info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Gregory the Great and the Marcianists
Fecha
2019-12Registro en:
Viale, Adrián Mariano; Gregory the Great and the Marcianists; Slovanský ústav Akademie ved Ceské Republiky; Byzantinoslavica - Revue internationale des Etudes Byzantines; 77; 1-2; 12-2019; 195-210
0007-7712
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Viale, Adrián Mariano
Resumen
During the pontificate of Gregory the Great, John of Chalcedon and Athanasius of Isauria were condemned at Constantinople. Accused of being Marcianists, they appealed to the Roman bishop. To review their cases, Gregory received from Constantinople some documents related to the Council of Ephesus. The pope could not find those same documents in Rome, and he then suspected they had been faked. Finally, Gregory acquitted Athanasius and John because they showed repentance, underlining at the same time that their accusers were Pelagians. This article analyses these striking events, in order to learn more about the way of working of Gregory and about the relationship between Rome and Constantinople at his time.