Archbishop of Albi

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The current Catholic archdiocese with its see at Albi is officially Albi, Castres and Lavaur, and is coextensive with the department of Tarn, in Southern France. The office of Bishop of Albi has existed in the Christian church.

In the 17th century the post was promoted to an archbishopric, from a bishopric.

One significant holder of the post was Saint Salvius.

Contents

[edit] List of bishops and archbishops

[edit] To 1000

  • St Clair
  • Antime
  • c. 406: Diogénien
  • 451: Anemius
  • 506: Sabin
  • 549: Ambroise
  • 580–584: St Salvi (Salvy) or Salvii
  • 585: Didier
  • 625–647: Constantius
  • ?–664: Didon
  • 647–673: Richard
  • 692–30. May 698: Citruin
  • c. 700: St Amarand
  • 722: Hugo I.
  • 734: Johannes I
  • 812: Verdat
  • 825: Wilhelm I
  • 844: Balduin
  • 854: Pandevius
  • 876: St Loup
  • 886: Eloi
  • 887–891: Adolence
  • 921: Paterne
  • 926: Godebric
  • 936: Angelvin
  • 941–942: Miron
  • 961–967: Bernard
  • 972: Frotaire (Frotarius)
  • 975–987: Amelius or Ameil
  • 990: Ingelbin
  • 992: Honorat
  • 998: Amblard

[edit] 1000-1300

  • 1020–1040: Amelius or Ameil II.
  • 1040–1054: Wilhelm II.
  • 1062–1079: Frotard, Frotarius
  • 1079–1090: Wilhelm III.
  • 1096: Gauthier
  • 1098–1099: Hugo II.
  • 1100–1103: Adelgaire I.
  • 1103: Armand I. de Cessenon
  • 1109–1110: Adelgaire II.
  • 1115: Sicard
  • 1115–1125: Bertrand I.
  • 1125–1132: Humbert
  • 1136–1143: Hugo III.
  • 1143–1155: Rigaud
  • 1157–1174: Guilhem, William of Dourgne
  • 1176: Gérard (Géraud, Girald)
  • 1183: Claude André
  • 1185–1227: Guillaume Pierre de Brens (William Peyre, Guilliame Peyre, Guilhem Peyre)
  • 1228–um 1254: Durand
  • 1254–um 1271: Bernard II. de Combret
  • 7. March 1276–1308: Bernard de Castanet

[edit] 1300-1500

  • 1308–1311: Bertrand des Bordes
  • 1311–1314: Géraud II.
  • 1314–1333: Béraud de Farges
  • 1334–1336: Pierre I. de la Vie
  • 26 July to 28 November 1337: Bernard IV. de Camiet
  • 1337–1338: Guillaume Court
  • 1339–1350: Peitavin de Montesquiou, Pectin de Montesquieu
  • 1351–1354: Armand II. Guillaume
  • 1355–1379: Hugues Auberti (Hugo Alberti)
  • 1379–1382: Dominique I. de Florence
  • 1382: Jean II. de Saie
  • 1383–1392: Guillaume VII. de la Voulte
  • 1393: Pierre II.
  • 1393–1410: Dominique I. de Florence (2. Mal)
  • 1410–1434: Pierre III. Neveu
  • 1435: Bernard V. de Cazilhac
  • 1435–1462: Robert Dauphin
  • 1462-1464: Louis d'Amboise, coadjutor
  • 1464–1473: Jean Jouffroy
  • 1474–1502: Louis d'Amboise

[edit] 1500-1700

  • 1502–1510: Louis II. d'Amboise (House of Amboise)
  • 1510–1515: Charles I. Robertet
  • 1515–1518: Jean-Jacques Robertet
  • 1519–1523: Adrien Gouffier de Boissy
  • 1524–1528: Aymar Gouffier
  • 1528–1535: Antoine Duprat
  • 1535–1550: John of Lothringen-Guise
  • 1550–1561: Louis I of Lothringen-Guise
  • 1561–1567: Cardinal Laurent Strozzi
  • 1568–1574: Philippe de Rodolfis
  • 1575–1588: Giuliano de Medici
  • 1588–1608: Alphonse I. d'Elbene
  • 1608–1635: Alphonse II. d'Elbene
  • 1635–1676: Gaspard de Daillon du Lude
  • 1676–1687: Hyacinthe Serroni (first Archbishop, from 1678)
  • 1687–1703: Charles II. Le Goux de la Berchère

[edit] 1700-present

  • 1703–1719: Henri de Nesmond
  • 1719–1747: Armand-Pierre de la Croix de Castries
  • 1747–1759: Dominique de La Rochefoucauld (also Archbishop of Rouen)
  • 1759–1764: Léopold-Charles de Choiseul-Stainville
  • 1764–1794: François-Joachim de Pierre de Bernis
  • 3 April 1791: Jean-Joachim Gausserand
  • 1794–1802: François de Pierre de Bernis
  • 1817–1833: Charles III Brault
  • 1833–1842: François-Marie-Edouard de Gually
  • 1842–1864: Jean-Joseph-Marie-Eugène de Jerphanion
  • 1864–1875: Jean-Paul-François-Marie-Félix Lyonnet
  • 1876–1884: Etienne-Emile Ramadié
  • 1884–1899: Jean-Emile Fonteneau
  • 1899–1918: Eudoxe-Irénée-Edouard Mignot
  • 1918–1940: Pierre-Célestin Cézerac
  • 1940–1956: Jean-Joseph-Aimé Moussaron
  • 1957–1961: Jean-Emmanuel Marquès
  • 1961–1974: Claude Dupuy
  • 1974–1985: Robert-Joseph Coffy (also Archbishop of Marseille)
  • 1986–1988: Joseph-Marie-Henri Rabine
  • 1989–1999: Roger Lucien Meindre
  • 2000– Pierre-Marie Joseph Carré (incumbent)

[edit] External links

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