Strangers To Patrons Bishop Damasus and
Strangers To Patrons Bishop Damasus and
Strangers To Patrons Bishop Damasus and
3 (2016): 465–486
Strangers to Patrons:
Bishop Damasus and the Foreign Martyrs of Rome
Marianne Sághy
Central European University, Department of Medieval Studies
According to Christian theology, Christians are foreigners on earth. This paper focuses
on the theme of foreigners and foreignness in the epigrams of Bishop Damasus of
Rome. What motivated the bishop to highlight this theme at a time when Christianity
was growing “respectable” in Roman society? How did the Church integrate foreign
Christians into the social fabric of the Roman town? In late fourth-century Rome, not
only foreign martyrs were identiied as such, but entire groups of foreigners for whom
“national” enclaves were created in the catacombs. I examine the Damasian epigrams in
the context of their religious substrate of “alienation” and in light of the cosmopolitan
heritage of Rome. As bishop of the Nicene Catholic fraction in the Vrbs, whose
enterprise aimed at making Rome a new Jerusalem in part through the “importation”
of holy martyrs, Damasus sought to represent his Church at its most “universal” in the
teeth of his local schismatic and/or heretical opponents. Roman tradition buttressed the
universalist aspirations of Catholicism. As the largest metropolis of the ancient world,
Rome was a “cosmopolis,” a melting pot of peoples, and Damasus did not remain a
stranger to the Catholicity of Rome’s cosmopolitan history at a time when conlicting
loyalties to ciuitas, Romanitas and Christianitas were hotly debated political, religious and
cultural issues.
Keywords: foreign martyrs, bishop Damasus, epigrams, Late Antique Rome
The notion that Christians are foreigners on earth was a prevalent idea in the
ancient world, as it is today.1 “God’s people” sojourn temporarily in this world,
on their way to the heavenly homeland. To be a “stranger” (peregrinus), however,
was more than a religious metaphor for Christians in Antiquity: it was existential
evidence. If they felt alienated, this was in large part a consequence of the fact that
the world had cast them out for their allegedly outlandish beliefs. “Foreignness,”
therefore, was not just a matter of Christian self-perception or identity, it was
also the way in which Christians were perceived by their contemporaries, Jews
and Romans alike. From metaphor to social reality, “foreignness” covered a
range of experience, expressing the deepest religious core of the new faith and
also exposing the socio-historical context in which Christianity grew. Christians
formed a diaspora of “legal aliens” in the cities of the Roman Empire, in which
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Hungarian Historical Review 5, no. 3 (2016): 465–486
the new religion spread thanks to its itinerant apostles, wandering teachers, exiled
leaders, and migrant martyrs.
It comes as all the more of a surprise that, following the turn which took
place under the rule of Constantine, the very “strangers” who had been thrown
to the lions became the patron saints of the cities in which they had suffered
martyrdom. The cult of martyrs rose parallel with Christianity’s integration
into Roman society. If the sudden reversal of the urban representations of the
martyrs can be explained by the fact that they had already been venerated heroes
in persecuted Christianity, the question still remains as to how a stranger could
stand for, and represent in heaven, the ciuitas in which s/he had not enjoyed
the status of citizenship and had been tortured and executed as a dangerous
criminal. How would s/he guarantee the safety, prosperity, and salvation of a
city in which s/he had been treated as a suspicious outsider?
This paradox was bravely addressed by the foremost episcopal impresario
of the cult of the martyrs, Damasus of Rome (366–84 A.D).2 While many Late
Antique bishops made a point of excavating “local” martyrs to promote them
to the status of patron saints, Damasus frankly acknowledged that the martyrs
of Rome, the “new stars” of the Vrbs, were almost all foreigners. Martyrs from
abroad became a major success story in Late Antique Christianity.3 I focus on
Damasus’ presentation of the “alienness” of the martyrs in his epigraphical
poetry.4 What did “foreigner” mean for Damasus? What motivated the bishop
to highlight this theme at a time when Christianity was becoming “respectable”
in Roman society?
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Bishop Damasus and the Foreign Martyrs of Rome
5 Shotwell and Ropes Loomis, The See of Peter; Meyendorff, The Primacy of Peter; Daley, “Position and
Patronage.”
6 Sogno, Q. Aurelius Symmachus; Fux, “Les patries des martyrs,” 371.
7 Cochrane, Christianity and Classical Culture; Boer, Romanitas et Christianitas; Martin and Cox Miller, The
Cultural Turn; Sághy, “Fido recubans.”
