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Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Albi

The Archdiocese of Albi(Latin: Archidioecesis Albiensis–Castrensis–Vauriensis); (French: Archidiocèse d'Albi–Castres–Lavaur) is a Latin archdiocese of the Catholic Church in France.[a] It is part of the Archdiocese of Toulouse, comprises the department of Tarn.

Archdiocese of Albi-Castres-Lavaur

Archidioecesis Albiensis
Location
Ecclesiastical provinceToulouse
MetropolitanArchdiocese of Toulouse
Statistics
Area5,780 km2 (2,230 sq mi)
Population
- Total
- Catholics
(as of 2018)
396,341
289,700 (guess)
Parishes507
Information
DenominationRoman Catholic
Sui iuris churchLatin Church
RiteRoman Rite
Establishedc. 5th Century
3 October 1678 (Archdiocese of Albi)
17 February 1922 (Archdiocese of Albi-Castres-Lavaur)
CathedralCathedral Basilica of St. Cecilia in Albi
Patron saintSaint Cecilia
Secular priests105 (diocesan)
31 (Religious Orders)
21 Permanent Deacons
Current leadership
PopeFrancis
Major ArchbishopGuy de Kerimel
ArchbishopJean-Louis Balsa
Bishops emeritusJean Legrez
Website
Website of the Archdiocese

In the 12th century, the spread of alternative beliefs in the region led to the arrival of church authorities to refute and try the "heretics". Among them were the Good Men, from whom the Cathars became known as Albigensians. The latter held their own council in 1167, and their bishopric was defined. In 1179, Pope Alexander III summoned the Third Lateran Council, where he condemned them. In the early 1200s, a religious and military crusade was waged against the movement and they were largely destroyed.

The Diocese of Albi was established in the 5th century and was under the Archdiocese of Bourges for centuries. On 3 October 1678, Pope Innocent XI made it an archdiocese. With the arrival of the French Revolution, it was suppressed in favor of Tarn. With the Concordat of 1801, it was integrated into the See of Montpellier. Finally, with the Concordat of 11 June 1817, the Archdiocese of Albi was restored.

In May 2018, Legrez restructured the diocese to reflect the reality of the church in the region. The totality of parishes, which had been around since the Middle Ages, were reduced from 503 to 21.

History edit

Originally erected around the 5th century as the Diocese of Albi,[1] the diocese was for centuries a suffragan of the Archdiocese of Bourges.

Growth of heresy edit

In 1145[2] Pope Eugenius sent Cardinal Albericus, the bishop of Ostia, to Toulouse as his legate against the Petrobusian heretics, and Cardinal Albericus took the Cistercian monk Bernard of Clairvaux along with him. Gofridus of Clarivaux, an associate of Bernard, left a highly colored account of Bernard's work in confuting the Petrobosian leader Henry of Lausanne; after several days of preaching in Toulouse, Bernard caused Henri to flee, but he was quickly captured and turned over to the bishop of Toulouse. Bernard also preached against the Manichaean heretics of the neighborhood, though at the castle-town of Verfeil, some ten miles east of Toulouse, he was completely unsuccessful.[3]

The cardinal, followed some days later by Bernard, then visited Albi. The Cardinal's reception was cold and jeering, reflecting no doubt the well-known anti-clerical attitudes of the Albigensians, in particular the luxury and arrogance of the higher clergy. Bernard's reception was more friendly, his reputation as an ascetic and celibate approximating the Albigensian view of "the good men". He was favorably received in his sermon in the cathedral on 29 June, and, at least in his own imagination, he persuaded large numbers to return to the true and orthodox faith. His companion and biographer, Geoffrey of Auxerre, was less certain, an evaluation which appeared more realistic in the outcome. Geoffrey also wrote to the monks at Clairvaux that Bernard's return should be expected some time after the Octave of the Assumption (the last week of August). The cardinal was back with the pope in time for Christmas in Rome.[4]

In 1147, while he was still on his journey to France, Pope Eugene III received reports, charges that Bishop Gilibertus of Poitiers was guilty of heresy; the information was brought by two of Gilibertus' own Archdeacons. Gilibertus was summoned to answer to the charges. As the two Archdeacons were returning to France, they consulted with the well-known Cistercian monk, Bernard of Clairvaux, who became eager to help them in bringing Gilibertus to account. The Bishop was examined first at Auxerre, then in Paris (April–June), and finally at the Council of Reims in March 1148.

