Ecclesiastical Annals (Baronius, 1588-1607) – Angelological and Demonological References in the History of the Church (Years 1-1198)
V. Byzantine and Early Medieval Period (Vol 8-12, years 451-1000)
- Second Council of Constantinople (553): anathemas against Origenists (condemnation of the Devil’s apocatastasis)
- Council of Braga I (561): against Priscillianism
- St. Gregory the Great (6th-7th centuries): Homilies on the Gospels with nine choirs
- Roman Council of 745: Aldebert case (eight angels with apocryphal names)
- Second Council of Nicaea (787): veneration of angelic images
VI. Medieval Period (Vol 13-19, years 1000-1198)
- St. Bernard of Clairvaux (1090-1153): treatise on angels in the Song of Songs
- Hugh of St. Victor (12th century): first scholastic synthesis
- Peter Lombard (1100-1160): Sentences, Book II on Angels
- Lateran Councils I, II, III (1123, 1139, 1179): condemnation of Cathars (demonic dualism)
Continuation by Raynaldus (1198-1565)
Odoric Raynaldi (1595-1671) continued Baronio’s Annales covering 1198 (Pope Innocent III) to 1565 (Trento Council). For angelology and demonology, he includes:
- 1215, Fourth Lateran Council (Pope Innocent III): Firmiter credimus, dogmatic definition of angels
- 1442, Florence: Cantate Domino reiterates Lateran IV
- 1481, Pope Sixtus IV: Constitution Grave nimis against excessive veneration of saints
- 1517, Martin Luther’s 95 Theses: demonological context of the Protestant Reformation
- 1545-1563, Council of Trent: definitions on demonology
Methodological Importance of the Annales
Baronio wrote the Annales as a Catholic response to the Protestant ‘Magdeburg Centuries’ (1559-1574), an ecclesiastical history by Matthias Flacius Iliricus. The Annales stand out for:
- Yearly chronology allowing location of each event
- Citations of primary sources with precise references
- Use of Vatican manuscripts not yet published at the time
- Systematic treatment of individual councils beyond ecumenical ones
- Documentation of liturgical festivals and local devotions
Importance for Angelological/Demonological Research
For the historical study of angelology and demonology, the Annales are valuable because:
- Document individual councils not included in Mansi’s main collection
- Reference miracles and exorcisms in saint’s lives
- Cite ancient liturgies in full text
- Compile papal bulls in precise chronological order
- Preserve Eastern traditions about the seven archangels
Further Reading
Index of Ancient Magisterial Sources on Angelology and Demonology: Academic Guide | Latran IV (1215) | Roman Council 745 | Braga I Council
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