dimanche 12 février 2017

Saint ANTOINE CAULEAS, patriarche de Constantinople et confesseur

Carte topographique de Constantinople, antique, byzantine et moderne - dessinée par Alexandre Raymond (1872-1941)


Saint Antoine

Patriarche de Constantinople (+ 901)

Patriarche de Constantinople, il mit tout en œuvre pour rétablir l'unité de l'Eglise compromise en 867 par la querelle entre le patriarche saint Photios et le Pape saint Nicolas Ier.

À Constantinople, en 901, saint Antoine, surnommé Cauléas, évêque, qui, au temps de l'empereur Léon VI, fit tous ses efforts pour affermir la paix et l'unité dans l'Église.

Martyrologe romain

SOURCE : https://nominis.cef.fr/contenus/saint/5656/Saint-Antoine.html

Saint Antoine Cauléas

Patriarche de Constantinople (895-901)

Fête le 12 février

Églises d’Orient

Près de Constantinople [auj. Istanbul, Turquie] 829 – † v. 901

Autres graphies : Antoine II Cauléas, Antoine Cauléas (Kauleas) ou de Constantinople

Né près de Constantinople, d’origine phrygienne, il montra de bonne heure un grand penchant pour la contemplation et devint plus tard abbé d’un monastère situé au voisinage de la ville. À la mort du patriarche Étienne de Constantinople, en 888, il fut élu à sa place. Administrateur prudent, il possédait « la discrétion d’un esprit pur, qui sait conserver l’équilibre et ne se laisse pas abuser ». Il mit tout en œuvre pour rétablir l’unité de l’Église brisée en 867 par la querelle entre le patriarche Photios et le pape Nicolas Ier.

SOURCE : http://www.martyretsaint.com/antoine-cauleas/

Saint Anthony Kauleas

Also known as

Anthony Cauleas

Antony Cauleas

Antony Kauleas

Antony II of Constantinople

Memorial

12 February

Profile

Born to a noble family from Phrygia who had moved to the country to escape persecution by the iconoclastsMonk near Constantinople at age 12. Abbot of his house. Patriarch of Constantinople in 893. He worked to heal the schisms created by his predecessor Photius, presiding over the Fourth Æcumenical Council of Constantinople in 869 and 870 which condemned or reversed all that Photius had done; all records of the council were destroyed by later schismatics. Throughout his life Antony was known for his personal holiness, his deep personal prayer life, and the sanctity he brought to his offices.

Born

829 near Constantinople

Died

12 February 901 of natural causes

Canonized

Pre-Congregation

Additional Information

Book of Saints, by the Monks of Ramsgate

Lives of the Saints, by Father Alban Butler

Saints of the Day, by Katherine Rabenstein

books

Our Sunday Visitor’s Encyclopedia of Saints

other sites in english

Catholic Online

Wikipedia

sitios en español

Martirologio Romano2001 edición

fonti in italiano

Santi e Beati

Wikipedia

nettsteder i norsk

Den katolske kirke

MLA Citation

“Saint Anthony Kauleas“. CatholicSaints.Info. 15 April 2022. Web. 11 February 2024. <https://catholicsaints.info/saint-anthony-kauleas/>

SOURCE : https://catholicsaints.info/saint-anthony-kauleas/


Antony Kauleas B (RM)

(also known as Antony Cauleas)

Born near Constantinople in 829; died 901. Antony's noble, Phrygian parents had retired to the countryside near Constantinople to escape the persecution of the Iconoclasts when he was born. He became a monk at a monastery in Constantinople when he was 12 years old, and eventually became its abbot. Upon the death of Patriarch Stephen the Wise, the brother of Emperor Leo VI, Antony succeeded as patriarch of Constantinople in 893. Thus, he was the second successor to Photius, the effects of whose schism he labored to remove (and whom Leo VI exiled). Antony completed the work began by Stephen to bring peace to the Church in the East. He presided over the Fourth Ecumenical Council of Constantinople (869-70), which condemned or reformed all that had been done by Photius during his last usurpation of that see after the death of Saint Ignatius. The acts of this council are entirely lost, perhaps through the malice of those Greeks who renewed this unhappy schism. A perfect spirit of mortification, penance, and prayer, sanctified this great pastor, both in his private and public life. His name is found both in the Greek Menaea and in the Roman Martyrology (Benedictines, Husenbeth).

