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Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Split-Makarska

The Archdiocese of Split-Makarska (Latin: Archidioecesis Spalatensis-Macarscensis; Croatian: Splitsko-makarska nadbiskupija; ) is a Latin Metropolitan archdiocese of the Catholic church in Croatia and Montenegro.[1][2] The diocese was established in the 3rd century AD and was made an archdiocese and metropolitan see in the 10th century. The modern diocese was erected in 1828, when the historical archdiocese of Salona was combined with the Diocese of Makarska. It was elevated as an archdiocese and metropolitan see in 1969, restoring the earlier status of the archdiocese of Split, as it is also known. The diocese was also known as Spalato-Macarsca.[3]

Metropolitan Archdiocese of Split-Makarska

Archidioecesis Spalatensis-Macarscensis

Splitsko-makarska nadbiskupija
Location
Country Croatia
 Montenegro
Ecclesiastical provinceSplit
Statistics
Area4,088 km2 (1,578 sq mi)
Population
- Total
- Catholics
(as of 2014)
456,029
441,036 (96.7%)
Information
DenominationCatholic
RiteRoman Rite
Established3rd century
CathedralCathedral of Saint Domnius, Split
Co-cathedralCo-cathedral of Saint Mark, Makarska Saint Peter ,Split
Current leadership
PopeFrancis
Metropolitan ArchbishopZdenko Križić
Bishops emeritusMarin Barišić
Website
nadbiskupija-split.com

History edit

The see was founded in or before 300 AD as Diocese of Salona. Eastern Roman Emperor Leo I (r. 457–474) appointed Glycerius as Bishop of Salona in 474, Glycerius had earlier served as Western Roman Emperor but was deposed by Julius Nepos. Around 500 AD it was promoted to a Metropolitan archdiocese.

The Archbishopric of Spalathon or Spalatum (also Salona, Latin: Spalatum) was a Christian archbishopric with seat in Salona, Dalmatia (modern Split, Croatia) in the early Middle Ages. After the Fall of the Western Roman Empire it recognised the supremacy of the Patriarch of Constantinople. During this period, the Salona archdiocese, in year 590, gained territory from the suppressed Roman Church of Makarska.[4]

Salona was ravaged by the South Slavs (Sclaveni) in 614, but in its place, Spalatum subsequently emerged.[5][6] In 639 the city was again razed by the Slavs.

In 647 the city of Spalato (now Split) began to arise from the ruins of Salona, and after an interregnum of eleven years its archbishops took over the territory of the archbishops of Salona. [7]

During the rule of Vladislav of Croatia (821–835), all of Croatia except the Archdiocese of Nin became subject to the Patriarchate of Constantinople, under the jurisdiction of the Archbishopric of Spalatum.[6] It lost territory in 1144 to establish the Diocese of Hvar.

It lost territory again in 1344 to re-establish the Roman Catholic Diocese of Makarska, in 1400 it regained that territory from the re-suppressed the Diocese of Makarska, but again lost territory in 1615 to re-re-establish the Diocese of Makarska.

With the death of Archbishop Laelius Cippico (1807) began another interregnum which lasted twenty-three years. By papal bull Locum Beati Petri the Church in Dalmatia was reorganized in 1828, Makarska united with Split, and the latter demoted as a simple bishopric of Split-Makarska, made subject to the Archdiocese of Zadar. Paul Miossich was appointed first bishop of the new diocese in 1830.[7] It also absorbed the suppressed Tragurium (or Traù, now Trogir).

On 27 July 1969, it was promoted again as Metropolitan Archdiocese It enjoyed a papal visit from Pope John Paul II in October 1998.

Special churches edit

Its cathedral episcopal see is the Cathedral of Saint Domnius (Katedrala sv. Dujma), in Split (Dalmatia). The city also has the co-cathedral of Saint Peter Apostle (Konkatedrala sv. Petar Apostola).

