St. Paulinus of Nola
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Paulinus of Nola (; la, Paulinus Nolanus; also Anglicized as Pauline of Nola; – 22 June 431) born Pontius Meropius Anicius Paulinus, was a Roman Empire, Roman Roman poetry, poet, writer, and Roman senate, senator who attained the ranks of suffect consul () and Roman governor, governor of Campania (–81) but—following the assassination of the list of Roman emperors, emperor Gratian and under the influence of his Roman Spain, Spanish wife Therasia of Nola—abandoned his career, was baptized as a Christianity in the Roman Empire, Christian, and probably after Therasia's death became bishop of Nola in Campania. While there, he wrote poems in honor of his predecessor Felix of Nola, St Felix and corresponded with other Christian leaders throughout the Roman Empire, empire. He is credited with the introduction of Altar bell, bells to Christian liturgy, Christian worship and helped resolve the disputed election of Pope Boniface I. His renunciation of his wealth and station in favor of an ascetic and philanthropic life was held up as an example by many of his contemporaries—including  Augustine of Hippo, Augustine, Jerome, Martin of Tours, Martin, and Ambrose—and he was subsequently venerated as a Christian saint, saint. His relics became a focus of Christian pilgrimage, pilgrimage, but were removed from Nola sometime between the 11th and 20th centuries. His calendar of the saints, feast day is observed on 22 June in both the Roman Catholic Church, Roman Catholic and Eastern Orthodox Churches. In Nola, the entire week around his feast day is celebrated as the Festival of the Lilies.


Life

Pontius Meropius Paulinus was born at Bordeaux, in southwestern France. He was from a notable Roman senate, senatorial family with estates in the Aquitaine province of France, northern Iberia, and southern Italy. Paulinus was a kinsman of Melania the Elder. He was educated in Bordeaux, where his teacher, the poet Ausonius, also became his friend. At some time during his boyhood he made a visit to the shrine of St Felix at Nola near Naples.Löffler, Klemens "St. Paulinus, Bishop of Nola". ''The Catholic Encyclopedia''
Vol. 11. New York: Robert Appleton Company, 1911.
His normal career as a young member of the senatorial class did not last long. In 375, the Emperor Gratian succeeded his father Valentinian I, Valentinian. Gratian made Paulinus suffect consul at Rome , and appointed him governor of the southern Italian province of Campania . Paulinus noted the Campanians' devotion to Saint Felix of Nola and built a road for pilgrims, as well as a hospice for the poor near the local shrine."St. Paulinus of Nola"
Catholic News Agency
In 383 Gratian was assassinated at Lyon, France, and Paulinus went to Milan to attend the school of Ambrose.Pope Benedict XVI (December 19, 2007)
"St. Paulinus of Nola"
''L'Osservatore Romano'', p. 15]
Around 384 he returned to Bordeaux. There he married Therasia of Nola, Therasia, a Christian noblewoman from Barcelona. Paulinus was threatened with the charge of having murdered his brother. It is possible that an attempt was made to accuse him in order to confiscate his property. He was baptized by Bishop Delphinus of Bordeaux. He and his wife traveled to Iberia about 390. When they lost their only child eight days after birth they decided to withdraw from the world, and live a secluded religious life. Paulinus was close to both Pelagius and to the Pelagian writer Julian of Eclanum. In 393 or 394, after some resistance from Paulinus, he was ordained a presbyter on Christmas Day by Lampius, Bishop of Barcelona.Otto Bardenhewer, Bardenhewer, Otto. Translated by Thomas J. Shahan (2006). ''Patrology: The Lives and Works of the Fathers of the Church''. Kessinger Publishing. p.447. (This was similar to what had happened with Augustine of Hippo, St. Augustine of Hippo, who had been ordained against his protestations in the year 391 at the behest of a crowd cooperating with Bishop Valerius in the north African city of Hippo Regius.) However, there is some debate as to whether the ordination was canonical, since Paulinus received ordination "at a leap" (''per saltum''), without receiving minor orders first. Paulinus refused to remain in Barcelona, and in late spring of 395 he and his wife moved from Iberia to Nola in Campania where he remained until his death. Paulinus credited his conversion to St. Felix, who was buried in Nola, and each year would write a poem in honor of the saint. The great building works undertaken by Paulinus in 402-403 were the crowning glory and ornament of the renovated Nola. He restored and improved the ancient basilica erected in the martyr's honour. He and Therasia of Nola, Therasia also rebuilt a church commemorating St. Felix, of great size and richly decorated, a monument of Christian art, with magnificent porticoes and fountains, for which a copious supply of water was brought from nearby Avella. Great crowds of pilgrims flocked to the martyr's tomb. In January 406 following the peace after the defeat of Radagaisus, Paulinus invited a circle of guests including Melania the Younger and her husband and mother (Albina) and many other christians such as the Bishop of Beneventum, and where Melania wished to stay with all her household, though she left before 408. During these years Paulinus engaged in considerable epistolary dialogue with Jerome, St. Jerome among others about monastic topics. "Paulinus decided to invest his money for the poor and the church rather than rejecting it completely, which stands in contrast to other more severe contemporary views such as Jerome's". Therasia died some time between 408 and 410, and shortly afterwards Paulinus received episcopal ordination. Around 410, Paulinus was chosen Bishop of Nola, where he served for twenty years. Like a growing number of aristocrats in the late 4th and early 5th centuries who were entering the clergy rather than taking up the more usual administrative careers in the imperial service, Paulinus spent a great deal of his money on his chosen church, city and Christian liturgy, ritual. Paulinus died at Nola on 22 June 431. The following year the presbyter Uranus wrote his "On the Death of Paulinus" ('), an account of the death and character of the saint.


