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Pope St. Martin I
Martyr, born at Todi on the Tiber, son of Fabricius; elected Pope at Rome, 21
July, 649, to succeed Theodore I; died at Cherson in the present peninsulas of
Krym, 16 Sept., 655, after a reign of 6 years, one month and twenty six days,
having ordained eleven priests, five deacons and thirty-three bishops. 5 July is
the date commonly given for his election, but 21 July (given by Lobkowitz,
Statistik der Päpste
Freiburg, 1905) seems to correspond better with the date
of his death and reign (Duchesne Lib. Pont.
, I, 336); his feast is on 12
November.The Greeks honor him on 13 April and 15 September, the Muscovites on 14
April. In the hymns of the Office the Greeks style him infallibilis fidei
magister because he was the successor of St. Peter in the See of Rome (Nilles,
Calendarium Manuale
, Innsbruck, 1896, I, 336).
Martin, one of the noblest figures in a long line of Roman pontiffs (Hodgkin,
Italy
, VI, 268) was, according to his biographer Theodore (Mai, Spicil. Rom.
,
IV 293) of noble birth, a great student, of commanding intelligence, of profound
learning, and of great charity to the poor. Piazza, II 45 7 states that he
belonged to the order of St. Basil. He governed the Church at a time when the
leaders of the Monothelite heresy, supported by the emperor, were making most
strenuous efforts to spread their tenets in the East and West. Pope Theodore had
sent Martin as apocrysiary to Constantinople to make arrangements for canonical
deposition of the heretical patriarch, Pyrrhus. After his election, Martin had
himself consecrated without waiting for the imperial confirmation, and soon
called a council in the Lateran at which one hundred and five bishops met. Five
sessions were held on 5, 8, 17, 119 and 31 Oct., 649 (Hefele,
Conciliengeschichte
, III, 190). The Ecthesis
of Heraclius and the Typus
of
Constans II were rejected; nominal excommunication was passed against Sergius,
Pyrrus, and Paul of Constantinople, Cyrus of Alexandria and Theodore of Phran in
Arabia; twenty canons were enacted defining the Catholic doctrine on the two
wills of Christ. The decrees signed by the pope and the assembled bishops were
sent to the other bishops and the faithful of the world together with an
encyclical of Martin. The Acts with a Greek translation were also sent to the
Emperor Constans II.
The pope appointed John, Bishop of Philadelphia, as his vicar in the East
with necessary instructions and full authority . Bishop Paul of Thessalonica
refused to recall his heretical letters previously sent to Rome and added others,
- he was, therefore, formally excommunicated and deposed. The Patriarch of
Constantinople, Paul, had urged the emperor to use drastic means to force the
pope and the Western Bishops at least to subscribe to the Typus
. The emperor
sent Olympius as exarch to Italy, where he arrived while the council was still
in session. Olympius tried to create a faction among the fathers to favor the
views of the emperor, but without success. Then upon pretense of reconciliation
he wished to receive Holy Communion from the hands of the pontiff with the
intention of slaying him. But Divine Providence protected the pope, and Olympius
left Rome to fight against the Saracens in Sicily and died there. Constans II
thwarted in his plans, sent as exarch Theodore Calliopas with orders to bring
Martin to Constantinople. Calliopas arrived in Rome, 15 June, 653, and, entering
the Lateran Basilica two days later, informed the clergy that Martin had been
deposed as an unworthy intruder, that he must be brought to Constantinople and
that another was to be chosen in his place. The pope, wishing to avoid the
shedding of human blood, forbade resistance and declared himself willing to be
brought before the emperor. The saintly prisoner, accompanied by only a few
attendants, and suffering much from bodily ailments and privations, arrived at
Constantinople on 17 Sept., 653 or 654, having landed nowhere except the island
of Naxos. The letters of the pope seem to indicate he was kept at Naxos for a
year. Jaffe, n. 1608, and Ewald, n 2079, consider the annum fecimus an
interpolation and would allow only a very short stop at Naxos, which granted the
pope an opportunity to enjoy a bath. Duchesne, Lib. Pont.
, I, 336 can see no
reason for abandoning the original account; Hefele, Conciliengeschichte III
,
212, held the same view (see Zeitschr. für Kath. Theol.
, 1892, XVI, 375).
From Abydos messengers were sent to the imperial city to announce the arrival
of the prisoner who was branded as a heretic and rebel, an enemy of God and of
the State. Upon his arrival in Constantinople Martin was left for several hours
on deck exposed to the jests and insults of a curious crowd of spectators.
Towards evening he was brought to a prison called Prandearia and kept in close
and cruel confinement for ninety-three days, suffering from hunger, cold and
thirst. All this did not break his energy and on 19 December he was brought
before the assembled senate where the imperial treasurer acted as judge. Various
political charges were made, but the true and only charge was the pope's refusal
to sign the Typus
. He was then carried to an open space in full view of the
emperor and of a large crowd of people. These were asked to pass anathema upon
the pope to which but few responded. Numberless indignities were heaped upon him,
he was stripped of nearly all his clothing, loaded with chains, dragged through
the streets of the city and then again thrown into the prison of Diomede, where
he remained for eighty five days. Perhaps influenced by the death of Paul,
Patriarch of Constantinople, Constans did not sentence the pope to death, but to
exile. He was put on board a ship, 26 March, 654 (655) and arrived at his
destination on 15 May. Cherson was at the time suffering from a great famine.
The venerable pontiff here passed the remaining days of his life. He was buried
in the church of Our Lady, called Blachernæ, near Cherson, and many miracles are
related as wrought by St Martin in life and after death. The greater part of his
relics are said to have been transferred to Rome, where they repose in the
church of San Martino ai Monti. Of his letters seventeen are extant in P.L.,
LXXXVII, 119.
MANN, Lives of the Popes, I (London, 1902), 385; Hist. Jahrbuch, X, 424; XII, 757; LECLERCQ, Les Martyrs, IX (Paris, 1905), 234; Civila Cattolica, III(1907), 272, 656.
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