There are former cathedrals in three former sees absorbed in the archdiocese:

  • World Heritage Site: Katedrala sv. Lovre, in Trogir, formerly Trau or Tragurium
  • World Heritage Site: Crkva sv. Ivan Krstitelj, also in Trogir
  • Katedrala sv. Marka, in Makarska

Ecclesiastical province edit

Its suffragans are

Episcopal ordinaries edit

(all Roman Rite; many bio-data to be added)

Bishops of Salona

Known bishops of Salona include :

Metropolitan Archbishops of Salona

Archbishop Honorius III conducted a synod in 530; Natalis at a Council in 590, unjustly deposed his archdeacon Honoratus, but pope Gregory the Great took the latter's part.

  • Natalis, 582 (20th)
  • Maximus the Schismatic
  • John of Ravenna † (650 – circa 680)
  • Petar II † (?)
  • Martin I † (?)
  • Leone † (?)
  • Petar III † (840–860 Died)
  • Justin † (860–876 Died)
  • Marino † (881–886 Died)
  • Teodozije † (887–893)
  • Petar IV † (893–912)
  • Ivan II † (914–928)
  • Januarije II † (?–circa 940)
  • Frontinijan III † (circa 940 – circa 970)
  • Martin II † (970–1000)
  • Pavao † (1015–1030)
  • Martin III † (1030)
  • Dobralj † (1030–1050 Deposed)
  • Ivan III † (1050–1059 Resigned)
  • Lawrence, Archbishop of Split † (1059–1099 Died)
  • Crescenzio † (1110–1112 Died)
  • Manasse † (1112 – 1114 o 1115 Deposed)
  • Sede vacante (1115–1135)
  • Grgur † (1135)
  • Gaudio † (1136–1158 Deposed)
  • Absalom † (1159–1161 Died)
  • Petar V † (2 July 1161 Appointed – 1166 Died)
  • Albert de Morra † (1166)
  • Gerardo † (1167–1175 nominated archbishop of Siponto)

Out of the long series of its seventy-nine archbishops may be mentioned St. Rayner (d. 1180), and the unfortunate Marcus Antonius de Dominis, who was deprived of his office after having filled it for fourteen years and died an apostate at Rome in 1624; Thomas, who resigned his office voluntarily (thirteenth century), is the author of a history of the bishops of Salona and Spalato.[7]

