Roman Catholic Diocese of Reggio Emilia-Guastalla
You may be looking for the archdiocese of Reggio Calabria-Bova
Diocese of Reggio Emilia-Guastalla Dioecesis Placentina-Bobiensis | |
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Reggio Emilia Cathedral | |
Location | |
Country | Italy |
Ecclesiastical province | Modena-Nonantola |
Statistics | |
Area | 2,394 km2 (924 sq mi) |
Population - Total - Catholics |
(as of 2010) 569,853 504,133 (88.5%) |
Parishes | 318 |
Information | |
Denomination | Catholic Church |
Rite | Roman Rite |
Established | 1st Century |
Cathedral | Cattedrale di Beata Vergine Assunta (Reggio Emilia) |
Co-cathedral | Concattedrale di Ss. Pietro e Paolo (Guastalla) |
Current leadership | |
Pope | Francis |
Bishop | Massimo Camisasca, F.S.C.B. |
Emeritus Bishops |
Adriano Caprioli Giovanni Paolo Gibertini, O.S.B. |
Website | |
reggioemilia.chiesacattolica.it |
The Diocese of Reggio Emilia-Guastalla is a Roman Catholic ecclesiastical territory in Emilia-Romagna, Italy. It has existed in its current form since 1986. In that year the historical Diocese of Reggio Emilia was united with the Diocese of Guastalla. The diocese is a suffragan of the Archdiocese of Modena-Nonantola.[1][2]
History
In the Capitulary of Quierzy, Reggio was included among the towns which Pepin had in mind for the Donation of Pepin, but it came into possession of the Papal States only later, and for a short time. After the death of Countess Matilda (1165) the popes claimed the town as a part of her inheritance, while the emperors claimed the same as a fief of the Holy Roman Empire.
Reggio accepted the vicars of Emperor Henry VII and Louis the Bavarian, and was subject to the pope under Cardinal Bertrand du Poyet (1322). Later (1331), John of Bohemia, who recognized the suzerainty of the pope over Reggio as well as over Parma and Modena, was made lord of the city, but sold it to the Fogliani, from whom it passed to the Gonzaga of Mantua (1335), who sold it to Galeazzo II Visconti of Milan. In 1409 it returned again to the House of Este of the line of Modena, until 1859. The popes, however, always claimed to be its suzerains. After the Ferrara War, Reggio spontaneously submitted to Pope Julius II (1512–15). By the Peace of Barcelona (1529), Emperor Charles V bound himself to give back Reggio to the popes, but he did not do so.
A local legend makes the first bishop of Reggio Saint Protasius, a disciple of Saint Apollinaris. Admitting his existence, also five or six historical bishops, predecessors of Faventius in 451, it would seem that the episcopal see dates from the first half of the 4th century. Saint Prosper was the successor of Faventius; he died between 461 and 467.
Bishops of Reggio Emilia
- Protasio ? † (328 ?)
- Cromazio ? † 345 ?)
- Antonino ? † (362 ?)
- Elia ? † (379 ?)
- Santino ? † (396 ?)
- Carosio ? † (413 ?)
- Favenzio † (451)
- Elpidio † (V secolo)
- Prospero † (? - 25 June 466 ?)
- Tommaso † (483)
- Stefano † (511 ?)
- Diodato o Deusdedit † (488 o 533 ?)
- Lorenzo † (500 ?)
- Teodosio o Teodoro † (554 o 555 ?)
- Donodidio † (577 ?)
- Adriano † (599 ?)
- Benenato † (622 ?)
- Paolo I † (644 ?)
- Lupiano o Ulpiano † (666 ?)
- Maurizio † (679 - 680)
- Giovanni † (681 - 684 o 714)
- Costantino † (690 ? o 715)
- Beato Tommaso † (701 - 714 ?)
- Sisto o Callisto † (726 ?)
- Geminiano † (751 o 752 ?)
- Apollinare † (756 - 781)
- Adelmo † (781 - after800)
- Norperto o Nodeberto † (814 - 835)
- Vitale † (836 - 842)
- Roberto † (842 - 844)
- Sigifredo † (844 - 857)
- Amon † (860)
- Rotfrido † (864 - 874 ?)
- Azzo I † (877)
- Paolo II † (878 - 881)
- Aronne † (881 - 885)
- Adelardo † (890)
- Azzo II † (890 - 899)
- Pietro † (900 - 914/915)
- Girardo o Gottardo † (914 - 920 o 930 ?)
- Fredolfo ? † (920 ?)
- Giberto † (940)
- Aribaldo o Eriberto † (942 - 944)
- Adelardo † (945 - 952)
- Ermenaldo o Ermanno † (962 - 978/979)
- Teuzone † (978/979 - 1030)
- Sigifredo II † (1031 - 1041)
- Condelardo † (1041 - ?)
