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Pope Sisinnius (died 4 February 708) was the bishop of Rome from 15 January 708 to his death on 4 February 708. Besides being Syrian and his father being named John, little is known of Sisinnius' early life or career. At the time of his election to the papal throne, Sisinnius suffered from severe gout, leaving him weak. During the course of his twenty-day papacy, Sisinnius consecrated a bishop for Corsica and ordered the reinforcement of the walls surrounding the papal capital of Rome. On his death, Sisinnius was buried in Old St. Peter's Basilica. He was succeeded by Pope Constantine.

BackgroundEdit

ReligiousEdit

Template:Further information In the late fifth century, the churches of the East and West were divided over the monophysite controversy, the East largely accepting that Jesus Christ's divine nature overshadowed his human nature, and the West (under the guidance of the 451 Council of Chalcedon) believing in a hypostatic union.Template:Sfn The Eastern Byzantine emperors sought a theological compromise to hold their domains together, but the popes in Rome (the papal capital) suspected them of harboring heretical sympathies and accordingly attempted to resist imperial claims of dominance over the Church.Template:Sfn By the time of Pope Martin I (Template:Reign), East–West relations had become incredibly strained;Template:Sfn by the late seventh century, as the historian Eamon Duffy describes, "[t]he requirement that the pope[s] should wait for confirmation of their appointment from Constantinople before they could be considered was waived, the Exarch at Ravenna [the Byzantine representative in the Italian Peninsula] being empowered to issue the necessary mandate".Template:Sfn

The role of the pope in the time of Sisinnius, and the first millennium as a whole, was limited to that of a mediator. As the theologian Richard McBrien explains, the popes were not able to appoint all bishops, nor were they able to "govern the universal Church". They also did not publish encyclicals or catechisms, and were not able to canonize saints or convene ecumenical councils.Template:Sfn

PoliticalEdit

Template:Further information The centuries preceding the reign of Sisinnius were characterized by external intervention in the selection of the pope. The eastern Byzantine Empire nominated men of the Roman aristocracy to the office; the Italian Ostrogothic kingdom chose members of the provincial aristocracy. As the historian Jeffrey Richards explains, "[t]he reasons for this are both political and social". The monarchs of both states relied on the support of the groups they installed on the papal throne.Template:Sfn The seventh century saw a shift in the geographical origins of the popes: only eight out of twenty-seven popes between 604 and 752 were Roman,Template:Efn compared to the figure of eleven out of seventeen from 483 to 604.Template:Sfn The change has its origins in the restoration of Byzantine dominion over Italy under Justinian I (Template:Reign), which saw the phasing out of the Roman senate as an institution as senatorial families were either executed or fled to the East.Template:Sfn During the Ostrogothic kingdom's rule over Rome from the late-fifth to the mid-sixth century, the senate held major sway over the selection of new popes, but following the imperial reconquest, control over the papal throne was no longer in its hands. Instead, the election of the pope was left to the clergy of Rome, the city's people, and the Imperial military garrison.Template:Sfn Richards argues that before the fall of the Western Roman Empire in 476 and after the rise of the Holy Roman Empire in Italy in 752, the "prestige, power and influence" of the pope was augmented under the protection of the imperial powers, and notes the papacy's growth in power during the sixth and seventh centuries.Template:Sfn

Sisinnius' predecessor, John VII (Template:Reign) was installed as the bishop of Rome the same year that the Byzantine emperor Justinian II (Template:Reign) was restored to his throne.Template:Sfn Shortly after regaining power, the latter sent several decrees of canon law from the 692 Quinisext Council to John, any of which he could approve or reject. Out of worry of displeasing the Emperor, the Pope sent the decrees back to Justinian unchanged.Template:Sfn The issue of the Quinisext canons continued into the reign of Sisinnius' successor, Constantine, who travelled to Constantinople in 711 to negotiate with the East over the matter.Template:Sfn

Life and papacyEdit

File:ByzantineEmpire717+extrainfo+themes.svg
The Duchy of Rome (numbered 3) within the Byzantine Empire in Sisinnius' time

Little information about Sisinnius before his election to the papal throne is extant.Template:Sfn Much of what is known about him is deduced from four lines of the {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} (Template:Langx), a collection of papal biographies.Template:Sfn The historian Jean Durliat stated that "[t]he concision of his biography may be interpreted as the result of aversion to him on the part of the Roman clergy, or perhaps a reflection of the absence of anomaly in an ecclesiastical career that led naturally to the pontificate".Template:Sfn By birth, Sisinnius was Syrian and his father was named John.Template:Sfn Sisinnius was respected for his upright, moral disposition and concern for the people of Rome, politically and militarily part of the Exarchate of Ravenna.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Like many of his immediate predecessors, he was likely not a member of the upper class, as indicated by the paucity of donations of gold and silver during his pontificate and the pontificates of the popes between him and Pope Honorius I in the seventh century.Template:Sfn

Sisinnius was elected to become the bishop of Rome, likely in October 707, and was consecrated on 15 January 708;Template:Sfn the nearly three-month delay was due to a wait for confirmation of Sisinnius' election by the exarch of Ravenna.Template:Sfn By the time of his election, Sisinnius was ridden with gout and could not feed himself using his hands.Template:Sfn He was one of many such early medieval popes who were elderly,Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn which Richards explains by saying that "[o]ld age in the popes generally also betokened experience" in either administrative or spiritual tasks, which the electorate would have taken into consideration when choosing a new pope.Template:Sfn During his reign, Sisinnius consecrated a bishop for Corsica. He also ordered the preparation of lime so that the walls surrounding the city of Rome, which by then were in poor condition due to past attacks, could be reinforced.Template:Sfn The task was never executed, as Sisinnius died in Rome on 4 February after a reign of twenty days.Template:Sfn He was buried in the left nave of Old St. Peter's Basilica; his tomb was destroyed in the 17th century during the Basilica's demolition.Template:Sfn The next pope elected was Constantine, another Syrian,Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn who was consecrated on 25 March 708.Template:Sfn

NotesEdit

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ReferencesEdit

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SourcesEdit

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