Anastasius I., bp. of Rome
Anastasius I., bp. of Rome, was consecrated A.D.
398 ("Honorio IV. et Eutychiano coss."
26Prosp. Aq. Chron.), and died in April, 402 (Anast. Bibl. vol.
i. p. 62). According to Anastasius Bibliothecarius, he put an end to an unseemly
strife between the priests and deacons of his church, by enacting that priests as
well as deacons should stand bowed ("curvi starent") at the
reading of the Gospels. Jerome calls him a "vir insignis,"
taken from the evil to come, i.e. dying before the sack of Rome by Goths,
A.D. 410. One letter by Anastasius is extant. Rufinus wrote
to him shortly after his consecration (not later than A.D.
400, Constant. Epp. Pont. Rom. p. 714) to defend himself against the charge
of complicity in the heresy ascribed to Origen. Anastasius replied (see Constant.
l.c.) in a tone which, dealing leniently with Rufinus, explicitly condemned
Origen. Nine other letters are referred to:—(1–5) To Paulinus, bp. of Nola (Paul.
Nol. Ep. 20). (6) To Anysius, bp. of Thessalonica, giving him jurisdiction
over Illyria; referred to by Innocent I., in his first letter (Constant.).
(7) To Johannes, bp. of Jerusalem. (8) To African bishops who had sent him
an embassy to complain of the low state of their clergy. (9) Contra Rufinum,
an epistle sent ad Orientem (Hieron. Apol. lib. 3).
[G. H. M.].