Roman Catholic Diocese of Isola
The Diocese of Isola was a Roman Catholic diocese in Italy, located in Isola di Capo Rizzuto, Crotone, Reggio Calabria in the ecclesiastical province of Santa Severina.[1][2]
History
- 1114: Established as Diocese of Isola (Insulensis)[1]
- 27 Jun 1818: Suppressed (to Diocese of Crotone)[2]
- 1968: Restored as Titular Episcopal See of Isola (Insulensis)[2]
Ordinaries
- Benedetto, O.S.A. (28 May 1451 - 23 Jul 1451 Appointed, Bishop of Dragonara)
- . . .
- Bonadias de Nigronibus (4 Jun 1479 - 1487 Died)
- Angelo Castalsi (28 Feb 1488 - 1508 Died)
- Cesare Lambertini (22 Sep 1508 - 8 Jun 1545 Resigned)
- Tommaso Lambertini (8 Jun 1545 - 1550 Died)
- Onorato Fascitelli, O.S.B. (30 Jan 1551 - 1562 Resigned)
- Annibale Caracciolo (4 May 1562 - 1605 Died)[3]
- Scipione Montalegre (1605 - 1609 Died)
- Girolamo Palazzuoli (11 Jan 1610 - 1614 Died)
- Andrea Giustiniani, O.P. (24 Nov 1614 - 27 Nov 1617 Died)
- Giovanni Antonio Massimo (12 Feb 1618 - Feb 1622 Died)
- Ascanio Castagna (8 Aug 1622 - 16 Dec 1627 Died)
- Alessandro Bichi (5 May 1628 - 9 Sep 1630 Appointed, Bishop of Carpentras)
- Francesco Bibilia (8 Jan 1631 - 1634 Died)
- Martino Alfieri (21 Aug 1634 - 11 Apr 1639 Appointed, Archbishop of Cosenza)
- Giuliano Viviani (2 May 1639 - Nov 1640 Died)
- Antonio Celli, O.P. (16 Sep 1641 - 1645 Died)
- Domenico Carnevale (19 Feb 1646 - 12 Dec 1646 Died)
- Giovanni Battista Morra (1 Jul 1647 - Oct 1648 Died)
- Giovanni Francesco Ferrari (2 May 1650 - 1659 Died)
- Carlo Rossi (bishop) (1 Sep 1659 - 9 Sep 1679 Died)
- Francesco Megale (27 Nov 1679 - 4 Nov 1681 Died)
- Francesco Martini (Marini) (25 May 1682 - Oct 1715 Died)
- Domenico Votta (20 Dec 1717 - Jun 1722 Died)
- Pierluigi del Mayo (23 Sep 1722 - 2 Apr 1749 Resigned)
- Giuseppe Lancellotti, O.F.M. Conv. (5 May 1749 - 18 Jan 1766 Died)
- Michael Angelo Monticelli (21 Jul 1766 - 15 May 1798 Died)
References
- 1 2 Catholic Hierarchy: "Diocese of Isola" retrieved January 30, 2016
- 1 2 3 GCatholic: "Titular Episcopal See of Isola" retrieved January 30, 2016
- ↑ "Bishop Annibale Caracciolo" Catholic-Hierarchy.org. David M. Cheney. Retrieved March 21, 2016
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