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cause he refused to deny the Nicene faith, under the name of Athanasius; 2. showing marvelous constancy and a spirit ready for martyrdom , he wrote a work Against Constantius the Emperor and sent it to him to read,5 and not much later he returned in the time of the emperor Julian, and died in Cagliari in the reign of Valentinianus .6 notes 1. See Eus., Chron., 355 a.d., ed. Helm, 239I, trans. Donalson, 47–48. 2. For Liberius, ordained the thirty-fourth bishop of Rome, cf. Chron., a.d. 349, ed. Helm, 237b; LThK 63 (1997), 894–95, G. Schwaiger. 3. EEC 12 , 286–87, art., “Constantius II,” R. M. Grant; EECh 1, 198, M. Forlin Patrucco; M. M. Mudd, Studies in the Reign of Constantius II (New York, 1989). 4. Exiled by Constantius, 355–361. The occasion was the Council of Milan ; see Eus., Chron., a.d. 355, ed. Helm, 239I, trans. Donalson, 47–48. 5. I. Opelt, “Formen der Polemik bei Lucifer von Calaris,” VigChr 26 (1972): 200–226. 6. Return from exile: Chron., a.d. 362, ed. Helm, 242e, trans. Donalson, 50. His death: Chron., a.d. 370 (ed. Helm, 246a), trans. Donalson, 53: “like Gregory, a bishop in Spain, and Philo of Libya, he never joined himself to the Arian depravity.” references Q 4, 61–65 — CPL 112–118 — Cath 7, 1250–51, J. Liébaert — DSp 6, 923 — EEC 22 , 697, M. P. McHugh — EECh 2, M. Simonetti — LThK 63 , 1083–84, C. Kannengiesser — LThK 23 , 882–83, art., “Cagliari,” M. Lupi — HLL 8, 5, 486–91 XCVI. EUSEBIUS, ANOTHER BISHOP usebius, whose place of origin was Sardinia, was a lector in the city of Rome. He was bishop of Vercelli.1 He was exiled for his profession of faith to Scythopolis and from there to Cappadocia by the emperor Constantius.2 128 ST. JEROME ...

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