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Pontifex maximus
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{{dablink|For alternate senses of this word, see
pontifex (disambiguation).}}
In
Ancient Rome, the '''Pontifex Maximus''' was the high priest of the ''
collegium'' of the ''
College of Pontiffs Pontifices,'' the most important position in
Roman religion, open only to a
patrician, until 254 BC, when a plebeian first occupied this post. A distinctly religious office under the early
Roman Republic, it gradually became politicized until, beginning with
Augustus, it was subsumed into the Imperial office.
Today, '''Pontifex Maximus''' is one of the titles of the Bishop of Rome as
Roman Catholic Pope. As a papal title, the translation '''Supreme Pontiff''' is customary when writing in English, in which the Latin term ''Pontifex Maximus'' refers to the former pagan Roman post. But Latin is still the official Vatican language, and the Latin form ''Pontifex Maximus'' is still used in reference to the Pope when writing or speaking in that language.
Etymology
The term ''pontifex'' literally means "bridge-builder" (''pons'' + ''facere''); Maximus literally means 'the greatest', i.e. the highest. This was perhaps originally meant in a literal sense: the position of bridge-builder was indeed an important one in Rome, where the major
bridges were over the
Tiber, the holy river (and a deity, at the same time); only prestigious authorities, with sacral functions, could be allowed to "disturb" it with mechanical additions. However, it was always understood in its symbolic sense as well: the pontifices were the ones who smoothened the bridge between gods and men (Van Haeperen). It has besides been noted that in ancient
India similar concepts were in use in similar ages, here too ideally regarding rivers and bridges. The word has also been thought by some to be a corruption of a similar-sounding but etymologically unrelated
Etruscan language Etruscan word for ''
priest'', but this theory is a minority opinion.
Origins, duties, and development of the Pagan Pontifices
In the
Roman Republic, the Pontifex Maximus was the highest office in the
polytheism polytheistic Roman religion, which was very much a state cult. His was the most important of the ''Pontifices'' (plural of ''Pontifex''), positions in the main sacred college (''
College of Pontiffs Collegium Pontificum''), which he directed. Other members of this
priest priesthood included the ''
Rex Sacrorum'' (king of the sacred rites), the
Flamen Flamines (each devoted to a major deity), the
Vestal Virgin Vestales. During the early Republic, the Pontifex Maximus selected the members to hold these posts. However there were many other religious officials, including the
Augures and
Haruspices (two originally Etruscan types of reading of the will of the gods: from the flight and conduct of birds viz. the entrails of sacrificial animals),
Fetiales and many other colleges and individual offices.
The most recent general study of the pontifical college (Van Haeperen 2002), omits the earliest periods of Roman history, as too little is known. The major Roman source,
Varro's book on the pontiffs, is lost: only a little of it survives in
Aulus Gellius and
Nonius Marcellus. More information is to be found in remarks by
Cicero,
Livy,
Dionysius of Halicarnassus,
Valerius Maximus, in Plutarch's ''vita'' of
Numa Pompilius, Festus' summaries of
Verrius Flaccus, and in later writers. Some of these sources present an extensive list of everyday actions that were
taboo for the Pontifex Maximus; it seems difficult to reconcile these lists with evidence that many Pontifices Maximi were prominent members of society who lived normal, non-restricted lives.
The number of Pontifices, (s)elected by ''cooptatio'' (i.e the remaining members nominate their new colleague) for life, was originally six, but this number increased to fifteen in the
1st century BC. The office came into its own with the abolition of the monarchy, when most sacral powers previously vested in the King were transferred either to the Pontifex Maximus or to the
Rex Sacrorum (not unlike the Athenian polis's
basileus), though traditionally a (non-political)
Roman dictator Dictator (the very highest, extraordinary, non-collegial magistracy in the Republic, closest thing to a king; compare
interrex) was formally mandated by the Senate for one day (), to perform a specific rite. In post-Severan times, so few pagan senators were interested in becoming pontiffs, that the lack of candidates led to a change in the pattern of office holding.
The Pontifex was not simply a priest. He had both political and religious authority. It is not clear which of the two came first or had the most importance. In practice, particularly during the late Republic, the office of Pontifex Maximus was generally held by a member of a politically prominent family. Being Pontifex Maximus was not a full-time job and did not preclude the office-holder from holding a secular magistracy or serving in the military.
The Pontifices had many relevant and prestigious functions, such as keeping the official minutes of elected magistrates (see ''
Fasti''), and the so-called "public diaries", the ''
Annales maximi''. They also collected information related to the Roman religious tradition into a sort of ''corpus'' which summarised
dogma and other concepts, similar to later compilations of
law in
Jurisprudence.
