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Episcopal Crisis Management in Late Antique Gaul: The Example of Exsuperius of Toulouse*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  13 November 2015

Geoffrey Dunn*
Affiliation:
Australian Catholic University, McAuley Campus

Abstract

In the first quarter of the fifth century the provinces of Gaul experienced their most dramatic shakeup since Julius Caesar, with the Rhine crossing of Vandals, Suebi and Alans, the retaliation from Roman forces in Britain under the usurper Constantine III, and the establishment of the Visigothic kingdom of Toulouse under Wallia in 418. Exsuperius was bishop in Toulouse throughout much of this time. Most of what we know about him comes from the challenges that confronted him. Not only did he face the crisis of hostile forces besieging his city, but he faced internal ones as well, with famine resulting from the siege and, at an earlier time, dissent being expressed to the asceticism and Christian discipline he promoted. While famine and theological dissent were regular features of what bishops had to deal with, responding to a siege was not something most bishops in previous generations had experienced. This article investigates how Exsuperius responded to these crises of varying magnitudes and argues that, although he is reported by Jerome as being solely responsible for averting the external threat, he was probably part of a team of negotiators, and that, with regard to the internal threat, he allied himself with Innocent I, the Roman bishop. The literary encounter between Toulouse and Rome in Innocent’s Epistula 6 reinforced Innocent’s position as the leading Western bishop, as well as offered support to Exsuperius in dealing with the crisis he faced.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Australasian Society for Classical Studies 2014

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Footnotes

*

An earlier version of this article was presented at the 32nd Conference of the Australasian Society for Classical Studies at the University of Auckland in 2011. I am grateful to the Australian Research Council, which made this research possible, and to those who have improved the article by their helpful criticism since the paper was originally presented.

References

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2 Van Dam (n. 1) 143-4.

3 Van Dam (n. 1) 147-9. Cf.Rapp, C., Holy Bishops in Late Antiquity: The Nature of Christian Leadership in an Age of Transition, The Transformation of the Classical Heritage 37 (Berkeley 2005) 279-89Google Scholar, who argues that the idea that bishops filled in a power vacuum created by the decline of the curiales is misleading. Rather, bishops should be seen as standing ‘alongside the small body of leading citizens that increasingly monopolized leadership in civic matter’ (289).

4 Jerome, Ep. 123.15.4 (CSEL 56/1.92): non possum absque lacrimis Tolosae facere mentionem, quae ut hucusque non rueret, sancii episcopi Exsuperii merita praestiterunt. When Mathisen, R.W., Roman Aristocrats in Barbarian Gaul: Strategies for Survival in an Age of Transition (Austin 1993) 27Google Scholar, referred to this letter, he stopped short of citing this sentence.

5 Mathisen’s compelling observation (n. 4, 91-3) about Romano-Gallic aristocrats acquiring ecclesiastical office from the end of the fourth century as a new way of maintaining social status, might suggest that Exsuperius had an aristocratic background. See Gassmann, P., Der Episkopat in Gallien im 5. Jahrhundert (Bonn 1977) 5071Google Scholar. While someone like Martin of Tours could become a bishop without having come from a wealthy background, it is true, as Rapp (n. 3) 211 points out, that men from a wealthy background had a greater chance of becoming bishops. On this distinction between sacred and secular attitudes towards charity, see Brown, P., Poverty and Leadership in the Later Roman Empire, The Menahem Stem Jerusalem Lectures (Hanover NH and London 2002) 1 6Google Scholar.

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15 See Heather, P., The Fall of the Roman Empire: A New History of Rome and the Barbarians (Oxford 2006) 198-9, for an estimate of the size of this forceGoogle Scholar.

