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St. Martin of Braga
(Bracara; or, of Dumio).
Bishop and ecclesiastical writer; b. about 520 in Pannonia; d. in 580 at
Braga in Portugal. He made a pilgrimage to Palestine, where he became a monk and
met some Spanish pilgrims whose narrations induced him to come to Galicia
(Northwestern Spain) with the purpose of converting the Suevi, some of whom were
still half pagans and others Arians. He arrived in Spain in 550, founded various
monasteries, among them that of Dumio, of which he became abbot and afterwards
bishop. At the Synod of Braga, in May, 561, he signed as Bishop of Dumio. Later
he became Archbishop of Braga and, as such, presided over the second Council of
Braga in 572. He was successful in converting the Arian Galicians and rooting
out the last remnants of paganism among them. He is venerated as a saint, his
feast day being 20 March. His great learning and piety are attested by Gregory
of Tours (Hist. Franc., V, xxxviii), who styles him full of virtue (plenus
virtutibus) and second to none of his contemporaries in learning (in tantum se
litteris imbuit ut nulli secundus sui temporis haberetur
).
His writings consist chiefly of moral, liturgical, and ascetical treatises.
The best known of his moral treatises, Formula vitae honestae
or De
differentiis quatuor virtutum
, as St. Isadore of Seville (De viris illustribus
xxxv) entitles it, is an exposition of Christian life chiefly for laymen, from
the standpoint of the four cardinal virtues, and is believed to be based on a
lost work of Seneca. His little work, De ira
, is merely a compendium of
Seneca's three books, De ira
. The two preceding works proceed from the
standpoint of natural ethics, while his three other moral treatises: Pro
repellenda jactantia
, De superbia
, and Exhortatio humilitatis
, are
expositions of Christian morality. Of great importance in the history of
medieval canon law is Martin's collection of eighty-four canons: Collectio
orientalium canonum, seu Capitula Martini
, which was compiled after 561, and
contains mostly Greek, also a few Spanish and African, canons. It is in two
parts; the first, containing sixty-eight canons, treats of the ordination and
the duties of clerics; the second, containing sixteen canons, treats chiefly of
the duties and faults of laymen. His two liturgical works are a little treatise:
De pascha
, in which he explains to the people the reason why Easter is
celebrated at variable periods between IX Kal. April, and XI Kal. Maii, and
Epistola ad Bonifatium de trina mersione
, in answer to a letter from a Spanish
bishop who supposed that the custom of triple aspersion in baptism was of Arian
origin. His ascetical works are Sententiae patrum AEgyptiorum
, a collection of
edifying narratives concerning Egyptian monastic life, and of pious sayings of
Egyptian abbots, which he translated from the Greek; and another work of similar
nature, Verba seniorum
, translated from the Greek by Paschasius, a deacon of
Dumio, by order and with the help of Martin. He also wrote an interesting sermon
De correctione rusticorum
, against the pagan superstitions which were still
prevalent among the peasantry of his diocese. There are also extant three
poetical inscriptions, In basilico
, In refectorio
, Epistaphium
. No
complete edition of Martin's works has ever been published. His Formula vitae
honestae
, Libellus de moribus
(spurious), Pro repellanda jactantia
, De
superbia
, Exhortatio humilitatis
, De ira
, De pascha
, and the three
poetical inscriptions are printed in Gallandi, Bibl. Vet. Patr.
, XII, 275-288,
and in Migne, P.L., LXXII, 21-52. Migne also reprints Verba seniorum
(P.L.
LXXIII, 1025-62); AEgyptiorum patrum sententiae (P.L., LXXIV, 381-394);
Capitula Martini
(P.L., 574-586). The sermon, De correctione rusticorum
was
edited with notes and a learned disquisition on Martin's life and writings by
C.P. Caspari (Christiania, 1883). The epistle, De trina mersione
, is printed
in Collectio maxima conciliorum Hispaniae
II (Rome, 1693), 506, and in Espa a
sagrada
, XV (Madrid, 1759), 422. The latest editions of the Formula honestae
vitae
were prepared by Weidner (Magdeburg, 1872) and May (Neisse, 1892). The
treatise De pascha
was recently edited by Burn, in Niceta of Remesiana
(Cambridge, 1905), 93 sq.
Besides the work of Caspari, mentioned above, see Bardenhewer, Patrology, tr. Shahan (St. Louis, 1908), 658-660; Gams, Kirchengesch. Spaniens, II (Ratisbon, 1864), i, 471-5; De Amaral, Vida e opuscula di s Martingho Bracharense (Lisbon, 1803); Seeberg-Wagenmann in Realencyklopädie für prot. Theol. s. v. Martin von Bracara; Ward in Dict. Christ. Biogr. s. v. Martinus of Braga.
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