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St. Maximinus
Bishop of Trier, b. at Silly near Poitiers, d. there, 29 May, 352 or 12 Sept.,
349. He was educated and ordained priest by St. Agritius, whom he succeeded as
Bishop of Trier in 332 or 335. At that time Trier was the government seat of the
Western Emperor and, by force of his office, Maximinus stood in close relation
with the Emperors Constantine II and Constans. He was a strenuous defender of
the orthodox faith against Arianism and an intimate friend of St. Athanasius,
whom he harboured as an honoured guest during his exile of two years and four
months (336-8) at Trier. He likewise received with honours the banished
patriarch Paul of Constantinople in 341 and effected his recall to
Constantinople. When four Arian bishops came from Antioch to Trier in 342 with
the purpose of winning Emperor Constans to their side, Maximinus refused to
receive them and induced the emperor to reject their proposals. In conjunction
with Pope Julius I and Bishop Hosius of Cordova, he persuaded the Emperor
Constans to convene the Synod of Sardica in 343 and probably took part in it.
That the Arians considered him as one of their chief opponents is evident from
the fact that they condemned by name along with Pope Julius I and Hosius of
Cordova at their heretical synod of Philippopolis in 343 (Mans, Sacrorum Conc.
nova et ampl. Coll.
, III, 136 sq.). In 345 he took part in the Synod of Milan
and is said to have presided over a synod held at Cologne in 346, where Bishop
Euphratas of Cologne was deposed on account of his leanings toward Arianism.
{Concerning the authenticity of the Acts of this synod see the new French
translation of Hefele's Conciliengeschichte
, I, ii (Paris, 1907), pp. 830-34.}
He also sent Sts. Castor and Lubentius as missionaries to the valleys of the
Mosel and the Lahn. It is doubtful whether the Maximinus whom the usurper
Magnentius sent as legate to Constantinople in the interests of peace is
identical with the Bishop of Trier (Athanasius, Apol. ad Const. Imp.
, 9). His
cult began right after his death. His feast is celebrated on 29 May, on which
day his name stands in the martyrologies of St. Jerome, St. Bede, St. Ado, and
others. Trier honours him as its patron. In the autumn of 353 his body was
buried in the church of St. John near Trier, where in the seventh century was
founded the famous Benedictine abbey of St. Maximinus, which flourished till
1802.
A life, full of fabulous accounts, by a monk of St. Maximinus in the eighth century, is printed in Acta SS., May, VII, 21-24. The same life, revised by SERVATUS LUPUS, is found in MIGNE, P.L. CXIX, 21-24, and in Mon. Germ. Script. rerum Merov., III, 74-82; DIEL, Der heilige Maximinus und der heilige Paulinus, Bischöfe von Trier (Trier, 1875); CHAMARD, St. Maximin de Treves, St. Athenase et les semi-Ariens in Revue des Quest. hist., II (Paris, 1867), 66-96; BENNETT in Dict. Christ. Biog., s.v.
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