Saint Anthony Kauleas

Also known as

Anthony Cauleas

Antony Cauleas

Antony Kauleas

Antony II of Constantinople

Memorial

12 February

Profile

Born to a noble family from Phrygia who had moved to the country to escape persecution by the iconoclastsMonk near Constantinople at age 12. Abbot of his house. Patriarch of Constantinople in 893. He worked to heal the schisms created by his predecessor Photius, presiding over the Fourth Æcumenical Council of Constantinople in 869 and 870 which condemned or reversed all that Photius had done; all records of the council were destroyed by later schismatics. Throughout his life Antony was known for his personal holiness, his deep personal prayer life, and the sanctity he brought to his offices.

Born

829 near Constantinople

Died

12 February 901 of natural causes

Canonized

Pre-Congregation

SOURCE : https://catholicsaints.info/saint-anthony-kauleas/

Butler’s Lives of the Saints – Saint Antony Cauleas, Patriarch of Constantinople, Confessor

Article

He was by extraction of a noble Phrygian family, but born at a country seat near Constantinople, where his parents lived retired for fear of the persecution and infection of the Iconoclasts. From twelve years of age he served God with great fervour, in a monastery of the city, which some moderns pretend to have been that of Studius. In process of time he was chosen abbot, and, upon the death of Stephen, brother to the emperor Leo VI, surnamed the wise, or the Philosopher, patriarch of Constantinople in 893. His predecessor had succeeded Photius in 886, (whom this emperor expelled,) and laboured strenuously to extinguish the schism he had formed, and restore the peace of the church over all the East. Saint Antony, completed this great work, and in a council in which he presided at Constantinople, condemned or reformed all that had been done by Photius, during his last usurpation of that see, after the death of Saint Ignatius. The acts of this important council are entirely lost, perhaps through the malice of those Greeks who renewed this unhappy schism. A perfect spirit of mortification, penance, and prayer, sanctified this great pastor, both in his private and public life. He died in the year 896, of his age sixty-seven, on the 12th of February, on which day his name is inserted in the Greek Menæa, and in the Roman Martyrology. See an historical panegyric on his virtues, spoken soon after his death by a certain Greek philosopher name Nicephorus, in the Bollandists.

MLA Citation

Father Alban Butler. “Saint Antony Cauleas, Patriarch of Constantinople, Confessor”. Lives of the Fathers, Martyrs, and Principal Saints1866. CatholicSaints.Info. 11 February 2013. Web. 17 December 2020. <https://catholicsaints.info/butlers-lives-of-the-saints-saint-antony-cauleas-patriarch-of-constantinople-confessor/>

SOURCE : https://catholicsaints.info/butlers-lives-of-the-saints-saint-antony-cauleas-patriarch-of-constantinople-confessor/

February 12, 2018

Saint Anthony II Kauleas, Patriarch of Constantinople (+ 901)

Verses

Anthony cared not for things below,

For which he was justly made worthy of the good things above.

Our Holy Father Anthony was born in 829 near Constantinople into a noble family that had moved to the countryside near Constantinople from Phrygia to escape the persecution of the Iconoclasts. Anthony became a monk at a monastery in Constantinople when he was twelve years old. He eventually became the abbot of the monastery, earning a reputation for assistance to the poor. After the restoration of Patriarch Ignatios in 867, Anthony contributed to the reconciliation between the supporters of Patriarchs Photios and Ignatios, both of whom were pursuing the same policies. He came to the attention of Stylianos Zaoutzes, the powerful minister of Roman Emperor Leo VI the Wise, who had ascended to the throne in 886. Anthony supported Leo against Patriarch Photios when Leo replaced Photios with his younger brother Stephen I. Upon the death of Patriarch Stephen I, Anthony was appointed by Leo as Patriarch of Constantinople in 893.

