[478] Seldenius, De Synedriis, iii. 220-47.
[479] Dionysius Exiguus translated this account into Latin (Migne, Patr. Lat., lxvii. 418). See also Tillemont, Mém., i. 44; vii. 163. Morcelli, Menol. Const., i. 167; ii. 65, 222. Baillet, iv. 825 seqq.; vi. 291 seqq. Du Cange, Traité du Chef de S. J. B. (Paris, 1665), wrote against the trustworthiness of Marcellus. The chronology of the Paschal Chronicle was corrected by Du Cange and Pagi. See Rauschen, Jahrbücher d. Theol., 356 A.
[480] Nilles, i., 2nd ed., 111.
[481] Migne, Patr. Lat., lxxviii. 120, 394.
[482] Pseudo-Alcuin, De off. Eccl., c. 30.
[483] Ordo Rom. XI., c. 66. Migne, Patr. Lat., lxxviii. 1050. There is not sufficient evidence to support Binterim’s view (Denkw., v. 379) that the procession to the Baptistry proves that solemn baptism was administered at Rome on the 24th June.
[484] Sermo 287-93. In Sermo 292, c. 1, appears the passage quoted on page.... “Hoc majorum traditione suscepimus, etc.”
[485] A town of Gamala was situated on the eastern shore of the Lake Genesareth, on a mountain. Josephus, Bello Jud., 4, 1, 1-7; Antt., 18, 1, 1, etc. Nothing is known of the village of Gamala near Jerusalem.
[486] For the fullest account of the particulars, see Hydatius, Chron. (Roncalli, ii. 99), “Honorio X. et Theodosio VI. Conss.” With this date agrees Marcellinus (op. cit., ii. 279), but not the Chron. Breve. (op. cit., ii. 259) or Theophanes, Chrongr., ed. Bonn, i. 133.
[487] Gennadius, De Script. Eccl., 46, 47. The writings relating to the “Inventio S. Stephani” are in Latin. The translation is printed in Migne, xli., Opera S. Augustini VII., 805-54.