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Flavius Honorius

 
Saints: Honorius

Honorius (d. 653), archbishop of Canterbury. He came to England in 601, one of the second band of Roman missionaries to Kent. He succeeded Justus as archbishop in 627, being consecrated at Lincoln by Paulinus. He received the pallium from Pope Honorius with the instruction that when one archbishop died, the other would consecrate his successor. During his twenty-five years' rule he consolidated the work of conversion by sending the Burgundian Felix to evangelize East Anglia. He received the exiled Paulinus to the see of Rochester after the disastrous battle of Hatfield Chase (634). He lived to see the apostolate of Aidan in Northumbria, the replacement of Birinus of Wessex by Agilbert, the conversion of Peada and the Middle Angles, and the arrival of the young Wilfrid in Kent on his way to Rome. Honorius, like his predecessors, was buried at Canterbury in the monastery of SS. Peter and Paul (later St. Augustine's), the centre of his cult. He is mentioned in the Roman and other martyrologies. Feast: 30 September.

Bibliography
Click here for a list of abbreviations used in this bibliography.

  • Bede, H. E., ii. 15–18; iii. 14, 20, 25; v. 19
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Archaeology Dictionary: Flavius Honorius
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Emperor of the western Roman empire from ad 395 and widely recognized as one of the least effective holders of that title. During his reign Britain, Spain, and parts of Gaul were lost to the empire and Rome itself was captured by Alaric. Honorius was the son of Theodosius the Great.

 
Columbia Encyclopedia: Honorius
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Honorius, 384-423, Roman emperor of the West (395-423). On the death (395) of Theodosius I, the Roman Empire was divided; Arcadius, the elder son, received the East, and Honorius, the younger son, received the West. This division proved to be a permanent one. The general Stilicho, as guardian of Honorius, at first controlled the government of the West and defended the empire against the Visigoths. Honorius married (398) Stilicho's daughter, but in 408, influenced by a malicious favorite, Honorius ordered the execution of his general. Alaric I, king of the Visigoths, invaded Italy again in 409 and installed a puppet ruler at Rome, while Honorius remained at Ravenna. Negotiations with Alaric were mishandled by Honorius; infuriated, Alaric stormed and sacked Rome in 410. Alaric's death left Ataulf in command of the Visigoths, who then left Italy to invade Gaul. In 412, Honorius made peace with Ataulf, whom he reluctantly accepted (414) as husband for his sister Galla Placidia. A rival emperor, Constantine, was defeated (411) by Honorius' general Constantius, who soon exercised the actual power and who married (417) the widowed Galla Placidia. In 421, Honorius was obliged to accept Constantius as joint emperor (see Constantius III), but Constantius died in the same year. Honorius died two years later; after a usurper was put down by forces from the East, the son of Galla Placidia and Constantius became (425) emperor as Valentinian III. The weak reign of Honorius marked an important stage in the decline of the Western Empire.
Dictionary: Ho·no·ri·us   (hō-nôr'ē-əs, -nōr'-) pronunciation, Flavius
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A.D. 384-423.

Roman emperor of the West (395-423). During his reign the decline of the empire became irreversible.


 
 

 

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