Archdiocese of Laodicea of ​​Syria

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From Wikipedia, Liberade Libera.

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L’ Archdiocese of Laodicea of ​​Syria (in latino: Archdiocese of Laodicensis in Syria ) is a suppressed headquarters and headquarters of the Catholic Church.

Laodicea of ​​Syria, corresponding to the city of Lattakia in today’s Syria, is an ancient seat of the Roman province of Syria first in the civil diocese of the East and in the Patriarchate of Antioch. Like all the episcopal offices of this province, it depended directly on the patriarch of Antioch, which elevated it, like other dioceses of the province, to the rank of metropolitan headquarters without suffragan, as documented by one Episcopal Notice dated to the second half of the 6th century. [first]

According to Doroteo di Tire, the first bishop of Laodicea would have been San Lucio, mentioned by San Paolo in the letter to the Romans 16.21 [2] , and remembered in the Greek menologists on April 22nd. [3] Eusebio di Cesarea adds 6 bishops of Laodicea, preceding the council of Nicea of ​​325, where the first well -known bishop of this location is documented, Theodotus.

The episcopal series of Laodicea is fragmented: documented until the 6th century, it later becomes incomplete and few are the well -known names. The headquarters is still a metropolis of the Greco-Orthodox church of Antioch.

During the era of the crusades, the city was home to a diocese of the Latin rite.

From the twentieth century Laodicea of ​​Syria has been counted among the archbishop’s offices of the Catholic Church; The headquarters have been vacant from 1 December 1986.

Greek archbishops [ change | Modifica Wikitesto ]

Latin bishops [ change | Modifica Wikitesto ]

  • Gerardo † (mentioned in 1136 and 1159 [8] )
  • Anonymous † (mentioned in 1190)
  • Pietro di Sant’Ilario, O.P. † (1264 – 22 September 1272 discharged)

Archbishops holders [ change | Modifica Wikitesto ]

The bishops of Laodicea of ​​Syria appear confused with the bishops of Laodicea di Frigia, because in the sources mentioned the chronotaxes of the two locations are not distinct.