Influence

As bishop of Nola, Paulinus is traditionally credited with the introduction of the use of Altar bell, bells in church services. One form of medieval handbell was known as the ' and medieval steeple bells were known as ''s'' from this supposed origin. However, Dr. Adolf Buse, professor at the Seminary of Cologne, showed that the use of bells in churches, an invention credited to Paulinus by tradition, is not due to him, nor even to the town of Nola. Already during his governorship Paulinus had developed a fondness for the 3rd-century martyr, St. Felix of Nola. Felix was a minor saint of local importance and patronage whose tomb had been built within the local necropolis at Cimitile, just outside the town of Nola. As governor, Paulinus had widened the road to Cimitile and built a residence for travelers; it was at this site that Paulinus and Therasia of Nola, Therasia took up residence. Nearby were a number of small chapels and at least one old basilica. Paulinus rebuilt the complex, constructing a brand new basilica to Felix and gathering to him a small monastic community. Paulinus wrote an annual hymn (''natalicium'') in honor of St. Felix for the feast day when processions of pilgrims were at their peak. In these hymns we can understand the personal relationship Paulinus felt between himself and Felix, his advocate in heaven. His poetry shares with much of the work of the early 5th century an ornateness of style that classicists of the 18th and 19th centuries found cloying and dismissed as decadent, though Paulinus' poems were highly regarded at the time and used as educational models. Many of Paulinus's letters to his contemporaries, including Ausonius and Sulpicius Severus in southern Gaul, Victricius of Rouen in northern Gaul, and Augustine in Africa, are preserved. Four letters from Paulinus to Augustine survive, and eight from Augustine to Paulinus. In one, Augustine invites Paulinus to visit Africa. As a publishing technique at that time, Augustine often sent copies of his works to Paulinus, to be copied and circulated in Italy. Paulinus may have been indirectly responsible for Augustine's ''Confessions'': Paulinus wrote to Alypius of Thagaste, Alypius, Bishop of Tagaste, Thagaste and a close friend of Augustine of Hippo, St. Augustine, asking about his conversion and taking up of the ascetic life. Alypius's autobiographical response does not survive; St. Augustine's ostensible answer to that query is the ''Confessions''. Paulinus also wrote five letters to Delphinus and six to Amandus of Bordeaux. "Paulinus' surviving letters and poems, many devoted to the feast day of Felix, reveal his attitudes and values, illuminate his social and spiritual relationships, preserve vivid traces of the literary and aesthetic evolution of Latin literature under the influence of Christian ideas, and document the emergence of the late antique cult of the saints." We know about his buildings in honor of St. Felix from literary and archaeological evidence, especially from his long letter to Sulpicius Severus describing the arrangement of the building and its decoration. He includes a detailed description of the apse mosaic over the main altar and gives the text for a long inscription he had written to be put on the wall under the image. By explaining how he intended the visitors to understand the image over the altar, Paulinus provided rare insight into the intentions of a patron of art in the later Empire. He explained his project in a Poem dedicated to another great catechist, St Nicetas of Remesiana, as he accompanied him on a visit to his basilicas: "I now want you to contemplate the paintings that unfold in a long series on the walls of the painted porticos. ... It seemed to us useful to portray sacred themes in painting throughout the house of Felix, in the hope that when the peasants see the painted figure, these images will awaken interest in their astonished minds." In later life Paulinus, by then a highly respected church authority, participated in multiple church synods investigating various ecclesiastical controversies of the time, including Pelagianism.


Legend

Gregory the Great recounts a popular story that alleges that when the Vandals raided Campania, a poor widow came to Paulinus for help when her only son had been carried off by the son-in-law of the Vandal king. Having exhausted his resources in ransoming other captives, Paulinus said, "Such as I have I give thee", and went to Africa to exchange places with the widow's son. There Paulinus was accepted in place of the widow's son, and employed as gardener. After a time the king found out that his son-in-law's slave was the great Bishop of Nola. He at once set him free, granting him also the freedom of all the captive townsmen of Nola. According to Pope Benedict XVI, "the historical truth of this episode is disputed, but the figure of a Bishop with a great heart who knew how to make himself close to his people in the sorrowful trials of the barbarian invasions lives on."


