Siddhesh Joshi (Editor)

Pope Anterus

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Papacy began
  
21 November 235

Name
  
Pope Anterus

Term ended
  
January 3, 236 AD

Feast day
  
3 January

Predecessor
  
Pope Pontian

Birth name
  
Anterus

Successor
  
Pope Fabian

Papacy ended
  
3 January 236

Role
  
Bishop of Rome


Pope Anterus httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsaa


Died
  
January 3, 236 AD, Rome, Italy

Similar People
  
Pope Pius I, Pope Lucius I, Pope Urban I, Pope Sixtus I, Pope Eutychian

Pope Anterus | Wikipedia audio article


Pope Anterus (died 3 January 236) was the Bishop of Rome from 21 November 235 to his death in 236. He succeeded Pope Pontian, who had been deported from Rome to Sardinia, along with the antipope Hippolytus.

Contents

Anterus was the son of Romulus, born in Petilia Policastro, Calabria. He is thought to have been of Greek origin, and his name may indicate that he was a freed slave. He created one bishop, for the city of Fondi.

Martyrdom

Some scholars believe he was martyred, because he ordered greater strictness in searching into the acts of the martyrs, exactly collected by the notaries appointed by Pope Saint Clement I. Other scholars doubt this and believe it is more likely that he died in undramatic circumstances during the persecutions of Emperor Maximinus the Thracian.

Tomb

He was buried in the papal crypt of the Catacomb of Callixtus, on the Appian Way in Rome. The site of his sepulchre was discovered by Giovanni Battista de Rossi in 1854, with some broken remnants of the Greek epitaph engraved on the narrow oblong slab that closed his tomb; only the Greek term for bishop was legible.

His ashes had been removed to the Church of Saint Sylvester in the Campus Martius and were discovered on 17 November 1595, when Pope Clement VIII rebuilt that church.

References

Pope Anterus Wikipedia