Dacius (bishop of Milan)

Dacius
Archbishop of Milan

Wall with the Urn of Saint Dacius
Church Catholic Church
Appointed c. 530 AD
Reign ended 5 February 552
Predecessor Magnus
Successor Vitale
Personal details
Died 5 February 552
Chalcedon
Sainthood
Feast day January 14
Venerated in Catholic Church

Dacius or Datius (Italian: Dazio) was Archbishop of Milan from c. 530 to 552. He is honoured as a saint in the Catholic Church.[1]

An active ecclesiastical politician, he was an ally of Pope Vigilius in the latter's struggles against Justinian, involved in the Three-Chapter Controversy. He is remembered as a defender of Catholic orthodoxy against the heresies of his day.[2]

Contents

The Gothic War

Before to became a bishop, Dacius was a monk. He was elected bishop of Milan on about 530, and soon he had to face the worse period of the history of Milan, which started with the terrible famine of 535-6. During such famine Dacius obtained by the praetorian prefect for Italy, Cassiodorus, some free distribution of grain for the paupers.[3]

Together with the famine began the Gothic War (535–554) between the Ostrogoths and the Byzantine Empire. Dacius sided with the Byzantines and at the end of 537 (or early in 538) he went to Rome along with some representatives of the people of Milan to ask the Byzantine general Belisarius to sent a force of 1,000 men, under Mundilas, to free the city from the Ostrogoths. Initially the operation was successfully, but soon the Goths, led by general Uraias, allied with the Burgundians and sieged the town considering the support of Milan to the Byzantines as a betrayal. The town surrendered in March 539, and in ravenge Uraias razed Milan to the ground, exterminated 30,000 male citizens and sold the women as slaves.[4] Dacius survived this catastrophe because he was in Rome: he never returned again to Milan.

The Three-Chapter Controversy

In 544-545 Dacius was in Constantinople where he was present to the issue by the Emperor Justinian I of an edict in which the three chapters (i.e. some writings of Theodore of Mopsuestia, Theodoret of Cyrus and Ibas of Edessa) were anathematized. Justinian was attempting to reconcile the Non-Chalcedonian Christians, but most bishops saw in this anathema a possible denial of the Chalcedonian Creed. While the resistance of the Eastern bishops collapsed in a short time, those from the Latin-speaking bishops, such as Dacius, stood firm.[1]

Justinian required Pope Vigilius, who opposed the edict, to came to Constantinople to sign the anathema. Vigilius had to left Rome in November 545, but he tried to interrupt the travel remaining for a long time in Sicily, where he was reached by Dacius. However on January 25, 547 the Pope arrived in Constantinople, where he was forced to reside by the Emperor till he would not have approved the edict.

In 550 Dacius reached Virgilius in Constantinople, and he urged the Pope not to come to an agreement with the Emperor. In August 551 he and the pope had to take sanctuary in the Basilica of St. Peter in Constantinople were the Pope was beaten. Again on December 23 both Dacius and the Pope escaped and took refuge in the Church of St. Euphemia in Chalcedon, from which Pope Virgilius issued an Encyclical letter describing the treatment he had received. Dacius died, probably at Chalcedon, on February 5, 552.[3]

Legacy

Dacius' body was later translated from Chalcedon to Milan and buried in the Church of San Vittore al Corpo (Saint Victor Maurus) where it is still venerated. A late tradition, with no historical basis, associates Dacius with the Milan's family of the Agliati.

In Chapter 4 (Book 3) of his Dialogues, Gregory the Great describes Dacius as an exorcist:[5]

In the time of the same Emperor, Datius, Bishop of Milan, about matters of religion, travelled to Constantinople. And coming to Corinth, he sought for a large house to receive him and his company, and could scarce find any: at length he saw afar off a fair great house, which he commanded to be provided for him: and when the inhabitants of that place told him that it was for many years haunted by the devil, and therefore stood empty: "so much the sooner," quoth the venerable man, "ought we to lodge in it, if the wicked spirit hath taken possession thereof, and will not suffer men to dwell in it." Whereupon he gave order to have it made ready: which being done, he went without all fear to combat with the old enemy. In the dead of the night, when the man of God was asleep, the devil began, with a huge noise and great outcry, to imitate the roaring of lions, the bleating of sheep, the braying of asses, the hissing of serpents, the grunting of hogs, and the screeching of rats. Datius, suddenly awaked with the noise of so many beasts, rose up, and in great anger spake aloud to the old serpent, and said: "Thou art served well, thou wretched creature: thou art he that diddest say: I will place my seat in the north, and I will be like to the highest: and now through thy pride, see how thou art become like unto hogs and rats; and thou that wouldest needs unworthily be like unto God, behold how thou dost now, according to thy deserts, imitate brute beasts." At these words the wicked serpent was, as I may well term it, ashamed, that he was so disgraciously and basely put down, for well may I say that he was ashamed, who never after troubled that house with any such terrible and monstrous shapes as before he did: for ever after that time, Christian men did inhabit the same; for so soon as one man that was a true and faithful Christian took possession thereof, the lying and faithless spirit straightways did forsake it. But I will now surcease from speaking of things done in former times, and come to such miracles as have happened in our own days.

To Dacius was wrongly attributed a legendary history of the first bishops of Milan up to Maternus, known as Datiana Historia Ecclesiae Mediolanensis. This text is today attributed to Landulf of Milan, a historician of the 11th-century.[3]

Notes

  1. ^ a b Casari, Mario (1989). "Dazio, santo (sec. VI)". Dizionario della Chiesa Ambrosiana. 2. Milano: NED. p. 995 - 996. ISBN 887023102X. (Italian)
  2. ^ Ruggeri, Fausto (1991). I Vescovi di Milano. Milano: NED. p. 18. ISBN 8870231542. (Italian)
  3. ^ a b c Cazzani, Eugenio (1996). Vescovi e arcivescovi di Milano. Milano: Massimo. pp. 36–38. ISBN 887030891x. (Italian)
  4. ^ Tolfo, Maria Grazia. "Il Sestiere di Porta Romana - I prodromi della catastrofe". Storia di Milano. http://www.storiadimilano.it/citta/Porta_Romana/catastrofe.htm. Retrieved 28 Nov 2011. (Italian)
  5. ^ "Gregory the Great, Dialogues (1911) Book 3. pp. 105-174". CCEL. http://www.ccel.org/p/pearse/morefathers/gregory_03_dialogues_book3.htm#4. Retrieved 30 Oct 2011.