Pope Cornelius
Cornelius | |
---|---|
Birth name | Cornelius |
Papacy began | March 6 or March 13, 251 |
Papacy ended | June 253 |
Predecessor | Fabian |
Successor | Lucius I |
Born | ??? ??? |
Died | June 253 Civita Vecchia, Italy |
Styles of Pope Cornelius | |
Reference style | His Holiness |
Spoken style | Your Holiness |
Religious style | Holy Father |
Posthumous style | Saint |
Pope Cornelius was pope from his election on 6 or 13 March, 251 to his martyrdom in June 253.
Papacy
He was elected pope on either 6 or 13 March, 251 during the lull in the persecution of the Roman Emperor Decius. His election was opposed by Novatian, who maintained the view that not even the bishops could grant remission for grave sins such as murder, adultery, and apostasy, but that these could only be remitted at the Last Judgment; Cornelius on the contrary believed that bishops could grant remission for these grave sins. With the help of Cyprian, his party prevailed, and he was elected pope. Novatian fled Rome, but his followers organized into Novatianism, a sect considered heretical by the rest of Christianity.
In Cyprian's writings supporting Cornelius, it appears that the Roman church of the time had 155 clergy and supported through its efforts some 1500 widows and poor [1]
After serving two years, under the emperor Trebonianus Gallus, he was exiled to Civita Vecchia, where he died in June 253.
Veneration
In the Roman Catholic Church, he is commemorated along with Cyprian in a memorial on 16 September.
In iconography, Cornelius’ attribute was the horn (in reference to the Latin origin of his name –from “cornu,” “horn”).[2] This could be either a battle horn or cow's horn.[3]
Some of his relics were taken to Germany during the Middle Ages; his head was claimed by Kornelimünster Abbey near Aachen.[4] In the Rhineland, he was also a patron saint of lovers.[5] A legend associated with Cornelius tells of a young artist who was commissioned to decorate the Corneliuskapelle in the Selikum quarter of Neuss. The daughter of a local townsman fell in love with the artist, but her father forbade the marriage, remarking that he would only consent if the pope did as well. Miraculously, the statue of Cornelius leaned forward from the altar and blessed the pair, and the two lovers were thus married.[6]
Cornelius, along with Quirinus of Neuss, Hubertus and Anthony the Great, was venerated as one of the Four Holy Marshals in the Rhineland during the late Middle Ages.[7][8][9][10]
He was also a patron saint of farmers and of cattle, and was invoked against epilepsy, cramps, afflictions associated with the nerves and ears.[11]
A legend told at Carnac states that its stones were once pagan soldiers who had been turned into stone by Cornelius, who was fleeing from them.[12][13]
Roman Catholic Popes | ||
---|---|---|
Preceded by: Fabian |
Bishop of Rome Pope 251–253 |
Succeeded by: Lucius I |
Notes
- ↑ Peter Brown, in A History of Private Life: 1. From Pagan Rome to Byzantium, Paul Veyne, editor, page 270.
- ↑ Cornelius - Ökumenisches Heiligenlexikon
- ↑ Patron Saints Index: Pope Saint Cornelius
- ↑ Cornelius - Ökumenisches Heiligenlexikon
- ↑ Cornelius - Ökumenisches Heiligenlexikon
- ↑ Cornelius - Ökumenisches Heiligenlexikon
- ↑ Quirinus von Rom (von Neuss) - Ökumenisches Heiligenlexikon
- ↑ marschaelle
- ↑ Die Kapelle
- ↑ Heimatbund St.Tönis 1952 e.V
- ↑ Cornelius - Ökumenisches Heiligenlexikon
- ↑ TheRecord.com - Travel - Marvelling at Carnac's stones
- ↑ France Holidays, Brittany
ReferencesISBN links support NWE through referral fees
External links
- "Pope Cornelius" in the 1913 Catholic Encyclopedia.
- Letters of Pope Cornelius I
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