Chapter 52: The Roman Bishops and Emperors of the First Three Centuries

In tracing the parallel destinies of the Church and Empire, a sober comparison of popes and emperors offers a revealing chronology of growth, suffering, and convergence. From Augustus to Constantine, the nascent Roman episcopate walked beneath the shadow of imperial majesty—sometimes tolerated, sometimes hunted, yet always enduring. Though the historical sequence of popes contains uncertainties, this juxtaposition underscores how the seed of apostolic succession germinated in the soil of a hostile world power, ultimately to emerge as a spiritual rival to the very Caesars themselves.

I. Parallel Chronology of Popes and Emperors

Date Roman Bishops (Popes) Roman Emperors
27 B.C. Augustus
14–37 Tiberius
37–41 Caligula
41–54 Claudius
42–67 Peter the Apostle Nero (54–68)
67–79 Linus Galba, Otho, Vitellius
79–91 Cletus / Anacletus Titus, Domitian
91–100 Clement I Nerva, Trajan
100–109 Evaristus Trajan
109–119 Alexander I Hadrian (117–138)
119–128 Xystus I
128–139 Telesphorus Antoninus Pius (138–161)
139–142 Hyginus
142–154 Pius I
154–168 Anicetus Marcus Aurelius (161–180)
168–176 Soter
177–190 Eleutherus Commodus (180–192)
190–202 Victor I Pertinax, Didius Julianus, Septimius Severus
202–218 Zephyrinus Caracalla, Geta
218–223 Callistus I (Antipope: Hippolytus) Heliogabalus
223–230 Urban I Alexander Severus
230–235 Pontianus (resigned in exile)
235–236 Anterus Maximin the Thracian
236–250 Fabianus (Martyr) Gordians, Philip the Arab
250–251 See vacant Decius
251–252 Cornelius (in exile) Gallus
251 Antipope Novatian
252–253 Lucius I Volusian
253–257 Stephanus I Aemilian, Valerian
257–258 Xystus II (martyred) Valerian
259–269 Dionysius Claudius II
269–274 Felix I Aurelian
275–283 Eutychianus Tacitus, Probus
283–296 Gaius (Caius) Carus, Carinus, Diocletian (beg. 284)
296–304 Marcellinus Diocletian, Maximian
304–307 See vacant Galerius, Maximin II
308–309 Marcellus Maxentius, Licinius
309–310 Eusebius Maximin II
310–311 See vacant Reigning jointly
311–314 Miltiades (Melchiades) Constantine the Great (ruling West)
314–335 Silvester I Constantine (sole ruler from 323)

II. Notes on Papal Succession

The total number of popes from the Apostle Peter to Leo XIII (1878) is traditionally counted as 263, averaging nearly seven years per reign. Peter’s legendary tenure of twenty-five years set the perceived maximum—surpassed only by Pius IX, whose reign from 1846 to 1878 lasted twenty-seven years, during which papal infallibility was declared. In contrast, the archbishops of Canterbury have historically averaged about fourteen years per term.

This chronology reveals not only the resilience of the Roman episcopate under imperial volatility but also its gradual emergence as a centralizing force in Christian identity. While emperors waged war and changed with violent rapidity, the bishops of Rome preserved institutional memory, spiritual cohesion, and eventually, doctrinal supremacy.

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