Priscus was a bishop of Lyon who exercised his office from 573 to sometime between 585 and 589.

History edit

Priscus succeeded Nizier of Lyon in 573. While his predecessor had advised Aetherius to take the diocese, King Gontran named Priscus instead.[1]

There is little information about Priscus' character, no evidence either of indignity, or of particular pastoral zeal. His metrical episcopal epitaph allows us to know that he came from the nobility and that he held political office before becoming a bishop.[2]

One of his rare known actions is the meeting of a provincial council in 583 in Lyon. Also present were the bishops Evantius of Vienne, Syagrius of Autun, Isice I of Grenoble, Isaac I of Valence, Eusebius of Mâcon, Agricola of Nevers and Veranus of Cavaillon. Among the decisions, the sixth and last canon decided to open at the expense of the bishop a leprosarium in each city.[3][4][5]

References edit

  1. ^ Bernard Berthod, Jacqueline Boucher, Bruno Galland, Régis Ladous et André Pelletier, Archevêques de Lyon, Lyon, éditions lyonnaises d'art et d'histoire, 2012, p.191
  2. ^ Jacques Gadille, René Fédou, Henri Hours et Bernard de Vregille, Histoire des diocèses de France, Lyon, Paris, Éditions Beauchesne, coll. « Histoire des diocèses France » (no 16), (april 1997), p.352
  3. ^ Charles Petouraud, « Les léproseries lyonnaises au Moyen Âge et à la Renaissance », Cahiers d'Histoire, t. VII-3, 1962, p. 425–464
  4. ^ Monumenta Germaniae Historica série in-4°. Leges. Sectio III. Concilia, vol I, p. 154.
  5. ^ Émile Poulat, « Gadille (Jacques) — Histoire des diocèses de France - Lyon », Archives de sciences sociales des religions, Persée, vol. 58, no 2, 1984, p. 259–260