A New History of Christian Empire: Excavating Pope Sylvester’s Oratory, 1636

Author:

Di Manno Talia1

Affiliation:

1. Independent Researcher, Berkeley, CA 94720, USA

Abstract

This article examines how antiquarians in Rome used archaeological evidence—a site excavated from under the church of San Martino in Monti in 1636—to argue that Pope Sylvester (314–335) exercised spiritual and temporal authority over the Roman Empire. The document which had formed the bedrock of papal sovereignty, the Donation of Constantine, was shown to be a forgery in the early modern period. Protestant reformers pointed to the document’s contradictions to dismantle the Catholic Church’s claims that its preeminence originated in the privileges bestowed on Sylvester by the Emperor Constantine. I use archival materials and a history of the site published in 1639 to describe how antiquarians claimed that they found the house church of Sylvester, which he converted into a church after Constantine’s baptism and then used to host a Roman Council in 324 (before Nicaea). I offer a new perspective on Catholic confessional historiography by observing how antiquarians used material evidence to provide a foundation for early papal power in the Roman Empire, thereby bypassing the need for spurious documents such as the Donation. This new tradition, which lives on today despite modern archaeological critiques, illustrates the malleability of Catholic epistemologies and historiography in the wake of textual criticism.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Religious studies

Reference83 articles.

1. Andretta, Elisa (2011). Roma medica: Anatomie d’un système medical au XVI siècle, École française de Rome.

2. Antoniazzi, Giovanni (1985). Lorenzo Valla e la polemica sulla donazione di Costantino, Edizione di Storia e Letteratura.

3. Backus, Irena (2003). Historical Method and Confessional Identity in the Era of the Reformation, Brill.

4. Bahn, Paul (2014). The History of Archaeology, Routledge.

5. Baldriga, Irene (2002). L’occhio della Lince: I primi lincei tra arte, scienza, e collezionismo (1603–1630), Accademia Nazionale dei Lincei.

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