Julianus, bishop of Cos
Julianus (27), bp. of Cos, the friend and
frequent correspondent of Leo the Great. He
was by birth an Italian. Being educated at
Rome (Leo. Mag. Ep. lxxxi. 1042; Migne, Ep.
cxiii. 1190) he was acquainted with Latin as
well as Greek (Ep. cxiii. 1194) and was thus
useful to Leo, who was ignorant of Greek.
Leo found in him a man after his own heart.
He describes him as a "part of himself" (Ep.
cxxv. 1244). Long experience led him to put
the fullest confidence in his orthodoxy, erudition,
watchfulness, and zeal (Ep. xxxv. 875,
xci. 1066). Nothing could exceed the value
of such a man to Leo to watch over the interests
of the faith and the Roman see in the
East. Julian was present at the council of
Constantinople in 448 and professed his belief
in the "two natures in one Person"—an expression
which Dioscorus could not tolerate
when he heard it read at Chalcedon—and
subscribed the condemnation of Eutyches (Labbe, Concilia,
iv. 188 B, 231 B. In Apr. 449 he
was present at the synod in Constantinople,
granted by the emperor at the demand of
Eutyches to verify the records of the former
council. Here we find him disputing occasionally
the exact accuracy of the "Acta"
(Labbe, iv. 231 (2), c. 234 (2) B; Tillem. xv.
511). He wrote to Leo a letter which produced
two replies dated the same day, June 13,
449, the first of a long series of letters from Leo
to Julian (Epp. xxxiv. xxxv.). The latter of
the two contains an elaborate dogmatic statement
against Eutyches. After this Julian
became one of the pope's chief mediums for
impressing his wishes and policy on the East.
[LEO.]
Through the Eutychian troubles Julian remained true to the faith and suffered
so much that, as he tells Leo, he thought of
retiring to Rome (Ep. lxxxi. 1042). It was
JULIUS of Puteoli,
however, not this Julian, who was papal legate at the council of Ephesus.
Leo commended Julian to the favour of Pulcheria
and Anatolius of Constantinople as one
who had always been faithful to St. Flavian
(Epp. lxxix. lxxx. 1037, 1041, dated Apr. 457).
In June 451 he begs him to associate himself
with his legates, Lucentius and Basil, to the
council of Chalcedon (Ep. lxxxvi. 1063). He
is commended to Marcian the emperor as a
"particeps" with them (Ep. xc. 1065). His
exact position at that council appears somewhat
ambiguous. He is not mentioned among
the legates in the letter of Leo to the council
(Ep. xciii. 1070), but in the Acts of the council
is always spoken of as holding that position (Labbe, iv. 80 C,
852 C, 559 E). In the list
of signatures he does not appear among the
legates of Rome, yet higher than his own
rank, as bp. of Cos, would entitle him to
appear, and among the metropolitans (cf.
Tillem. xv. 645, and note, 43). His condemnation
of Dioscorus, with reasons assigned,
appears in the acta of the third session of the
council (Labbe, iv. 427 C). In the matter of the claims of
BASSIAN
and Stephen to the see of Ephesus, he gives his voice first for setting
both aside, then for allowing a local council
to choose (701 D, 703 D). He displeased Leo
by not resisting the 28th canon of the council
in favour of the claims of Constantinople
(Ep. xcviii. 1098), and by writing to Leo
begging him to give his assent to it (Ep. cvii.
1772). After this, however, he is in as good
favour as ever. From Mar. 453 he was
apocrisiarius or deputy of the see of Rome at
the court of Constantinople. Leo requests
him to remain constantly at court, watching
zealously over the interests of the faith (Epp.
cxi. 1187, cxiii. 1190, "speculari non desinas";
cf. Tillem. xv. 761). In Mar. 453 Leo requested
him to make a complete translation
of the Acts of the council of Chalcedon (Ep.
cxiii. 1194). Julian seems to have returned
to his diocese in 457 (cf. Tillem. xvii. 762, 791)
and wrote a reply, in his own name only, to
the circular letter of the emperor Leo on the
excesses of Timothy Aelurus and the authority
of the Chalcedonian council.
[LEO, emperor.]
Julian urges that Timotheus should be punished
by the civil power and maintains
strongly the authority of the council. "For
where were assembled so many bishops, where
were present the holy Gospels, where was so
much united prayer, there, we believe, was
579also present with invisible power the author of
all creation" (Labbe, iv. 942; Or. Chr.
i. 935). After this no more is known of him.
[C.G.]