Antoninus

Antoninus (fl. 400s–410s) was a bishop in North Africa and one of Augustine's correspondents on matters of church discipline and pastoral practice. He appears 9 times in this collection as a recipient of Augustine's letters. Augustine's letters to Antoninus deal with the practical challenges of running a North African diocese in the early fifth century — managing clerical disputes, handling questions of church discipline, and navigating the complex ecclesiastical politics of a region divided by the Donatist schism. They offer a ground-level view of the administrative work that consumed most of a bishop's time. Antoninus is significant as a representative of the ordinary bishops who formed the backbone of the African church — men whose names history barely remembers but who did the daily work of keeping a complex institution running in difficult times.
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Letters sent
9
Letters received
9
Total letters
1
Correspondents

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All letters (9)

From Augustine of Hippoc. 389

1. As letters are due to you by two of us, a part of our debt is repaid with very abundant usury when you see one of the two in person; and since by his voice you, as it were, hear my own, I might have refrained from writing, had I not been called to do it by the urgent request of the very person whose journey to you seemed to me to make this un...

augustine hippo #20
From Augustine of Hippoc. 392

1. Last year I sent by the hand of our brother, the subdeacon Asterius, a letter conveying to your Excellency a salutation due to you, and readily rendered by me; and I think that my letter was delivered to you. I now write again, by my holy brother the deacon Præsidius, begging you in the first place not to forget me, and in the second place to...

augustine hippo #39
From Augustine of Hippoc. 397

1. When my kinsman, our holy son Asterius, subdeacon, was just on the point of beginning his journey, the letter of your Grace arrived, in which you clear yourself of the charge of having sent to Rome a book written against your humble servant. I had not heard that charge; but by our brother Sysinnius, deacon, copies of a letter addressed by som...

augustine hippo #68
From Augustine of Hippoc. 398

1. You are sending me letter upon letter, and often urging me to answer a certain letter of yours, a copy of which, without your signature, had reached me through our brother Sysinnius, deacon, as I have already written, which letter you tell me that you entrusted first to our brother Profuturus, and afterwards to some one else; but that Profutu...

augustine hippo #72
From Augustine of Hippoc. 398

Jerome's answer to Letters 28, 40 and 71. To Augustine, My Lord Truly Holy, and Most Blessed Father, Jerome Sends Greeting in Christ. 1.

augustine hippo #75
From Augustine of Hippoc. 399

Having anxiously inquired of our holy brother Firmus regarding your state, I was glad to hear that you are well. I expected him to bring, or, I should rather say, I insisted upon his giving me, a letter from you; upon which he told me that he had set out from Africa without communicating to you his intention. I therefore send to you my respectfu...

augustine hippo #81
From Augustine of Hippoc. 405
augustine hippo #20
From Augustine of Hippoc. 405

Source. Translated by J.G. Cunningham.

augustine hippo #117
From Augustine of Hippoc. 406

There are many who go halting upon both feet, and refuse to bend their heads even when their necks are broken, persisting in adherence to their former errors, even though they have not their former liberty of proclaiming them. Respectful salutations are sent to you by the holy brethren who are with your humble servant, and especially by your pio...

augustine hippo #123