Presbyters Uniwersytet Warszawski
ID
ER 228
Canon 5 of the Council of Carthage (North Africa, AD 419) forbids clerics to lend on interest.
Canon 5
 
[...]Nec omnino cuiquam clericorum liceat de qualibet re fenus accipere. [...]
Proinde quod in laicis deprehenditur multo magis debet in clericis praedamnari.
 
(ed. Munier 1974: 102)
Canon 5
 
[...] No cleric whatsoever is allowed to accept interest on anything. [...] If we disapprove something when it is done by laymen, it must be condemned much more if it is done by clerics.
 
(trans. S. Adamiak)
 

Discussion:

The canon refers to Canon 13 of the Council of Carthage 345/348 [130].

Place of event:

Region
  • Latin North Africa
City
  • Carthage

About the source:

Title: Canones in causa Apiarii
Origin: Carthage (Latin North Africa)
Denomination: Catholic/Nicene/Chalcedonian
Apiarius, a presbyter of Sicca Veneria in North Africa, was excommunicated for some unspecified crimes by his bishop, Urbanus. In 418 he appealed directly to Pope Zosimus, who sent legates to Africa to assess the charges. The council of African bishops gathered in Carthage in May 419 to address the question. On the 25 May they approved several disciplinary canons, mainly repeated from previous councils, which are known collectively in scholarship as “Canones in causa Apiarii”. They were also sometimes transmitted as the part of “Codex Apiarii causae”, together with other acts of the council of 419.
We follow the edition of Munier, who followed Turner, who established the text according to three codices: Vindobonensis 2141, fol. 106, Monacensis (olim Frisingensis), fol. 64`, and Wirceburgensis Univ. mp. th. f. 146, fol. 66. We ignore the later textual traditions, namely Italian collections (which were the basis of the edition of brothers Ballerini in PL 56), and the redaction of Dionysius Exiguus; both of them have been included in the Corpus Christianorum edition, and they contain only minor changes, which we ignore, with the exception of two canons not transmitted in the first recension.
Edition:
C. Munier ed., Concilia Africae a. 345-a. 525, Corpus Christianorum. Series Latina 149, Turnhoult 1974, 79-165.  
 
Bibliography:
C.H. Turner, Ecclesiae occidentalis monumenta iuris antiquissima, vol. 1-2, Oxford 1889-1939.

Categories:

Described by a title - Clericus
    Economic status and activity - Loans
      Economic status and activity - Indication of wealth
        Please quote this record referring to its author, database name, number, and, if possible, stable URL: S. Adamiak, Presbyters in the Late Antique West, ER228, http://www.presbytersproject.ihuw.pl/index.php?id=6&SourceID=228