Caecina Decius Maximus Basilius

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Caecina Decius Maximus Basilius
Bargello diptych detail.jpg
Detail of consular diptych depicting Basilius
NationalityRoman
Years activefl. 480–483
OfficeConsul (480)
Praetorian prefect of Italy (483)
Political partyGreens
ChildrenAlbinus, Avienus, Inportunus, Theodorus

Caecina Decius Maximus Basilius (fl. 480–483), was a Roman politician. He was the first consul appointed under Odoacer's rule (480), and afterwards was Praetorian prefect of Italy.[1] He is best known for presiding over the papal election of Pope Felix III.

Life[]

A member of the gens Decia, Basilius was the son of Caecina Decius Basilius, one of the two consuls of 463. He had four sons, all of whom attained consular rank: Albinus in 493 (presumably the first consul nominated by Theodoric the Great), Avienus in 501, Theodorus in 505, and Inportunus in 509.[2] He was the first consul appointed from Rome since Rufius Postumius Festus eight years before.

As leader of the Roman Senate and chief minister to king Odoacer, and patron to the Greens, Basilius was one of the most powerful men in post-Imperial Rome.[3] As a result, Basilius played a major role in the papal election of 483, being the beneficiary of an issued by Pope Simplicius that gave him veto power over the election of Simplicius' successor. When it was clear Simplicius was on his deathbed, Basilius convened a meeting of the Roman Senate, the local clergy and leading local bishops at the to elect the next Pope, Felix.[3] At the same council, an ecclesiastical law was promulgated which forbade the alienation of ecclesiastical property by future popes.[4]

The proceedings of a Roman synod of 501 indicate that he was dead by that date, and a passage of Cassiodorus shows that his death occurred before his sons reached adulthood, leaving their mother in charge of running the household.[1]

References[]

  1. ^ a b John Moorhead, "The Decii under Theoderic", Historia: Zeitschrift für Alte Geschichte, 33 (1984), p. 107
  2. ^ Cassiodorus, Variae III.6.2; translated by S.J.B. Barnish, Cassiodorus: Variae (Liverpool: University press, 1992), p. 50
  3. ^ a b Jeffrey Richards, The Popes and the Papacy in the Early Middle Ages (London: Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1979), p. 58
  4. ^ Richards, Popes and the papacy, p. 59
Political offices
Preceded by Roman consul
480
Succeeded by
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