Hierarch 5th century

Gratus of Aosta

died c. 470

Also known as Gratus, Bishop of Aosta

Bishop of Aosta in Italy, of which he is the patron saint (c. 470)

Feast Day
September 7
Draft
Draft — pending review. Not yet verified for publication.
Commemorated as

Our Father among the Saints Gratus, Bishop of Aosta

Life

Gratus of Aosta was a fifth-century bishop of Aosta, the principal city of the Aosta Valley in the western Alps, and is venerated as the patron saint of the city. As a pre-schism Western saint he is commemorated in the Orthodox calendar on September 7, the day recorded for his repose. He belongs to the period of an undivided Church and is counted among the Latin saints of the early Roman patriarchate.

The earliest secure historical notice of Gratus places him at the synod of Milan in 451, where, while still a priest, he represented his bishop, Eustasius of Aosta. His signature appears on the letter that the assembled bishops sent to Pope Leo the Great affirming their condemnation of the Eutychian heresy, which had been rejected at the Council of Chalcedon in the same year. Gratus succeeded Eustasius as bishop of Aosta sometime after 451; later tradition counts him as the second bishop of the see.

As bishop, Gratus is associated with the translation of relics in his city around 470, including those of Innocent, numbered among the martyrs of the Theban Legion, ceremonies at which bishops of Agaunum and Sion are said to have been present. He died around 470 and was buried at Aosta. His tomb inscription, preserved in the church of Saint-Christophe, records his rest in peace as bishop. A diffusion of his cult followed in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries.

Timeline 3 moments Read Hide
  1. 451 Synod of Milan As a priest, Gratus represents Bishop Eustasius of Aosta and signs the synod's letter to Pope Leo the Great condemning the heresy of Eutyches.
  2. after 451 Bishop of Aosta Gratus succeeds Eustasius as bishop of Aosta, traditionally reckoned the second bishop of the see.
  3. c. 470 Repose Gratus dies and is buried at Aosta; his feast is kept on September 7.

Contributions & Legacy

1 contributions Read Hide

Relics and Veneration

The spread of Gratus's veneration is dated chiefly to the twelfth and thirteenth centuries, when his relics were translated from the church of St Laurence in Aosta to the Collegiate church of Saint Ursus (Sant'Orso), where a portion of his relics is still kept in a reliquary of gold and silver. He is honored as patron of the Aosta Valley and, in popular devotion, of vineyards and those who work them. He is invoked for protection against natural hazards, among them fire, hail, lightning, rain, storms, and harmful insects and animals.

In Western art Gratus is depicted as a bishop holding the head of Saint John the Baptist together with a bunch of grapes. This iconographic motif derives from the Magna Legenda Sancti Grati, a legendary life composed in 1285 by Jacques de Cours, a canon of Aosta cathedral, on the occasion of a translation of the relics. The account is fictitious and anachronistic; the twentieth-century historian Aime Pierre Frutaz demonstrated that it has no historical basis, and only the few notices surrounding the synod of 451 and his episcopate rest on firmer ground.

Sources: Latin Saints of the Orthodox Patriarchate of Rome