- Sifredo † (1046)
- Adalberto † (1047 - 1049)
- Conone † (1050)
- Adalberio o Alberio † (1053 - 1060)
- Volmaro † (1062 - 1065)
- Gandolfo † (1065 - 1085 deposed)
- Sant'Anselmo † (1082 - 1086) (Apostolic administrator)
- Eriberto o Euberto † (1085 - 1092)
- Lodovico † (1092 - dopo il 1093)
- Bonseniore o Bonsignore † (1098 - 1118 o 1130)
- Adelmo o Adelelmo † (1123 o 1130 - 1139)
- Alberio † (1139 - 1163)
- Albericone o Alberico † (1163 - 1187)
- Pietro † (1187 - 1210)
- Nicolò dei Maltraversi † (1211 - 1243)
- Guglielmo da Fogliano † (1243 - 5 agosto 1283 )
- Sede vacante (1283-1290)
- Guglielmo of Bobbio, † (22 giugno 1290 - 3 September 1301 )
- Enrico de Casalorci o Casalocci † (3 aprile 1302 - 1312)
- Guido de Baisio † (1313 - 11 ottobre 1329 named bishop of Rimini)
- Guido Roberti † (1329 - 1332 named archbishop of Ravenna)
- Tommasino Fogliani † (1334 - 1336) (Apostolic administrator)
- Rolando Scarampi † (1336 - 1337)
- Bartolomeo d'Asti † (1339 - 1362)
- Lorenzo † (1362 - 1379)
- Serafino Tavacci da Trino † (1379 - 1387 named bishop of Santa Giusta)
- Ugolino da Sesso † (24 luglio 1387 - 1394 o 1395)
- Tebaldo da Sesso, † (1394 o 1395 - 1439)
- Giacomo Antonio della Torre † (17 January 1439 - 19 October 1444 named bishop of Modena)
- Battista Pallavicino † (19 October 1444 - 1466)
- Antonio Beltrando † (28 May 1466 - 5 May 1476)
- Bonfrancesco Arlotti † (9 July 1477 - 7 January 1508)
- Gianluca Castellini † (1508 - 1510)
- Ugo Rangone † (18 October 1510 - 28 August 1540)
- Marcello Cervini (24 settembre 1540 - 29 febbraio 1544 named bishop of Gubbio, after Pope Marcello II)
- Giorgio Andreasi † (2 April 1544 - 22 January 1549 )
- Giambattista Grossi † (22 January 1549 - 28 March 1569)
- Eustachio Locatelli, † (15 April 1569 - 14 October 1575)
- Farncesco Martelli † (19 October 1575 - 9 March 1578)
- Benedetto Manzoli † (9 April 1578 - 26 August 1585)
- Giulio Masetti (bishop) † (7 October 1585 - 2 September 1592)[3]
- Claudio Rangoni † (16 December 1592 - 2 September 1621)[4]
- Alessandro d'Este † (13 October 1621 - 13 maggio 1624)
- Paolo Coccapani † (17 May 1625 - 26 June 1650)
- Rinaldo d'Este † (16 December 1650 - 23 April 1660)
- Girolamo Codebò † (24 january 1661 - 3 January 1661)
- Gianagostino Marliani † (27 February 1662 - 4 June 1674)
- Augusto Bellincini † (1674 - 20 July 1700)
- Ottavio Picenardi † (14 March 1701 - December 1722)
- Lodovico Forni † (12 May 1723 - 21 November 1750)
- Giovanni Maria Castelvetro † (7 December 1750 - 4 April 1785)
- Francesco Maria D'Este † (26 September 1785 - 17 May 1821)
- Angelo Maria Ficarelli † (19 April 1822 - 5 June 1825)
- Filippo Cattani † (4 July 1826 - 7 January 1849)
- Pietro Raffaelli † (20 April 1849 - 23 July 1866)
- Carlo Macchi † (27 March 1867 - 22 May 1873)
- Guido Rocca † (25 July 1873 - 26 January 1886)
- Vincenzo Manicardi † (7 June 1886 - 20 October 1901)
- Arturo Marchi † (16 December 1901 - 29 April 1910 named archbishop of Lucca)
- Eduardo Brettoni † (12 October 1910 - 13 November 1945)
- Beniamino Socche † (13 February 1946 - 16 January 1965)
- Gilberto Baroni † (27 March 1965 - 30 September 1986 named Bishop of Reggio Emilie-Guastalla)
- Thomas (c. 701)
- Nodoberto, ambassador of Louis the Pious at Constantinople (817);
- Azzo II, murdered during the Hungarian invasion in 900;
- Thenzo (978), who rebuilt the Basilica of St. Prosper and other churches;
- Nicolò Maltraversi (1211), much praised by the chronicler Salimbene de Adam and often ambassador to Emperor Frederick II;
- Enrico de Casalocci (1302);
- Battista Pallavicini (1445), the poet;
- Marcello Cervini (1540), later Pope Marcellus II;
- Cardinal Alessandro d'Este (1621);
- Angelo M. Ficarelli (1821).[5]
Notes
- ↑ "Diocese of Reggio Emilia-Guastalla" Catholic-Hierarchy.org. David M. Cheney. Retrieved March 29, 2016
- ↑ "Diocese of Reggio Emilia-Guastalla" GCatholic.org. Gabriel Chow. Retrieved March 29, 2016
- ↑ "Bishop Giulio Masetti" Catholic-Hierarchy.org. David M. Cheney. Retrieved March 21, 2016
- ↑ "Bishop Claudio Rangoni" Catholic-Hierarchy.org. David M. Cheney. Retrieved March 21, 2016
- ↑ Catholic Encyclopedia article
This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Herbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). "article name needed". Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton.
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Coordinates: 44°42′00″N 10°38′00″E / 44.7000°N 10.6333°E