Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Siracusa
Archdiocese of Siracusa Archidioecesis Syracusana | |
---|---|
Location | |
Country | Sicily |
Ecclesiastical province | Siracusa |
Statistics | |
Area | 1,341 km2 (518 sq mi) |
Population - Total - Catholics |
(as of 2010) 330,000 320,000 (97%) |
Parishes | 76 |
Information | |
Denomination | Catholic Church |
Rite | Roman Rite |
Established | 2nd century |
Cathedral | Cattedrale della Natività di Maria Santissima |
Current leadership | |
Pope | Francis |
Archbishop | Salvatore Pappalardo |
Emeritus Bishops | Giuseppe Costanzo |
Map | |
Website | |
www.arcidiocesi.siracusa.it |
The Italian Catholic Archdiocese of Siracusa, also known as Syracuse, (Latin: Archidioecesis Syracusana) is in Sicily. It became an archdiocese in 1744.[1][2] The current Archbishop is Salvatore Pappalardo. He was given the pallium by Pope Benedict in June 2009, during a Mass on the feast of the Solemnity of the Holy Apostles Saints Peter and Paul. He is not to be confused with Salvatore Pappalardo, now-deceased Cardinal and Archbishop of Palermo.
History
Syracuse claimed to be the second Church founded by St. Peter, after that of Antioch. It also claims that St. Paul preached there. As its first bishop it venerates St. Marcianus, whose dates are uncertain. Little authenticity can be assigned to the list of the seventeen bishops who were predecessors of Chrestus, to whom the Emperor Constantine wrote a letter.
In the times of St. Cyprian (mid-3rd century), Christianity certainly flourished at Syracuse, and the catacombs located there attest to Christian worship there in the 2nd century. Besides its martyred bishops, Syracuse claims other Christian martyrs, such as St. Benignus and St. Eugarius (204), St. Bassianus (270); and the martyrdom of the deacon Euplus and the virgin St. Lucy under Diocletian are thought to be historical.
The names of the known bishops of the following century are few in number: Germanus (346); Eulalius (465); Agatho (553), during whose rule Pope Vigilius died at Syracuse; Maximianus and Joannes (586), who received letters from Pope Gregory I; while another bishop was denounced by Pope Honorius for the protection which he accorded to prostitutes; St. Zozimus (640), who founded the monastery of Santa Lucia fuori-le-mura; St. Elias (d. 660).
Of Marcianos II it is said that he was consecrated not at Rome, but at Syracuse, since the Emperor Leo the Isaurian (726) had removed Southern Italy from the jurisdiction of Rome, and had then elevated Syracuse to the dignity of a metropolitan see, over the thirteen other dioceses of Sicily. Stephen II (768) carried to Constantinople the relics of St. Lucy for safety against the Saracen incursions.
Archbishop Gregorios Asbestas (about 845) was deposed by St. Ignatius, Patriarch of Constantinople, and then became the principal accomplice of the schismatic Patriarch St. Photius.[3] After Syracuse fell to the Arabs in 878, St. Sophronius, together with the monk Theodosius, was thrown into prison at Palermo where he died in a dungeon. Until the Norman Conquest the names of further bishops are not known.
The series reopens in 1093 with Bishop Rober, who received the pallium from Pope Urban II; in 1169 the Englishman Richard Palmer was also invested by papal authority. In 1188 the see became suffragan of the archdiocese of Monreale. Among the bishops of this period are:
- Rinaldo de Lusio, killed in 1154;
- Pietro de Moncada (1313) and Ruggero Bellomo (1419), who restored the cathedral;
- Jacopo Venerio (1460), afterwards cardinal;
- Pietro de Urries (1516), ambassador of Emperor Charles V to the Fifth Lateran Council;
- Gerolamo Bononi (1541), a reformer at the Council of Trent;
- Jacopo Orozco (1562), who introduced the Roman ritual in place of the Gallican, and who founded the seminary.
- Annibale Termini (1695).
In 1816 the diocese of Caltagirone was detached from Syracuse. The diocese of Piazza Armerina and diocese of Noto were made its suffragan sees, but the latter was detached in the same year.[4]
Ordinaries
Diocese of Siracusa
Erected: 2nd Century
Latin Name: Syracusanus
Metropolitan: Archdiocese of Monreale
- Maximian , O.S.B. (591 - Nov 594 Died)
- ...
- Pablo de Santafé (3 Feb 1446 - 1460 Died)
- ...
