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  1. Caesarius of Arles (Latin: Caesarius Arelatensis; 468/470 – 27 August 542 AD), sometimes called "of Chalon" (Cabillonensis or Cabellinensis) from his birthplace Chalon-sur-Saône, was the foremost ecclesiastic of his generation in Merovingian Gaul.

  2. Saint Caesarius of Arles (born c. 470, in the region of Chalon-sur-Saône, Gaul [France]—died 542, Arles; feast day August 27) was a leading prelate of Gaul and a celebrated preacher whose opposition to the heresy of Semi-Pelagianism (q.v.) was one of the chief influences on its decline in the 6th century. At age 20, he entered the monastery ...

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  3. The Abbey of St Caesarius (French: Abbaye Saint-Césaire), at first called the abbey or monastery of St John (French: monastère Saint-Jean), was a nunnery in the city of Arles in the south-eastern corner of the rampart. It was founded in 512 AD by Saint Caesarius of Arles, after whom it is now named. The abbey was suppressed in the French ...

  4. On the death of the bishop Caesarius was unanimously chosen his successor (502 or 503). He ruled the See of Arles for forty years with apostolic courage and prudence, and stands out in the history of that unhappy period as the foremost bishop of Gaul.

  5. Born into the fifth century Gallo-Roman landed gentry, Caesarius left his family home in Burgundy to enter the monastic life on the island of Lerins off the coast of Provence. Saint Honoratus had founded the first community of monks there in 410 and the monastery was soon established as an important academy for illustrious men of the church.

  6. Bertrand, Dominique, ed. Césaire d'Arles et la christianisation de la Provence: actes des journées « Césaire » (Aix-en-Provence, Arles, Lérins, 3-5 novembre 1988, 22 avril 1989). Paris: Éd. du Cerf, 1994.

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  8. Dec 2, 2009 · By emigrating from Chalon to Lérins, and from there to Arles, Caesarius had transported himself from the periphery of the Roman world to its Mediterranean heartland. A Roman possession for nearly 600 years, until the Visigoths took control of it in 476/77, Provence was the most romanized region in Gaul, in the words of Pliny the Elder, writing ...

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