Presbyters Uniwersytet Warszawski
ID
ER 1640
A copy of the libellus on faith of Pope Hormisdas sent by his legates to the Emperor Anastasius, Bishops Ennodius of Pavia and Fortunatus of Catania, the Presbyter Venantius, the Deacon Vitalis, and the notary Hilarus, AD 517. Letter 116b included in the Collectio Avellana compiled in the second half of the 6th c.
116b. [in Coll. Avell.]
 
EXEMPLUM LIBELLI PER ENNODIUM ET FORTUNATUM EPISCOPOS UENANTIUM PRESBYTERUM UITALEM DIACONUM ET HILARUM NOTARIUM.
 
The document formulating the orthodox faith and condemning Nestorius, Eutyches, Dioscorus of Alexandria, Timothy Aelurus, Peter Mongos, Acacius of Constantinople, and Peter the Fuller of Antioch.
 
(ed. Guenther 1895: 520-522)
116b. [in Coll. Avell.]
 
A COPY OF THE LIBELLUS OF FAITH [CARRIED BY] BISHOPS ENNODIUS AND FORTUNATUS, THE PRESBYTER VENANTIUS, THE DEACON VITALIS AND THE NOTARY HILARUS.
 
The document formulating the orthodox faith and condemning Nestorius, Eutyches, Dioscorus of Alexandria, Timothy Aelurus, Peter Mongos, Acacius of Constantinople, and Peter the Fuller of Antioch.
 
(summary by M. Szada)

Place of event:

Region
  • Rome
  • East
City
  • Constantinople

About the source:

Author: Hormisdas
Title: Collectio Avellana, Letters, Epistulae, Formula Hormisdae
Origin: Rome
Denomination: Catholic/Nicene/Chalcedonian
Hormisdas was a bishop of Rome from 514 until his death in 523. During his pontificate he managed to resolve the Acacian Schism (see the discussion in [1581]) in 519. The libellus fidei was carried by the papal legacy in 517 to the emperor as a part of efforts to reconcile the sees of Rome and Constantinople which were not in communion since 484. Libellus, which is dated with the consular date (year of the consulship of Agapitus, thus, the year 517) has been artificially attached to the instructions of Hormisdas for the same envoys in 515.
 
Collectio Avellana is a collection containing 244 letters issued by emperors, imperial magistrates and popes. The earliest item is dated to AD 367, the latest to AD 553. Hence, the compilator worked most probably in the second half of the 6th century. Two hundred documents of the Collectio are not known from any other collection. The editor of the Collectio, Günther noticed that it can be divided into five thematic parts (Gunther 1896: 3-96; Steinacker 1902: 14-15; Blaudeau 2013: 4) :
1) no. 1-40 is an independent collection making use of the records of the prefecture of the city of Rome concerning two episcopal elections;
2) no. 41-50 that are derived from the records of the bishopric in Carthage, and consist of the letters of Innocentius I and Zosimus;
3) no. 51-55, the late letters of Leo I not known from any other source, regarding the exile of Bishop Timothy II of Alexandria;
4) no. 56-104 the group of letters from the pontificates of Simplicius, Gelasius, Symmachus, John, Agapet, and Vigilius;
5) no. 105-243 the letters from the records of Hormisdas.
 
The modern name of the collection derives from the codex Vaticanus Latinus 4961 copied in the monastery Sancti Crucis in fonte Avellana that was considered the oldest by the brothers Ballerini who edited the Collectio in 1787.
Edition:
O. Guenther ed., Epistolae Imperatorum Pontificum Aliorum Inde ab a. CCCLXVII usque DLIII datae Avellana Quae Dicitur Collectio, Corpus Scriptorum Ecclesiasticorum Latinorum 35/1, 35/2, Prague, Vienna, and Leipzig 1895
A. Thiel ed., Epistolae Romanorum Pontificum genuinae et quae ad eos scriptae sunt a s. Hilaro usque ad Pelagium II, vol. 1, Brunsberga 1868
Bibliography:
P. Blaudeau, "Un point de contact entre collectio Avellana et collectio Thessalonicensis?”, Millennium Yearbook / Millenium Jahrbuch 10 (2013), 1–12.
O. Guenther, Avellana-Studien, Wien 1896.
O. Guenther, "Zu den Gesta de nomine Acacii”, Byzantinische Zeitschrift 3 (1894), 146–149.
D. Moreau, "Les actes pontificaux comme sources des historiens et des chroniqueurs de l'Antiquité tardive", in: L'historiographie tardo-antique et la transmission des savoirs, ed. P. van Nuffelen, P. Blaudeau,  Millenium-Studien 55, Berlin, Boston 2015, 23-54.
H. Steinacker, "Ueber das älteste päpstliche Registerwesen”, Mitteilungen des Instituts für Österreichische Geschichtsforschung 23 (1902), 1–49.

Categories:

Travel and change of residence
Described by a title - Presbyter/πρεσβύτερος
Ecclesiastical administration - Ecclesiastical envoy
Relation with - Bishop/Monastic superior
Relation with - Deacon
Relation with - Lower cleric
Please quote this record referring to its author, database name, number, and, if possible, stable URL: M. Szada, Presbyters in the Late Antique West, ER1640, http://presbytersproject.ihuw.pl/index.php?id=6&SourceID=1640