Roman Catholic Suburbicarian Diocese of Palestrina
The Roman Catholic Suburbicarian Diocese of Palestrina, (Lat:Praenestinus), is a Roman Catholic suburbicarian diocese centered on the comune of Palestrina in Italy.
The current Bishop of Palestrina is Domenico Sigalini, who on Wednesday, November 3, 2010, was also appointed by Pope Benedict XVI to be the general ecclesiastical assistant of Italian Catholic Action.
History
During the 17th century, the comune of Palestrina was the family territory of a number of Italian noble families including the Barberini, Colonna and d'Este families (which regularly intermarried). Members of these families are represented throughout the list of diocese Bishops, especially between 1600 and 1800. Barberini Pope Urban VIII appointed a number of relatives and close supporters to the Palestrina diocese and governmental positions.
Bishops
To 1000
- Andreas 771-778
- Contantinus 826
- Leone 925-933[1]
- Teophylactus 963[2]
- Stefan 988[3]
- Peter 996-1027[4]
1000-1200
- Johannes I 1036-1039[5]
- Johannes II 1044
- Raniero 1058 (pseudocardinal)
- Bruno 1059-1060
- Bernhard 1061-1065
- Loperto 1066-1069
- vacant 1069-1073
- Uberto Belmonte 1073-1082
- Berardo (?) ca.1092 (?)[6]
- Milone 1095/98-1104
- vacant 1104-1107[7]
- Cuno of Praeneste 1107-1122
- Guillaume Praenestinus 1123-1137[8]
- Johannes 1130-1134 (pseudocardinal)
- Étienne de Châlons 1139-1144
- Guarino Foscari 1144-1158
- Giulio I 1158-1164
- vacant 1164-1176[9]
- Vibiano 1168-1173 (pseudocardinal)
- Manfredo de Lavagna 1176-1178
- vacant 1178-1179
- Benerede 1179-1180
- Paolo Scolari 1180-1187
- vacant 1188-1191[10]
- Giovanni III da Anagni 1190-1196[11]
- vacant 1196-1200
1200-1400
1400-1600
- Oddo Colonna 1401-1405 (administrator)
- Antonio I Gaetani 1405-1409, † 1412 (Bishop of Porto 1409-1412)
- Angelo de Anna de Summaripa 1412-1428
- vacant 1428-1431
- Hugues de Lusignan 1431-1436, † 1442 (Bishop of Frascati 1436-1442)
- vacant 1436-1444
- Giovanni IV Tagliacotio 1444-1449
- Giorgio de Flisco 1449-1455
- vacant 1455-1460
- Juan de Torquemada 1460-1463, † 1468 (Bishop of Albano c. 1464 and Bishop of Sabina 1463-1468)
- vacant 1463-1465
- Alain de Cotivy 1465-1472, † 1474 (also Bishop of Sabina 1472-1474)
- Angelo Capranica 1472-1478
- Marco Balbo 1478-1491
- Jean Balue 1491 (Bishop of Albano 1483-1491)
- Giovanni VII Micheli 1491-1492, † 1503 (Bishop of Albano 1491, Bishop of Porto 1492-1503)
- Girolamo II Basso della Rovere 1492-1503, † 1507 (Bishop of Sabina 1503-1507)
- Lorenzo Cybo de Mari 1503 (Bishop of Albano 1501-1503, Bishop of Frascati 1503)
- Antonio Pallavicino 1503-1507 (Bishop of Frascati 1503-1505)
- Giovanni Antonio Sangiorgio 1507-1508, † 1509 (Bishop of Frascati 1505-1507, Bishop of Sabina 1508-1509)
- Bernardino Lopez de Carvajal 1508-1509 (Bishop of Frascati 1507-1509, of Sabina 1509-1521 and of Ostia and Velletri 1521-1523)
- Guillaume Briçonnet 1509-1511 (Bishop of Albano 1507-1508 and of Frascati 1509-1510)
- Marco II Vigerio 1511-1516
- Francesco II Soderini 1516-1523 (Bishop of Albano 1516-1517, of Porto 1523 and of Ostia and Velletri 1523-1524)
- Alessandro Farnese 1523
- Antonio Maria Ciocchi del Monte 1523-1524 (Bishop of Albano 1521-1523 and of Sabina 1524)
- Pietro V Accolti 1524, † 1532 (Bishop of Albano 1623-1524 and of Sabina 1524-1532)
- Marco Cornaro 1524
- Lorenzo Pucci 1524-1531 (Bishop of Albano 1524)
- Giovanni Piccolomini 1531-1533, † 1537 (Bishop of Albano 1524-1531, of Porto 1533-1535 and of Ostia and Velletri 1535-1537)
- Andrea della Valle 1533-1534 (Bishop of Albano 1533)
- Bonifacio Ferreri 1534-1535, † 1543 (Bishop of Albano 1533-1534, of Sabina 1535-1537 and of Porto 1537-1543)
- Lorenzo II Campeggio 1535-1537, † 1539 (Bishop of Albano 1534-1535 and of Sabina 1537-1539)
- Antonio Sanseverino 1537-1539, † 1543 (Bishop of Sabina 1539-1543 and of Porto 1543)