The Pontifices were in charge of the
Roman calendar and determined when
Intercalation intercalary days needed to be added to sync the calendar to the seasons. Since the Pontifices were often politicians, and because a Roman magistrate's term of office corresponded with a calendar year, this power was prone to abuse: a Pontifex could lengthen a year in which he or one of his political allies was in office, or refuse to lengthen one in which his opponents were in power. Under his authority as Pontifex Maximus
Julius Caesar introduced the calendar reform that created the
Julian calendar, with a fault under a day per century, easily corrected by a modification of the rules for
bisextile days (only added in a leap-year) to produce our present
Gregorian calendar.
{{Roman government}}
Some authors believe that eventually Roman magistrates would have gained some of the Pontifices' political prerogatives and powers. Earlier Pontifices were elected only from the old nobility (patrician class), but in
300 BC the ''lex Ogulnia'' admitted people from ''
plebs'' (plebeians) too to run for the charge, so that part of the prestige of the title was lost.
In
104 BC the ''lex Domitia'' prescribed that the election would henceforward be voted by the ''comitia tributa''; by the same law, only 17 of the 35 tribes of the city could vote. This law was abolished by
Lucius Cornelius Sulla Sulla and restored when Julius Caesar was Pontifex Maximus.
After Caesar's assassination in 44 BC, his ally
Marcus Aemilius Lepidus (49 BC) Marcus Aemilius Lepidus was selected as Pontifex Maximus. Though Lepidus eventually fell out of political favor and was sent into exile as
Augustus Caesar consolidated power, he retained the priestly office until his death in 13 BC, at which point Augustus was selected to succeed him and given the right to appoint other pontifices. With this attribution, the new office of Emperor was given a religious dignity. Most authors contend that the power of naming the Pontifices was not really used as an ''instrumentum regni'', an enforcing power.
From this point on, Pontifex Maximus was one of the many titles of the Emperor, slowly losing its specific and historical powers and becoming simply a referent for the sacral aspect of imperial duties and powers. In periods of joint rule, two ''pontifices maximi'' could serve together, as
Pupienus and Balbinus did in 238 -- a situation unthinkable in Republican times. In the
crisis of the Third Century, usurpers did not hesitate to claim for themselves the role not only of Emperor but of Pontifex Maximus as well. Even the early Christian Emperors continued to use it; it was only relinquished by
Gratian in
376, at the time of his visit to Rome (Van Haeperen).
Legacy
Christian usage
In Christian circles, when
Tertullian furiously applied the term to
Pope Callixtus I, with whom he was at odds, ''ca'' 220, over Callistus' relaxation of the Church's penitential discipline, allowing repentant adulterers and fornicators back into the Church, under his Petrine authority to "bind and loosen," it was in bitter irony:
:"In opposition to this [modesty], could I not have acted the dissembler? I hear that there has even been an edict sent forth, and a peremptory one too. The 'Pontifex Maximus,' that is the 'bishop of bishops,' issues an edict: 'I remit, to such as have discharged [the requirements of] repentance, the sins both of adultery and of fornication.' O edict, on which cannot be inscribed, 'Good deed!' ...Far, far from Christ's betrothed be such a proclamation!" (Tertullian, ''On Modesty'' ch. 1)
Was ''Pontifex'' a word in common currency by early 3rd-century
Christianity to denote a
bishop? Tertullian's usage is unusual in that most of the technical terms of Roman paganism were avoided in the vocabulary of Christian
Latin in favour of
neologisms or
Greek language Greek words. After Gratian put aside the pagan honour, it remained in desuetude. ''Pontifex summus'' was an expression used to distinguish
Hilary of Arles (died 449) as the bishop of the notable see of
Gallia Narbonensis, in relation to those of less importance, by
Eucherius of Lyons (''Catholic Encyclopedia'', quoting Pat. Lat., L, 773), but other such early instances are difficult to find, and it may be significant that ''Pontifex summus'' was substituted for the pagan formula ''Pontifex maximus'' by Bishop Eucherius.
At the end of the 6th century
Pope Gregory I Gregory I was the first Pope to employ ''"Pontifex maximus"'' in a formal sense, in a broader program of asserting Roman primacy. It has remained one of the titles of the popes to this day.
*The title ''Pontifex Maximus'' was briefly usurped,1902–1906, by the head of the Filipino sect
Aglipayanism.
The tradition of sovereign as High Priest
:''Main article:
Caesaropapism''.