8 Psalm 39:12.
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The idea that “God’s elect” are strangers did not originate with the Christians.
In the Old Testament, the “chosen people” are strangers.9 The authors of the New
Testament, particularly the Apostle Peter, expound on this theme. Peter opens
his irst letter by addressing his readers as “God’s elect, strangers in the world,”10
and he emphasizes the “strangeness” of the Christians.11 Does Peter refer to
the social alienation of the Christians following their conversion or to the social
status of Christians before their conversion? Probably both. By using the term
παρεπίδημος, Peter evokes Psalm 39:12, whereas πάροικος is equal to the Latin
inquilinus, meaning a free person who is not a Roman citizen. Such populations
could be deported anytime from any Roman town. One such expulsion occurred
during the reign of Claudius, when the Jews, including Priscilla and Aquila, were
expelled from Rome.12 Peter, who may have escaped the expulsion of Jews or,
like Priscilla and Aquila,13 may have returned after the death of Claudius, might
have known these deported Christians. “Strangers” in 1 Peter is less a metaphor
for the Christian pilgrimage on earth than a description of Christian life in pagan
society. If the Jews are “strangers on earth,”14 Christians are “strangers of the
Diaspora,” “foreigners in exile.” The “marvellous paradox” of Christianity in
the Roman Empire is the invention and perfection of “alien citizenship,”15 being
at once involved in and disengaged from society: in the words of the second-
century author of the Epistle to Diognetus:
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Graeco-Roman society had been on its way well before the fourth century,18
and Constantine’s privileging of the Christian Church ultimately seems to have
created more problems than it solved.19 The Arian-Nicene theological debates
ended in exile and persecution,20 but this time Christians persecuted Christians;21
and the soaring of the numbers of lukewarm, opportunist Christians provoked
a sharp debate on Christian perfection.22 Traditional Christians felt alienated in
the new Christian Empire,23 where new heresies mushroomed,24 controversies
raged,25 and continuity with the past was broken26 or had to be reinvented.27
Pollutae caerimoniae, magna adulteria; plenum exiliis mare, infecti caedibus scopuli: “holy
things were desecrated, adultery widespread; the sea was swarming with exiles and
its rocks stained with blood.” The words of Tacitus, with which he characterized
the period of upheaval that followed the death of Nero, aptly summarize the
turmoil of the fourth century. Political transformation, economic interests,
religious violence, and the pressures of the barbarian incursions uprooted
individuals and whole populations: the late Empire was a commonwealth of
displaced persons, with Italy as a “transit zone” in its center.28
By the mid-fourth century, “foreigners” constituted the majority of Rome’s
population.29 To be sure, many of these foreigners had Roman citizenship and
were Roman in their culture, but they had come from faraway provinces to
the ancient capital of the Empire. The emperors themselves came from the
Eastern provinces of Illyricum and Pannonia,30 and the imperial administration
constantly shifted personnel within the boundaries of the Empire. Thus, for
example, a large group of Pannonian oficials worked in Rome.31 The army that
18 Brakke, Deliyannis and Watts, Shifting Cultural Frontiers; Mitchell and Nuffelen, Monotheism; Salzman,
Sághy, and Lizzi Testa, Pagans and Christians. For the debate on pagan-Christian assimilation, see Herrero de
Jáuregui, “Christian Assimilation”; Roessli, “Assimilation chrétienne.”
19 Brown and Lizzi Testa, Pagans and Christians.
20 Vallejo Girvés, “L’Europe des exilés.”
21 Meyendorff, Imperial Unity.
22 Wimbush and Valantasis, Asceticism; Vogüé, Histoire littéraire.
23 Guinot and Richard, Empire chrétien.
24 Pourkier, L’hérésiologie.
25 Galvão-Sobrinho, Doctrine and Power; Clark, The Origenist Controversy; Berndt and Steinacher, Arianism;
Shaw, Sacred Violence.
26 Tronzo, The Via Latina Catacomb.
27 Johnson and Schott, Eusebius of Caesarea.
28 Gennaccari, “L’Italia come luogo di transito.”
29 Curran, Pagan City; Grig and Kelly, Two Romes; Twine, “The City in Decline.”
30 Lenski, Failure of Empire; Alföldi, Az utolsó nagy pannon császár.
31 Matthews, Western Aristocracies; Kovács, “A sopianaei születésű Maximinus.”
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patrolled the Roman world recruited soldiers from all over the provinces and
increasingly from among the so-called barbarians.32 The slave trade brought
various ethnic groups to Rome,33 but alongside this, intellectuals in Egypt and
Syria also felt the irresistible pull of Rome,34 while Christian teachers, bishops,
and ascetics, zipping through the Empire as conciliar delegates or imperial exiles,
made obligatory stopovers in Rome.35 As the third-century jurist Modestinus
wrote, “Roma communis nostra patria est,” yet the foreigners did not forget their
homelands.36 On the contrary: they kept together and sought to memorialize the
places from which they had come, thereby expressing that they were “displaced
persons,” that they had come to Rome from other provinces.