In 1165 a judicial meeting was assembled by Bishop Guillaume de Dorgne of Albi at the castle-town of Lombers, two leagues (c. 10 miles) south of Albi, a place agreed upon by the "good men" (boni homines) of the Vaudois, where they believed they would be safe under the protection of the knights who held the castle in fief. The "good men" were under suspicion of heresy, and they were expected to answer the charges against them.[5] The Bishop fortified his court with a large assembly of notables: the archbishop of Narbonne and the bishops of Agde, Lodève, Nîmes, and Toulouse; the abbots of S. Pons, Castres, Sendrac, Saint-Guilham, Gaillac, Candeil, and others; the provosts of Toulouse and of Albi; the archdeacons of Narbonne and Agde; Countess Constance of Toulouse, Trincavel the Vicomte of Béziers, and the Vicomte of Laurac; and practically the entire population of Albi and Lombers.[6] Bishop Gaucelinus of Lodève, who acted as inquisitor, had six topics concerning the theological doctrine and practices of the "good men" on which he interrogated them closely, sometimes in fact engaging in debate. The "good men" refused to use or respond to arguments or texts from the Old Testament. They were reluctant to discuss the eucharist (though they admitted that any good man, cleric or layman could consecrate), marriage, or penance (They would only say that the sick could confess to anyone they wanted).[7] In return, the "good men" accused the prelates of being guilty of unchristian greed and luxury, lupi rapaces, and they named Bishop William a heretic. Bishop Gaucelinus pronounced sentence on the "good men" as heretics, and offered them an oath of purgation in which they could demonstrate their orthodoxy. They refused. Bishop Guillaume could not bring himself to compel them to swear, or to impose a penalty, since there was considerable support among the people for their cause. Thereafter the "good men" were called Albigensians.[8]

In 1167 the Albigensians were numerous and confident enough that they held their own Council at Saint-Felix-de-Caraman. A Bogomil bishop Nicetas, and Marcus, a representative of the Lombard community, were present. This council defined the geographical span of the Albigensian Bishoprics of Agenais, Toulouse, Albigeios and Carcasses (Carcassonne). The Albigensian bishop of Albi, Sicard Cellarier, took part.[9]

In 1179 Pope Alexander III summoned a general council of the Church, which met in Rome at the Lateran Basilica beginning on 5 March, and came to be called the Third Lateran Council. The 27th Canon of the Council addressed the heresies which were to be found in Gascony, the Albigeois, and Toulouse (in Gasconia, Albegesio, et partibus Tolosanis, et aliis locis) under the names Cathars, Patrines, Publicani, and other names. Anathemas were hurled against them, forbidding anyone to favor or to do business with them in their homes or on their properties.[10] In 1180 Pope Alexander appointed Cardinal Henri de Marsiac, who had once been Abbot of Clairvaux and who had been promoted Bishop of Albano at the Lateran Council, to serve as Legate in France against the Albigensians. In June 1181 he led a body of knights against the town of Lavaur, which served as the headquarters of the Cathar bishop of Toulouse. The Cardinal also held councils at Le Puy, Bazas, Limoges, Bourges and Bordeaux. He returned to Rome only after the death of Pope Alexander.[11]

Albigensian Crusade edit

The Vicomté d'Albi was united with the crown by King Louis VIII in 1226, during his visit to the Albigeois in October.[12]

In 1275 the Dominicans held their General Chapter meeting in Perpignan. At that meeting they took the decision to establish a convent of Dominicans in Albi, and they sent eight members of the Order to undertake the task. In the next year the convent opened, with Bernard Bociat elected the first Prior Conventual. The first stone of their church, Saint-Louis, was laid by Bishop de Castenet in 1293.[13]

On 6 March 1474, King Louis XI of France by patent letters granted Bishop Louis d'Amboise and his successors the Presidency of the Three Estates of Languedoc, which included the lands of Perpignan and Roussillon, as well as the Bordelais and Guienne.[14]

Archbishopric edit

On 3 October 1678, Pope Innocent XI, in the Bull Triumphans pastor aeternus, raised the diocese to the status of a metropolitan archbishopric. The province was composed of the dioceses of Albi, Rodez, Castres, Cahors, Vabres, and Mende.[15] The bull was confirmed by King Louis XIV in letters patent dated 14 June 1680.[16]

Cathedral and canons edit

The canons (priests) of the cathedral chapter of Albi had once lived under the rule of Saint Augustine, since perhaps the 11th century.[17] Bishop Frotardus, at some point before his deposition in 1075, carried out a reform of the cathedral chapter, complaining of the greed, lack of chastity, and neglect of duty of the canons. Most of the canons returned to their duty. The document attesting to the reform mentions two sacristans, capiscolaris (cantor), a treasurer, and a dean. A provost is also mentioned under Frotardus.[18]