  • Raynerius of Split † (1175 – 4 August 1180 Died)
  • Sede vacante (1180–1185)
  • Petar VI † (1185–1187 nominated archbishop of Kalocsa)
  • Petar VII † (1188–1196)
  • Bernard of Perugia † (1198–1217 Died)
  • Slavič † (1217–1219)
  • Göncöl † (29 Jul 1220 Appointed – 31 May 1242 Died)
  • Stephen (July 1242 – November 1243 Resigned) (elected archbishop)
  • Thomas the Archdeacon (1243 – 1244) (elected archbishop)
  • Ugrin † (April 1245 – 27 Nov 1248 Died)
  • Ivan de Buzad (1248 – 1249) (elected archbishop)
  • Roger of Torre Maggiore † (30 April 1249 Appointed – 14 April 1266 Died)
  • Ivan de Buzad † (1266 Appointed – 1294 Died)
  • Jakob † (1294–1297 Resigned) (elected archbishop)
  • Petar VIII † (10 May 1297 Appointed – 1324)
  • Belian † (26 Sep 1324 Appointed – 28 Jan 1328 Died)
  • Domenico Luccari † (17 Oct 1328 Appointed – April 1348 Died)
  • Ivan † (30 May 1348 Appointed – ?)
  • Hugolin Branca † (25 June 1349 Appointed – 1388 Resigned)
  • Andrea Gualdo † (29 May 1389 Appointed – 1402 Resigned)
  • Pellegrino d'Aragona † (18 April 1403 Appointed – 7 Mau 1409 Died)
  • Doimo Giudici † (11 August 1410 Appointed – 1411 Resigned), also Dujam de Judicibus [8]
  • Peter of Pag † (19 Oct. 1411 Appointed – 30 dicembre 1426 Died)
  • Francesco Malipiero † (27 Jan. 1427 Appointed – 16 June 1428 nominated archbishop of Castello)
  • Bartolomeo Zabarella † (16 June 1428 Appointed – 18 Dec 1439 nominated archbishop of Firenze)
  • Jacopino Badoer (18 Dec 1439 – 1451 Died)[2]
  • Lorenzo Zanni (Zane) (5 June 1452 – 28 April 1473 Appointed, Bishop of Treviso)[9]
  • Pietro Riario † (28 April 1473 Appointed as Apostolic administrator – 3 Jan 1474 Died)
  • Giovanni Dacri, O.F.M., 1474 – 15 Feb 1485 Died)
  • Pietro Foscari † (1 April 1478 Appointed as Apostolic administrator – 17 Sep 1479 Resigned)
  • Bartolomeo Averoldi (1479–1503)
  • Bernardo Zanne † (15 Feb 1503 Appointed – 5 Jan 1524 Died)
  • Andrea Cornaro † (1527 Appointed – 1537 Resigned) [10]
  • Marco Cornaro (Corner) † (11 Aug 1537 Appointed – 1566 Resigned)
  • Alvise Michiel † (19 July 1566 Appointed – 1582 Died)
  • Giovanni Domenico Marcot (Malcoto detto Foconio), Dominican Order (O.P.) † (1582 Succeeded – 2 Aug 1602 Died)
  • Marc'Antonio de Dominis † (15 Nov 1602 Appointed – 1616 Resigned))[11]
  • Sfortia Ponzoni † (22 Aug 1616 Appointed – 1641 Died)[11]
  • Leonard Bondumier † (15 April 1641 Appointed – 1668 Resigned[11][12]
  • Bonifazio Albani, Somascans (C.R.S.) † (30 Jan 1668 Appointed – 18 Feb 1678 Died)
  • Stephanus Cosimi, C.R.S. † (5 Sep 1678 Appointed – 10 May 1707 Died)[13]
  • Stefano Cupilli, C.R.S. † (12 March 1708 Appointed – 11 Dec 1719 Died)
  • Giovanni Battista Laghi, C.R.S. † (15 Apr 1720 Appointed – 11 Feb 1730 Died)
  • Antoine Kacich † (18 Dec 1730 Appointed – 7 Oct 1745 Died)
  • Pacifico Bizza † (17 Jan 1746 Appointed – 13 May 1756 Died)
  • Nicolaus Dinaricio † (3 Jan 1757 Appointed – Jun 1764 Died)
  • Giovanni Luca Garagnin † (5 Jun 1765 Appointed – 20 Oct 1780 Died)
  • Lelio de Cippico † (20 Sep 1784 Appointed – 24 Mar 1807 Died)
Suffragan Bishops of Split-Makarska
  • Paolo Miossich † (15 March 1830 Confirmed – 10 Oct 1837 Died)
  • Giuseppe Godeassi † (27 April 1840 Confirmed – 22 June 1843 Confirmed, Archbishop of Zadar)
  • Luigi Pini † (17 June 1844 Confirmed – 11 Jan 1865 Died)
  • Marko Kalogjera (Marco Calogerà, Calogjera) † (29 Oct 1866 Appointed – 1888 Died)
  • Filip Frane Nakić † (30 Dec 1889 Appointed – 1910 Died)
  • Antun Gjivoje † (11 July 1911 Appointed – 27 Feb 1917 Died)
  • Georg Carić † (8 June 1918 Appointed – 17 May 1921 Died)
  • Quirinus Clement Bonefacic † (6 June 1923 Appointed – 9 May 1954 Retired)
  • Frane Franić † (24 Dec 1960 Appointed – see below)
Metropolitan Archbishops of Split-Makarska
  • Frane Franić † (see above 24 Dec 1960 Appointed – 10 Sep 1988 Retired)
  • Ante Jurić † (10 Sep 1988 Appointed – 21 June 2000 Retired)
  • Marin Barišić (21 June 2000 Appointed – 13 May 2022 Retired)
  • Dražen Kutleša (13 May 2022 Appointed – 14 February 2023 Appointed Coadjutor Archbishop of Zagreb)
  • Zdenko Križić, O.C.D. (8 September 2023 – present)