16 Kulikowski (n. 14) acknowledges dependence upon Drinkwater, J.F., ‘The Usurpers Constantine III (407-411) and Jovinus (411-413)’, Britannia 29 (1998) 269-98CrossRefGoogle Scholar, even though he disagrees with him on several key points. For a positive assessment of Kulikowski, see Halsall, G., Barbarian Migrations and the Roman West 376-568, Cambridge Medieval Textbooks (Cambridge 2007) 211-2Google Scholar. In a later work, Drinkwater, Alamanni and Rome 213- 496: Caracalla to Clovis (Oxford 2007) 321Google Scholar, acknowledges Kulikowski’s redating, but does not adopt it or alter his reconstruction. In response to Birley, A.R., The Roman Government of Britain (Oxford 2005) 455-60CrossRefGoogle Scholar, Kulikowski, , Rome’s Gothic Wars from the Third Century to Alaric, Key Conflicts in Classical Antiquity (Cambridge 2007) 171Google Scholar, is prepared to question his rejection of the end of 406 as the date.

17 Rut. Namat. 1.20-30: . . . indigenamque suum Gallica rura uocant./Illa quidem longis nimium deformia bellis, /sed quam grata minus, tam miseranda magis. /securos leuius crimen contemnere dues: priuatam repetunt publica damna fldem. /praesentes lacrimas tectis debemus auitis: prodest admonitus saepe dolore labor, nec fas ulterius longas nescire ruinas/quas mora suspensae multiplicauit opis: iam tempus laceris post saeua incendia fundis/uel pastorales aedificare casas. (‘Gaul, where I was born, summons me away./Long wars have ruined the fields of my native land;/pity takes me from the land that I love./It is nothing to neglect men who are at ease,/but suffering compels our loyalty./An ancestral home needs our presence and our tears;/labour which grief has urged is often best./It is sinful to neglect ruin already/compounded by neglect: now is the time,/after the fires have cooled, to rebuild, even if/we are rebuilding only shepherds’ huts.’) (trans, by Isbell, H., The Last Poets of Imperial Rome, Penguin Classics [Harmondsworth 1971])Google Scholar.

18 Poema con. ad ux.(CSEL 30.344-8); Prosp. Carmen de prou. Dei (Marcovich); and Orient. Common. (CSEL 16.191-261). See Wood, I.N., ‘Continuity or Calamity?: The Constraints of Literary Models’, in Drinkwater, J.F. and Elton, H. (eds), Fifth-Century Gaul: A Crisis of Identity? (Cambridge 1992) 9-18Google Scholar, on how Gallic literature of the first half of the fifth century was particularly pessimistic; M. Roberts, ‘Barbarians in Gaul: The Response of the Poets’, in Drinkwater and Elton, loc. cit. 97-106. On Prosper as the author of Carmen de prou. Dei, see Marcovich, M., Prosper of Aquitaine: De prouidentia Dei. Text, Translation and Commentary, Supplements to Vigiliae Christianae 10 (Leiden 1989)Google Scholar; Hwang, A.Y., Intrepid Lover of Perfect Grace: The Life and Thought of Prosper of Aquitaine (Washington D.C. 2008) 52Google Scholar.

19 On Jerome’s reputation in Gaul, see Mathisen, R.W., ‘The Use and Misuse of Jerome in Gaul during Late Antiquity’, in Cain, A. and Lössl, J. (eds), Jerome of Stridon: His Life, Writings and Legacy (Farnham and Burlington VT 2009) 191208Google Scholar. On this letter see Krumeich, C., Hieronymus und die christlichen Feminae Clarissimae, Habelts Dissertations-drucke Reihe Alte Geschichte, Heft 36 (Bonn 1993) 170-6Google Scholar; Cain, A., The Letters of Jerome: Asceticism, Biblical Exegesis, and the Construction of Christian Authority in Late Antiquity, Oxford Early Christian Studies (Oxford 2009) 158-9Google Scholar, and ‘Jerome’s Epistula 117 on the Subintroductat: Satire, Apology, and Ascetic Propaganda in Gaul’, Augustinianum 49 (2009) 119-43.

