonary. (See ANTIPHONARY; SACRAMENTARY.)
Works of Gregory; complete or partial editions; translations, recensions, etc.
Opera S. Gregorii Magni: (Editio princeps, Paris, 1518); ed. P. Tossianensis
(6 vols., Rome, 1588-03); ed. P. Goussainville (3 vols., Paris, 1675); ed. Cong.
S. Mauri (Sainte-Marthe) (4 vols., Paris, 1705); the last-named re-edited with
additions by J. B. Gallicioli (17 vols., Venice, 1768-76) and reprinted in Migne,
P.L., LXXV-LXXIX.
Epistolae
, ed. P. Ewald and L. M. Hartmann in Mon. Germ.
Hist.: Epist.
, I, II (Berlin, 1891-99); this is the authoritative edition of
the text of the Epistles (all references given above are to this edition); Jaffe,
Regesta Pontif,
(2nd ed., Rome, 1885), I, 143-219; II, 738; Turchi, S. Greg.
M. Epp. Selectae
(Rome, 1907); P. Ewald, Studien zur Ausgabe des Registers G
regors I.
in Neues Archiv
, III, 433-625; L.M. Hartmann in Neues Archiv
, XV,
411, 529; XVII, 493; Th. Mommsen in Neues Archiv
, XVII, 189; English
translation: J. Barmby, Selected Epistles
in Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers
,
2nd Series, XII, XIII (Oxford and New York, 1895, 1898), Regula Pastoralis
Curae
, ed. E. W. Westhoff (Munster, 1860); ed. H. Hurter, S.J., in SS. Patr.
Opuse. Select.
, XX; ed. A. M. Micheletti (Tournai, 1904); ed. B. Sauter
(Freiburg, 1904); English translations: King Alfred's West Saxon Version of
Gregory's Pastoral Care
, ed. H. Sweet (London, 1871); The Book of Pastoral
Care
(tr. J. Barmby) in Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers
, 2nd Series, XII
(Oxford and New York, 1895). Dialogorum Libri IV
: very many editions of the
whole work have appeared, and also of Bk. II, Of the Life and Miracles of St.
Benedict
, separately; an old English translation has been reprinted by H.
Coleridge, S. J. (London, 1874); L. Wiese, Die Sprache der Dialoge
(Halle,
1900); H. Delehaye, S. Gregoirele Grand dans Phagiographie Grecque
in
Analecta Bolland.
(1904), 449-54; B. Sauter, Der heilige Vater Benediktus
nach St. Gregor dem Grossen
(Freiburg, 1904). Hom. XL in Evangelia
, ed. H.
Hurter in SS. Patrum Opuse. Select.
, series II, Tom. VI (Innsbruck, 1892). G.
Pfeil: Schriften Gregors der Gr.
(Munich, 1900). Magna Moralia
, Eng. tr. in
Library of the Fathers
(4 vols., Oxford, 1844); Prunner, Gnade und Sünde nach
Gregors expositio in Job
(Eichstätt, 1855).
CHIEF SOURCES. - First of all come the writings of Gregory himself, of which a full account is given above, the most important from a biographical point of view being the fourteen books of his Letters and the four books of Dialogues. The other early authorities are ST. GREGORY OF TOURS (d. 594 or 595), Historia Francorum, Bk. X, and the Liber Pontificalis, both practically contemporary. To the seventh century belong ST. ISIDORE OF SEVILLE. De Viris Illustribus, XL, and ST. ILDEPHONSUS OF TOLEDO, De Viris Illustribus, I. Next come the Vita Antiquissima, by an anonymous monk of Whitby, written probably about 713, and of special interest as representing an essentially English tradition in regard to the saint; THE VEN. BEDE, Hist. Eccles., II, whose work was finished in 731; PAUL THE DEACON, who compiled a short Vita Gregorii Magni between 770 and 780, which may be supplemented from the same writers more famous work Historia Longobardorum; lastly JOHN THE DEACON, who, at the request of John VIII (872-882), produced his Vita Gregorii in answer to the complaint that no history of the saint had yet been produced in Rome. Besides these direct authorities considerable light on the period of St. Gregory's life may be gathered from the works of various contemporary chroniclers and historians.