References edit

  1. ^ "Metropolitan Archdiocese of Split-Makarska" Catholic-Hierarchy.org. David M. Cheney. Retrieved September 25, 2016
  2. ^ a b "Archdiocese of Split-Makarska" GCatholic.org. Gabriel Chow. Retrieved September 25, 2016
  3. ^ Catholic Hierarchy page
  4. ^ "Roman Catholic, n. and adj". Oxford English Dictionary. Retrieved 24 October 2017.
  5. ^ A history of Christianity in the Balkans
  6. ^ a b Matthew Spinka, A history of Christianity in the Balkans: a study in the spread of Byzantine culture among the Slavs, pp. 19–20
  7. ^ a b c d Catholic Encyclopedia article
  8. ^ "Dujam de Judicibus". genealogia.dejudicibus.it. Retrieved June 20, 2019.
  9. ^ "Patriarch Lorenzo Zanni (Zane)" Catholic-Hierarchy.org. David M. Cheney. Retrieved September 28, 2016
  10. ^ "Archbishop Andrea Cornaro". catholic-hierarchy.org. Retrieved July 31, 2017.
  11. ^ a b c Gauchat, Patritius (Patrice). HIERARCHIA CATHOLICA MEDII ET RECENTIORIS AEVI Vol IV. p. 320.
  12. ^ "Archbishop Leonardo Bondumier" Catholic-Hierarchy.org. David M. Cheney. Retrieved January 20, 2017
  13. ^ "Archbishop Stephanus Cosimi, C.R.S." Catholic-Hierarchy.org. David M. Cheney. Retrieved March 21, 2016

  This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainHerbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company. {{cite encyclopedia}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)

Sources edit

  • GigaCatholic with incumbent biography links
  • Luttwak, Edward. The grand strategy of the Byzantine Empirep. 164
  • History of the bishops of Salona and Split

