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Pope Saint Hilarius

Pope Saint Hilarius was born with the given name of Hilarius in the year A.D., and died in 468 A.D. He began his reign as Pope in the year 461 A.D. and ended his reign in the year 468 A.D., during the Late Antiquity. Saint Hilarius was from Sardinia, and his papal number is: 46 out of 267 officially recognized Roman Catholic Popes.

Summary: Pope who strengthened papal discipline in the post-Chalcedonian Church.

Biography:

Saint Hilarius served after the major Christological controversies of the mid-fifth century and focused on consolidating ecclesiastical discipline, especially in the Western Church. He reinforced Rome’s role in supervising episcopal conduct and resolving disputes, continuing the administrative trajectory strengthened by his predecessors.

Hilarius also helped safeguard the Church against doctrinal confusion that lingered after Chalcedon. He understood that councils alone did not settle everything at once; their teaching had to be received, defended, and woven into the life of the Church.

His pontificate stands as an example of patient consolidation, where strong institutional care preserved the fruits of theological victory.