St. Sixtus III

St. Sixtus III
St. Sixtus III
    Pope St. Sixtus III
     Catholic_Encyclopedia Pope St. Sixtus III
    (XYSTUS).
    Consecrated 31 July, 432; d. 440. Previous to his accession he was prominent among the Roman clergy and in correspondence with St. Augustine. He reigned during the Nestorian and Pelagian controversies, and it was probably owing to his conciliatory disposition that he was falsely accused of leanings towards these heresies. As pope he approved the Acts of the Council of Ephesus and endeavoured to restore peace between Cyril of Alexandria and John of Antioch. In the Pelagian controversy he frustrated the attempt of Julian of Eclanum to be readmitted to communion with the Catholic Church. He defended the pope's right of supremacy over Illyricum against the local bishops and the ambitious designs of Proclus of Constantinople. At Rome he restored the Basilica of Liberius, now known as St. Mary Major, enlarged the Basilica of St. Lawrence-Without-the-Walls, and obtained precious gifts from the Emperor Valentinian III for St. Peter's and the Lateran Basilica. The work which asserts that the consul Bassus accused him of crime is a forgery. He is the author of eight letters (in P.L., L, 583 sqq.), but he did not write the works "On Riches", "On False Teachers", and "On Chastity" ("De divitiis", "De malis doctoribus", "De castitate") attributed to him. His feast is kept on 28 March.
    DUCHESNE (ed.), Lib. Pont., I (Paris, 1886), 126-27, 232-37; BARMBY in Dict. Christ. Biog., s. v. Sixtus (3); GRISAR, History of Rome and the Popes, tr. CAPPADELTA, I (St. Louis, 1911), nos. 54, 135, 140, 144, 154.
    N.A. WEBER

The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume VIII. — New York: Robert Appleton Company. . 1910.


Catholic encyclopedia.

Игры ⚽ Нужно решить контрольную?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Sixtus III. — Sixtus III. (Xystus) (* im 4. Jahrhundert oder 5. Jahrhundert; † 18. oder 19. August 440) war Bischof von Rom (31. Juli 432–440). Sein Name bedeutet: Sixtus = der Sechste (latein.) bzw. Xystus = der Geglättete (griech.) Sein Name wird oft mit der …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Sixtus III, Pope Saint — • Reigned 432 440 Catholic Encyclopedia. Kevin Knight. 2006 …   Catholic encyclopedia

  • SIXTUS III — SIXTUS III. excepit Caelestinum I. A. C. 432. a Pelagianis suspectus, quasi cum illis faceret, redditus, scripsit ad Aurelium Carthaginensem, duasque epistolas accepit ab Augustino, qui de Gratia ibi accuratissime tractavit. Nestorium reducturus… …   Hofmann J. Lexicon universale

  • Sixtus III, Saint — ▪ pope also spelled  Xystus  born , Rome died Aug. 19, 440, feast day March 28       pope from 432 to 440.       A chief Roman priest when he succeeded Pope St. Celestine I on July 31, 432, Sixtus had previously been suspected of favouring… …   Universalium

  • Pope Sixtus III — Infobox Pope English name=Pope Sixtus III birth name=??? term start=July 31, 432 term end=August 18, 440 predecessor=Celestine I successor=Leo I birthplace=not known dead=dead|death date=death date|440|8|18|mf=y deathplace=Rome other=Sixtus|… …   Wikipedia

  • Sixtus III — Saint, pope A.D. 432 440. Also, Xystus III. * * * …   Universalium

  • Sixtus III — Saint, pope A.D. 432 440. Also, Xystus III …   Useful english dictionary

  • Pope St. Sixtus III —     Pope St. Sixtus III     † Catholic Encyclopedia ► Pope St. Sixtus III     (XYSTUS).     Consecrated 31 July, 432; d. 440. Previous to his accession he was prominent among the Roman clergy and in correspondence with St. Augustine. He reigned… …   Catholic encyclopedia

  • Sixtus V. — Sixtus V. Sixtus V. (* 13. Dezember 1521 in Grottammare, Marken; † 27. August 1590 in Rom), bürgerlicher Name Felice Peretti di Montalto, war von 1585 bis 1590 Papst der katholischen Kirche …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Sixtus — (Ξύστος Xýstos ‚der Feine, Glatte‘) ist der Name folgender Personen: Sixtus (Bischof) (1. Jh. n. Chr.), erster Bischof von Reims Hl. Sixtus I. (115–125), Papst Hl. Sixtus II. (257–258), Papst Hl. Sixtus III. (432–440), Papst Sixtus IV.… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”