- Giovanni Vincenzo Caraffa 1539-1541
- Alessandro II Cesarini 1541-1542
- Francesco III Cornaro 1542-1543
- Giovanni Maria Ciocchi del Monte 1543-1550
- François Louis de Bourbon de Vendôme 1550-1557
- Federigo Cesi 1557-1562, † 1564
- Giovanni Morone 1562-1564, † 1580 (Bishop of Albano 1560-1561, of Sabina 1561-1562, of Frascati 1562, 1564–1565, of Porto 1565-1570 and of Ostia and Velletri 1570-1580)
- Cristoforo Madruzzo 1564-1570, † 1578 (Bishop of Albano 1561-1562, of Sabina 1562-1564 and of Porto 1570-1578)
- Otto Truchsess von Waldburg 1570-1573 (Bishop of Albano 1562-1570 and Sabina 1570)
- Giulio della Rovere 1573-1578 (Bishop of Albano 1570 and of Sabina 1570-1573)
- Giovanni Antonio Serbelloni 1578-1583, † 1591 (Bishop of Frascati 1583-1587, of Sabina 1578, of Porto 1587-1589 and of Ostia and Velletri 1589-1591)
- Giovanni Francesco I Gambara 1583-1587 (Bishop of Albano 1580-1583)
- Marco Antonio Colonna 1587-1597
- Giulio Antonio Santori 1597-1602
1600-1800
- Alessandro Ottaviano de' Medici 1602-1605 (Bishop of Albano 1600-1602)
- Agostino Valeri 1605-1606
- Ascanio Colonna 1606-1608
- Antonio Maria Galli 1608-1611, † 1620 (Bishop of Frascati 1605-1608, of Porto 1611-1615 and of Ostia and Velletri 1615-1620)
- Gregorio Petrocchini de Montelbero 1611-1612
- Benedetto Giustiniani 1612-1615, † 1621 (Bishop of Sabina 1615-1620 and of Porto 1620-1621)
- Francesco Maria Del Monte 1615-1621, † 1625 (Bishop of Porto 1621-1623 and of Ostia and Velletri 1623-1625)
- Ottavio Bandini 1621-1624, † 1629 (Bishop of Porto 1624-1626 and of Ostia and Velletri 1626-1629)
- Andrea III Baroni Peretti Montalto 1624-1626, † 1629 (Bishop of Albano 1626-1627 and of Frascati 1627-1629)
- Domenico Ginnasi 1626-1629, † 1639 (Bishop of Porto 1629-1630 and of Ostia 1630-1639)
- Marcello Lante della Rovere 1629, † 1652 (Bishop of Frascati 1629-1639, of Porto 1639-1641 and of Ostia 1641-1652)
- Pier Paolo Crescenzi 1629-1641, † 1645 (Bishop of Porto 1641-1645)
- Guido Bentivoglio 1641-1644
- Alfonso de la Cueva Albuquerque 1644-1655
- Bernardino Spada 1655-1661 (Bishop of Albano 1646-1652, of Frascati 1652 and of Sabina 1652-1655)
- Antonio Barberini 1661-1671 (Bishop of Frascati 1655-1661)
- Rinaldo d'Este 1671-1672
- Cesare Facchinetti 1672-1679, † 1683 (Bishop of Porto 1679-1680 and of Ostia and Velletri 1680-1683)
- Alderano Cybo 1679-1680, † 1700 (Bishop of Frascati 1680-1683, of Porto 1683-1687 and of Ostia and Velletri 1687-1700)
- Lorenzo III Raggi 1680-1687
- Antonio IV Bichi 1687-1691
- Paluzzo Paluzzi Altieri degli Albertoni 1691-1698 (Bishop of Sabina 1689-1691)
- Luis Manuel Fernando Portocarrero 1698-1709
- Fabrizio Spada 1710-1717
- Francesco IV del Giudice 1717-1721 (Bishop of Frascati 1721-1724 and of Ostia and Velletri 1724-1725)
- Francesco Barberini 1721-1726, † 1738 (Bishop of Ostia and Velletri 1726-1738)
- Tommaso Ruffo 1726-1738, † 1753 (Bishop of Porto 1738-1740 and of Ostia and Velletri 1740-1753)
- Giorgio II Spinola 1738-1739
- Giovanni Battista Altieri 1739-1740
- Vincenzo I Petra 1740-1747
- Antonio Xaverio Gentilis 1747-1753
- Giuseppe Spinelli 1753-1759, † 1763 (Bishop of Porto 1759-1761 and of Ostia and Velletri 1761-1763)
- Federico Marcello Lante 1759-1763, † 1773 (Bishop of Porto 1763-1773)
- Giovanni Francesco II Stoppani 1763-1774
- Girolamo III Spinola 1775-1784
- Marcantonio Colonna 1784-1793
- Leonardo Antonelli 1794-1800, † 1811 (Bishop of Porto 1800-1807 and of Ostia and Velletri 1807-1811)
From 1800
Post 1960
Like all dioceses in this category, for historical reasons it has had, since 1960, an incumbent residential bishop with ordinary powers but also has assigned to it as an honorary high ranking dignity one of the six cardinals in the Order of Cardinal Bishops.[14] The Cardinal Bishop has no powers with regard to the government of the diocese.
