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Duchesne and others have viewed the beginning of the Liber Pontificalis up until the biographies of Pope Felix III ( 483 – 492 ) as the work of a single author, who was a contemporary of Pope Anastasius II ( 496-498 ), relying on Catalogus Liberianus, which in turn draws from the papal catalogue of Hippolytus of Rome, and the Leonine Catalogue, which is no longer extant.
no: Anastasius II
no: Anastasius I ( pave )
Anastasius was born at Dyrrhachium ; the date is unknown, but he is thought to have been born no later than 430 or 431.
The papal legates voiced their approval of the restoration of the veneration of icons in no uncertain terms, and the patriarch sent a full account of the proceedings of the council to Pope Hadrian I, who had it translated ( the translation Anastasius later replaced with a better one ).
He has no sons to succeed him and the Albanian-born Anastasius, palace official ( silentiarius ) and favoured friend of empress Ariadne, is elevated to the throne.
Hypatius was the nephew of Emperor Anastasius I, who ruled before Justin, and he was also associated by marriage to the noble Anicii clan, which gave him a serious claim to the imperial diadem ; however, Hypatius showed no such ambition, and he and the other nephews of Anastasius were well-treated by both Justin and his successor to the Byzantine throne, Justinian I.

Anastasius and Bibliothecarius
* Anastasius Bibliothecarius ( c. 810 – 878 ) – librarian of the Church of Rome, scholar and statesman, sometimes identified as an Antipope
In the 16th century, Onofrio Panvinio attributed the biographies after Damasus until Pope Nicholas I ( 858 – 867 ) to Anastasius Bibliothecarius ; Anastasius continued to be cited as the author into the 17th century, although this attribution was disputed by the scholarship of Caesar Baronius, Ciampini, Schelstrate and others.
The one most commonly cited is Anastasius Bibliothecarius ( d. 886 ), a compiler of Liber Pontificalis, who was a contemporary of the female Pope by the Chronicons dating.
His tables of universal history ( Chronographikon syntomon ), in passages extended and continued, were in great favor with the Byzantines, and were also circulated outside the Empire in the Latin version of Anastasius Bibliothecarius, and also in Slavonic translation.
* Anastasius Bibliothecarius Chronographia tripartita
The events of the trials of Maximus were recorded by Anastasius Bibliothecarius.
* C. de Boor ( Leipzig, 1883 – 85 ), with an exhaustive treatise on the manuscript and an elaborate index, and an edition of the Latin version by Anastasius Bibliothecarius
According to Anastasius Bibliothecarius, George " struggled valiantly against heresy Iconoclasm and received many punishments from the rulers who raged against the rites of the Church ", although the accuracy of the claim is suspect.
* Anastasius Bibliothecarius ( 810-878 )
Anastasius Bibliothecarius ( c. 810 – c. 878 ) was bibliothecarius ( literally " librarian ") and chief archivist of the Roman Catholic Church and also briefly an Antipope.
This article incorporates text from the 1913 Catholic Encyclopedia article " Anastasius Bibliothecarius " by J. P. Kirsch, a publication now in the public domain.
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# REDIRECT Anastasius Bibliothecarius
The principal adviser of the two last-named Popes, Anastasius Bibliothecarius, accepted the Byzantine comparison of the pentarchy with the five senses of the human body, but added the qualification that the patriarchate of Rome, which he likened to the sense of sight, ruled the other four.

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