One of the most interesting and moving cases involved the establishment of
a “national” Pannonian cemetery within the San Sebastiano catacomb complex
on the Via Appia,37 the spot where Rome’s most famous strangers, the princes
of the apostles, were also celebrated. Beginning with the urban prefecture of
Viventius (365–67), a Pannonian bureaucrat from Siscia (now Sisak/Sziszek in
Croatia), a large number of Pannonians chose to be buried ad sanctos. Viventius’
daughter Lucceia continued to sponsor the cemetery, and she arranged the burial
of a mother from Pannonia by the name of Nunita and her daughter Maximilla,
a consecrated virgin (virgo ancilla Dei), in 389. Around this time, Quirinus, the
martyr bishop of Siscia was buried in the Platonia mausoleum behind the apse
of the Basilica of San Sebastiano, long believed to have been the temporary
common (or shared) tomb of the two apostles. Quirinus’ relics in grave nr. 13
of the mausoleum were identiied at the end of the nineteenth century and
provoked heated scholarly debate.38
Quirinus was martyred in Savaria (now Szombathely, Hungary) during the
persecutions of Diocletian after having been arrested in 309. He had attempted
to lee, but was thrown to prison, where he converted his jailer, Marcellus,
32 Jones, The Later Roman Empire; Liebeschuetz, Barbarians and Bishops.
33 Harper, Slavery.
34 Schall, “Plotinus”; DePalma Digeser, “Lactantius, Porphyry”; Kelly, “The New Rome and the Old”;
Ross, “Ammianus.”
35 Pietri, “La question d’Athanase”; Duval, Jérôme entre l’Occident et l’Orient; Kaufman, “Augustine,
Martyrs.”
36 For an interesting parallel of imperial alienation in the sixteenth century see Bartels, Spectacles of
Strangeness.
37 Bertolino, “Pannonia terra creat.” The Pannonian martyr St Quirinus is celebrated by Prudentius,
Peristephanon 7, probably in relation to Pannonian and “Damasian” circles. I thank Pierre-Yves Fux for this
reference.
38 De Waal, Die Apostelgruft ad Catacumbas an der via Appia.
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Bishop Damasus and the Foreign Martyrs of Rome
venerated in the Church of Rome. The list records the burial date (day, month,
year) of forty-seven martyrs. In the cases of people who were martyred in Rome,
it also mentions their burial places in the cemeteries and catacombs situated
along the great roads leading out from Rome. The presence of the three great
saints of Carthage in the liturgical calendar of the Church of Rome was taken as
a sign by scholars that the cult of the saints spread from Africa to Italy.47
The martyrs were the stars of early Christianity. They followed Christ and
conquered death. Their deaths were their birthdays (natales martyrum) in heaven:
this explains the joyous commemoration and cheerful celebration of their heroic
passing away among Christians to the present day. The annual celebration of the
martyr’s heavenly birthday included the reading of the story of the martyrdom
from the acts or from the passio, and the Eucharistic ritual. By including the
Carthaginian martyrs, whose tombs and relics were in Africa, in the liturgical
cycle of the martyrs venerated in Rome, the depositio martyrum indicates that the
passions of these martyrs were regularly read in the churches of the Vrbs and
that a local Roman veneration evolved if not around their relics, then around
their memory. Thus, St Cyprian of Carthage had his own Roman cult center
in the Cemetery of Callixtus on the Via Appia. This is important because it
shows that in fourth-century Rome a “spiritualized” commemoration of the
martyr ran parallel to the increasingly “material” veneration of the holy martyrs
at the holy tombs. 48 That the tomb of the martyr was no longer a simple site of
commemoration but a source of supernatural aid is attested by the note in the
list according to which the martyr Silanus’ corpse was stolen by the schismatic
Novatians (hunc Silvanum martyrem Novatiani furati sunt). Despite this development,
foreign martyrs whose bodily presence could not be secured in Rome still enjoyed
spiritualized veneration in the liturgy.
