The word
Pope is derived ultimately from the
Greek () originally an affectionate term meaning "father", later referring to a
bishop or
patriarch. The earliest record of the use of this title is in regard to the
Patriarch of Alexandria,
Pope Heraclas of Alexandria (232–248) in a letter written by his successor,
Pope Dionysius of Alexandria, to Philemon, a Roman presbyter: Which translates into: From the early 3rd century the title was applied generically to all bishops. The earliest extant record of the word
papa being used in reference to a
Bishop of Rome dates to late 3rd century, when it was allegedly applied to the highly controversial
Pope Marcellinus, records surrounding being problematic. (Since 1969 his feast day is left to local calendars and is no longer inscribed in the General Roman Calendar.) According to the
Oxford English Dictionary, the earliest recorded use of the title "pope" in English is in an
Old English translation (
c. 950) of
Bede's
Ecclesiastical History of the English People: In Modern English: ==Later history and contemporary use==