20 See n. 4. This is my own translation.

21 Kulikowski (n. 14) 327-32.

22 See Dunn, G.D., ‘Innocent I and Anysius of Thessalonica’, Byzantion 77 (2007) 124-48Google Scholar. For a traditional account of Stilicho’s failure to respond, see Burns, T.S., Barbarians within the Gates of Rome: A Study of Roman Military Policy and the Barbarians, ca. 375-425 A.D. (Bloomington and Indianapolis 1994) 202-4Google Scholar, and Hughes, I., Stilicho: The Vandal Who Saved Rome (Barnsley 2010) 180-2Google Scholar.

23 Oros. Hist. adu. pag. 7.37.4-17 (CSEL 5.538-42).

24 Olymp, frag. 13 (Blockley, R.C., The Fragmentary Classicising Historians of the Later Roman Empire 2: Text, Translation and Historiographical Notes, ARCS 10 [Liverpool 1983] 171)Google Scholar, and Zos. HN 5.27.2 (F. Paschoud, Zosime. Histoire nouvelle, t.3/1: Livre V, Collection des Universités de France [Paris 2003] 40); 6.3.1 (Paschoud 3/2.7). See also Oros. Hist. adu. pag. 7.40.4 (CSEL 5.550); and Soz. HE 9.6.1 (GCS NF 4.397); 9.11.2-12.3 (GCS NF 4.402- 403). Heather (n. 15) 209-11 does not see any connection between the barbarian invasion and the usurpations.

25 Soz. HE 9.12-13 (GCS NF 4.403-405). Perhaps the rebellion of Gerontius had to do with Constantine succumbing to the luxuries of imperial life as Frigeridus suggested in Greg. Tours Hist. Franc. 2.9 (MGH.SSrer.Merov. 1.55). On the barbarians see Zos. HN 6.5.2 (Paschoud 3/2.8-9). Cf.Matthews, J., Western Aristocracies and Imperial Court A.D. 364- 425, 2nd edn (Oxford 1998) 307, who says that the barbarians were unimpeded for two yearsGoogle Scholar.

26 After Stilicho’s murder and Alaric’s incursion into Italy, Honorius was prepared to recognise Constantine in late 408. See Zos. HN 5.43.2 (Paschoud 3/1.64); and Drinkwater (n. 16) 281. On Honorius and Alaric, see Dunn, , ‘Innocent I, Alaric, and Honorius: Church and State in Early Fifth-Century Rome’, in Luckensmeyer, and Allen, (n. 8) 243-62Google Scholar.

27 Of course, by the time that information reached Jerome in Palestine and returned to Ageruchia in Gaul it would have been much later in the year, but the state of the information when it was dispatched to Jerome suggests a time not long after Toulouse had been spared.

28 Février, P.-A., ‘The Origin and Growth of Cities of Southern Gaul to the Third Century A.D.: An Assessment of the Most Recent Archaeological Discoveries’, JRS 63 (1973) 1-28Google Scholar; Rivet, A.L.F., Gallia Narbonensis: Southern France in Roman Times (London 1988) 115-29Google Scholar; and Harries, J., ‘Christianity and the City in Late Roman Gaul’, in Rich, J. (ed.), The City in Late Antiquity (London 1992) 7798Google Scholar.

29 Greg. Tours, Hist. Franc. 1.30 (MGH.SSrer.Merov. 1.23).

30 Jer. Ep. 123.15.3 (CSEL 56/1.92).

31 Auson. Ordo urb. nob. 18. J.H.W.G. Liebeschuetz, The Decline and Fali of the Roman City (Oxford 2001 ) 84, estimated that Toulouse had a population of about 27,000.

32 Burns (n. 22) 204. There is evidence in Rutilius for the flight of some Roman civic figures from Toulouse, like the uicarius Victorinus (1.495-6), but that event is associated with Ataulf in 413, rather than with the Vandals in 409.

33 Merrills, A. and Miles, R., The Vandals, The Peoples of Europe (Oxford 2010) 3940Google Scholar. On the famine associated with this invasion, see Olymp, frag. 29.2 (Blockley [n. 24] 193).