Bishop Damasus of Rome drew on this martyr list when establishing the
monumental commemoration of the saints in Rome.49 Some scholars claim that
Damasus wrote the depositio martyrum in stone.50 Remarkably, Damasus chose to
stress that the apostles Peter and Paul were not Romans:
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Bishop Damasus and the Foreign Martyrs of Rome
for Christians, the teaching of the Apostle Peter quoted above. It also recalls
Rome’s failure to show hospitality to strangers, behavior squarely opposed to
the teachings of Jesus: “I was a stranger and you invited me in.”54 An existential
foreignness pervades the epigram. Christians are strangers on earth longing for
their true home: “For you have made us for yourself, and our heart is restless
until it rests in Thee.”55
The Eastern martyrs were Romanized thanks to their heroism. Yet again,
Damasus draws on and subverts a Roman concept: the idea that Romanitas equals
heroism.56 Pious Aeneas was another Oriental stranger whose heroism led him
to ind a new country for his gods.57 Damasus’ cruelly executed martyrs are
the founding heroes of Christianity in Rome.58 Damasus’ Romanization of the
Christian martyrs negotiates identity and difference on various levels, from the
aristocratic, Virgilian language of the epigrams to the emphasis on the martyrs’
“otherness” and the attribution of Roman citizenship. Romanitas for Damasus
is a spiritual virtue: it is the strength of the soul that makes man Roman. The
notion of Roman victory is internalized: it refers no longer to military might, but
to inner endurance. Romanitas is not a legal identity, but a spiritual disposition.
The Romanness of the apostles becomes an obverse “martyrdom in exile.”
The bishop integrates foreign martyrs into the history of Rome—no small
achievement in a city so self-consciously proud of its past!59 It might have been
Damasus’ tongue-in-cheek answer to the promotion of the prestige of the
“Romans of Rome” by the pagan prefect Symmachus.60 More importantly, it
reveals shifting notions of Romanitas in the late fourth century.61 Damasus gave
to Christian “Romans of Rome” their own heroes, foreigners praised in elegant
Latin elogia in the language of the most Roman of all Roman poets, Virgil.62 In
54 Matthew 25:35.
55 Augustine, Confessions, 1, 3.
56 Toll, “Making Roman-Ness”; Efrossini Spentzou, “Eluding ’Romanitas’.”
57 Gibson, “Aeneas as hospes.”
58 Trout, “Damasus and the Invention of Early Christian Rome.” By the ifth century, Romulus and
Remus had come to be regarded as criminals, and Peter and Paul, the spiritual brothers, as the true founders
of Rome in Leo Magnus, In Natali apostolorum Petri et Pauli, Tractatus 69 / LXXXII: “Isti sunt sancti patres
tui verique pastores, qui te regnis caelestibus inserendam multo melius multoque felicius condiderunt, quam
illi quorum studio prima moenium tuorum fundamenta locata sunt: ex quibus is qui tibi nomen dedit
fraternal te caede foedavit.”
59 Cracco Ruggini, “Intolerance.”
60 Salzman, “Relections on Symmachus’ Idea of Tradition”; Ebbeler, “Religious Identity.”
61 Maskarinec, “Who were the Romans?”
62 Trout, “Damasus and the Invention of Early Christian Rome.”
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the catacombs’ meandering “halls of fame,” the martyrs became Roman patriots
who mark themselves out with their heroic behavior. It is essential to note in
this context that the virtue Damasus extols most in the martyrs of Rome is
peacefulness and peacemaking, not bravery. As opposed to martyrial poetry that
indulges in graphic descriptions of the martyrs’ deiance of death and endurance
of torture and suffering,63 Damasus has little to say about physical pain: for him,
the martyrs are the quintessential peacemakers. Peace, incidentally, happens to
be the most Roman of Roman virtues. Damasus’ message of peace thus conveys
a political message of unity.
Peter and Paul did not come to Rome for Roman citizenship (one of them
had it already). They came for something higher. The bishop subversively turns
established hierarchies upside down, irst by stating that it is not the martyrs that
are honored by the bestowal Roman citizenship, but rather the Vrbs is honored
by the presence of the martyrs, citizens of heaven; secondly, by asserting that
there is something higher than Roman citizenship: citizenship in the heavenly
Kingdom.