Pope Boniface VIII, in a bull of 29 September 1297, secularized the canons. This led to an immediate and intense struggle between the bishop, Bernard de Castanet, and the canons of the cathedral chapter over the redistribution of the property and rights which had belonged to the monks of the monastery. Prebends had to be created, and issues over the rights of presentation to various churches and priories (which ones were to belong to the bishop, and which to the canons) had to be settled. The hostility that grew out of this situation certainly influenced the attempt in 1307–1308 to have Bishop de Castenet deposed by the pope.

The cathedral chapter was composed of seven dignities (not dignitaries) and twenty canons. The dignities were: the provost, the cantor, the succentor, the three archdeacons, and the theologian. Their prebends were granted by the bishop.[19] In 1678 there were eight dignities, twenty canons, and forty-eight prebends.[20] In 1747 there were nine dignities and twenty canons.[21]

There was also a collegiate church in Albi, the Church of Saint-Salvi, which was also served by a college of canons, at least since the mid-eleventh century. The canons, twelve in number, followed the rule of Saint Augustine, and were headed by a provost. The provost was elected by the canons and confirmed by the bishop, and had the right to confer all the benefices that belonged to the collegiate church.[22]

The Collège of Albi was established on 19 May 1623 by Bishop Alphonse d'Elbène and provided with an endowment of 3,000 livres. The Seminary of Albi was erected by the first archbishop, Hyacinthe Serroni, in 1684.[23]

Revolution edit

In 1790 the National Constituent Assembly decided to bring the French church under the control of the state. Civil government of the provinces was to be reorganized into new units called 'départements', originally intended to be 83 or 84 in number. The dioceses of the Roman Catholic Church were to be reduced in number, to coincide as much as possible with the new departments. Since there were more than 130 bishoprics at the time of the Revolution, more than fifty dioceses needed to be suppressed and their territories consolidated.[24] Clergy would need to take an oath of allegiance to the state and its constitution, specified by the Civil Constitution of the Clergy, and they would become salaried officials of the state. Both bishops and priests would be elected by special 'electors' in each department. This brought schism, since bishops would no longer need to be approved (preconised) by the papacy; the transfer of bishops, likewise, which had formerly been the exclusive prerogative of the pope in canon law, would be the privilege of the state; the election of bishops no longer lay with the Cathedral Chapters (which were all abolished), with other responsible clergy or the pope, but with electors who did not have to be Catholics or Christians.[25]

A new civil department, called "Tarn", was created by the French Legislative Assembly. The old diocese of Albi was suppressed, and a new "Diocese of Tarn" was created, with its center at Albi. It was assigned as a suffragan to the "Metropole du Sud". Archbishop François-Joachim de Bernis of Albi refused to take the oath to the Civil Constitution of the Clergy, and therefore his see was declared by the Legislative Assembly to be vacant. Cardinal de Bernis died on 2 November 1794. His nephew and coadjutor succeeded to the diocese canonically, receiving the pallium on 1 June 1795. He did not actually resign canonically, however, until 2 March 1802.[26]

The electors of Tarn, meeting at Castres on 13 March 1791, chose in his place Jean-Joachim Gausserand, who was a beneficier of the cathedral chapter of Albi and promoter forain of the district of Gaillac. He had been elected a deputy to the Estates General of 1789, and had taken the constitutional oath on 27 December 1790. He was consecrated a Constitutional Bishop in Paris at Notre Dame on 3 April 1791 by Constitutuonal Bishop Antoine-Adrien Lamourette. The consecration was valid, but canonically irregular, schismatic, and blasphemous (as a parody of genuine Catholic sacraments). Gausserand took possession of the diocese of Tarn on 1 May 1791. When religion was formally abolished in 1793 and replaced by the Cult of Reason, the bishop went into hiding, and his diocese was abolished; but, after the Terror, when it was restored, he found that more than 200 of his priests had resigned, and 40 of them had married. Gausserand held three synods in the diocese, in 1797 and 1801. He refused the opportunity to reconcile at the time of the Concordat of 1801. In 1808 he was struck with the interdict and he died in exile in Toulouse on 12 February 1820, without having been reconciled with the Roman Catholic Church.[27]

