Ursacius, bp. of Singidunum
Ursacius (1), bp. of Singidunum (Belgrade).
He and Valens, bp. of Mursa, appear at every
synod and council from 330 till c. 370, as
leaders of the Arian party both in the East and
West. They seem to have imbibed their
Arian views from Arius himself during the
period of his exile into Illyricum immediately
after the council of Nicaea. They are described
by Athanasius (ad Episc. Aegypt. 7,
p. 218) as the disciples of Arius. This could
scarcely have been at Alexandria, but they
may easily have come in contact with him
during his exile, which seems to have been
very fruitful in spreading his views, as almost
all the bishops of the Danubian provinces,
together with Ulfilas and the Gothic converts,
appear as Arians immediately afterwards (cf.
Sulp. Sever. Chron. ii. 38). Ursacius must
have been born, at latest, c. 300, as we find
him a bishop, actively engaged in conspiracy
against Athanasius, when Arius was recalled,
c. 332. From Socrates we gather the leading
events of his life. In H. E. i. 27 we find him
united with Eusebius of Nicomedia, Theognis
of Nicaea, Maris of Chalcedon, and Valens,
in getting up a case against Athanasius and
fabricating the scandalous charges of theft,
sacrilege, and murder, investigated at the
council of Tyre in 335, Ursacius and Valens
being present there. They must have been
very active and influential members of the
party even at that early period, for they were
sent to Egypt, as deputies of the synod, to
investigate the charge on the spot, notwithstanding
the protests of Athanasius (l.c. i. 31).
In 342 they assisted at Constantinople at the
consecration of Macedonius as patriarch.
Upon the triumph of Athanasius in 346 they
made their peace with Julius, bp. of Rome,
accepted the Nicene formula, and wrote to
Athanasius, professing their readiness to hold
communion with him. At the synod of
Sirmium in 359 they were again active
members of the Homoean party, who drew up
the Dated Creed, May 22, 359. They duly
presented this creed to the council of Ariminum
a few weeks later, which promptly
rejected it, deposing Ursacius and Valens from
their sees, "as well for their present conspiracy
to introduce heresy, as for the confusion
they had caused in all the churches by
their repeated changes of faith." Ursacius
and Valens at once sought the emperor's
presence and gained him over to their side.
The council also sent a long epistle to the
emperor, which Socrates (ii. 37) inserts. The
emperor refused to see the deputies of the
council, and sent them to wait his leisure at
Hadrianople first, and then at Nice in Thrace;
where Ursacius and Valens induced these
same deputies to sign, on Oct. 10, 359, a revised
version of the creed, which the council
had rejected. Socrates tells us that Nice in
Thrace was chosen in order that it might
impress the ignorant, who would confound it
with Nicaea in Bithynia, where the orthodox
symbol had been framed. Cf. Soz. H. E. iv.
19; Hieron. adv. Lucif. p. 189; Sulp. Sev.
Chron. ii. 44; and Gwatkin's Studies of
Arianism, pp. 157–178, for the history of this
period. Ursacius and Valens seem to have
remained influential with the court till the
end of life, for the last notice of either of them
in history tells how Valens obtained the recall
of the Arian Eunomius from exile in 367
(Philostorg. H. E. ix. 8). The writings of
Athanasius and Hilary frequently mention
them. Gwatkin's Studies is very full of
information, and Hefele's Councils (t. ii.
Clark's trans. s.nn.) gives abundant references
to the synods in which they took part; see
also Tillem. Mém. vi.
[G.T.S.]