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Pope Mark

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Papacy began
  
18 January 336

Name
  
Pope Mark

Term ended
  
October 7, 336 AD

Feast day
  
7 October

Posthumous style
  
Saint

Birth name
  
Marcus

Predecessor
  
Pope Sylvester I

Papacy ended
  
7 October 336

Successor
  
Pope Julius I


Pope Mark staticnewworldencyclopediaorgcc2Marcuspapajpg

Died
  
October 7, 336 AD, Rome, Italy

Similar People
  
Pope Julius I, Pope Alexander I, Pope Felix III, Pope Felix IV, Pope Leo II

Pope Mark (Latin: Marcus; died 7 October 336) was Pope from 18 January to 7 October 336.

Pope Mark FilePope Markjpg Wikimedia Commons

Little is known of his early life. According to the Liber Pontificalis, he was a Roman, and his father's name was Priscus. Mark succeeded St. Sylvester as pope on 18 January 336. He held office only eight months and twenty days, dying on 7 October following.

Some evidence suggests that the early lists of bishops and martyrs known as the Depositio episcoporum and Depositio martyrum were begun during his pontificate. Per the Liber Pontificalis, Pope Mark issued a constitution investing the Bishop of Ostia with a pallium and confirming his power to consecrate newly elected popes. Also per the Liber Pontificalis, Pope Mark is credited with the foundation of the Basilica of San Marco in Rome, and a cemetery church over the Catacomb of Balbina, just outside the city on lands obtained as a donation from Emperor Constantine.

Mark died of natural causes and was buried in the catacomb of Balbina. In 1048 his remains were removed to the town of Velletri, and from 1145 were relocated to the Basilica of San Marco in Rome, where they are kept in an urn under the altar. His feast day is celebrated on 7 October.

References

Pope Mark Wikipedia