WORKS ON GREGORY. - (1) General. - GREGORY OF TOURS, Historia Francorum, X, i, in P.L., LXXI; the best edition of this is by ARNDT AND KRUSCH in Mon. Germ. Hist.; Script. Rerum Meroving., I; Liber Pontificatis, ed. DUCHESNE (Paris, 1884), I, 312; ISIDORE OF SEVILLE, De Vir. Illustr., I, ibid.,XCVII; Vita It. Papae Gregorii M. (MS> Gallen, 567), written by a monk of Whitby, ed. GASQUET (Westminster, 1904): see also on same work EWALD, Die älteste Biographie Gregors I in Historische Aufsätze dem Andenken an G. Waitz gewidmet (Hanover,1886), 17-54; VEN. BEDE, Hist. Eccles., I, xxiii-xxxiii; II, i-iii; V, xxv; in P. L., XCV; PAUL THE DEACON, Vita Gregorii M. in P.L.,LXXV; IDEM, De Gestis Longobard., III, 24; IV, 5; In P.L., XCV; JOHN THE DEACON, Vita Gregorii M., ibid., LXXV; Acta SS., 12 March; VAN DEN ZYPE, S. Gregorius Magnus (Ypres, 1610); SAINTE_MARTHE, Histoire de S. Gregoire (Rouen, 1677); MAIMBOURG, Histoire du pontificat de S. Gregoire (Paris, 1687); BONUCCI, Istoria del B. Gregorio (Rome, 1711); WIETROWSKY, Hist. de gestis praecipuis in pontificatu S. Gregorii M. (Prague, 1726-30); POZZO, Istoria della vita di S. Gregorio M. (Rome, 1758); MARGGRAF, De Gregorii I. M. Vita (Berlin, 1844); BIANCHI-GIOVINI, Pontificato di S. Gregorio (Milan, 1844); LAU, Gregor I, der Grosse (Leipzig, 1845); PFAHLER, Gregor der Grosse (Frankfort, 1852); LUZARCHE, Vie du Pape Gregoire le Grand (Tours, 1857); ROMALTE, Vie de S. Gregoire (Limoges, 1862); PAGNON, Gregoire le Grand et son epoque (Rouen, 1869); BELMONTE, Gregorio M. e il suo tempo (Florence, 1871); BOHRINGER, Die Vater des Papsiiums, Leo I und Gregor I (Stuttgart, 1879): MAGGIO, Prolegomeni alla storia di Gregorio il Grande (Prato, 1879); BARMBY, Gregory the Great (London, 1879; reissue, 1892); CLAUSIER, S. Gregoire (Paris, 1886); BOUSMANN, Gregor I, der Grosse (Paderborn, 1890); WOLFSGRUBER, Gregor der Grosse (Saulgau, 1890); SNOW, St. Gregory, his Work and his Spirit (London, 1892); GRISAR, Roma alta fine del mondo antico (Rome, 1899), Pt. III; IDEM, San Gregorio Magno (Rome, 1904); DUDDEN, Gregory the Great, his Place in History and in Thought (2 vols.,London, 1905); CAPELLO, Gregorio I e il suo pontificuto (Saluzzo, 1904); CEILLIER, Histoire general des auteurs ecclesiastique, XI, 420-587; MILMAN, History of Latin Christianity, Bk. III, vii; MONTALEMBERT, Monks of the West, tr. Bk. v; GREGOROVIUS, Rome in the Middle Ages, tr., II, 16-103; HODGKIN, Italy and her Invaders, V, vii-ix; GATTA, Un parallelo storico (Marco Aurelio, Gregorio Magno) (Milan, 1901); MANN, Lives of the Popes in the Early Middle Ages (London, 1902), I, 1-250.
