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Religious Intolerance in the Later Roman Empire - Bad request ...

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emphasis on local elites serv<strong>in</strong>g <strong>the</strong>ir council before <strong>the</strong>ir church. Ablabius was<br />

perhaps a little more strict with <strong>the</strong> clergy than Bassus s<strong>in</strong>ce he was <strong>in</strong>cl<strong>in</strong>ed to regulate<br />

<strong>the</strong>ir numbers more and Bassus was prepared to propose legislation protect<strong>in</strong>g <strong>the</strong><br />

clerics from be<strong>in</strong>g forced back <strong>in</strong>to councils.<br />

CTh. 16.2.7 of 5 February 330 to Valent<strong>in</strong>us, governor of Numidia was<br />

Constant<strong>in</strong>e's last law on <strong>the</strong> church. 24 Aga<strong>in</strong> it was concerned with exemptions from<br />

liturgies and <strong>in</strong>cluded among beneficiaries lesser clergy: “lectors of <strong>the</strong> div<strong>in</strong>e<br />

scriptures, subdeacons, and <strong>the</strong> o<strong>the</strong>r clerics.” By <strong>the</strong> “<strong>in</strong>justice of heretics” <strong>the</strong>y were<br />

be<strong>in</strong>g brought <strong>in</strong>to <strong>the</strong> councils, but <strong>in</strong> <strong>the</strong> future, “accord<strong>in</strong>g to <strong>the</strong> practice of <strong>the</strong><br />

Orient” <strong>the</strong>y were to be exempt from such service. 25 Corcoran <strong>in</strong>dicates that this law<br />

was related to <strong>the</strong> Donatist problem which is probably correct s<strong>in</strong>ce it is addressed to<br />

<strong>the</strong> governor of Numidia, but as with CTh. 16.2.1, <strong>the</strong> Donatists were not yet heretics,<br />

so a Catholic cleric may well have <strong>in</strong>fluence its composition.<br />

Most of <strong>the</strong> laws are <strong>the</strong>refore directed towards <strong>the</strong> establishment of <strong>the</strong><br />

Catholic Church and <strong>the</strong> privileged position that it enjoyed. Therefore, <strong>in</strong> general,<br />

<strong>the</strong>y were defensive and dealt with threats to <strong>the</strong> status of <strong>the</strong> Church that had come to<br />

<strong>the</strong> attention of <strong>the</strong> authorities, ra<strong>the</strong>r than be<strong>in</strong>g offensive attempts to prohibit or<br />

curtail <strong>the</strong> activities of o<strong>the</strong>r sects. The immunity for clerics from liturgies may<br />

possibly not have been conf<strong>in</strong>ed to Constant<strong>in</strong>e’s area of <strong>the</strong> empire; Corcoran<br />

<strong>in</strong>dicates <strong>the</strong> fact that s<strong>in</strong>ce clerics were later forced to perform liturgies <strong>in</strong> Lic<strong>in</strong>ius’<br />

m<strong>in</strong>or persecution of 322 <strong>the</strong>n presumably, he reasons, <strong>the</strong>re must have been a<br />

previous immunity which was <strong>the</strong>n abolished by Lic<strong>in</strong>ius. 26<br />

24 Corcoran (2000) 169; Marcus Aurelianus Val. Valent<strong>in</strong>us 12 PLRE 1.936<br />

25 div <strong>in</strong>orum apicum et hypodiaconi ceterique clerici, qui per <strong>in</strong> iuriam haereticorum ad curiam dev ocati sunt,<br />

absolv antur et de cetero ad sim ilitud<strong>in</strong>em orientis m <strong>in</strong>im e ad curias dev ocentur, sed im m unitate plenissim a<br />

potiantur<br />

26 Corcoran (2002) 284-5<br />

12

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