Roman Catholic Archdiocese Of Avignon

The Archdiocese of Avignon (Latin: Archidioecesis Avenionensis; French: Archidiocèse d'Avignon) is a Latin archdiocese of the Catholic Church in France.

The diocese exercises jurisdiction over the territory embraced by the department of Vaucluse, in the Region of Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur. It is named for the prefecture of Avignon. The diocese has been led since January 2021 by Archbishop Georges Pontier, whom Pope Francis called out of retirement to serve as Apostolic Administrator.

Archdiocese of Avignon

Archidioecesis Avenionensis

Archidiocèse d'Avignon
Roman Catholic Archdiocese Of Avignon
Location
CountryFrance
Ecclesiastical provinceMarseille
MetropolitanArchdiocese of Marseille
Statistics
Area3,578 km2 (1,381 sq mi)
Population
- Total
- Catholics
(as of 2012)
554,000
405,100 (73.1%)
Parishes179
Information
DenominationRoman Catholic
Sui iuris churchLatin Church
RiteRoman Rite
Established4th Century
CathedralCathedral Basilica of Notre Dame des Doms
Patron saintNotre-Dame
St. Agricola of Avignon
Current leadership
PopeFrancis
ArchbishopFrançois Fonlupt
Bishops emeritusJean-Pierre Cattenoz
Website
Website of the Archdiocese

Established in the 4th century as the Diocese of Avignon, the diocese was elevated to an archdiocese in 1475, with the suffragan sees of the Diocese of Carpentras, the Diocese of Vaison, and the Diocese of Cavaillon. By the Concordat of 1801 these three dioceses were united to Avignon, together with the Diocese of Apt, a suffragan of the Archdiocese of Aix. At the same time, however, Avignon was reduced to the rank of a bishopric and was made a suffragan see of Aix.

The Archdiocese of Avignon was re-established in 1822, and received as suffragan sees the Diocese of Viviers (restored in 1822); Diocese of Valence (formerly under Lyon); Diocese of Nîmes (restored in 1822); and Diocese of Montpellier (formerly under Toulouse).

On 16 December 2002, the see – officially Archdiocese of Avignon (-Apt, Cavaillon, Carpentras, Orange, and Vaison) – lost its Metropolitan status and became instead a suffragan see of Marseille. In 2009 its name was changed to Archdiocese of Avignon, the secondary titles being suppressed.

History

There is no evidence that either Saint Rufus, disciple of Saint Paul according to certain traditions the son of Simon of Cyrene, or Saint Justus, likewise held in high honour throughout the territory of Avignon, was venerated in antiquity as bishop of that see. The first bishop known to history is Nectarius, who took part in several councils about the middle of the fifth century. Saint Agricol (Agricolus), bishop between 650 and 700, is the patron saint of Avignon.

In 1475 Pope Sixtus IV raised the diocese of Avignon to the rank of an archbishopric, in favour of his nephew Giuliano della Rovere who later became Pope Julius II.

Bishops

To 1000

  • ? - 100: Saint Simon of Cyrene
  • 3rd of 4th century: Saint Ruf
  • 439–451: Nectarius
  • 465: Saturinus
  • 475–507: Julianus
  • 524–540: Eucherius
  • 541–554: Antonius
  • 585: Johannes
  • 618: Maximus
  • 7th century: Saint Veredème
  • 7th century (683?): Saint Agricol
  • 855: Ragenutius
  • 860–876: Hilduinus
  • 876–879: Ratifridus

1000 to 1474

  • mentioned 1002: Pierre
  • before 1006–1033: Heldebert
  • 1033–1036: Senioret
  • 1037– after 1047: Benoît I
  • before 1050– after 1173: Rostaing II
  • 1095– after 1120: Albert
  • before 1124–1142: Laugerius
  • 1148–after 1148: Geoffroy I
  • 1173–1174: Raymond I
  • 1174–1177: Geoffroy II
  • 1178–1180: Pontius
  • 1180–1197: Rostaing III de Marguerite
  • 1197–1209: Rostaing IV
  • 1209–1216 death: Guillaume I de Montelier
  • mentioned 1225: Pierre II
  • before 1226– after 1230: Nicolas de Corbie
  • mentioned 1238: Benedictus
  • 1242–1261 death: Zoen Tencarari
  • 1264–1266: Bertrand de Saint-Martin
  • 1267– c. 1287 death: Robert d'Uzès
  • mentioned 1288: Benoît III
  • 1290– after 1294: André de Languiscel
  • 1300–1310: Bertrandus Aymini
  • 1310–1312: Jacques Duèze, later Pope John XXII
  • 1313–1317: Jacques de Via (nephew of John XXII)
  • 1317–1334: John XXII (again)
  • 1336–1349: Jean de Cojordan
  • 1349–1352 death: Clement VI
  • 1352–1362 death: Innocent VI
  • 1362–1366: Anglicus Grimoard (brother Pope Urban V)
  • 1366–1367: Urban V
  • 1367–1368: Philippe de Cabassole
  • 1368–1371 death: Pierre d'Aigrefeuille
  • 1371–1383: Faydit d'Aigrefeuille
  • 1391–1394: Clement VII (antipope)
  • 1394–1398: Benedict XIII (antipope)
  • 1398–1406: Gilles de Bellamere
  • 1410–1412: Pierre V de Tourroye
  • 1412–1415: Simond de Cramaud
  • 1415–1419: Guy I de Roussillon-Bouchage
  • 1419–1422: Guy II Spifame
  • 1422–1432: Guy III de Roussillon-Bouchage
  • 1432–1433: Marco Condulmer
  • 1437–1474: Alain de Coëtivy

