No. He was a Roman Emperor.
There was a Pope Constantine, who reigned from 708-715. He was the only pope to use the name "Constantine."
Pope Constantine became Pope on March 25, 708 C.E. Do not confuse Pope Constantine with the Roman Emperor Constantine the Great (ca. 272-337).
Pope Constantine was born in 664.
Roman Emperor Constantine the Great supported both.
During the reign of Constantine I (the Great, 306-337) the popes were: Marcellus I (308-309), Eusebius (309-310) Miltiades (311-314), Sylvester I (314-335), Mark (330), and Julius I (337-352). Between 304 and 308 there was an interregnum, a period where there was not a pope.
Pope Constantine died on 715-04-09.
A:Lorenzo Valla proved the Donation of Constantine, by which Emperor Constantine supposedly granted great wealth and power to Pope Sylvester and his successors, to be a forgery in the fifteenth century.
No, Constantine the Great ordered the construction of the first Saint Peter's Basilica. The Vatican was established with the signing of the Lateran Treaty between Pope Pius XI and Benito Mussolini in 1929.
Well that depends on your definition of what a Pope is. If you mean the head of The Catholic Church that was since Saint Peter even though Protestants deny this, it was certainly not Constantine, nor influenced by Constantine, when the title of Pope first apears is less clear, some say it comes from the second century A.D. but the first contemporary source to use the title was of Pope Damascus I who lived after Constantine.
No, there were no popes at the time of Constantine. Constantine moved the capital because of economic and logistical reasons. The eighth-century forgery now known as the Donation of Constantine claimed that Constantine moved his imperial capital to the east, in order to grant the pope temporal power in the west. However, nothing in this document was true.
Constantine the Great was born on February 27, 272.
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