Syagrius

Syagrius (fl. 590s) was bishop of Autun in Gaul and appears 7 times in this collection as a recipient of Pope Gregory the Great's letters. Gregory's correspondence with Syagrius dealt with church reform in Gaul, the suppression of simony, and Gregory's broader agenda of bringing the Frankish church under closer Roman oversight. The letters to Syagrius are significant because they document Gregory's efforts to reform the Merovingian church — a project that required working through sympathetic local bishops who could navigate the complicated politics of Frankish Gaul. Syagrius appears to have been one of Gregory's most cooperative contacts in the region. These letters reveal the long reach of Gregory's reform program and the practical challenges of exercising papal authority in territories governed by Germanic kings.
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Letters sent
9
Letters received
9
Total letters
2
Correspondents

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All letters (9)

From Sidonius Apollinarisc. 467
sidonius apollinaris #5
From Sidonius Apollinarisc. 467
sidonius apollinaris #8
From Pope Gregory the Greatc. 599

Gregory to Syagrius of Augustodunum (Autun), Etherius of Lugdunum (Lyons), Virgilius of Aretale (Arles), and Desiderius of Vienna (Vienne), bishops of Gaul. A paribus. Our Head, which is Christ, has to this end willed us to be His members, that through the bond of charity and faith He might make us one body in Himself.

gregory great #9106
From Pope Gregory the Greatc. 599

Gregory to Syagrius, Bishop of Augustodunum (Autun). Mistress of all good things is charity, which savours of nothing extraneous, nothing rough, nothing confused; which so exercises and strengthens hearts that nothing is heavy, nothing difficult, but all that is done becomes sweet. Since, then, it is its peculiar quality to foster things that ar...

gregory great #9108
From Pope Gregory the Greatc. 599

Gregory to Virgilius, Bishop of Arelate (Arles), and Syagrius, Bishop of Augustodunum (Autun). The nature of the office committed to me, dearest brethren, drives me to break out into a cry of grief, and to sharpen your love with the anxiety of charity, for that it is said that you in your parts have been too negligent and remiss, where the recti...

gregory great #9114
From Pope Gregory the Greatc. 599

If in secular affairs every man should have his right and his proper rank preserved to him, how much more in ecclesiastical arrangements ought no confusion to be let in; lest discord should find place there, whence the blessings of peace should proceed. And this will in this way be secured, if nothing is yielded to power but all to equity. Now i...

gregory great #9115
From Pope Gregory the Greatc. 601

Many good things having been reported to us with regard to your pursuits, such joy arose in our heart that we could not bear to refuse what your Fraternity had requested to have granted to you. But it afterwards came to our ears, what we cannot mention without shame, that your Fraternity is in the habit of expounding grammar to certain persons. ...

gregory great #11054
From Pope Gregory the Greatc. 601

The language of your epistles, full of venerable gravity, has so engaged our heart's affection that it would please us to be ever mingling mutual discourse, to the end that, if we cannot enjoy your bodily presence, absence may make no difference with us while this intercourse goes on between us. For how great love of ecclesiastical order shines ...

gregory great #11056
From Pope Gregory the Greatc. 601

[To Virgilius, Bishop of Arelate (Arles).] Gregory to Virgilius, etc. What affection should be bestowed on brethren who come to us of their own accord is apparent from the fact that they are usually invited to visit us for the sake of charity. And so, if our common brother the bishop Augustine should chance to come to you, let your Love, as is f...

gregory great #11068