34 Jer. Ep. 125.9 (CSEL 56/1.127-8).

35 Jer. Ep. 125.20.3-4 (CSEL 56/1.140-2). The implication here is that Exsuperius was using personal funds rather than (or in addition to) ecclesiastical ones.

36 Jer. Ep. 125.20.3 (CSEL 56/1.140) seems to be quite specific that it was the Christians of Toulouse whom Exsuperius helped when he writes: . . . omnemque substantiam Christi uisceribus erogauit.

37 Jer. Ep. 123.15.3 (CSEL 56/1.92): ‘cities . . . which the sword devastates from the outside, famine does from within’ (my own translation). It would appear that at the time of Ep. 123 Jerome only knew of the famine facing Toulouse, but by the time he composed Ep. 125 he had heard of Exsuperius’ heroic efforts to alleviate that situation.

38 Gassmann (n. 5) 185-92, 204; Rapp (n. 3) 232-4; Mathisen (n.4) 97-100; Holman (n. 7). They do not make reference to Exsuperius.

39 Brown (n. 5) 45, and Finn, R., Almsgiving in the Later Roman Empire: Christian Promotion and Practice 313-450, Oxford Classical Monographs (Oxford 2006) 34-5 and 65-7 (on bishops fulfilling that responsibility from personal resources)Google Scholar. This activity, in part, needs to be distinguished from the bishop’s other role of preaching to others to attend to the needs of the poor. On this see e.g. Mayer, W., ‘Poverty and Generosity toward the Poor in the Time of John Chrysostom’, in Holman, S.R. (ed.), Wealth and Poverty in Early Church and Society (Grand Rapids MI 2008) 140-58Google Scholar; Allen, P. and Morgan, E., ‘Augustine on Poverty’, in Allen, P., Neil, B. and Mayer, W., Preaching Poverty in Late Antiquity: Perceptions and Realities, Arbeiten zur Kirchen- und Theologiegeschichte 28 (Leipzig 2009) 126Google Scholar.

40 See Dunn (n. 26) 257-8.

41 Neil, B. and Allen, P., ‘Displaced Peoples: Reflections from Late Antiquity on a Contemporary Crisis’, Pacifica 24 (2011) 2942CrossRefGoogle Scholar, examine the more common phenomenon of episcopal reaction to situations where sieges had been successful and people had become refugees.

42 Gillett, A., Envoys and Political Communication in the Late Antique West, 411-533, Cambridge Studies in Medieval Life and Thought, fourth series (Cambridge 2003) 25Google Scholar.

43 Auson. Comm. prof. Burdig. 16-17, 19. The Exsuperius of Toulouse mentioned there was certainly not our bishop, but could have been a relative, even his father.

44 Paul. Euch. 353-81 (SC 209.82-84) and Prosp. Carmen de prou. Dei 1.53-60 (Marcovich 6).

45 Oros. Hist. adu. pag. 7.41.9 (CSEL 5.554).

46 Hydat. 69 (Mommsen, Chronica Minora saec. IV. V. VI. VII. 1, MGH.AA 9 [Berlin 1894] 19); Prosp. Epit. chron. 1271 (MGH.AA 9.469). See Matthews (n. 25) 314-28; Wolfram, H., History of the Goths, trans. Dunlap, T.J. (Berkeley 1988) 161-72Google Scholar; Heather, P., Goths and Romans 332-489, Oxford Historical Monographs (Oxford 1991) 219-24Google Scholar; Burns, , ‘The Settlement of 418’, in Drinkwater, and Elton, (n. 18) 5363Google Scholar; Garcia, A.M. Jiménez, ‘Settlement of the Visigoths in the Fifth Century’, in Heather, P. (ed.), The Visigoths from the Migration Period to the Seventh Century: An Ethnographic Perspective, Studies in Historical Archaeoethnology 4 (Woodbridge 1999) 93-115Google Scholar; Kulikowski, M., ‘The Visigothic Settlement in Aquitania: The Imperial Perspective’, in Mathisen, R.W. and Shanzer, D. (eds), Society and Culture in Late Antique Gaul: Revisiting the Sources (Aldershot 2001,) 2638Google Scholar; Carr, K.E., ‘From Alaric to the Arab Conquest: Visigothic Efforts to Achieve Romanitas’, in Hall, L. Jones (ed.), Confrontation in Late Antiquity: Imperial Presentation and Regional Adaptation (Cambridge 2003) 103-16Google Scholar; Halsall (n. 16) 224-34.

