[303:7] Cf. Thatcher and McNeal, No. 43.
[304:1] Richter, i., 200.
[304:2] Robinson, Readings, i., 120; Ogg, Source Book, § 14; Pertz, i., 136.
[305:1] Ogg, Source Book, § 14; Thatcher and McNeal, No. 6.
[305:2] Robinson, Readings, i., 122.
[305:3] Pertz, i., 293; Thatcher and McNeal, No. 44.
[305:4] Ib., No. 6; Robinson, Readings, i., 122; Migne, lxxi., 911. The title of "patrician" was introduced by Constantine. It was the name of a rank, not of an office, and was next to that of Emperor and consul. Hence it was usually conferred upon governors of the first class, and even upon barbarian chiefs whom the Emperor might wish to win. Thus, Odoacer, Theodoric, and Clovis had all received the title from the eastern court. Later it was even given to Mohammedan princes. It was very significant now that the Pope assumed the imperial right to confer it, because it was plainly an illegal usurpation. It made Pepin practically the viceroy of Italy and the protector of the Papacy. (See Smith and Cheetham.)
[306:1] Migne, lxxxix., 1004; see Robinson, Readings, i., 122; Greenwood, Cathedra Petri, iii., 388.
[306:2] Muratori, iii., 96; Migne, cxxviii., 1098.
[306:3] Thatcher and McNeal, No. 45. (Baronius, Ann., 755; Migne, cxxviii., 1099.) See Wiltsch, Geog. and Statistics of the Ch., i., 264.