Rome saw the apostles die and thus earned the right to call them its citizens
(Roma suos potius meruit defendere cives). The competition, particularly with Antioch,
is transparent: the two apostles resided in Antioch before coming to Rome, and
Antioch developed a special Petrine tradition celebrating the apostle’s presence
in the city.64 Remarkably, there is no mention of the foundation of the Church
of Rome by Peter in Damasus’ epigrams. As opposed to the Liberian catalogue
of 354, Damasus does not present Peter as the irst bishop of Rome, but echoes
the traditional view of the apostle’s Roman activity as recorded by Irenaeus
of Lyons and Eusebius of Caesarea.65 The topography of this epigraphy is
symbolic: it is placed neither in the Vatican nor on the Via Ostiensis, but rather
in the ancient Roman cult place of the basilica Apostolorum in the San Sebastiano
catacomb on the Via Appia (that would soon become, as we have seen, the
national cemetery of other “Easterners,” this time from Pannonia). Damasus’
return to the concelebration of the apostles is triggered less by traditionalism
than by the need for unity in a time of division: the synergy of the two apostles
offers an actual, ever valid model of collaboration between churchmen of very
different temperaments. The concordia apostolorum, as presented by Damasus, is
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promoted as a political model in the Church of Rome and also as a useful model
of Christian civic behavior.66
The new citizens of Rome, however, do not reside in the Vrbs: after their
martyrdom, they soar to the palace of Heaven. “I have fought the good ight, I
have inished the course, I have kept the faith; in the future there is laid up for me
the crown of righteousness, which the Lord, the righteous Judge, will award to me
on that day; and not only to me, but also to all who have loved His appearing.”67
Damasus exalts the “new stars” (nova sidera) of Rome in the ancient language of
stellar afterlife. Becoming a star after one’s death, however, was a privilege reserved
for emperors in Rome.68 The subversive twist makes the Oriental strangers equal
and even superior to the emperors: St Peter and Paul do not idly light the night
sky, as imperial constellations do, but rather actively care for Rome’s inhabitants.
The idea that martyrdom leads to the acquisition of Roman citizenship emerges
in two other Damasian epigrams dedicated to foreign martyrs who similarly
assure intercession between the faithful and God. Saturninus of Carthage died
in Rome and thus became Roman. In the epigram placed above Saturninus’
tomb in the catacomb of Thraso on the Via Salaria Nova, Damasus contrasts the
religious conception of the heavenly abode (incola Christi) and Roman citizenship
(Romanum civem) with the Carthaginian origins of the martyr:
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Hermes’ suffering for the “holy name” makes him not only a citizen, but
a “brother,” on whose intercession with God Damasus can count. The martyr
is a well-known human face in the world to come. The epigram afirms the rise
of the dead to the heavenly court, a fundamental component of the cult of the
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saints, and radiates the warmth and joy that the faithful experience in inding a
“brother” in the other world who extends a helping hand over the believer, both
in this world and in the afterlife.73
From praise for the peregrini Peter and Paul and the heroism of Saturninus
of Carthage, Damasus comes to extol Hermes of Greece the patronus. These
foreigners are not just examples of faithful perseverance and heroic love from
ancient times, but also are unceasingly active patron saints of the Church
of Rome. The Roman citizenship that they gained enables them to act as
intercessors in heaven for the faithful, both before and after death. By making
clear reference to the foreign origins of the martyrs, the epigrams of Bishop
Damasus of Rome evoke an impressive range of religious, cultural, and political
issues that preoccupied the society of fourth-century Rome. Some were new
questions. How could tradition be preserved? How could changes be adopted?
Others belonged to the oldest layer of the Christian faith. How could one live
as a “stranger on earth”? The unique blend of these traditions makes Damasus’
poetry intriguing and powerful. The bishop’s chief enterprise consisted of
identifying the martyrs of Rome, and this amounted essentially to the compilation
of a collective history of the Church of Rome.74 Damasus not only integrated
foreign martyrs into this story, he also chose to be vocal about the foreignness
of the martyrs. To write the history of the “church of the martyrs” and to enlist
alien martyrs into one’s own faction can be interpreted as an indication of the
practical urgency of community building in Rome. Damasus brought home with
extraordinary conidence and purposefulness the Nicene belief that the local
church is the Body of Christ. By including all believers, past and present, foreign
and homegrown, in his commemoration, Damasus made tangible the communio
sanctorum, the Eucharistic fellowship of all believers and their participation in the
Resurrection Body.
Damasus’ sophisticated combination of orthodoxy and Christian tradition,
universalism and local aristocratic interests, and religious mystique and concrete
politics inscribed a remarkably high-caliber Catholic Christianity into the history
of Rome and fashioned a Roman Catholic self-perception that left the door wide
open to strangers, now venerated as Rome’s own patron saints.75 The evocation
of the foreign origins of the martyrs was a compliment to the history of the
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