47 Paul. Nola, EP. 48 in Greg. Tours Hist. Franc. 2.13 (CSEL 29.389-90). Courcelle, P., ‘Fragments historiques de Paulin de Nole conservés par Grégoire de Tours’, Mélanges d’histoire du Moyen Age dédiés à la mémoire de Louis Halphen (Paris 1951) 146-8Google Scholar. See Trout, D.E., Paulinus of Nola: Life, Letters, and Poems, The Transformation of the Classical Heritage 27 (Berkeley 1999) 201, for Paulinus’ connections with Gallic bishopsGoogle Scholar. On this particular list of bishops in Gregory see Mratschek, S., ‘Die abgebrochene Bischofsliste bei Gregory von Tours – ein vergessenes Zeugnis antipäpstlicher Propaganda?’, in Young, F., Edwards, M. and Parvis, P. (eds), Studia Patristica 43, papers presented at the 14th International Conference on Patristic Studies, Oxford 2003 (Leuven 2006) 443Google Scholar.

48 Saturnini, Passio s. (Ruinart, T., Acta martyrum [Ratisbone 1859] 175-80)Google Scholar. Griffe, É., La Gaul chrétienne à l’époque romaine 3 (Paris 1965) 226-30Google Scholar, accepts the former date, while Crouzel, H., ‘Saint Jérôme et ses amis Toulousains’, BLE 73 (1972) 135-8, accepts the latterGoogle Scholar. See also Labrousse, M., Toulouse antique, des origines à rétablissement des Wisigoths, Bibliothèque des Écoles française d’Athènes et de Rome 112 (Paris 1968) 558-66Google Scholar.

49 Hunter, D.G., ‘Vigilantius of Calagurris and Victricius of Rouen: Ascetics, Relics, and Clerics in Late Roman Gaul’, JECS 7 (1999) 409Google Scholar.

50 Harries (n. 28) 83.

51 While Hunter (n. 49) 404 identifies Calagurris as the modern St Martory, , Heid, S., Celibacy in the Early Church: The Beginnings of a Discipline of Obligatory Continence for Clerics in East and West, trans. Michael J., Miller (San Francisco, 2000) 267, identifies it with modern CazèresGoogle Scholar. The fact that Jer. Con. Vigil. 1 (PL 23.340) linked Vigilantius with Quintilian, who had been born in Calahorra (ancient Calagurris Nassica, in Hispania Tarraconensis), has not led scholars to think he was born in the same town as Quintilian. There is also the possibility of Loarre (ancient Calagurris Fibularensis).

52 Trout (n. 47) 202, Griffe (n. 48) 226-30, and Miller, P. Cox, ‘“The Little Blue Flower is Red”: Relics and the Poetizing of the Body’, JECS 8 (2000) 216, think that the dedication was the trigger for Vigilantius’ reactionGoogle Scholar. Cf. Hunter (n. 49) 409. Lössl, J., ‘An Early Christian Identity Crisis Triggered by Changes in the Discourse of Martyrdom: The Controversy between Jerome of Strido and Vigilantius of Calagurris’, in Leemans, J. (ed.), More than a Memory: The Discourse of Martyrdom and the Construction of Christian Identity in the History of Christianity, Annua Nuntia Lovaniensia 51 (Leuven 2005) 110-1, raises no objections to Hunter’s interpretationGoogle Scholar.

