Diocese of Jesi

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The Italian Catholic diocese of Jesi (Iesi) is in the Marche. It is a suffragan of the archdiocese of Ancona-Osimo.[1]

[edit] History

Saint Septimius, martyred in 307, is venerated as the first bishop of Jesi. Saint Florianus, who was cast into the Esino in the Diocletian persecution, is also venerated (perhaps he is confounded with Saint Florianus who was cast into the Enus or Anisus). Other bishops of antiquity were Martianus (c. 500), Calumniosus (c. 647), Honestus. The relics of these three were discovered in 1623.

In 1245 Pope Innocent IV deposed the intruder Armannus and placed in his stead the Franciscan Gualtiero, an Englishman and a friend of John of Parma, general of the order and patron of the Franciscan Spirituals, spoken of by Salimbene as "bonus cantor, bonus praedicator, bonus dictator". Bishop Severinus in 1237 laid the foundations of the new cathedral, a magnificent structure; the old one, now San Nicola, was outside the city, and in the eighteenth century had fallen into ruin.

Gabriele del Monte (1554) introduced the reforms of the Council of Trent, which he had attended. His successors were Cardinal Camillo Borghese (1597), afterwards Pope Paul V; Cardinals Tiberio Cenci (1621) and Alderano Cibo (1656), noted for their benefactions; Antonio Fonseca (1724), who restored the cathedral and founded a hospital. Cardinal Caprara, afterwards Archbishop of Milan, who concluded the Concordat with Napoleon, was Bishop of Jesi (1800-02). He was succeeded by Antonio M. Odescalchi, deported to Milan by the French in 1809.[2]

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ Catholic Hierarchy page
  2. ^ Catholic Encyclopedia article

This article incorporates text from the public-domain Catholic Encyclopedia of 1913.