Bourbon restoration edit

After the signing of the Concordat of 1801 with First Consul Napoleon Bonaparte, Pope Pius VII demanded the resignation of all bishops in France, in order to leave no doubt as to who was a legitimate bishop and who was a Constitutional imposter.[28] He then immediately abolished all of the dioceses in France, for the same reason. Then he began to restore the old Ancien Régime dioceses, or most of them, though not with the same boundaries as before the Revolution, but instead taking account of the abolition of the Estates and Provinces and the creation of the new department system of civil government. The diocese of Albi was not one of those revived by Pope Pius VII in his bull Qui Christi Domini of 29 November 1801. The territory of the former diocese of Albi was assigned to the diocese of Montpellier, which also received the territories of the suppressed dioceses of Agde, Lavaur, Narbonne, Saint-Pons, and Vabres.[29]

Following the Concordat of 11 June 1817, the archdiocese was restored in 1822 to its former borders and title.

During the First World War, 349 members of the clergy of the diocese of Albi were mobilized. Seventeen died, six won the Légion d'honneur, three won the Médaille militaire, and sixty-three were awarded the Croix de guerre.[30]

20th and 21st centuries edit

In February 1922, the name was changed to its current designation of the Archdiocese of Albi-Castres-Lavour.

In May 2018, Archbishop Jean Legrez restructured the diocese to take into account the severe decline in the number of priests and parishioners. The number of parishes was reduced from 503 to 21.[31]

Bishops and Archbishops edit

To 1000 edit

Clair[32]
Anthimius[33]
  • c. 406: Diogenianus[34]
[451: Anemius][35]
  • 506: Sabinus[36]
  • 549: Ambroise[37]
  • 580–584: Salvius (Salvy)[38]
  • 585: Desiderius ((Didier))[39]
  • 614: Fredemundus[40]
  • 625–647: Constantius[41]
  • ?–664: Dido (Didon)[42]
  • c. 673: Richard[43]
  • 692–30. May 698: Citruin[44]
  • c. 700: Amarand[45]
  • 722: Hugo[45]
  • 734: Johannes[45]
  • c. 804: Deodatus (Verdatus)[46]
  • 825: Guilelmus[45]
  • 844: Balduin[45]
  • 854: Pandevius[45]
  • 876: Lupus[47]
  • 886: Eligius (Eloi)[48]
  • 887–891: Adolenus (Adolence)[49]
  • 921: Paterne
  • 926: Godebric
  • 936: Angelvin
  • 941–942: Miron
  • 961–967: Bernard
  • 972: Frotaire (Frotarius)
  • 975–987: Amelius or Ameil
  • 990: Ingelbin
  • 992: Honorat
  • 998: Amblard

1000–1300 edit

  • 1020–1040: Amelius (or Ameil II).[50]
  • 1040–1054: Guilielmus[51]
  • 1062–1079: Frotardus[52]
  • 1079–1090: Guilelmus (III.)
  • 1096: Galterus (Galterius, Walter, Gauthier)[53]
  • 1098–1099: Hugo II.
  • 1100–1103: Adelgaire I.
  • 1103: Arnaldus de Cecenno[54]
  • 1109–1110: Adelgarius.
  • 1115: Sicard
  • 1115–1125: Bertrandus
  • 1125–1132: Humbertus[55]
  • 1136–1143: Hugo III.
  • 1143–1155: Rigaud
  • 1157–1174: Guilelmus[56]
[Gérard][57]
  • 1183: Claude André[58]
  • 1185–1227: Guilelmus Petri[59]
  • 1228–c. 1254: Durand
  • 1254–c. 1271: Bernard II. de Combret[60]
1271–1276: Sede Vacante[61]

1300–1500 edit

  • 1308–1311: Bertrand des Bordes
  • 1311–1314: Géraud II.
  • 1314–1333: Béraud de Farges
  • 1334–1337: Pierre de la Vie[63]
  • 1337: Bernard de Camiet[64]
  • 1337–1338: Guillaume Court
  • 1339–1350: Pictavinus de Montesquiou[65]
  • 1351–1354: Arnaud Guillaume[66]
  • 1355–1379: Hugues Auberti (Hugo Alberti)
  • 1379–1382: Dominique de Florence, O.P. (Avignon Obedience)[67]
  • 1382–1383: Jean de Saie (Avignon Obedience)[68]
  • 1383–1392: Guillaume de la Voulte (Avignon Obedience)
  • 1393–1410: Dominique de Florence (again)[69]
  • 1410–1434: Pierre III. Neveu
  • 1435: Bernard V. de Cazilhac
  • 1435–1462: Robert Dauphin
  • 1462–1473: Cardinal Jean Jouffroy[70]
  • 1474–1503: Louis d'Amboise,[71] (the Elder)

