A church council held in Aquiléia in …
Years: 381 - 381
A church council held in Aquiléia in September 381, summoned by Gratian explicitly to "solve the contradictions of discordant teaching", has in fact been organized by Ambrose, though it is presided over by Valerian, Bishop of Aquileia.
The council, attended by thirty-two bishops of the West, from Italy, Africa, Gaul, and Illyria, deposes from their offices two bishops of the Eastern province of Dacia as partisans of Arius.
One of these, Palladius, had applied to the Emperor of the East for an opportunity to clear himself before a general council of these charges concerning the nature of Christ.
He had been unwilling to submit to a council of the Western bishops only, for Ambrose had previously assured the Emperor of the West that such a matter as the soundness or heresy of just two bishops might be settled by a council simply consisting of the bishops of the Diocese of Italy alone.
Palladius refused to admit the legitimacy of the proceedings, but the bishops unanimously pronounce anathema on all counts, and the matter is settled.
The council also requests the Emperors Theodosius and Gratian to convene at Alexandria a general council of all bishops in order to put an end to the Meletian schism at Antioch that has been ongoing since 362.
Locations
People
Groups
- Italy, Diocese of
- Christians, Meletian
- Christianity, Arian
- Christianity, Nicene
- Italy, Praetorian prefecture of
- Roman Empire: Valentinian dynasty (Rome)
- Roman Empire: Theodosian dynasty (Constantinople)
Topics
- Roman Age Optimum
- Late Antiquity
- Migration Period
- Arian controversy
- Fall of the Western Roman Empire