53 Jer. Comm. in Zach. pr. 1 (CCL 76A.747-8); pr. 2 (CCL 76A.795); pr. 3 (CCL 76A.848).

54 Jer. Con. Vigil. 3 (PL 23.341-2). Sisinnius also took Con. Vigil., back to the West: Jer. Con. Vigil. 17 (PL 23.352).

55 Jer. Ep. 119 (CSEL 55.446-69).

56 Jer. Comm. in Amos, 3.pr. (PL 25.1057).

57 Jer. Ep. 109.1 (CSEL 55.351-3). For background on the pre-existing hostility between Jerome and Vigilantius, see Massie, M., ‘Vigilance de Calagurris face à la polémique hiéronymienne: Les fondements et la signification du conflit’, BLE 81 (1980) 81-108Google Scholar; Rebenich, S., Hieronymus und sein Kreis: Prosopographie und sozialgeschichtliche Untersuchungen (Stuttgart 1992) 209-59Google Scholar; Clark, E.A., The Origenist Controversy: The Cultural Construction of an Early Christian Debate (Princeton 1992) 34, 36Google Scholar; Burrus, V., The Making of a Heretic: Gender, Authority, and the Priscillianist Controversy, The Transformation of the Classical Heritage 24 (Berkeley 1995) 144-5Google Scholar; Hunter (n. 48) 404-9; Conring, B., Hieronymus als Briefschreiber. Ein Beitrag zur spätantiken Epistolographie, Studien und Texte zu Antike und Christentum 8 (Tübingen 2001) 215-29Google Scholar; Hunter, D.G., Marriage, Celibacy, and Heresy in Ancient Christianity: The Jovinianist Crisis, Oxford Early Christian Studies (Oxford 2007) 258-9Google Scholar; Mathisen (n. 19) 194. Vigilantius had taken Paul. Nola Ep. 5 (CSEL 29.24-39) to Jerome and had taken a reply back to Paulinus in 395. See Jer. Epp. 58 (CSEL 54.527-41) and 61 (CSEL 54.575-82).

58 Jer. Con. Vigil. 2 (PL 23.340-1). See Hunt, E.D., ‘Gaul and the Holy Und in the Early Fifth Century’, in Drinkwater, and Elton, (n. 18) 267-70Google Scholar.

59 Jer. Con. Vigil. 3 (PL 23.341). It has to be admitted that Con. Vigil. 5-10 (PL 23.343-8) is about the cult of martyrs, including the keeping of vigils. Fasting, almsgiving, and chastity are the topics considered in Con. Vigil. 12-16 (PL 23.349-52). It is only in the last sentence of the whole treatise that Jerome returns to the question of clerical continence (Con. Vigil. 17 [PL 23.352]). One should note that there is no mention of clerical continence in Ep. 109.

60 Hunt (n. 58) 272.

61 Jer. Ep. 109.2 (CSEL 55.353). Hunter (n. 49) 410 reads this as the bishop having ‘been influenced’ which, if he were Exsuperius, amounted only to hesitation. Against Hunter, I think Jerome’s accusation is altogether harsher.

62 Thacker, A., ‘Loca sanctorum: The Significance of Place in the Study of the Saints’, in Thacker, A. and Sharpe, R. (eds), Local Saints and Local Churches in the Early Medieval West (Oxford 2002) 1112Google Scholar. Heid (n. 51) 268; and Clark, G., ‘Translating Relics: Victricius of Rouen and Fourth-Century Debate’, EME 10 (2001) 172Google Scholar. Van Dam (n. 1) 138 ventures no opinion about the identity of Vigilantius’ bishop.

63 Fremantle, W.H., Lewis, G. and Martley, W.G., Jerome: Letters and Select Works, Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers, second series, vol. 6 (New York 1893) 417Google Scholar.

64 Lössl (n. 52) 102-5. Hunt (n. 58) 270 thinks that Vigilantius’ attack could have been more about the situation in the Holy Land than in Gaul, which could explain Jerome’s vitriol.