1500–1700 edit

1687–1693: Sede Vacante[86]

1700–present edit

1801–1823: Sede Vacante
  • 1823–1833: Charles Brault[95]
  • 1833–1842: François-Marie-Edouard de Gually[96]
  • 1842–1864: Jean-Joseph-Marie-Eugène de Jerphanion[97]
  • 1865–1875: Jean-Paul-François-Marie-Félix Lyonnet[98]
  • 1876–1884: Etienne-Emile Ramadié[99]
  • 1884–1899: Jean-Emile Fonteneau[100]
  • 1900–1918: Eudoxe-Irénée-Edouard Mignot[101]
  • 1918–1940: Pierre-Célestin Cézerac
  • 1940–1956: Jean-Joseph-Aimé Moussaron
  • 1957–1961: Jean-Emmanuel Marquès
  • 1961–1974: Claude Dupuy
  • 1974–1985: Robert-Joseph Coffy[102]
  • 1986–1988: Joseph-Marie-Henri Rabine
  • 1989–1999: Roger Lucien Meindre
  • 2000–2010: Pierre-Marie Joseph Carré
  • 2011–2023: Jean Legrez, O.P.[103]
  • 2023–present: Jean-Louis Balsa

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ A suffragan diocese is usually a diocese rather than an archdiocese and led by a bishop rather than an archbishop.