Patriarch Anthony II was a pious man who generously endowed monastic foundations and founded or re-founded the Kaulea Monastery (more accurately called "Kalliou") with the support of the emperor. He devoted himself to restoring harmony within the Church. One of his great accomplishments was to renew ties between the Church and Stylianos Mapas, Metropolitan of Neocaesarea, and members of his anti-Photian party, a move that promoted peaceful relations between Constantinople and the Church of Rome.

Saint Anthony reposed in peace on February 12, 901 in Constantinople and was buried in the church of his monastery. There Saint Anthony was held responsible for various miracles after his repose. Nikephoros Gregoras the Philosopher offered an encomium in his honor.* There it says "he had the discretion of a pure mind that keeps its balance and is not deceived;" and, "his happy and praiseworthy life was a credit to all." After 1192, the Kaulea Monastery was renamed after its founder, Saint Anthony.**

Notes:

* Read the encomium here.

** St. Nikodemos the Hagiorite says that the Anthony that should be commemorated on this day is Patriarch Anthony III the Studite of Constantinople, who reposed in 983.

SOURCE : https://www.johnsanidopoulos.com/2018/02/saint-anthony-ii-kauleas-patriarch-of.html

Sant' Antonio Cauleas Patriarca di Costantinopoli

12 febbraio

m. Costantinopoli, 901 circa

Sant’Antonio detto “Cauleas”, patriarca di Costantinopoli, al tempo dell’imperatore Leone VI si adoperò con tutte le sue forze per consolidare la pace e l’unità della Chiesa.

Martirologio Romano: A Costantinopoli, sant’Antonio, detto Cauléas, vescovo, che al tempo dell’imperatore Leone VI fortemente si adoperò per rafforzare la pace e l’unità nella Chiesa.

Sant’Antonio Cauleas nacque nei pressi di Costantinopoli in una località ove i suoi genitori si erano ritirati per timore della persecuzione iconoclasta. Alla morte della madre Antonio, allora appena dodicenne, entrò in un monastero nella capitale imperiale bizantina, del quale divenne ben presto abate con il nome di “Antonio II Cauleas” (essendo stato preceduto da Antonio I Cassimatas, 821-837). Il padre di Antonio entrò più tardi anch’egli in monastero e ricevete l’abito religioso direttamente dalle mani del figlio. La Chiesa orientale viveva a quel tempo in uno stato di grande confusione, dopo che l’imperatore aveva espulso il legittimo patriarca costantinopolitano Sant’Ignazio (23 ottobre) e nell’867 aveva imposto sul soglio vescovile il celebre Fozio.

Anche questi fu però costretto a lasciare la cattedra patriarcale nell’886, probabilmente spinto dal nuovo imperatore Leone VI che voleva insediare il proprio fratello minore Stefano. Fozio non oppose resistenza e si ritirò in un monastero, mentre invece i seguaci di Ignazio non vollero riconoscere la legittimità dell’elezione di Stefano, in quanto ordinato diacono proprio da Fozio.

In questo contesto, alla morte di Stefano nell’893 Antonio fu eletto patriarca di Costantinopoli. Il suo operato fu subito caratterizzato da molteplici sforzi volti a riappacificare le due fazioni, riuscendo infine a persuadere il metropolita Stiliano Mapas, capo degli ignaziani, a porre fine allo scisma. Un punto di forza per Antonio derivò dall’aver ricevuto l’ordinazione in tempi non sospetti e dunque dall’indiscutibilità della validità del suo ministero, come era avvenuto invece per il suo immediato predecessore Stefano.

Non è storicamente chiaro se per risolvere la disputa sia stato necessario l’intervento del vescovo di Roma oppure questi abbia semplicemente sanzionato in un secondo tempo la soluzione già raggiunta da Antonio. Il dato di fatto è che entrambe le Chiese, sia Roma che Costantinopoli, riconobbero “Ignazio, Fozio, Stefano ed Antonio” quale autentica e valida successione di patriarchi sulla sede bizantina. La pace fu stipulata ufficialmente nell’899 ed Antonio morì poco dopo, forse verso il 901.

