This historic book may have numerous typos and missing text. Purchasers can usually download a free scanned copy of the original book (without typos) from the publisher. Not indexed. Not illustrated. 1912 edition. Excerpt: ...and endeavoured to arrange an understanding between them and the semi-orthodox party, of which Basil of Ancyra was at this moment leading the triumph. This is the subject of his book on The Synods Then followed the Council of Ariminum, where, thanks to the pressure put upon them by the prefect Taurus, and to the intrigues of the court prelates, the bishops of the Gauls allowed themselves to be led like the rest to a deplorable capitulation. Even the firmest among them, Servasius of Tongres and Phoebadius himself, compromised themselves, and co-operated either directly or indirectly in what was to be for a long time the formula of the Arian dissenters. When they returned home, very sad at heart, as we may well believe, they soon heard the news that Julian had been proclaimed Augustus, and that the high officials of Constantius, notably the praetorian prefect Florentius, with whom they had much more to do than with the Caesar, had set out to rejoin their master. While these things were happening, Hilary arrived2 with news from Constantinople, and letters addressed to the Western prelates by those of their Greek colleagues, upon whom 1 Supra, p. 234. 2 Hilary had not been pardoned; this return to Gaul was, in the intention of the government, only a change of exile. They held that, being dangerous in the East, he would be less so in his own country. This, at least, is what Sulpicius Severus says, Chron. ii. 45: fostremo quasi discordiae seminarium et perturbator Orientis redire ad Callias iubetur, absque exilii indulgentia. Eudoxius, Acacius, and other victors of the day, had just been showering sentences of deposition. A meeting was held at Paris, probably in the summer of 360, and from thence an answer was despatched to the Easterns in a...
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This historic book may have numerous typos and missing text. Purchasers can usually download a free scanned copy of the original book (without typos) from the publisher. Not indexed. Not illustrated. 1912 edition. Excerpt: ...and endeavoured to arrange an understanding between them and the semi-orthodox party, of which Basil of Ancyra was at this moment leading the triumph. This is the subject of his book on The Synods Then followed the Council of Ariminum, where, thanks to the pressure put upon them by the prefect Taurus, and to the intrigues of the court prelates, the bishops of the Gauls allowed themselves to be led like the rest to a deplorable capitulation. Even the firmest among them, Servasius of Tongres and Phoebadius himself, compromised themselves, and co-operated either directly or indirectly in what was to be for a long time the formula of the Arian dissenters. When they returned home, very sad at heart, as we may well believe, they soon heard the news that Julian had been proclaimed Augustus, and that the high officials of Constantius, notably the praetorian prefect Florentius, with whom they had much more to do than with the Caesar, had set out to rejoin their master. While these things were happening, Hilary arrived2 with news from Constantinople, and letters addressed to the Western prelates by those of their Greek colleagues, upon whom 1 Supra, p. 234. 2 Hilary had not been pardoned; this return to Gaul was, in the intention of the government, only a change of exile. They held that, being dangerous in the East, he would be less so in his own country. This, at least, is what Sulpicius Severus says, Chron. ii. 45: fostremo quasi discordiae seminarium et perturbator Orientis redire ad Callias iubetur, absque exilii indulgentia. Eudoxius, Acacius, and other victors of the day, had just been showering sentences of deposition. A meeting was held at Paris, probably in the summer of 360, and from thence an answer was despatched to the Easterns in a...
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