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  • Agostino di Nottingham, O.F.M. † (about 1310 -?)
  • Simone, O.P. † (4 July 1345 -?)
  • Giovanni Dolce, O.P. † (January 27, 1382 -?)
  • Turio † (? Deceased)
  • Gondisalvo Alfonso, O.P. † (October 19, 1405 – after 1436 deceased) [9]
  • Martino †
  • Antonio † (? Deceased)
  • Guglielmo di Barlasina, O.F.M. † (7 February 1396 -? Deceased)
  • Bartolomeo Fernando, O.P. † (22 June 1412 -?)
  • Nicola, O.S.B. † (March 21, 1414 -?)
  • Giovanni † (? Deceased)
  • Gerardo de Ruppin, O.P. † (16 Gennaio 1426 -?)
  • Giuliano di Tallada, O.P. † (12 July 1432 – 22 August 1435 appointed bishop of Bosa)
  • Denis de la Loyerie, O.F.M. † (22 August 1435 -? Deceased)
  • Garcia di Ledesma, O.P. † (17 August 1440 -?)
  • Jean Hardi † (June 17, 1446 -?)
  • Giorgio, O.F.M. † (mentioned in 1460)
  • Pierre Sorel † (mentioned in 1463)
  • Paolo di Cracovia, O.P. † (September 16, 1464 – 1498 deceased) [ten] [11]
  • Giovanni Loveri, O.F.M. † (April 29, 1475 -? Deceased)
  • Giacomo di Bydgoszcz, O.P. † (1481 -? Deceased)
  • Garcia, O.P. † (20 March 1493 -?)
  • Matteo di Lulino, O.P. † (October 16, 1497 -?)
  • Marian Lille, O.P. † (24 January 1499 – 12 March 1503 Deceduto [twelfth] ) [11]
  • Baldassarre di Bernezzo, O.S.B. † (3 July 1499 – 7 May 1509 deceased) [13]
  • Rodrigo of San Genesio, O.CIST. † (April 21, 1501 – after 1520 deceased) [14]
  • Giovanni † (9 August 1503 – 16 October 1526 deceased [15] ) [11]
  • Dennis T. O’Connor, C.S.B. † (May 4, 1908 – 30 June 1911 deceased)
  • Raffaele Scapinelli of Leguigno † (30 January 1912 – 7 December 1916 appointed cardinal presbyter of San Girolamo dei Croati) [16]
  • Francesco Moretti † (7 March 1921 – 30 December 1926 deceased)
  • Riccardo Bartoloni † (21 May 1928 – 11 October 1933 deceased)
  • Orazio Mazzella † (1 November 1934 – 30 July 1939 deceased)
  • Mario Giardini, B. † (February 5, 1940 – 30 August 1947 deceased)
  • Guido Luigi Bentivoglio, O.C.S.O. † (March 30, 1949 – April 3, 1952 Archbishop of Catania succeeded)
  • Benjamin-Petave Roland-Gosselin † (April 23, 1952-22 May 1952 deceased)
  • Paul Bernier † (7 August 1952 – 9 September 1957 appointed Archbishop, personal title, of Gaspé)
  • Domenico Tardini † (December 27, 1958 – 27 December 1958 discharged)
  • Martin John O’Connor † (September 5, 1959 – 1 December 1986 deceased)
  1. ^ ( FR ) Echos d’Orient X, 1907, PP. 93, 140 and 143 .
  2. ^ Rm 16,21 . are Laparola.net .
  3. ^ ( THE ) Who, East Christian , Paris, 1740, volume II, col. 789.
  4. ^ a b ( IN ) Ernest Honigmann, The Patriarch of Antioch: A Revision of Le Quien and the Notitia Antiochena , Tradition Vol. 5 (1947), p. 144.
  5. ^ Apollinare occupied the Laodicea headquarters during the period in which Pelagio had been exiled by Emperor Valente.
  6. ^ ( FR ) Ernest Honigmann, The Constantinople Council of 394 and the authors of the “Syntagma of the XIV titles” , in Paul Devos (you.), Three posthumous memories of history and geography of the East Christian , Brussels, 1961, p. 40.
  7. ^ For the latter four bishops: ( FR ) Vitalien Laurent, The corpus of the seals of the Byzantine Empire , vol. V/2, Paris, 1965, pp. 381-384.
  8. ^ Mentioned as a witness in a bubble in Melisenda, queen of Jerusalem, having as its object the order of San Lazzaro, and dated 1159, an agreement VII.
  9. ^ ( IS ) Mercedes Vázquez Bartomeu, Obispos in parts of unbelievers en la Archidiócesis Compostelana (1405-1524) , Spain, 54 (2002), pp. 212-213.
  10. ^ ( PL ) Paweł Czaplewski, Titular episcopate in medieval Poland , Annals of the Society of Friends of the Sciences of Poznań 43, Poznań, 1915, pp. 87-90.
  11. ^ a b c Suffragano bishop of Krakow
  12. ^ ( PL ) Paweł Czaplewski, Titular episcopate in medieval Poland , pp. 91-92.
  13. ^ Marco Fratini, Baldassarre Bernezzo and the sunset of the Gothic in Pinerolo , Bulletin of the Piedmontese Society of Archeology and Fine Arts, New Li series (1999), pp. 241-261.
  14. ^ ( IS ) Mercedes Vázquez Bartomeu, Obispos in parts of unbelievers en la Archidiócesis Compostelana (1405-1524) , Spain, 54 (2002), pp. 220-221.
  15. ^ ( PL ) Paweł Czaplewski, Titular episcopate in medieval Poland , pp. 92-94.
  16. ^ ( FR ) Catholic pontifical directory 1914 , p. 337.

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