A parte il suo particolare ruolo nella storia universale della Chiesa, come descritto sinora, non si hanno molte altre notizie sulla vita di Antonio, se non ciò che i suoi contemporanei abbiano tramandato circa il suo spirito di mortificazione, di preghiera e di penitenza. Fondò uno splendido monastero in cui volle essere sepolto, che successivamente in suo onore fu ridenoominato “tou koulea, o tou kyr antoniou”.

Il Martyrologium Romanum commemora al 12 febbraio Sant’Antonio Cauleas, quale consolidatore della pace e dell’unità della Chiesa.

Autore: Fabio Arduino

SOURCE : http://www.santiebeati.it/dettaglio/92723

Den hellige Antonius Kauleas (829-~901)

Minnedag: 12. februar

Den hellige Antonius Kauleas (Cauleas) ble født i 829 nær Konstantinopel i en frygisk familie som hadde trukket seg tilbake fra byen av frykt for forfølgelser fra ikonoklastenes side. Da hans mor døde, ble Antonius i en alder av tolv år munk i et kloster i Konstantinopel. Senere ble han abbed for dette klosteret som Antonius II Kauleas, for en av hans forgjengere var Antonius I Kassymatas (821-37). Hans far trådte inn i klosteret og ble ikledd drakten av sin sønn.

Den bysantinske Kirken var i denne perioden i en tilstand av betydelig forvirring. Den hellige patriarken Fotios ble innsatt som en inntrenger i embetet etter at den hellige Ignatius av Konstantinopel ble utvist av keiseren i 867. Men han hadde blitt tvunget til å abdisere for andre gang i 886, åpenbart bare fordi den nye keiseren Leo VI (886-911) ønsket å ha sin yngre bror Stefan som patriark. Fotios trakk seg tilbake til et kloster og døde rundt 891.

Tilhengerne av Ignatius nektet å anerkjenne Stefan, siden han var blitt diakonviet av Fotios. Stefan døde i 893, og da ble Antonius valgt til ny patriark. Han var utrettelig i sine forsøk på å skape fred mellom de to fraksjonene, og til slutt lyktes han i å overtale ignatianernes leder, metropolitt Stylian Mapas, til å gi opp sin motstand. Siden hans egen ordinasjon hadde funnet sted enten under den hellige Methodios Bekjenneren (d. 847) eller Ignatius, var han ikke utsatt for de samme angrep på sin gyldighet som Stefan hadde vært. Han viste seg å være en dyktig og hellig kirkeleder under vanskelige omstendigheter.

Om pavens intervensjon bidro til å løse disputten eller bare sanksjonerte en løsning som var fått i stand av Antonius, er ikke klart, men både Roma og Konstantinopel anerkjente at «Ignatius, Fotios, Stefan og Antonius» utgjorde en autentisk suksesjon av patriarker. Denne freden ble oppnådd i 899, og dermed var det såkalte «Fotianske» skisma mellom Konstantinopel og Roma over.

Bortsett fra Antonius' plass i den generelle kirkehistorien er det ikke mye som er kjent om ham, selv om samtidige skrev om hans ånd av askese, bot og bønn. Han døde rundt 901. Han hadde grunnlagt og deretter restaurert et strålende kloster hvor han ble gravlagt, og det ble siden omdøpt til hans ære til Tou Koulea eller Tou Kyr Antoniou. Hans minnedag er 12. februar og hans navn står i Martyrologium Romanum.

Kilder: Attwater/Cumming, Butler (II), Benedictines, Bunson, KIR, CSO, Patron Saints SQPN, Infocatho, santiebeati.it - Kompilasjon og oversettelse: p. Per Einar Odden - Opprettet: 1998-04-12 22:01 - Sist oppdatert: 2006-07-26 18:05

SOURCE : http://www.katolsk.no/biografier/historisk/akauleas