43°30′29″N 16°26′26″E / 43.5081°N 16.4405°E / 43.5081; 16.4405

roman, catholic, archdiocese, split, makarska, archdiocese, split, makarska, latin, archidioecesis, spalatensis, macarscensis, croatian, splitsko, makarska, nadbiskupija, latin, metropolitan, archdiocese, catholic, church, croatia, montenegro, diocese, establi. The Archdiocese of Split Makarska Latin Archidioecesis Spalatensis Macarscensis Croatian Splitsko makarska nadbiskupija is a Latin Metropolitan archdiocese of the Catholic church in Croatia and Montenegro 1 2 The diocese was established in the 3rd century AD and was made an archdiocese and metropolitan see in the 10th century The modern diocese was erected in 1828 when the historical archdiocese of Salona was combined with the Diocese of Makarska It was elevated as an archdiocese and metropolitan see in 1969 restoring the earlier status of the archdiocese of Split as it is also known The diocese was also known as Spalato Macarsca 3 Metropolitan Archdiocese of Split MakarskaArchidioecesis Spalatensis MacarscensisSplitsko makarska nadbiskupijaLocationCountry Croatia MontenegroEcclesiastical provinceSplitStatisticsArea4 088 km2 1 578 sq mi Population Total Catholics as of 2014 456 029441 036 96 7 InformationDenominationCatholicRiteRoman RiteEstablished3rd centuryCathedralCathedral of Saint Domnius SplitCo cathedralCo cathedral of Saint Mark Makarska Saint Peter SplitCurrent leadershipPopeFrancisMetropolitan ArchbishopZdenko KrizicBishops emeritusMarin BarisicWebsitenadbiskupija split com Contents 1 History 2 Special churches 3 Ecclesiastical province 4 Episcopal ordinaries 5 References 6 SourcesHistory editThe see was founded in or before 300 AD as Diocese of Salona Eastern Roman Emperor Leo I r 457 474 appointed Glycerius as Bishop of Salona in 474 Glycerius had earlier served as Western Roman Emperor but was deposed by Julius Nepos Around 500 AD it was promoted to a Metropolitan archdiocese The Archbishopric of Spalathon or Spalatum also Salona Latin Spalatum was a Christian archbishopric with seat in Salona Dalmatia modern Split Croatia in the early Middle Ages After the Fall of the Western Roman Empire it recognised the supremacy of the Patriarch of Constantinople During this period the Salona archdiocese in year 590 gained territory from the suppressed Roman Church of Makarska 4 Salona was ravaged by the South Slavs Sclaveni in 614 but in its place Spalatum subsequently emerged 5 6 In 639 the city was again razed by the Slavs In 647 the city of Spalato now Split began to arise from the ruins of Salona and after an interregnum of eleven years its archbishops took over the territory of the archbishops of Salona 7 During the rule of Vladislav of Croatia 821 835 all of Croatia except the Archdiocese of Nin became subject to the Patriarchate of Constantinople under the jurisdiction of the Archbishopric of Spalatum 6 It lost territory in 1144 to establish the Diocese of Hvar It lost territory again in 1344 to re establish the Roman Catholic Diocese of Makarska in 1400 it regained that territory from the re suppressed the Diocese of Makarska but again lost territory in 1615 to re re establish the Diocese of Makarska With the death of Archbishop Laelius Cippico 1807 began another interregnum which lasted twenty three years By papal bull Locum Beati Petri the Church in Dalmatia was reorganized in 1828 Makarska united with Split and the latter demoted as a simple bishopric of Split Makarska made subject to the Archdiocese of Zadar Paul Miossich was appointed first bishop of the new diocese in 1830 7 It also absorbed the suppressed Tragurium or Trau now Trogir On 27 July 1969 it was promoted again as Metropolitan Archdiocese It enjoyed a papal visit from Pope John Paul