Relics

About 800 Prince Grimoald III of Benevento removed Paulinus's bones as relics. From the 11th century they rested at the church of Saint Adalbert, now Saint Bartholomew, on the Tiber Island, island in the Tiber in Rome. In 1908 Pope Pius X permitted them to be translation (relics), translated to the new cathedral at Nola, where they were reinterred on 15 May 1909. The bones are now found in the small Sicily, Sicilian city of Sutera, where they dedicate a feast day, and conduct a procession for the saint at Easter each year.


Modern devotion to St. Paulinus

The people of modern-day Nola and the surrounding regions remain devoted to St. Paulinus. His feast day is celebrated annually in Nola during ''"La Festa dei Gigli"'' (the Feast of the Lilies), in which Gigli and several large statues in honor of the saint, placed on towers, are carried upon the shoulders of the faithful around the city. In the United States the descendants of Italian immigrants from Nola and Brusciano continue the tradition in Williamsburg, Brooklyn#Feast of St. Paulinus and Our Lady of Mount Carmel, Brooklyn. This proud tradition is also kept alive in East Harlem, held on Giglio Way by the Giglio Society of East Harlem and on Long Island in Franklin Square with the Sons of San Paulino di Nola. Saint Paulinus is also venerated in the Eastern Orthodox Church, his feast day commemorated on 23 January.


References


Bibliography

* Ausonius, & Paulinus of Nola, ''Ausone et Paulin de Nole : Correspondance'', tr. D. Amherdt (2004) [Latin text ; French translation]. Introduction, Latin text, French translation & notes. Bern: Peter Lang Publ., 2004 (Sapheneia, Beiträge zur Klassischen Philologie ; 9) VII, 247 p. * Paulinus Nolanus, ''Carmina'', ed. F. Dolveck (2015) (''Corpus Christianorum. Series Latina'', 21), Turnhout: Brepols Publishers () * Paulinus of Nola, ''Sancti Pontii Meropii Paulini Nolani Opera'', ed. G. de Hartel (2nd. ed. cur. M. Kamptner, 2 vols., 1999) [v.1. Epistulae; v.2. Carmina. Latin texts] * Paulinus of Nola, ''Paolino di Nola I Carmi ...'', ed. A. Ruggiero (1996) * Paulinus of Nola, ''Paolino di Nola Le Lettere. Testo latino con introduzione, traduzione italiana ...'', ed. G. Santaniello (2 vols., 1992) * Paulinus of Nola, ''The Poems of Paulinus of Nola translated ... by )'', 1975 (Ancient Christian Writers, 40). * Paulinus of Nola, ''Letters of St Paulinus of Nola translated ... by P. G. Walsh'', 2 vols., 1966–7 (Ancient Christian Writers, 35—36). * Catherine Conybeare, ''Paulinus Noster Self and Symbols in the Letters of Paulinus of Nola'' (2000) * * —Chapter III of the Dialogues contains a long anecdote about Paulinus. * J. Morelli, ''De S. Paulini Nolani Doctrina Christologica'' (Theology Doctorate dissertation, Pontificia Facultas Theologica Neapolitana apud Majus Seminarium, ex Typographica Officina Forense, Neapoli, MCMXLV) * J. T. Lienhard, "Paulinus of Nola and Early Western Monasticism, with a study of the Chronology of His Work and an Annotated Bibliography," 1879–1976 (Theophaneia 28) (Köln-Bonn 1977), pp. 192–204; * C. Magazzù, 'Dieci anni di studi su Paolino di Nola' (1977–1987), in ''Bollettino di studi latini'' 18 (1988), pp. 84–103; * C. Iannicelli, 'Rassegna di studi paoliniani' (1980–1997), in ''Impegno e Dialogo'' 11 (1994–1996) [publish.1997], pp. 279–32
Rassegna Iannicelli


External links


Brooklyn Giglio "In honor of Our Lady of Mt Carmel and San Paulino di Nola"

Sons of San Paolino
of Pope Benedict XVI about Paulinus
Giglio USA

''San Paolino de Nola''Digitized codex
(1471–1484) that contains: ''Epistula de obitu Paulini'' by Uranius, ''Vita sancti Paulini'' by Pope Gregory I, ''Epistolae'' by Paulinus of Nola and fragments about the life of Paulinus of Nola, a
Somni
{{Authority control 354 births 431 deaths 4th-century Gallo-Roman people 4th-century Latin writers 5th-century Christian saints 5th-century Gallo-Roman people 5th-century Italian bishops 5th-century Latin writers 5th-century Roman poets Anicii Christian clerical marriage Church Fathers Correspondents of Jerome Gallo-Roman saints Latin letter writers Writers from Bordeaux Suffect consuls of Imperial Rome Clergy from Bordeaux