References edit

  1. ^ Compayre, p. 61. DeVic-Vaissete, IV, p. 383 column 1.
  2. ^ Adrian H. Bredero (2004). Bernard Of Clairvaux. A&C Black. p. 25. ISBN 978-0-567-08285-5. The Encyclopædia Britannica article "Albigeois" Volume 1 (Cambridge 1910), p. 505, gives the date of 1147, which, however, is inconsistent with the known whereabouts of Cardinal Albericus.
  3. ^ Cesare Baronio (ed. Augustin Theiner), Annales Ecclesiastici Tomus XIX (Bar-le-Duc 1870), pp. 3-9.
  4. ^ De Vic and Vaissete, Histoire generale de Languedoc Tome III (Toulouse 1872), p. 745-746.
  5. ^ Pilar Jimenez, "Sources juridiques pour l'etude du catharisme: les actes du concile de Lombers (1165)," Clio & Crimen no. 1 (Durango ES, 2014), p. 358-372.
  6. ^ Martin Bouquet, ed. (1877). Recueil des historiens des Gaules et de la France (in French and Latin). Vol. Tome quatorzieme. Paris: Victor Palmé. pp. 431–434.
  7. ^ Damian J. Smith (2010). Crusade, Heresy and Inquisition in the Lands of the Crown of Aragon: (c. 1167 - 1276). Boston-Leiden: Brill. p. 77. ISBN 90-04-18289-6. Mark Gregory Pegg (2009). A Most Holy War: The Albigensian Crusade and the Battle for Christendom. Oxford University Press. pp. 42–44. ISBN 978-0-19-539310-1. Crozes, pp. 58-59.
  8. ^ Crozes, p. 59.
  9. ^ Bernard Hamilton, "Cathar Links with the Balkans and Byzantium," Antonio Sennis, ed. (2016). Cathars in Question. Woodbridge Suffolk UK: Boydell & Brewer. pp. 131–150. ISBN 978-1-903153-68-0., at 141-144.
  10. ^ C. J. Hefele, Histoire des conciles (tr. Delarc) Tome VII (Paris 1872) pp. 509-510.
  11. ^ Hefele, p. 514. Michael D. Costen, The Cathars and the Albigensian Crusade (Manchester 1997), pp. 105-106. Cardinal Henri missed the Conclave of 1181.
  12. ^ Compayré, p. 8, 270. Julien Théry-Astruc (2016), "The Heretical Dissidence...", p. 103.
  13. ^ Compayré, p. 58.
  14. ^ Compayré, pp. 85–87.
  15. ^ Sainte-Marthe, Gallia christiana I, Instrumenta, p. 1-3. Ritzler-Sefrin, V, p. 75 note 1.
  16. ^ Compayré, p. 65.
  17. ^ DeVic-Vaissete, IV, p. 383 column 1.
  18. ^ Sainte-Marthe, Gallia christiana I, p. 11, and Instrumenta, pp. 5–6. Compayré, pp. 70–71
  19. ^ Sainte-Marthe, Gallia christiana I, p. 2.
  20. ^ Ritzler-Sefrin, V, p. 75 note 1.
  21. ^ Ritzler-Sefrin, VI, p. 73 note 1.
  22. ^ J.-L. Biget, "Sainte-Cécile et Saint-Salvi: chapitre de cathédrale et chapitre de collégiale à Albi," Cahiers de Fanjoux 24 (1989) 65-104. Sainte-Marthe, Gallia christiana I, pp. 49-52.
  23. ^ DeVic-Vaissete, IV, p. 383 column 2.
  24. ^ Louis Marie Prudhomme (1793). La République française en quatre-vingt-quatre départements, dictionnaire géographique et méthodique (in French). Paris: Chez l'éditeur, rue des Marais. pp. 7–11.
  25. ^ Ludovic Sciout (1872). Historie de la constitution civile du clergé (1790-1801) ... (in French). Vol. Tome I. Paris: Firmin Didot frères, fils et cie. pp. 204–208.
  26. ^ Bernis was appointed Archbishop of Rouen on 27 September 1819, and died on 4 February 1823. Ritzler-Sefrin, VI, p. 73 notes 4 and 5.
  27. ^ Paul Pisani (1907). Répertoire biographique de l'épiscopat constitutionnel (1791-1802) (in French). Paris: A. Picard et fils. pp. 403–407, 456.
  28. ^ Em Sevestre; Émile Sévestre (1905). L'histoire, le texte et la destinée du Concordat de 1801 (in French). Paris: Lethielleux. pp. 238–249, 488, 496.
  29. ^ Pius VI; Pius VII (1821). Collectio (per epitomen facta,) Bullarum, Brevium, Allocutionum, Epistolarumque, ... Pii VI., contra constitutionem civilem Cleri Gallicani, ejusque authores et fautores; item, Concordatorum inter ... Pium VII. et Gubernium Rei publicae, in Galliis, atque alia varia regimina, post modum in hac regione, sibi succedentia; tum expostulationum ... apud ... Pium Papam VII., Contra varia Acta, ad Ecclesiam Gallicanam, spectantia, a triginta et octo Episcopis, Archiepiscop. et Cardinal. antiquae Ecclesiae Gallicanae, subscriptarum, etc. 6 Avril, 1803 (in Latin). London: Cox & Baylis. pp. 111–121, at p. 116.
  30. ^ Almanach catholique français (in French). Paris. 1920. p. 71.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  31. ^ Vaillant, Gauthier (9 August 2018). "Restructuring parishes — a move from necessity to audacity". La Croix International. Bayard. Retrieved 28 May 2018.
  32. ^ Clair is a name in the Proprium diocesis Auscitanensis, a list of diocesan Mass commemorations for June 1; the name also occurs in Bordeaux, Auch, Limoges, Perigueux, Sarlat, and Lectoure. A church was named after him. De Vic-Vaissete, Histoire de Languedoc IV, p. 383. Crozes, pp. 8–18, provides an extensive treatment of the legend, and the objections to its authenticity. For the legend, see: Daniele Papebrochius; Francois Baert; Conrad Janninck (1695). Acta Sanctorum Junii (in Latin). Vol. Tomus I. Antwerp: typographia Henrici Thieullier. pp. 7–16.
