Tragurium (titular see)
Tragurium, a town in Croatia now called Trogir, became the seat of a diocese in the 11th century. A residential see until 1828, the bishopric is now included in the Catholic Church's list of titular sees.[1]
Diocesan bishops
- Petrus (970-?)
- Saint John of Trogir from Osor (1062-1111)
- Anonim (1112 -?)
- sede vacante (1123-1151?)
- Dessa Maccarelli from Tragurium (1151-1180, elected only)
- Michael from Tragurium (1180-1206)
- Treguanus from Florence (1206-1254)
- fra Columbanus from Rab (1255-1277)
- Joannes II (1277-?)
- Gregorius Machinatura from Tragurium (1282-1297)
- Liberio from Ancona (1297-1319)
- Lampridio Vitturi from Tragurium (1320-1348)
- fra Bartolomeo from Vallismontana (1349-1361)
- Niccolò de' Casotti (Nikola Kažotić) from Tragurium ([[1361]-1370])
- Valentinus (1370-?)
- Crisogono (Krševan) de Dominis from Rab (1372-1403 transferred to the see of Kalocsa))
- Simone (Šimun) de Dominis from Rab (1403-1420?)
- Marino de Cernotis (Carnota) from Rab (1423-1424 transferred to the see of Trieste)
- fra Tommaso Tomasini from Tuscia (1424 - 1435 transferred to the see of Recanati)
- cardinal Ludovico (Trevisan) Scarampi Mezzarota from Padua (1435 - 1437 transferred to the see of Florence)
- cardinal Giovanni Vitelleschi[2] from Corneto (apostolic administrator1437 - 1440)
- Angelo Cavazza from Venice (1440 - 1452)
- Giacomo Trugloni from Ancona (1452 - 1483)
- Leonello Chiericato from Vicenza (1484 - 1488 transferred to the see of Concordia)
- Francesco Marcello from Venice (1488 - 1524)
- Toma Niger[3] from Split (1524-1525)
- Cristofor de Baptistis (Niger) from Split (1525-1559)
- cardinal Federico Corner[4] from Venice (1560-1561 transrerred to the see of Bergamo)
- cardinal Alvise Corner from Venice (apostolic administrator 1561-1567)
- Tommaso Sperandio Corbelli from Fano (1567 - 1574)
- Antonio Guidi from Mantua (1574 - 1604)
- Marzio Andreucci from Udine (1604 - 1622)
- Pace Giordano (Pax Jordanus) (1623-1649)[5] from Vicenza (1623-1649)
- sede vacante (1649-1654)
- Francesco Coccalini from Venice (1654 - 1661)
- Giovanni Paolo Garzoni from Venice (1663 - 1675)
- Giovanni (Ivan) de Andreis from Trogir (1676 - 1683)
- Ivan Cupareo (Giovanni Cuppari) from Split (1684 - 1694)
- Simeon Cavagnin from Split (1695 - 1698)
- Stefano Cupilli from Venice (1699 - 1708 transferred to the see of Split)
- Pietro Paolo Calore from Venice (1708 - 1713 transferred to the see of Krk)
- fra Michelangelo Farolfi from Candia (Heraklion) (1713 - 1715)
- Ivan Vidović from Šibenik (1716 - 1721)
- Ante Kadčić from Makarska (1722 – 1730 transferred to the see of Split)
- fra Giuseppe Caccia from Venice (1731 - 1737)
- Gerolamo Fonda[6] from Piran (1738 - 1754)
- Didak Manola from Split (1755 - 1765)
- Ivan Antun Miočević from Šibenik (1766 - 1786)
- Lelio Cippico from Trogir (accepted 1783 the transfer from the see of Šibenik when Miočević was to be transferred to the see of Split – 1784 transferred to the see of Split)[7]
- Antonio Belglava from Zadar (1787 - 1789)
- Giovanni Pietro Galzigna from Rab (1790 - 1795 transferred to the see of Rab)
- Giovanni Antonio Pinelli from Trogir (1795 - 1821)
- sede vacante (1821-1828)
Titular bishops
- Frans Joseph Bruls Canisius (26 April 1969 - 7 January 1976)
- Thaddeus Anthony Shubsda (20 December1976 - 26 May1982 named Bishop of Monterey)
- Dale Joseph Melczek[8] (3 December1982 - 28 October1995 named Coadjutor Bishop of Gary)
- Pierre Farine (12 August 1996 - )
Notes
- ↑ Annuario Pontificio 2013 (Libreria Editrice Vaticana, 2013, ISBN 978-88-209-9070-1), p. 995
- ↑ The Cardinals of the Holy Roman Church - Obituary (1394-1503)
- ↑ Croats at European universities in Middle Ages, Latinists, Encyclopaedists
- ↑ Cardinal Federico Cornaro
- ↑ Lovorka Čoralić, Iva Kurelac (February 2004). "A contribution to our knowledge about the life of Pace Giordano, the Bishop of Trogir (1623-1649)". Croatica Christiana Periodica (Zagreb, Croatia: The Catholic Faculty of Theology) 52. Retrieved 2012-02-27.
- ↑ Acta Histriae, 9, 2001, 2 (XII.)
- ↑ Hrvatski biografski leksikon vol. 2, Zagreb 1989, p. 679
- ↑ bishop melczek