The practice of religious and secular duality united in the sovereign has a long history, having passed from the Roman to the
List of Byzantine Emperors Byzantine emperors, where it perhaps reached its zenith in the West. The
Romanov dynasty of
Russia, the
Third Rome, claiming direct descent from the Roman emperors, also claimed supreme authority over the
Russian Orthodox Church. The first of the
Holy Roman Emperors,
Charlemagne (c. A.D. 742 or 747 - 814) is said to have regretted that he allowed himself to be crowned by the Pope rather than crowning himself''';''' since his authority was supposed to come directly from God, he was in no need of a "bridge builder".
Though the sovereign of England is
Supreme Governor of the Church of England since the
English Reformation there is effective
separation of church and state.
Eastern traditions, from the ancient Egyptian to the Japanese, have carried the concept even further, by according their sovereigns demigod status. The secular equivalent of the emperor as Pontifex Maximus is the
philosopher-king of the Greek sages, with whom the Roman Emperor
Marcus Aurelius is said to have identified, as a
stoic, and to which the Prussian king
Frederick the Great and the French Emperor
Napoleon Bonaparte aspired, both as ''
philosophes.''
Popular culture
In the Christian fiction series ''
Left Behind (series) Left Behind'', Cardinal Peter Mathews is named Pontifex Maximus of
Enigma Babylon One World Faith established by antagonist
Nicolae Carpathia.
Incomplete list of ''Pontifices maximi''
*
753 BC to
712 BC - Duties and power of office held by the
Kings of Rome
*
712 BC -
Numa Marcius
*...
*
509 BC -
Papirius
*...
*
449 BC -
Furius
*
431 BC -
Cornelius Cossus
*
420 BC -
Minucius
*
390 BC -
Follius Flaccinator
*...
*
332 BC -
Cornelius Callissa
*
304 BC -
Cornelius Scipio Barbatus
*...
*
254 BC -
Tiberius Coruncanius
*
243 BC -
Caecilius Metellus Lucius Caecilius Metellus
*
237 BC -
Lucius Cornelius Lentulus Caudinus
*
212 BC -
Publius Licinius Crassus Dives (consul 205 BC) Publius Licinius Crassus Dives
*
183 BC -
Gaius Servilius Geminus
*
180 BC -
Marcus Aemilius Lepidus (187 BC) Marcus Aemilius Lepidus
*
152 BC - Vacant
*
150 BC -
Publius Cornelius Scipio Nasica
*
141 BC -
Publius Cornelius Scipio Nasica Serapio
*
132 BC -
Publius Licinius Crassus Mucianus
*
130 BC -
Publius Mucius Scaevola
*
115 BC -
Caecilius Metellus Lucius Caecilius Metellus Dalmaticus
*
103 BC - Gnaeus Domitius
Ahenobarbus
*
89 BC -
Quintus Mucius Scaevola
*
81 BC -
Caecilus Metellus Quintus Caecilius Metellus Pius
*
63 BC -
Julius Caesar Gaius Julius Caesar
*
44 BC -
Marcus Aemilius Lepidus (49 BC) Marcus Aemilius Lepidus
*
12 BC -
Caesar Augustus
*
12 BC to
376 AD 376 - Held by the
Roman Emperors Emperors
*
Pope Gregory I, 590–604 to the present - Held by the
Popes.
Furthermore
* Two English words ''Pontificate'' correspond to two different Latin words : the noun from ''Pontificatus'' indicates the (term of) office of a Pontiff, the verb ''to pontificate'' means to speak or act with the solemnity of a pontiff, often used in a derogatory sense for pompous arrogance
*Pontifex is also a inter-house cross-country race at Charterhouse, Godalming, the official distances per year group vary from 4.5 miles to 1.75 miles, the course includes flat and steep terrain.
External links
-
article ''Pontifex'' in Smith's Dictionary of Greek and Roman Antiquities
-
List from republican times
-
Annotated Pontifex Maximus list
-
''Catholic Encyclopedia'': under "Pope", section V. Titles and Insignia
Further reading
*
Pauly-Wissowa
*Van Haeperen, Françoise, 2002. ''Le collège pontifical (3ème s. a. C. - 4ème s. p. C.)'' in series '' Études de Philologie, d'Archéologie et d'Histoire Anciennes'', no. 39. (Brussels: Brepols) ISBN 90-74461-49-2 ([http://ccat.sas.upenn.edu/bmcr/2003/2003-10-16.html Bryn Mawr Classical review, 2003])
{{Roman religion}}
Category:Ancient Roman religion
Category:Ancient Roman titles
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Pontifex Maximus
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