I
Born about 304; died 11 December, 384. His father, Antonius, was probably a Spaniard;
the name of his mother, Laurentia, was not known until quite recently. Damasus seems to
have been born at Rome; it is certain that he grew up there in the service of the church
of the martyr St. Laurence. He was elected pope in October, 366, by a large majority, but
a number of over-zealous adherents of the deceased Liberius rejected him, chose the deacon
Ursinus (or Ursicinus), had the latter irregularly consecrated, and resorted to much
violence and bloodshed in order to seat him in the Chair of Peter. Many details of this
scandalous conflict are related in the highly prejudiced "Libellus Precum"
(P.L., XIII, 83-107), a petition to the civil authority on the part of Faustinus and
Marcellinus, two anti-Damasan presbyters (cf. also Ammianus Marcellinus, Rer. Gest.,
XXVII, c. iii). Valentinian recognized Damasus and banished (367) Ursinus to Cologne,
whence he was later allowed to return to Milan, but was forbidden to come to Rome or its
vicinity. The party of the antipope (later at Milan an adherent of the Arians and to the
end a contentious pretender) did not cease to persecute Damasus. An accusation of adultery
was laid against him (378) in the imperial court, but he was exonerated by Emperor Gratian
himself (Mansi, Coll. Conc., III, 628) and soon after by a Roman synod of forty-four
bishops (Liber Pontificalis, ed. Duchesne, s.v.; Mansi, op. cit., III, 419) which also
excommunicated his accusers.
Damasus defended with vigour the Catholic Faith in a time of dire and varied perils. In
two Roman synods (368 and 369) he condemned Apollinarianism and Macedonianism; he also
sent his legates to the Council of Constantinople (381), convoked against the aforesaid
heresies. In the Roman synod of 369 (or 370) Auxentius, the Arian Bishop of Milan, was
excommunicated; he held the see, however, until his death, in 374, made way for St.
Ambrose. The heretic Priscillian, condemned by the Council of Saragossa (380) appealed to
Damasus, but in vain. It was Damasus who induced Saint Jerome to undertake his famous
revision of the earlier Latin versions of the Bible (see VULGATE). St. Jerome was also his
confidential secretary for some time (Ep. cxxiii, n. 10). An important canon of the New
Testament was proclaimed by him in the Roman synod of 374. The Eastern Church, in the
person of St. Basil of Cæsarea, besought earnestly the aid and encouragement of Damasus
against triumphant Arianism.; the pope, however, cherished some degree of suspicion
against the great Cappadocian Doctor. In the matter of the Meletian Schism at Antioch,
Damasus, with Athanasius and Peter of Alexandria, sympathized with the party of Paulinus
as more sincerely representative of Nicene orthodoxy; on the death of Meletius he sought
to secure the succession for Paulinus and to exclude Flavian (Socrates, Hist. Eccl., V,
xv). He sustained the appeal of the Christian senators to Emperor Gratian for the removal
of the altar of Victory from the Senate House (Ambrose, Ep. xvii, n. 10), and lived to
welcome the famous edict of Theodosius I, "De fide Catholica" (27 Feb., 380),
which proclaimed as the religion of the Roman State that doctrine which St. Peter had
preached to the Romans and of which Damasus was supreme head (Cod. Theod., XVI, 1, 2).
When, in 379, Illyricum was detached from the Western Empire, Damasus hastened to
safeguard the authority of the Roman Church by the appointment of a vicar Apostolic in the
person of Ascholius, Bishop of Thessalonica; this was the origin of the important papal
vicariate long attached to that see. The primacy of the Apostolic See, variously favoured
in the time of Damasus by imperial acts and edicts, was strenuously maintained by this
pope; among his notable utterances on this subject is the assertion (Mansi, Coll. Conc.,
VIII, 158) that the ecclesiastical supremacy of the Roman Church was based, not on the
decrees of councils, but on the very words of Jesus Christ (Matt., xvi, 18). The increased
prestige of the early papal decretals, habitually attributed to the reign of Siricius
(384-99), not improbably belongs to the reign of Damasus ("Canones Romanorum ad
Gallos"; Babut, "La plus ancienne décrétale", Paris, 1904). This
development of the papal office, especially in the West, brought with it a great increase
of external grandeur. This secular splendour, however, affected disadvantageously many
members of the Roman clergy, whose worldly aims and life, bitterly reproved by St. Jerome,
provoked (29 July, 370) and edict of Emperor Valentinian addressed to the pope, forbidding
ecclesiastics and monks (later also bishops and nuns) to pursue widows and orphans in the
hope of obtaining from them gifts and legacies. The pope caused the law to be observed
strictly.
Damasus restored his own church (now San Lorenzo in Damaso) and provided for the proper
housing of the archives of the Roman Church (see VATICAN ARCHIVES). He built in the
basilica of St. Sebastian on the Appian Way the (yet visible) marble monument known as the
"Platonia" (Platona, marble pavement) in honour of the temporary transfer
to that place (258) of the bodies of Sts. Peter and Paul, and decorated it with an
important historical inscription (see Northcote and Brownlow, Roma Sotterranea). He also
built on the Via Ardeatina, between the cemeteries of Callistus and Domitilla, a basilicula,
or small church, the ruins of which were discovered in 1902 and 1903, and in which,
according to the "Liber Pontificalis", the pope was buried with his mother and
sister. On this occasion the discoverer, Monsignor Wilpert, found also the epitaph of the
pope's mother, from which it was learned not only that her name was Laurentia, but also
that she had lived the sixty years of her widowhood in the special service of God, and
died in her eighty-ninth year, having seen the fourth generation of her descendants.
Damasus built at the Vatican a baptistery in honour of St. Peter and set up therein one of
his artistic inscriptions (Carmen xxxvi), still preserved in the Vatican crypts. This
subterranean region he drained in order that the bodies buried there (juxta sepulcrum
beati Petri) might not be affected by stagnant or overflowing water. His extraordinary
devotion to the Roman martyrs is now well known, owing particularly to the labours of
Giovanni Battista De Rossi. For a good account of his architectural restoration of the
catacombs and the unique artistic characters (Damasan Letters) in which his friend Furius
Dionysius Filocalus executed the epitaphs composed by Damasus, see Northcote and Brownlow,
"Roma Sotterranea" (2nd ed., London, 1878-79). The dogmatic content of the
Damasan epitaphs (tituli) is important (Northcote, Epitaphs of the Catacombs,
London, 1878). He composed also a number of brief epigrammata on various martyrs
and saints and some hymns, or Carmina, likewise brief. St. Jerome says (Ep. xxii,
22) that Damasus wrote on virginity, both in prose and in verse, but no such work has been
preserved. For the few letters of Damasus (some of them spurious) that have survived, see
P.L., XIII, 347-76, and Jaffé, "Reg. Rom. Pontif." (Leipzig, 1885), nn.
232-254.
THOMAS J. SHAHAN
The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume IV
Copyright © 1908 by Robert Appleton Company
Online Edition Copyright © 1999 by Kevin Knight
Nihil Obstat. Remy Lafort, Censor
Imprimatur. +John M. Farley, Archbishop of New York