Early Life and Monastic Formation
Caesarius was born around 468/470 in Chalon-sur-Saône, then within the Western Roman Empire, into a wealthy Gallo-Roman (Roman-Burgundian) family. His sister, Caesaria the Elder, would later preside over a convent he founded. Accounts of his youth differ on detail: he is said to have left home in his teens — at about seventeen to study under Bishop Sylvester, or, by another account, at thirteen to enter the monastery of Lérins.
At the island monastery of Lérins he trained as a monk and served as cellarer, the official responsible for provisions. By tradition he was removed from this office, or made unpopular, for withholding food from monks whose austerity he judged insufficient. When his own health declined from monastic rigors, the abbot — named in one account as Porcarius — sent him to Arles for medical care.
Bishop of Arles
On arriving in Arles, Caesarius found that Bishop Aeonius was a kinsman. Aeonius ordained him deacon and priest, and Caesarius presided over a suburban monastery for about three years. Around 502, at roughly thirty-three years of age, he was consecrated bishop of Arles upon Aeonius's death, beginning a tenure of some forty years.
His episcopate was marked by intense pastoral charity: he famously ransomed captives and prisoners, going so far as to sell church ornaments to fund their redemption. He was twice the object of serious accusations. In the first, the notary Licinianus accused him of sedition or disloyalty (to Alaric II), and he was exiled to Bordeaux, but he was quickly pardoned and restored once his innocence was established. The second arose around 512, when he was charged with treachery during a siege by Theodoric; an interview at Ravenna with the Ostrogothic king cleared him, after which his episcopate proceeded peacefully.
Church Councils
Caesarius presided over two significant regional councils. The Council of Agde, held in September 506, was attended by some thirty-five bishops and addressed matters of church discipline.
Most significant was the Council of Orange in 529, which resolved century-long disputes concerning grace and predestination. The council affirmed that in every good work it is God who first inspires within us faith and love, without requiring any preceding human merit, and it condemned the notion of predestination to evil. Sources note that he was regarded in the early Middle Ages as 'the faithful champion of Augustine.'
Monastic Rules and Foundations
Caesarius composed two monastic rules. The 'Ad Monachos' (Regula ad Monachos), a rule for monks, drew on the traditions of Lérins. The 'Ad Virgines' (Regula ad Virgines), composed around 512, is described as the first Western rule written exclusively for women. It emphasized claustration — the complete enclosure of women within the monastery — with strict regimens governing the hours of prayer, modest dress, and standards of piety.
He founded a convent for ascetic women in Arles under the direction of his sister, Caesaria the Elder, and around 525 appointed his niece, Caesaria the Younger, as her successor.
Preaching and Writings
More than 250 surviving sermons form the core of Caesarius's literary corpus, addressing Christian belief, moral instruction, asceticism, divine judgment, and lingering pagan practices, including such failings as drunkenness, lust, discord, and pride. He promoted reading and literacy among both literate and near-literate audiences, and is said to have urged the illiterate to hire readers after church services.
His thought was deeply shaped by Augustine of Hippo, Julianus Pomerius, and John Cassian. Among his works is a treatise on grace and free will, 'De Gratiâ et Libero Arbitrio,' directed against semi-Pelagianism, which sources report was approved by Pope Felix IV. He also sent suggested sermons to clergy across Spain, Italy, and Gaul, and his writings circulated widely, later appearing in Anglo-Saxon poetry and major medieval works. He received notable papal favor and is described as possibly the first Western bishop to receive a pallium from Rome.
Relics & Shrines
Caesarius died on 27 August 542 in Arles. A nineteenth-century reliquary of his remains is housed in the Church of St. Trophime in Arles, and a statue commemorates him in the Church of St. Caesarius in Arles.
Legacy
Caesarius is regarded as one of the last figures to integrate large-scale ascetic elements into Western Christianity, and in the early Middle Ages he was esteemed as 'the faithful champion of Augustine.' He is venerated in both the Catholic and Eastern Orthodox churches, with a feast day on August 27.