  33. ^ De Vic-Vaissete, IV, p. 383, states: "Antime était disciple de S. Clair & passe pour avoir été son successeur." (Antime was a disciple of S. Clair and passes as having been his successor) He is known only from the Proprium. Crozes, p. 18 note 2, quotes their meager content. Sainte-Marthe, Gallia christiana I, p. 3.
  34. ^ Diogenianus is mentioned by Gregory of Tours, Historia Francorum, Book II, 13. Duchesne, II, p. 42.
  35. ^ The name appears, without reference to diocese, in a list of subscribers to a synodal letter addressed to Pope Leo III. Duchesne, p. 42, note 2, notes that the name is derived from Polycarpe de la Rivière, a known forger of documents. Carolus Munier, Concilia Galliae, A. 314 – A. 506 (Turnholt: Brepols 1963) p. 107-110 (who cites no manuscript source).
  36. ^ Sabinus was present at the Council of Agde in 506. Sirmond, Jacques, ed. (1789). "Concilium Agathense". Conciliorum Galliae tam editorum quam ineditorum collectio, temporum ordine digesta, ab anno Christi 177 ad ann. 1563, cum epistolis pontificum, principum constitutionibus, et aliis ecclesiasticae rei gallicanae monimentis (in Latin). Vol. 1. Paris: P. Didot. col. 796.
  37. ^ Ambrosius was represented by the Archdeacon Viventius at the Council of Orleans in 549. Sirmond, I, col. 1044. Duchesne, p. 42.
  38. ^ Salvius is mentioned by Gregory of Tours, Historia Francorum, Book V, 44 and 50; VI, 29; VII, 1; VIII, 22. Duchesne, p. 43.
  39. ^ Desiderius was the successor of Salvius: Gregory of Tours, VIII:22.
  40. ^ Fredemund signed the decrees of the Council of Paris in 614. Duchesne, II, p. 43, no. 7.
  41. ^ Constantius was present at the Council of Clichy in 627. Duchesne, II, p. 43, no. 8.
  42. ^ Duchesne, p. 43, argues that Dido is a contemporary of Pope Gregory I (590-604), and belongs before Bishop Constantius. The date of 664-667 is only the date of the manuscript in which his name is found. DeVic-Vaisette, IV, p. 656 column 2, remarks that the reference in the manuscript is the work of a falsifier.
  43. ^ The name is known only from a list constructed by a modern scholar, N. Sabatier, president of the Parlement of Toulouse. The source is conjectural, according to Louis Duchesne, II, pp. 41–42 and 44 no. 9. Cf. also Compayré, p. 68 note 4. Text of the list: Luc d' Achery, ed. (1666). Veterum aliquot scriptorum qui in Galliae bibliothecis, maxime Benedictinorum, latuerant, Spicilegium (in Latin). Paris: Apud C. Savereux. pp. 335–338.
  44. ^ Duchesne, II, pp. 41–42 and 44.
  45. ^ a b c d e f The name does not appear in the list supplied by Duchesne, p. 42, or in his list of authentic bishops at p. 44.
  46. ^ Compayré, p. 8, notes Bishop Deodatus, who had been an Aumonier of Charlemagne, who had established at Albi a judge, a fiscal procurator, and two notaries. Compayre, p. 69, suggests that Verdat (c. 812) of the list is Deodatus.
  47. ^ Lupus was present at the Council of Ponthion in 876. His name may be mentioned in the catalogue list three times, by error: Duchesne, II, p. 44 no. 10.
  48. ^ Eligius subscribed at the Council in villa Portu in the diocese of Nimes in 886. Duchesne, II, p. 44, no. 11. J. D. Mansi (ed.), Sacrorum Conciliorum nova et amplissima collectio editio novissima Tomus 18 (Venice: Antonio Zatta 1773), p. 45.
  49. ^ Duchesne, II, p. 44, no. 12.
  50. ^ Amelius was present at the Council of Bourges in 1031, and at the Council of Limoges. He participated in the dedication of the monastery of Vendôme in 1040. Saint-Marthe, Gallia christiana, I, p. 10. De Vic-Vaissete, IV, pp. 384 column 2; 653 column 2. Crozes, pp. 52–53. Gams, p. 484.
  51. ^ The See of Albi was purchased for Bishop Guilelmus (Guillem), son of Bernard-Aymard, at the price of 5,000 sols for Count Pons of Toulouse, and a similar sum for Vicomte Bernard Athon of Albi and Bishop Frotarius of Nîmes. Saint-Marthe, Gallia christiana, I, pp. 10–11. Crozes, p. 53. De Vic-Vaissete, IV, pp. 384 column 2; 653 column 2.
