Presbyters Uniwersytet Warszawski
ID
ER 2174
Due to the lack of any clergy, the revenues of the Church of Minturno (Italy) are tranferred to the neighbouring bishopric of Formia. Gregory the Great, Letter 1.8, AD 590.
Letter 1.8 to Bacauda, bishop of Formia (October 590)
 
The Church of Minturno is abandoned and is lacking any clergy. Gregory agrees to the petition of Bishop Bacauda of Formia to transfer the revenues from Minturno to his see, especially, since the bishopric of Formiae is very poor.
 
(ed. Norberg 1982; summarised by J. Szafranowski)

Discussion:

The city of Minturno was probably sacked during one of the Lormbard raids into southern Italy.

Place of event:

Region
  • Italy south of Rome and Sicily
  • Italy south of Rome and Sicily
City
  • Formia
  • Minturno

About the source:

Author: Gregory the Great
Title: Letters, Epistulae, Epistolae, Registrum epistularum, Registrum epistolarum
Origin: Rome (Rome)
Denomination: Catholic/Nicene/Chalcedonian
Gregory, later called the Great (Gregorius Magnus), was born ca 540 to an influential Roman family with some connection to the ancient gens Anicia. His great-great-grandfather was Felix III, who served as the bishop of Rome from 526 to 530. Possibly, Agapetus I, pope between 535 and 536, was his relative as well. Little is known about his early career, but in 573 Gregory ascended to the high office of city prefect. Shortly afterwards, however, he resigned from his post and adopted the monastic way of life. He founded a monastery dedicated to St. Andrew within his family estate on the Coelian Hill, next to the library established by Agapetus and Cassiodorus. Six other monasteries were founded in the estates his family owned in Sicily. Soon after his monastic conversion, he started to be given various tasks by Popes Benedict I (575–578) and Pelagius II (578–590). At that time, he was ordained a deacon. Between 579 and 585/6, Gregory acted as Pelagius` envoy in Constantinople. In 590, he was elected Pelagius` successor to the bishopric of Rome. The registry of his letters contained copies of Gregory`s papal correspondence up to his death in 604. The scope of Gregory`s original registry is still the subject of scholarly speculation. There are 854 extant letters gathered in fourteen volumes, most of them (686 letters) originating from the collection compiled at the time of Pope Hadrian I (772–795).
 
It is worth remembering that the majority of Gregory’s correspondence was jointly produced by the pope and his subordinates, see Pollard 2013.
Edition:
D. Norberg ed., S. Gregorii Magni Registrum Epistularum, Corpus Christianorum: Series Latina 140, 140A, Turnhout 1982.
 
Translation:
The Letters of Gregory the Great, trans. J.R.C. Martyn, Mediaeval Sources in Translation 40, Toronto 2004.
Bibliography:
R.M. Pollard, A Cooperative Correspondence: The Letters of Gregory the Great, in: M. Dal Santo, B. Neil (eds.), A Companion to Gregory the Great, Leiden-Boston 2013, pp. 291–312.

Categories:

Ecclesiastical transfer
    Shortage of clergy
      Please quote this record referring to its author, database name, number, and, if possible, stable URL: J. Szafranowski, Presbyters in the Late Antique West, ER2174, http://www.presbytersproject.ihuw.pl/index.php?id=6&SourceID=2174