II in October 1998 Special churches editIts cathedral episcopal see is the Cathedral of Saint Domnius Katedrala sv Dujma in Split Dalmatia The city also has the co cathedral of Saint Peter Apostle Konkatedrala sv Petar Apostola There are former cathedrals in three former sees absorbed in the archdiocese World Heritage Site Katedrala sv Lovre in Trogir formerly Trau or Tragurium World Heritage Site Crkva sv Ivan Krstitelj also in Trogir Katedrala sv Marka in MakarskaEcclesiastical province editIts suffragans are in Croatia Diocese of Dubrovnik Ragusa Diocese of Hvar Brac e Vis Diocese of Sibenik Knin in Montenegro Diocese of Kotor Cattaro Episcopal ordinaries edit all Roman Rite many bio data to be added Bishops of SalonaKnown bishops of Salona include Saint Domnius is patron saint of both the Archdiocese and the city of Split Hesychius III is mentioned in the twentieth book of St Augustine of Hippo s De Civitate Dei Glycerius 474 an epistle from Pope Gelasius I 492 496 is addressed to bishop Honorius 7 Metropolitan Archbishops of SalonaArchbishop Honorius III conducted a synod in 530 Natalis at a Council in 590 unjustly deposed his archdeacon Honoratus but pope Gregory the Great took the latter s part Natalis 582 20th Maximus the Schismatic John of Ravenna 650 circa 680 Petar II Martin I Leone Petar III 840 860 Died Justin 860 876 Died Marino 881 886 Died Teodozije 887 893 Petar IV 893 912 Ivan II 914 928 Januarije II circa 940 Frontinijan III circa 940 circa 970 Martin II 970 1000 Pavao 1015 1030 Martin III 1030 Dobralj 1030 1050 Deposed Ivan III 1050 1059 Resigned Lawrence Archbishop of Split 1059 1099 Died Crescenzio 1110 1112 Died Manasse 1112 1114 o 1115 Deposed Sede vacante 1115 1135 Grgur 1135 Gaudio 1136 1158 Deposed Absalom 1159 1161 Died Petar V 2 July 1161 Appointed 1166 Died Albert de Morra 1166 Gerardo 1167 1175 nominated archbishop of Siponto Out of the long series of its seventy nine archbishops may be mentioned St Rayner d 1180 and the unfortunate Marcus Antonius de Dominis who was deprived of his office after having filled it for fourteen years and died an apostate at Rome in 1624 Thomas who resigned his office voluntarily thirteenth century is the author of a history of the bishops of Salona and Spalato 7 Raynerius of Split 1175 4 August 1180 Died Sede vacante 1180 1185 Petar VI 1185 1187 nominated archbishop of Kalocsa Petar VII 1188 1196 Bernard of Perugia 1198 1217 Died Slavic 1217 1219 Goncol 29 Jul 1220 Appointed 31 May 1242 Died Stephen July 1242 November 1243 Resigned elected archbishop Thomas the Archdeacon 1243 1244 elected archbishop Ugrin April 1245 27 Nov 1248 Died Ivan de Buzad 1248 1249 elected archbishop Roger of Torre Maggiore 30 April 1249 Appointed 14 April 1266 Died Ivan de Buzad 1266 Appointed 1294 Died Jakob 1294 1297 Resigned elected archbishop Petar VIII 10 May 1297 Appointed 1324 Belian 26 Sep 1324 Appointed 28 Jan 1328 Died Domenico Luccari 17 Oct 1328 Appointed April 1348 Died Ivan 30 May 1348 Appointed Hugolin Branca 25 June 1349 Appointed 1388 Resigned Andrea Gualdo 29 May 1389 Appointed 1402 Resigned Pellegrino d Aragona 18 April 1403 Appointed 7 Mau 1409 Died Doimo Giudici 11 August 1410 Appointed 1411 Resigned also Dujam de Judicibus 8 Peter of Pag 19 Oct 1411 Appointed 30 dicembre 1426 Died Francesco Malipiero 27 Jan 1427 Appointed 16 June 1428 nominated archbishop of Castello Bartolomeo Zabarella 16 June 1428 Appointed 18 Dec 1439 nominated archbishop of Firenze Jacopino Badoer 18 Dec 1439 1451 Died 2 Lorenzo Zanni Zane 5 June 1452 28 April 1473 Appointed Bishop of Treviso 9 Pietro Riario 28 April 1473 Appointed as Apostolic administrator 3 Jan 1474 Died Giovanni Dacri O F M 1474 15 Feb 1485 Died Pietro Foscari 1 April 1478 Appointed