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Pierre Coustant

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Constant, PIERRE, a learned Benedictine of the Congregation of Saint-Maur, b. at Compiegne, France, April 30, 1654; d. at the Abbey of Saint-Germain-des-Pres near Paris, October 18, 1721. After receiving his classical education in the Jesuit College at Compiegne, he entered the Benedictine monastery of Saint-Remi at Reims as novice at the age of seventeen, and took vows on August 12, 1672. He made his philosophical and theological studies partly at Saint-Remi, partly at the monastery of Saint-Medard in Soissons whither he was sent to study philosophy under Francois Lamy. In 1681 his superiors sent him to the Abbey of Saint-Germain-des-Pres to assist his confrere Thomas Blampin in editing the works of St. Augustine. Coustant’s chief contribution to this publication, which still remains the best edition of St. Augustine’s works, consisted in the separating of the spurious from the genuine writings. He also aided his fellow Benedictines Edmond Marten and Robert Morel in making the indexes for the fourth volume containing the commentaries on the Psalms. In an appendix to the fifth volume he collected all the spurious homilies and traced them to their true sources.

The learning and acumen which Constant displayed in his share of the edition of St. Augustine’s works did not remain unnoticed by the Abbot General of the Maurist Congregation. When Mabillon suggested a new edition of the works of St. Hilary of Poitiers, it was Coustant whom the abbot general selected for this difficult undertaking. There was before this time practically only one edition of this great Gallic Doctor of the Church, namely the defective and uncritical one published by Erasmus (Basle, 1523). The subsequent editions of Miraeus (Paris, 1544), Lipsius (Basle, 1550), Grynaeus (Basle, 1570), Gillotius (Paris, 1572), and the one issued by the Paris Typographical Society in 1605 were little more than reprints of the Erasmian text. After making himself thoroughly conversant with St. Hilary’s terminology and train of thought, Coustant compared numerous manuscripts with a view to restoring the original text. In an extensive general preface he proved the Catholicity of Hilary’s doctrine concerning the birth of Christ from the Virgin Mary, the Holy Eucharist, Grace, the Last Judgment, the Holy Trinity, and other Catholic dogmas. The preface is followed by two biographical sketches of the saint, the former of which was composed by Constant himself from the writings of Hilary, while the latter is a reproduction of the life written by Fortunatus of Poitiers. Each treatise is preceded by a special preface stating its occasion and purpose, and the time when it was written. Difficult and obscure passages are explained in foot-notes. This edition of St. Hilary is a model work of its kind and ranks as one of the most esteemed literary productions of the Maurist Congregation. It was published in one folio volume at Paris in 1693 and bears the title: “Sancti Hilarii Pictavorum episcopi opera ad manuscriptos codices gallicanos, romanos, belgicos, nee non ad veteres editiones castigata, aliquot aucta opusculis”, etc. The work was republished with a few additions by Scipio Maffei (Verona, 1730) and by Migne, P.L., IX and X.

Coustant’s love for study did not prevent him from being an exemplary monk. Though often overwhelmed with work, he was punctual in attending the common religious exercises and found time for private works of piety. After completing the edition of St. Hilary’s works he requested his superiors to release him temporarily from literary labors and to allow him to devote more of his time to prayer and meditation. The wish was granted, though not as he expected. He was appointed prior of the monastery of Nogent-sous-Coucy. After three years he was, upon his own urgent request, relieved from the priorate and returned to Saint-Germain-des-Pres. For some time he worked on the new edition of the Maurist Breviary, then he assisted his confrere Claude Guesnie in making the elaborate general index to the works of St. Augustine.

Immediately upon the publication of St. Augustine’s works in 1700, Coustant was entrusted by his superiors with the editing of a complete collection of the letters of the popes from St. Clement I to Innocent III (c. 88-1216). To understand the colossal labor which such an undertaking entailed, it must be borne in mind that very little had been done in this direction before. There were, indeed, the papal decretals from Clement I to Gregory VII, collected by Cardinal Antonio Caraff and published by Antonio d’Aquino in 1591, but they were incomplete and their chronological order was frequently incorrect. There were also the “Annales” of Baronius and the “Concilia antiqua Galliae” of the Jesuit Jacques Sirmond, and other works containing scattered letters of the popes; but no one had ever attempted to make a complete collection of papal letters, much less to sift the spurious from the authentic, to restore the original texts and to order the letters chronologically.

After devoting more than twenty years to this gigantic undertaking, Coustant was able to publish the first volume in 1721. It contains the letters from the year 67 to the year 440, and is entitled “Epistobe Romanorum Pontificum et qux ad eos scriptae sunt a S. Clemente I usque ad Innocentium III, quotquot reperiri potuerunt….” (Paris, 1721). In the extensive preface of 150 pages Coustant explains the origin, meaning and extent of the papal primacy and critically examines the existing collections of canons and papal letters. The letters of each pope are preceded by a historical introduction and furnished with copious notes, while the spurious letters are collected in the appendix. Coustant had gathered a large amount of material for succeeding volumes, but he died the same year in which the first volume was published. Simon Mopinot, who had assisted Coustant in the preparation of the first volume, was entrusted with the continuation of the work, but he also died (October 11, 1724) before another volume was ready for publication. About twelve years later, Ursin Durand undertook to continue the work; in his case the Jansenistic disorders in which he became involved prevented the publication of the material he had prepared. Finally the French Revolution and the dissolution of the Maurist Congregation gave the death-blow to the great undertaking. A new edition of Coustant’s volume was brought out by Schonemann (Gottingen, 1796); a continuation, based chiefly on Coustant’s manuscripts and containing the papal letters from 461-521, was published by Thiel (Braunsberg, 1867). There are extant in the Bibliotheque Nationale at Paris fourteen large folio volumes containing the material gathered by Coustant and his Benedictine continuators. Coustant also took part in the controversy occasioned by Mabillon’s “De Re Diplomatica” between the Jesuit Germon and the Maurist Benedictines. In two able treatises he defends himself and his confreres against Germon who disputed the genuineness of some sources used in the Benedictine edition of the works of St. Hilary and St. Augustine.

MICHAEL OTT


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