Vincentius
Vincentius (8), presbyter of Constantinople,
intimately attached to Jerome, through whose
writings we hear of him throughout the last
20 years of 4th cent. Jerome became
acquainted with him when he came to Constantinople
in 380, from which time Vincentius
shared his interests and pursuits. To him,
with Gallienus, Jerome dedicated his translation
of Eusebius's Chronicle in 382 (Hieron.
cont. Joan. Hieros. c. 41). We may therefore
suppose he was ordained early in 382. But he
never fulfilled the office of presbyter. That
he knew Greek and Latin and was interested
in general history is shewn by Jerome's preface
to the Chronicle of Eusebius. He shared
Jerome's admiration of Origen, then at its
height, and asked Jerome to translate all his
works into Latin. In 382 he accompanied
Jerome to Rome, but without intending to
stay there. We do not hear of him during
Jerome's stay, but they left Rome together in
385 and settled at Bethlehem (cont. Ruf. iii.
22). He shared Jerome's studies and his
asceticism and controversial antipathies. He
was severe in his judgment upon Vigilantius
(Hieron. Ep. lxi. 3, a.d. 396), and co-operated
eagerly in the subsequent condemnation of
Origenism. In 396 or 397 he went to Rome,
for what cause is unknown (cont. Ruf. iii. 24).
No doubt he took part in the proceedings
against Origenism, in which Eusebius of
Cremona and Jerome's Roman friends were
actively engaged. On his return to Bethlehem
in 400 he was full of the subject. All
Rome and Italy, he reported, had been delivered;
and his praise of Theophilus of
Alexandria as having by his letter to the pope
Anastasius procured this deliverance is communicated
to that prelate in Jerome's letter
(Ep. 88, ed. Vall.) to him, the last mention of
Vincentius which we have.
[W.H.F.]