as Apostolic administrator 17 Sep 1479 Resigned Bartolomeo Averoldi 1479 1503 Bernardo Zanne 15 Feb 1503 Appointed 5 Jan 1524 Died Andrea Cornaro 1527 Appointed 1537 Resigned 10 Marco Cornaro Corner 11 Aug 1537 Appointed 1566 Resigned Alvise Michiel 19 July 1566 Appointed 1582 Died Giovanni Domenico Marcot Malcoto detto Foconio Dominican Order O P 1582 Succeeded 2 Aug 1602 Died Marc Antonio de Dominis 15 Nov 1602 Appointed 1616 Resigned 11 Sfortia Ponzoni 22 Aug 1616 Appointed 1641 Died 11 Leonard Bondumier 15 April 1641 Appointed 1668 Resigned 11 12 Bonifazio Albani Somascans C R S 30 Jan 1668 Appointed 18 Feb 1678 Died Stephanus Cosimi C R S 5 Sep 1678 Appointed 10 May 1707 Died 13 Stefano Cupilli C R S 12 March 1708 Appointed 11 Dec 1719 Died Giovanni Battista Laghi C R S 15 Apr 1720 Appointed 11 Feb 1730 Died Antoine Kacich 18 Dec 1730 Appointed 7 Oct 1745 Died Pacifico Bizza 17 Jan 1746 Appointed 13 May 1756 Died Nicolaus Dinaricio 3 Jan 1757 Appointed Jun 1764 Died Giovanni Luca Garagnin 5 Jun 1765 Appointed 20 Oct 1780 Died Lelio de Cippico 20 Sep 1784 Appointed 24 Mar 1807 Died Suffragan Bishops of Split MakarskaPaolo Miossich 15 March 1830 Confirmed 10 Oct 1837 Died Giuseppe Godeassi 27 April 1840 Confirmed 22 June 1843 Confirmed Archbishop of Zadar Luigi Pini 17 June 1844 Confirmed 11 Jan 1865 Died Marko Kalogjera Marco Calogera Calogjera 29 Oct 1866 Appointed 1888 Died Filip Frane Nakic 30 Dec 1889 Appointed 1910 Died Antun Gjivoje 11 July 1911 Appointed 27 Feb 1917 Died Georg Caric 8 June 1918 Appointed 17 May 1921 Died Quirinus Clement Bonefacic 6 June 1923 Appointed 9 May 1954 Retired Frane Franic 24 Dec 1960 Appointed see below Metropolitan Archbishops of Split MakarskaFrane Franic see above 24 Dec 1960 Appointed 10 Sep 1988 Retired Ante Juric 10 Sep 1988 Appointed 21 June 2000 Retired Marin Barisic 21 June 2000 Appointed 13 May 2022 Retired Drazen Kutlesa 13 May 2022 Appointed 14 February 2023 Appointed Coadjutor Archbishop of Zagreb Zdenko Krizic O C D 8 September 2023 present References edit Metropolitan Archdiocese of Split Makarska Catholic Hierarchy org David M Cheney Retrieved September 25 2016 a b Archdiocese of Split Makarska GCatholic org Gabriel Chow Retrieved September 25 2016 Catholic Hierarchy page Roman Catholic n and adj Oxford English Dictionary Retrieved 24 October 2017 A history of Christianity in the Balkans a b Matthew Spinka A history of Christianity in the Balkans a study in the spread of Byzantine culture among the Slavs pp 19 20 a b c d Catholic Encyclopedia article Dujam de Judicibus genealogia dejudicibus it Retrieved June 20 2019 Patriarch Lorenzo Zanni Zane Catholic Hierarchy org David M Cheney Retrieved September 28 2016 Archbishop Andrea Cornaro catholic hierarchy org Retrieved July 31 2017 a b c Gauchat Patritius Patrice HIERARCHIA CATHOLICA MEDII ET RECENTIORIS AEVI Vol IV p 320 Archbishop Leonardo Bondumier Catholic Hierarchy org David M Cheney Retrieved January 20 2017 Archbishop Stephanus Cosimi C R S Catholic Hierarchy org David M Cheney Retrieved March 21 2016 nbsp This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Herbermann Charles ed 1913 Catholic Encyclopedia New York Robert Appleton Company a href Template Cite encyclopedia html title Template Cite encyclopedia cite encyclopedia a Missing or empty title help Sources editGigaCatholic with incumbent biography links Luttwak Edward The grand strategy of the Byzantine Empirep 164 History of the bishops of Salona and Split43 30 29 N 16 26 26 E 43 5081 N 16 4405 E 43 5081 16 4405 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Split Makarska amp oldid 1181294947, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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