65 Lössl (n. 52) 115 is interested in Vigilantius rather than the bishop.

66 Hunter (n. 49)409-10,417.

67 Hunter (n. 49) 419. Thacker (n. 62) 110, however, distinguishes Victricius’ more extreme theology of relics from that held by Paulinus. But Mathisen, R.W., Ecclesiastical Factionalism and Religious Controversy in Fifth-Century Gaul (Washington D.C. 1989) 47- 8Google Scholar, upon whom Hunter relies, goes only as far as to say that Gallic bishops like Victricius and Exsuperius belonged to a small segment of the Gallic episcopacy that looked outside Gaul for support and had some loose connection with Martin of Tours. He does not suggest any commonality on the grounds of asceticism or a cult of saints.

68 Indeed, Kelly, J.N.D., Jerome: His Life, Writings and Controversies (London 1975) 289, describes Exsuperius as a friend and benefactor of JeromeGoogle Scholar.

69 Cain (n. 19)179.

70 Gennad. De uir. illus. 36 (Richardson, E.C., Hieronymus: Liber de uiris inlustribus, Gennadius: Liber de uiris inlustribus, Texte und Untersuchungen 14 [Leipzig 1896] 74)Google Scholar.

71 Innoc. Ep. 6 (PL 20.495-502 = Coustant, P., Epistolae Romanorum Pontificum et quae ad eos scriptae sunt a S. Clemente I usque ad Innocentum III 1 [Paris 1721] cols 789-96Google Scholar = Wurm, H., ‘Decretales selectae ex antiquissimis Romanorum Pontificum epistulis decretalibus. Praemissa introductione et disquisitione critice editae’, Apollinaris 12 [1939] 5678Google Scholar = Jaffé, P., Regesta Pontificum Romanorum l.AS. Pietro ad a. MCXLIII, rev. Kaltenbrunner, F. [Leipzig 1885 2] [= JK] no. 293)Google Scholar.

72 Innoc. Ep. 6.I.1 -4 (PL 20.496-8).

73 Innoc. Ep. 6.II.5-6 (PL 20.498-9).

74 Innoc. Ep. 6.I.4 (PL 20.498). See Siric. Ep. 1.VII.12; 1.XI.15 (PL 13.1141-4 = Coustant [n. 71] cols 632-3,635 = JK 255).

75 Siric. Ep. 1.20 (PL 13.1146).

76 Innoc. Ep. 6.1 (PL 20.495-6).

77 In 395 or 396 Jerome recommended to Furia, an aristocratic Roman widow and daughter-in- law of Sextus Claudius Petronius Probus, that she place herself under the spiritual guidance of Exsuperius (Ep. 54.11 [CSEL 54.478]). Labrousse (n. 48) 560, 565; Green, M.R., ‘Pope Innocent I: The Church of Rome in the Early Fifth Century’ (diss. Oxford 1973) 105Google Scholar; and Cabau, P., ‘Les évêques de Toulouse (IIIe XIVe siècles) et les lieux de leur sépulture’, Mémoires de la Société Archéologique du Midi de la France 59 (1999) 134Google Scholar, take this as referring to Exsuperius of Toulouse, while Crouzel (n. 48) 131, PCBE 2.730 (Exsuperius); Trout (n. 47) 202; and Bowes, K., Private Worship, Public Values, and Religious Change in Late Antiquity (Cambridge: 2008) 252, n. 124Google Scholar, do not think this was the same individual. In addition, the presbyter of Bordeaux of the same name mentioned in Paul. Nola Ep. 12.12 (CSEL 29.83) need not be to the bishop of Toulouse. See Trout (n. 47) 202.

78 Mathisen (n. 66) 45-8; Stancliffe, C., St. Martin and His Hagiographer: History and Miracle in Sulpicius Severus, Oxford Historical Monographs (Oxford 1983), 297312Google Scholar; Van Dam, R., Saints and their Miracles in Late Antique Gaul (Princeton 1993) 1417Google Scholar; Hunter (n. 49) 410-29.

79 That the letter was one of the most widely distributed of papal decretals in medieval collections of canonical material would indicate that eventually it did have a significant impact.