- Giacopo Antonio Venier (9 Jan 1462 - 16 Sep 1464 Appointed, Bishop of León)
- Andrea Tolomei (26 Jan 1463 - 1468 Died)
- Dalmazio Gabrielli (Gabriele, Grazielli), O.P. (6 Sep 1469 - 13 Jan 1511 Died)
- Guillermo Raimundo Centelles (4 Jun 1512 - 22 Aug 1516 Died)
- Pedro de Urieta (28 Sep 1516 - 1518 Resigned)
- Ludovico Platamone (18 Feb 1518 - 30 May 1540 Died)
- Girolamo Beccadelli Bologna (29 Apr 1541 - 16 Jul 1560 Died)
- Juan Orozco de Arce (6 Nov 1562 - 11 Aug 1574 Appointed, Bishop of Catania)
- Gilberto Isfar y Corillas (11 Aug 1574 - 23 Jan 1579 Appointed, Bishop of Patti)
- Juan Castellano Orozco (26 Jun 1579 - 12 May 1602 Died)
- Giuseppe Saladino (31 May 1604 - 22 Nov 1611 Died)[5]
- Juan Torres de Osorio (13 Nov 1613 - 19 Oct 1619 Appointed, Bishop of Catania)
- Paolo Faraone (7 Oct 1619 - 12 Nov 1629 Died)
- Fabrizio Antinori (13 Nov 1630 - 25 Jul 1635 Died)
- Francesco d'Elia e Rossi (2 May 1639 - 6 Dec 1647 Died)
- Giovanni Antonio Capobianco (22 Mar 1649 - 19 May 1673 Died)
- Francesco Maria Rini (Rhini), O.F.M. (1 Oct 1674 - 19 Oct 1676 Appointed, Bishop of Agrigento)
- Francesco Fortezza (14 Dec 1676 - 13 Nov 1693 Died)
- Asdrubale Termini (30 May 1695 - 6 Jun 1722 Died)
- Tomás Marín (Marino), O.P. (14 Feb 1724 - 2 May 1730 Died)
- Matteo Trigona (7 May 1732 Confirmed - 10 Oct 1747 Resigned)
- Francesco Maria Testa (6 May 1748 Confirmed - 22 Apr 1754 Confirmed, Archbishop of Monreale)
- Giuseppe Antonio de Requeséns, O.S.B. (17 Feb 1755 Confirmed - Jan 1773 Died)
- Giovanni Battista Alagona (13 Sep 1773 Confirmed - Sep 1801 Died)
- Gaetano Maria Bonanno (24 May 1802 - 6 Aug 1806 Died)
- Filippo Trigona (18 Sep 1807 Confirmed - 2 Jan 1824 Died)
- Giuseppe-Maria Amorelli (20 Dec 1824 Confirmed - 13 Dec 1840 Died)
- Michele Manzo (21 Apr 1845 Confirmed - 27 Sep 1852 Confirmed, Archbishop of Chieti)
- Angelo Robino (27 Jun 1853 Confirmed - 28 Aug 1868 Died)
- Giuseppe Guarino (23 Feb 1872 - 5 Jul 1875 Appointed, Archbishop of Messina)
- Benedetto Lavecchia Guarnieri, O.F.M. (5 Jul 1875 - 6 Mar 1896 Died)
- Giuseppe Fiorenza (22 Jun 1896 - 11 Dec 1905 Resigned)
- Luigi Bignami (11 Dec 1905 - 27 Dec 1919 Died)
- Giacomo Carabelli (13 Apr 1921 - 16 Jul 1932 Died)
- Ettore Baranzini (29 Apr 1933 - 6 Mar 1968 Died)
- Giuseppe Bonfigioli (6 Mar 1968 Succeeded - 17 Apr 1973 Appointed, Archbishop of Cagliari)
- Calogero Lauricella (8 Sep 1973 - 20 Jun 1989 Died)
- Giuseppe Costanzo (7 Dec 1989 - 12 Sep 2008 Retired)
- Salvatore Pappalardo (12 Sep 2008 - )
Notes
- ↑ "Archdiocese of Siracusa" Catholic-Hierarchy.org. David M. Cheney. Retrieved February 29, 2016
- ↑ "Metropolitan Archdiocese of Siracusa" GCatholic.org. Gabriel Chow. Retrieved February 29, 2016
- ↑ Byzantium: the Imperial centuries, pg 171 AD 610-1071 By Romilly James Heald Jenkins Publisher: University of Toronto Press ISBN 978-0-8020-6667-1
- ↑ Catholic Encyclopedia: Syracuse
- ↑ "Bishop Giuseppe Saladino" Catholic-Hierarchy.org. David M. Cheney. Retrieved March 21, 2016
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: 37°05′00″N 15°17′00″E / 37.0833°N 15.2833°E