Priscus, St. archbp. of Lyons
Priscus (11), St., 30th archbp. of Lyons, has been the subject of
much controversy. Gregory of Tours, the historian, his contemporary, brings
against him the gravest charges. According to the Hist. Franc. (iv. 36),
he set himself, with his wife Susanna, to persecute and destroy those who had
been the friends of his predecessor St. Nicetius, out of malice and jealousy,
and never wearied of declaiming against his memory. The Vitae Patrum
(viii. 5) also has an instance of his contempt for the same prelate, whose chaplain
he is said to have been. On the other hand, he is numbered by the church among
the saints. He was present at numerous councils, the 4th of Paris in 573, Châlons
in 579, Mâcon in 581 or 583, 3rd of Lyons in 581, another at Lyons in 583, Valence
in 584 or 585, and the 2nd of Mâcon in 585, at some of which he presided, and
at the last was honoured in the preface with the dignified title, very rare
in the West, of patriarcha (Mansi, ix. 949; Ceillier, xi. 896). For these and
other reasons the Bollandists (Acta SS. Jun. vi. 120–127) refuse credence
to Gregory's charges.
[S.A.B.]