[657] Spicilegium, t. ii.; see infra, [p. 401].

[658] Ranke, VI. xxx.

[659] According to the edition of De Rossi and Duchesne in the Acta SS. Boll., we find on the 20th Jan., XV. Kal. Febr., in the Weissenburg Codex: “Dedicatio Cathedra (sic) S. Petri Apostoli, qua primo Romæ Petrus Apostolus sedit.” Epternach Codex: “Depositio S. Mariæ et Cathedra Petri in Roma.” The Bern Codex is imperfect here. On the 22nd February, VIII. Kal. Mart., the Weissenburg Codex has: “Natale S. Petri Apostoli Cathedra quam sedit apud Antiochia” (sic). The Epternach has: “Cathedra Petri in Antioc. et Romæ.” The Bern Codex: “Cathedra S. Petri Apostoli quam sedit apud Antiochiam.”

[660] Binterim & Mooren, Die Erzdiözese Köln im Mittelalter, i., 2nd ed., 528.

[661] Bullarium, ed. Lux., i. 832.

[662] See Bäumer, 510.

[663] Clementis Rom., Recogn., 10, 70. For a different opinion, see Fr. X. Kraus, in the third appendix to his Roma Sott., and Marucchi, who wrongly considers the feast of the 22nd February commemorated the Vatican chair of St Peter and that of the 18th January his chair at the Ostrian Cemetery. Unfortunately the latter feast was unknown in Rome before the 16th century.

[664] Concerning this point, see Schanz, Kommentar zu Matthäus, 504; Markus, 417; Lukas, 251.

[665] Clementis Rom., Recogn., 3, 68.

[666] According to Duchesne, it is the work of a student of Magdalen College, Oxford, called Rabanus, and belongs to the year 1456. Rietsch, 10. The work is printed in Migne, Patr. Gr., i. 112.