Roman Catholic Diocese of Valence
Diocese of Valence - Die - Saint-Paul-Trois-Châteaux Dioecesis Valentinensis-Diensis-Tricastinensis Diocèse de Valence - Die - Saint-Paul-Trois-Châteaux | |
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Location | |
Country | France |
Ecclesiastical province | Lyon |
Metropolitan | Archdiocese of Lyon |
Statistics | |
Area | 6,522 km2 (2,518 sq mi) |
Population - Total - Catholics |
(as of 2014) 502,877 289,500 (57.6%) |
Information | |
Denomination | Roman Catholic |
Sui iuris church | Latin Church |
Rite | Roman Rite |
Cathedral | Cathedral Basilica of St Apollinaris of Valence |
Patron saint | St Apollinaris of Valence |
Current leadership | |
Pope | Francis |
Bishop | Pierre-Yves Michel |
Metropolitan Archbishop | Philippe Barbarin |
Emeritus Bishops | Didier-Léon Marchand Bishop Emeritus (1978-2001) |
Website | |
Website of the Diocese |
The Roman Catholic Diocese of Valence is a diocese of the Latin Church of the Roman Catholic church in southern France.[1] The contemporary diocese is co-extensive with the department of Drôme.
Bishops
To 1000
- Emilia (347–374)
- Sextius (374–?)
- Maximus I (400-419)
- Cariatho (c. 442)
- Apollinarius (?–520)
- Gallus (549)
- Maximus II. (567–581)
- Raynoalde (Romuald) (581 and 585)
- Elephas I. (?–641)
- Agilulf (641–?)
- Waldus (?–650)
- Angilde (650–658)
- Abbo (678–?)
- Salvius I. (68?)
- Antonie I.
- Bonit (788–800)
- Salvius II. (800–804)
- Lupicin (804–?)
- Antonie II. ?--?
- Elephas II. ?-?
- Lambert I. (?–835)
- Ado (835–842)
- Dunctran ?-?
- Eilard ?-?
- Brokhard ?-?
- Argimbert ?-?
- Agilde (?–858)
- Ratbert (Robert) (858–879)
- Isaak II. (886–889)
- Imeric (?–907)
- Remegaire (Romegari) I. (907–924)
- Odilbert (947–950)
- Aimon (960–981)
- Guigues (Guy) I. (994–997)
- Lambert II. (997–1001)
1000 to 1300
- Remegaire II. (1001–1016)
- Guigues II. (1016–1025)
- Humbert d´Albon (1028–1030)
- Ponç Adhemar (1031–1056)
- Odo I. (1058–1060)
- Raiginari (1060–1063)
- Gontard (1063–1100)
- Henric I. (1100–1107)
- Eustache (1107–1141)
- Jean I (1141–1146)
- Bernard (1146–1154)
- Odo II.de Crussol (1154–1183)
- Lantelm (1183–1187)
- Falco (1187–1200)
- Humbert de Miribel (1200–1220)
- Gerald of Lausanne (1220–1225)
- William of Savoy (1225–1239)
- Bonifatius (1239–1242)
- Philip of Savoy (1242–1268)
- Guy III. de Montlaur (1268)
- Bertrand (1268–1272)
- Guy III. de Montlaur (1272–1274) ( from 1275 to 1678 the diocese was united with the diocese of Dié)
- Amadeus del Rossillon (1274–1281)
- Philippe de Bernusson (1281–1282)
- Henri of Genf (1282–1283)
- Jean II of Genf (1283–1297)
- Guillaume del Rossillon (1297–1331)
1300 to 1500
- Adhemar de la Voulte (1331–1336)
- Henri de Villars (1336–1342)
- Pierre de Chastellux (1342–1350)
- Godofred (1350–1354)
- Louis de Villars (1354–1376)
- Guillaume de la Voulte (1376–1383)
- Amadeus de Saluzzo (1383–1389)
- Henri II (1389–1390)
- Jean de Poitiers (1390–1448)
- Louis of Poitiers (1448–1468)
- Gerard de Crussol (1468–1472)
- Jacques de Bathernay (1472–1474)
- Antoine de Balzac (1474–1491)
- Jean d'Épinay (1491–1503)
1500 to 1800
- Francisco Lloris y de Borja (1503–1505)
- Urbain de Miolan (1505)
- Gaspard de Tournon (1505–1520)
- Jean of Lothringen-Guise (1520–1522)
- Antoine Duprat (1522–1524)
- François-Guillaume de Castelnau de Clermont-Lodève (1524–1531)
- Antoine de Vesc (1531–1537) (then Bishop of Castres)
- Jacques de Tournon (1537–1553) (then Bishop of Castres)
- Jean de Montluc (1553–1579)
- Charles I. de Leberon (1579–1600)
- Pierre-André de Leberon (1600–1621)
- Charles II. de Leberon (1621–1654)
- Daniel de Cosnac (1654–1687)
- Guillaume Bokhard de Champigny (1687–1705)
- Jean de Catelan † ( 1705 Appointed - Jan 1725 Died)
- Alexandre de Milon (1725–1771)
- Pierre-François de Grave (1771–1787)
- Gabriel-Melchior de Messey (1778–1791)
- François Marbes (1791–1795) (constitutional bishop)
- Vacant (1795–1801)
From 1800
- François Bécherel † (5 Jul 1802 Appointed - 25 Jun 1815 Died)
- Marie-Joseph-Antoine-Laurent de la Rivoire de La Tourette † (8 Aug 1817 Appointed - 3 Apr 1840 Died)
- Pierre Chatrousse † (26 May 1840 Appointed - 17 May 1857 Died)
- Jean-Paul-François-Marie-Félix Lyonnet † (24 Jun 1857 Appointed - 4 Dec 1864 Appointed, Archbishop of Albi)
- Nicolas-Edouard-François Gueullette † (9 Dec 1864 Appointed - 7 Jan 1875 Resigned)
- Charles-Pierre-François Cotton † (16 Jan 1875 Appointed - 25 Sep 1905 Died)
- Jean-Victor-Emile Chesnelong † (21 Feb 1906 Appointed - 12 Jan 1912 Appointed, Archbishop of Sens (-Auxerre))
- Emmanuel-Marie-Joseph-Anthelme Martin de Gibergues † (7 Feb 1912 Appointed - 28 Dec 1919 Died)
- Désiré-Marie-Joseph-Antelne-Martin Paget † (22 Apr 1920 Appointed - 11 Jan 1932 Died)
- Camille Pic † (16 Aug 1932 Appointed - 25 Nov 1951 Died)
- Joseph-Martin Urtasun † (10 Aug 1952 Appointed - 17 Sep 1955 Appointed, Coadjutor Archbishop of Avignon)
- Charles-Marie-Paul Vignancour † (18 Dec 1957 Appointed - 6 Mar 1966 Appointed, Coadjutor Archbishop of Bourges)
- Jean-Barthélemy-Marie de Cambourg † (6 Mar 1966 Appointed - 1 Dec 1977 Resigned)
- Didier-Léon Marchand (8 Sep 1978 Appointed - 11 Dec 2001 Retired)
- Jean-Christophe André Robert Lagleize (11 Dec 2001 Appointed - 24 June 2014)
- Pierre-Yves Michel (4 Apr 2014 Appointed - present)
References
This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Herbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton.
External links
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