(2) Special. (a) The Patrimony. - ORSI, Della origine del
dominio temporate e della sovranita del Rom. Pontif. (2nd ed., Rome, 1754);
BORGIA, Istoria del dominio temporale della Sede Apostolica nelle due Sicilie
(Rome, 1789); MUZZARELLI, Dominio temporale del Papa (Rome, 1789); SUGENHEIM,
Gesch. der Entstehung und Ausbildung des Kirchenstaates (Leipzig, 1854);
SCHARPFF, Die Entstehung des Kirchenstaates (Freiburg im Br., 1860); GRISAR, Ein
Rundgang durch die Patrimonien des hl. Stuhls i, J. 600, in Zeitschr, Kuth,
Theol., I, 321; SCHWARZLOSE, Die Patrimonien d. röm. K. (Berlin, 1887); MOMMSEN,
Die Bewirtschaftung der Kirchengüter unter Papst Gregor I, in Zeitsch, f. Social-
und, Wirtschaftsgesch., I, 43; DOIZE, Deux etudes sur l'administration
temporelle du Pape Gregoire le Grand (Paris, 1904).
(b) Primacy and Relations with other Churches. - PFAFF, Dissertatio de
titulo l'atriarchoe (Ecumenici (Tubingen, 1735); ORTLIEB, Essai sur le systeme
eccles, de Gregoire le Grand (Strasburg, 1872); PINGAUD, La politique de S.
Gregoire (Paris, 1872); LORENZ, Papstwahl und Kaisertum (Berlin, 1874), 23;
CRIVELLUCCI, Storia della relazioni tra lo Stato e la Chiesa (Bologna, 1885), II,
301; GORRES, Papst Gregor der Grosse und Kaiser Phocas in Zeitschr. für
wissenschaftliche Theol., CLIV, 592-602.
(c) Relations with Lombards and Franks. - BERNARDI, I Longobardi e S.
Gregorio M. (Milan, 1843); Troya, Storia d'Italia del medio evo, IV: Codice
diplomatico longobardo dal 568 al 774 (Naples, 1852); DIEHL, Etudes sur
l'administration byzantine dans l'Exarchat de Ravenne (Paris, 1888); HARTMANN,
Unters. z. Gesch. d. byzant, Verwaltung in Italien (Leipzig, 1889); LAMPE, Qui
fuerint Gregorii M. p. temporibus in imperii byzantini parte occident, exarchi
(Berlin, 1892); PERRY, The Franks (London, 1857); KELLERT, Pope Gregory the
Great and his Relations with Gaul (Cambridge, 1889); GRISAR, Rom. u. d.
fränkische Kirche vornehmlich im 6. Jahr. in Zeitschr. kath. Theol., 14.
(d) Monasticism and Missionary Work. - MABILLON, Dissertatio de monastica
vita Gregorii Papoe (Paris, 1676); BUTLER, Was St. Augustine of Canterbury a
Benedictine? in Downside Review, III, 45-61, 223-240; GRÜTZMACHER, Die Bedeutung
Benedikts von Nursia und seiner Regel in der Gesch. des Mönchtums (Berlin, 1892);
CUTTS, Augustine of Canterbury (London, 1895); GRAY, The Origin and Early
History of Christianity in Britain (London, 1897); BRIGHT, Chapters on Early
English Church History (Oxford, 1897); BENEDETTI, S. Gregorio Magno e la
schiavitu (Rome, 1904).
(e) Writings. - ALZOO, Lehrb. der Patrologie (Freiburg im Br., 1876);
HARNACK, Lehrb. der Dogmengeschichte, III (Freiburg im Br., 1890); LOOFS, Leits.
zum Studium der Dogmengeschichte (Halle, 1893); SEEBERG, Lehrb. der
Dogmengeschichte, II (Leipzig, 1898); BARDENHEWER, Patrology, tr. SHAHAN
(Freiburg im Br., 1908).
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