The residential bishops have been:[15]
- Pietro Severi (1966–1975)
- Renato Spallanzani (1975–1986)
- Pietro Garlato (1986–1991)
- Vittorio Tomassetti (1992–1997)
- Eduardo Davino (1997–2005)
- Domenico Sigalini (2005–present )
Notes
- ^ cfr. Ivan Kuklujević Sakcinski: Codex diplomaticus regni Croatiae, Dalmatiae et Slavoniae, Vol. 1, Zagreb 1874, pp. 76-82; Regesta Imperii Online. Papstregesten 911-1024 Nr 70-73 and 111
- ^ Liudprandi historia Ottonis, MGH SS rer. Germ. 41, p. 165
- ^ cf. G. Cappelletti: Le chiese d'Italia della loro origine sino ai nostri giorni. Vol. 1, Venic 1844, pp. 599-601
- ^ Regesta Imperii Online. Papstregesten 911-1024 no. 758; and Papstregesten 1024-1046 no. 95
- ^ Sources for the period 1036-1130: Hüls, p. 108-117; Klewitz, p. 33-35, 117 and 120
- ^ Hüls, p. 111 no. 8 says that his existence is dubious because he appears only in one bull dated September 1092 which has been recognized as falsehood, though possibly based on original documents. Klewitz, p. 117 does not mention him among the occupants of this suburbicarian see.
- ^ Some sources mention cardinal Corrado 1105-1106 but the only document attesting his existence (bull of Paschalis II in favour of the church of S. Salvatore dated 27 December 1105) has been recognized as falsehood and both Klewitz, p. 120 and Hüls, p. 112-113, eliminated him from the list of the bishops of Palestrina
- ^ Source for the period 1130-1187: Brixius p. 135
- ^ Some sources mention cardinal Ugo or Ottone occupying that see ca. 1164 but Brixius, p. 60-68 excludes him from the list of cardinals created by Alexander III because no papal bulls signed by him has been found. Probably he is confused with cardinal-bishop Odo of Tusculum 1170-1171 (cf. Brixius, p. 65 no. 21)
- ^ Source for the period 1188-1228: Maleczek, p. 63
- ^ Some sources indicate that abbot Mainard of Pontigny became bishop of Palestrina in 1188 and died few weeks after his promotion but Maleczek, p. 125 says that Mainard is attested as abbot of Pontigny until 1192. Therefore, he should be excluded from the list of the bishops of Palestrina
- ^ Source for the list from 1231: The Cardinals of the Holy Roman Church
- ^ Some names in this list are from "Palestrina (Cardinal Titular Church)". Catholic-Hierarchy. http://www.catholic-hierarchy.org/diocese/d1p00.html. Retrieved 2006-12-31.
- ^ "Diocese of Palestrina". Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company. 1913.
- ^ http://www.catholic-hierarchy.org/diocese/dplst.html
Bibliography
Pius B. Gams, Series episcoporum Ecclesiae catholicae, Leipzig 1931
Hans-Walter Klewitz, Reformpapsttum und Kardinalkolleg, Darmstadt 1957
Rudolf Hüls, Kardinäle, Klerus und Kirchen Roms: 1049–1130, Bibliothek des Deutschen Historischen Instituts in Rom 1977
Johannes M. Brixius, Die Mitglieder des Kardinalskollegiums von 1130-1181, Berlin 1912
Werner Maleczek, Papst und Kardinalskolleg von 1191 bis 1216, Vienna 1984