Sabinian was
elected to succeed Gregory probably in March 604, but had to wait for
imperial ratification before being
consecrated in September. although the
Liber pontificalis states that he distributed grain during a famine at Rome under his pontificate. Whereas Gregory distributed grain to the Roman populace as invasion loomed, when the danger had passed Sabinian sold it to them. Because he was unable or unwilling to allow the people to have the grain for little or nothing, there grew up in later times a number of legends in which his predecessor was represented punishing him for avarice. Sabinian died 22 February 606. His funeral procession through the city had to change course to avoid hostile Romans.
Onofrio Panvinio, in his 1557
Epitome pontificum Romanorum, attributes to Sabinian the introduction of the custom of ringing
bells at the
canonical hours and the celebration of the
Eucharist, hence expressions such as ''o'clock
(Latin clocca'': a bell). The first attribution of this was in
Guillaume Durand's thirteenth-century
Rationale Divinorum Officiorum. ==Notes==