Bishopric of Adria

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The Bishopric of Adria is a bishopric suffragan to the patriarchate of Venice, which comprises roughly the northeastern Italian Province of Rovigo (Rovigo itself is not an episcopal see), and a part of one town in the Province of Padua.

[edit] Ecclesiastical history

Tradition dates the preaching of the Gospel in Adria from the days of St. Apollinaris, himself consecrated bishop by St. Peter. The figure of this Bishop of Ravenna has a singular importance in the hagiographical legends of the northeast of Italy. Even if Emilia, Romagna and the territory around Venice were Christianized and had bishops (the two facts are concomitant) before Piedmont, for example, their conversion does not go back beyond the end of the second century.

The first known bishop of Adria is Gallonistus, who was present at a synod in Rome (649) under pope Martin I (Mansi, XII). Venerable Bede's Martyrology mentions a St. Colianus, Bishop of Adria, but nothing is known about him. Amongst the bishops of Adria is the Blessed Aldobrandinus of Este (1248-1352).

The diocese had in the early 20th century, for a population of 190,400: 80 parishes; 300 churches, chapels and oratories; 250 secular priests; 72 seminarians; 12 regular priests; 9 lay-brothers; 90 confraternities; 3 boys schools (97 pupils); 6 girls schools (99 pupils).

[edit] Sources and references

This article incorporates text from the public-domain Catholic Encyclopedia of 1913. [1]
  • Zattoni, Il valore storico della Passio di S. Apollinare e la fondazione dell episcopato a Ravenna e in Romagna, in the "Rivista storico-critica delle scienze teologiche", I, 10 and II, 3.

[edit] See also