'Anastasius Bibliothecarius' (c.
810-c.
878) was a
librarian and supposed
antipope of the
Roman Catholic Church.
Family and education
He was a nephew of Bishop
Arsenius of Orta, who executed important commissions as
Papal legate.
Anastasius learned the
Greek language from
Eastern Roman monks and obtained an unusual education for his era, such that he appears to be the most learned ecclesiastic of
Rome in the barbaric period of the
9th century.
Abbot of Santa Maria
During the reign of
Pope Nicholas I (
855-
867) Anastasius was
abbot of
Santa Maria in Trastevere on the farther side of the
Tiber and was employed by the
Pope in various matters. He was also active as an author, and translated Greek language works into
Latin. Among them was the
biography of
St. John the Merciful, which he dedicated to Nicholas I.
Librarian of the Roman Church
The successor of Nicholas,
Pope Adrian II (
867-
872), appointed Anastasius librarian of the Roman Church, an important office which gave him much influence at the papal Court.
Envoy to Constantinople
In 869 he was sent by
Louis II, Holy Roman Emperor as envoy to
Constantinople, with two men of high rank in the
Frankish Empire, to negotiate a marriage between
Leo VI the Wise, oldest son of the
Byzantine emperor Basil I, and the daughter of the
Holy Roman Emperor.
When the envoys arrived at
Constantinople, the
Eighth Ecumenical Council was still in session, and Anastasius, who attended the last session (February, 870), zealously defended the papal cause and was of much service to the papal legates.
On their way home the papal legates were robbed, and the "Acts" of the council were carried off. However, they had given most of the declarations of obedience of the Greek bishops to Anastasius, who also had a copy of the "Acts", and was thus able to bring these documents to the pope. At the pope's order, he translated the "Acts" into Latin.
Continued influence
The successor of Adrian II,
Pope John VIII (
872-
882), also esteemed Anastasius, confirmed him in the office of librarian, entrusted important affairs to him, and encouraged him to further literary work.
Anastasius was in correspondence with the deposed Byzantine patriarch,
Photius, and sought to mediate between the patriarch and the pope and also to assuage the controversy over the
Holy Ghost by assuming that the Latins understood the procession (processio) of the Holy Ghost from the Son in the sense of transmission (missio).
Presumed identification with antipope Anastasius
If a passage in the annals of
Hincmar of Reims is genuine
[1] and Hincmar has not confused two men, then the librarian Anastasius is identical with the Roman presbyter Anastasius who in 874 became titular priest of St. Marcellus.
This Anastasius had fled from Rome in 848, to reside in various cities. On account of his flight he was excommunicated by a Roman synod in 850, and, as he did not return, was anathematized and deposed by another synod in 853.
After the death of
Pope Leo IV in 855 this Anastasius was elected as
Antipope by the imperial party, but the rightfully elected
Pope Benedict III, gained the supremacy, and acted kindly towards the usurper.
During the pontificate of Adrian II, Anastasius became involved in serious difficulties: in 868 a near relative of his named Eleutherius forcibly carried off the daughter of the pope, and soon after killed both her and her mother. The murderer was executed and Anastasius, who was regarded as the instigator of the murder, was punished by excommunication and deposition.
He lived at the imperial Court, and sought by the intervention of the emperor to exculpate himself before the pope.
Joseph Hergenröther[2] maintains, with good reason, that the librarian and the presbyter Anastasius (the antipope) were one and the same person, and weaves all the statements concerning the latter into the biography of Anastasius, while
Joseph Langen[3] considers them different persons. In August, 879, Zacharias of Anagni appears as librarian of the Roman Church, so that Anastasius must have died shortly before this date.
Translator and author
Anastasius translated from Greek into Latin the "Acts" of both the
Second Council of Nicaea and the
Fourth Council of Constantinople, as well as several legends of saints, along with other writings.
He also compiled a historical work, "Chronographia tripartita", from the Greek writings of
Theophanes, Nicephorus, and
Syncellus, and made a collection of documents concerning the affairs of
Pope Honorius I. Several important letters written by him have been preserved.
[4] The ''
Liber Pontificalis'', which was formerly ascribed to him, was not written by him; he seems to have shared in the revision of the ''Life'' of Nicholas I.
Notes
1. ''Monumenta Germaniae Historica'': ''Scriptores,'' I, 447.
2. Photius, II, 230-240.
3. ''Geschichte der römischen Kirche'', III, 270 sqq.
4. His writings are to be found in ''Patrologia Graeca'', XXIX; ''Patrologia Latina'', LXXIII, CXXII, CXXIX.
''This article incorporates text from the 1913 ''
Catholic Encyclopedia'' article "
Anastasius Bibliothecarius" by J.P. Kirsch, a publication now in the
public domain.''