Archbishops

  • 1474–1503: Giuliano della Rovere (Archbishop from 1475)
  • 1503–1512: Antoine Florès
  • 1512–1517: Orlando Carretto della Rovere (Orland de Roure)
  • 1517–1535: Hippolyte de' Medici
  • 1535–1551: Alessandro Farnese the Younger
  • 1551–1562: Annibale Bozzuti (Annibal Buzzutto)
  • 1566–1576: Félicien Capitone
  • 1577–1585: Georges d'Armagnac
  • 1585–1592: Domenico Grimaldi
  • 1592–1598: François-Marie Thaurusi (Francesco Maria Tarugi)
  • 1598–1609: Jean-François Bordini
  • 1609–1624: Etienne II Dulci
  • 1624–1644: Marius Philonardi
  • 1644–1647: Bernard III Pinelli
  • 1647–1649: César Argelli
  • 1649–1669: Domenico de' Marini
  • 1669–1672: Azzo Ariosto
  • 1673–1686: Hyacinthe Libelli
  • 1686–1689: Alexandre II Montecatini
  • 1690–1705: Lorenzo Fieschi
  • 1705–1717: François Maurice Gonteri
  • 1742–1757: Joseph Guyon de Crochans
  • 1757–1775: François Maria Manzi
  • 1775–1790: Carlo Vincenzo Giovio
  • 1793–1794: François-Régis Rovère
  • 1798: François Etienne
  • 1802–1817: Jean-François Périer
  • 1821–1830: Etienne-Parfait-Martin Maurel de Mons
  • 1831–1834: Louis-Joseph d'Humières
  • 1834–1842: Célestin Dupont (Jacques-Marie-Antoine-Célestin du Pont) (also Archbishop of Bourges)
  • 1842–1848: Paul Naudo
  • 1848–1863: Jean-Marie-Mathias Debelay
  • 1863–1880: Louis-Anne Dubreuil
Roman Catholic Archdiocese Of Avignon 
Archbishop Jean-Pierre Cattenoz (left) and Dominique Rey
  • 1880–1884: François-Edouard Hasley (also Archbishop of Cambrai)
  • 1885–1895: Louis-Joseph-Marie-Ange Vigne
  • 1896–1907: Louis-François Sueur
  • 1907–1928: Gaspard-Marie-Michel-André Latty
  • 1928–1957: Gabriel-Roch de Llobet
  • 1957–1970: Joseph-Martin Urtasun
  • 1970–1978: Eugène-Jean-Marie Polge
  • 1978–2002: Raymond Bouchex
  • 2002–2021: Jean-Pierre Marie Cattenoz
  • 2021–present: François Fonlupt

See also

Notes

References

Sources

Further reading

43°57′N 4°50′E / 43.950°N 4.833°E / 43.950; 4.833

This article uses material from the Wikipedia English article Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Avignon, which is released under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 license ("CC BY-SA 3.0"); additional terms may apply (view authors). Content is available under CC BY-SA 4.0 unless otherwise noted. Images, videos and audio are available under their respective licenses.
®Wikipedia is a registered trademark of the Wiki Foundation, Inc. Wiki English (DUHOCTRUNGQUOC.VN) is an independent company and has no affiliation with Wiki Foundation.

Tags:

Roman Catholic Archdiocese Of Avignon HistoryRoman Catholic Archdiocese Of Avignon BishopsRoman Catholic Archdiocese Of Avignon ArchbishopsRoman Catholic Archdiocese Of Avignon SourcesRoman Catholic Archdiocese Of Avignon Further readingRoman Catholic Archdiocese Of AvignonArchdioceseAvignonCatholic ChurchDepartments of FranceFranceFrench languageGeorges PontierLatinLatin ChurchPope FrancisProvence-Alpes-Côte d'AzurRegions of FranceVaucluse

🔥 Trending searches on Wiki English:

Juno TempleDead Island 2Kenneth Lofton Jr.Zoe SaldañaRobert De NiroCeline DionRufus SewellLiverpool F.C.Angelina JolieChris KyleYandexHarry Potter (film series)David ChoeLeBron JamesBetter Call SaulCanelo ÁlvarezJamie Lee CurtisAmerican Civil WarInternational Dance DayList of NBA championsReal Madrid CFPink (singer)Mani Ratnam filmographyLove & Death (miniseries)Nope (film)Bobbi Kristina BrownThe BeatlesRachel McAdamsLindsay Lohan2 Girls 1 CupDaniel RadcliffeDick Van DykeWaco siegeDorothy StrattenJesse PlemonsYouTube MusicLee Harvey OswaldX (2022 film)Togo (dog)AzerbaijanSexual intercourseBella RamseySexMichael KeatonRobyn Crawford59th Baeksang Arts AwardsTucker CarlsonThe Night Agent2023 World Snooker ChampionshipBarack ObamaPablo EscobarZarina WahabJudy GarlandLily RabeThe White LotusMicrodata (HTML)Kepler's SupernovaAnsel Adams2023 FIBA Basketball World CupSean CliffordCameron DiazSuper Mario Bros. (film)Bradley CooperRonald ReaganSarah SnookFloyd Mayweather Jr.Steven CrowderRenfield (film)Stetson BennettTony FinauPrince (musician)AadhaarCheryl HinesSara ArjunKnights of the Zodiac (film)Mötley Crüe🡆 More