<Li> Pyrrhus of Constantinople was excommunicated 648 by Pope Theodore I and a synod of bishops after he had gone back on his recantation of monothelitism . The Pope and the bishops also declared him deposed from being Patriarch of Constantinople . Theodore reportedly signed the excommunication upon St Peter's tomb using ink that was mingled with drops of the Blessed Sacrament . </Li> <Li> Paul II of Constantinople was excommunicated and deposed from his see in 649 by Pope Theodore I after the patriarch had professed Monothelitism . </Li> <Ul> <Li> The heretic preachers Adalbert and Clement by a council headed by St Boniface in 745 . Adelbert's excommunication was not upheld by Rome, however, although Clement's was . </Li> <Li> The second council of Nicaea excommunicated a number of people by name who had lived in previous times, some of whom had been already condemned previously, including: Arius and all who follow him, Macedonius I of Constantinople, Nestorius and those who followed him, Eutyches, Dioscorus, Severus of Antioch and Peter the Fuller along with those with them, Origen, Didymus the blind, Evagrius Ponticus, as well as Sergius I of Constantinople, Pyrrhus of Constantinople, Pope Honorius I, Cyrus of Alexandria, Macarius I of Antioch along with their followers </Li> </Ul> <Li> The heretic preachers Adalbert and Clement by a council headed by St Boniface in 745 . Adelbert's excommunication was not upheld by Rome, however, although Clement's was . </Li>

Who was the last person to be excommunicated