  52. ^ Frotard was excommunicated in the Council of Toulouse in 1075 for simony, and deposed by Pope Gregory VII. He had purchased the See of Albi for the value of fifteen first-class horses. He went to Rome and appealed his sentence, but was refused by Pope Gregory VII (1073–1085). When Wibertus of Ravenna was set up as (antipope) Clement III, he appealed again and was successful in c. 1083. Etienne Baluze (1761). Stephani Baluzii Tutelensis miscellanea novo ordine digesta et non paucis ineditis monumentis opportunisque animadversionibus aucta (in Latin). Vol. Tomus I (novo ordine ed.). Junctinium. p. 125. Crozes, p. 54. Stephanus Baluzius, Miscellaneorum Tomus sextus, hoc est Collectio veterum monumentorum... (Paris 1713), p. 431-432 (for the date). J.-D. Mansi (ed.), Sacrorum Conciliorum nova et amplissima collectio, editio novissima, Tomus XX (Venice 1775), pp. 457–458. Gams, p. 484.
  53. ^ Duchesne, II, p. 42. Saint-Marthe, Gallia christiana, I, p. 12.
  54. ^ Saint-Marthe, Gallia christiana I, pp. 12–13.
  55. ^ Humbertus is mentioned in documents of 1125, 1126 and 1127. In 1132 Humbert subscribed a charter in which Vicomte Roger of Albi was given the diocese of Albi in fief by Count Jourdain of Toulouse, and granted the right to participate in the election of a bishop of Albi. Compayré, p. 72. Sainte-Marthe, Gallia christiana I, p. 13. Crozes, pp. 55–56.
  56. ^ William of Dourgne was imprisoned by Vicomte Roger of Béziers in 1178, apparently in a conflict over seigneurial rights. Radosław Kotecki; Jacek Maciejewski (2014). Ecclesia et Violentia: Violence against the Church and Violence within the Church in the Middle Ages. Cambridge Scholars Publishing. pp. 35–36. ISBN 978-1-4438-7002-3. Jean Dufour, Les évêques d'Albi, de Cahors et de Rodez, des origines à la fin du XIIe siècle (Paris 1989), pp. 38–39. Crozes, pp. 58–60.
  57. ^ A "Bishop Gérard" is claimed for the diocese of Albi in 1176, but the only documentary evidence (the Concilium Lumbarense) has been redated from 1165 so that his dates do not conflict with those of Bishop Guilelmus. The names of other bishops in the document do not fit the period either, and Countess Constance of Toulouse, who was separated from Count Raymond V in 1165, signed the decrees. A real bishop, Pons d'Arsac of Narbonne, confirmed the decrees of the Council of Lombers at the Council of Capestang in 1166. Sainte-Marthe, Gallia christiana I, p. 15. C.J. Hefele, Histoire des conciles (tr. Delarc) VII (Paris 1872), pp. 432–434. Crozes, pp. 58–60.
  58. ^ Claude André is known from a single act of 1183: Gams, p. 484 column 2. De Vic-Vaissete, IV, p. 386.
  59. ^ Guilelmus is also called Guillaume Pierre de Brens, William Peyre, Guilliame Peyre, and Guilhem Peyre. He had been Provost of the Cathedral Chapter, and was Administrator of the diocese at least from 1177, during the imprisonment of Bishop Guilelmus by Roger II Trencavel. Bishop Guilelmus Petri died on 21 May 1230, and was buried on 22 May, according to a necrology and a manuscript in the episcopal archives, quoted by D'Auriac (p. 90 note 1, p. 91 note 1.). Eugène d'Auriac, pp. 63–91. Sainte-Marthe, Gallia christiana I, Instrumenta, p. 7. Gams, p. 484. Eubel, I, p. 81.
  60. ^ Eubel, I, p. 81.
  61. ^ Julien Théry-Astruc (2016), "The Heretical Dissidence...", p. 103.
  62. ^ Bernard was appointed on 7 March 1275 or 1276. He was transferred to the diocese of Le Puy on 30 July 1308 by Pope Clement V. He was named a cardinal by Pope John XXII, and was promoted to the Suburbicarian See of Porto and Santa Rufina on 18 December 1316. He died on 14 August 1317. Crozes, pp. 62–74. Eubel, I, pp. 15 no. 1; 36, 81, 91.
  63. ^ Pierre de la Vie, Archdeacon of Fenohelto (Narbonne), was the nephew of Cardinal Arnaud de la Vie, and grand-nephew of Pope John XXII. He was appointed Bishop of Albi on 15 June 1334. He died on 27 August 1337. Crozes, p. 82. Eubel, I, p. 81.
  64. ^ Bernard de Camiet was appointed on 20 October 1337, and died on 28 November 1337. Crozes, p. 82. Eubel, I, p. 81
  65. ^ He is also called Peitavin de Montesquiou, and Pectin de Montesquieu. He had previously been Bishop of Bazas (1325–1334), and then Bishop of Maguelonne (1334–1339). He was appointed Bishop of Albi on 27 January 1339, and named a cardinal by Pope Clement VI on 17 December 1350, in consequence of which he resigned the bishopric. He died on 1 February 1355. Crozes, p. 84. Eubel I, pp. 19 no. 19; 81, 320, 516.
  66. ^ Bishop Arnaldus Guillelmi made his solemn entry into Albi on 10 July 1351. Sainte-Marthe, Gallia christiana I, Instrumenta p. 12.
  67. ^ Dominique was appointed by Pope Clement VII on 18 May 1379. He was transferred to the diocese of Saint-Pons-de-Thomères on 30 May 1382. Crozes, p. 87. Eubel, I, p. 81, 406.
  68. ^ Jean de Saie had previously been Bishop of Lombès (1362–1363), Bishop of Dax (1363–1375), and then Bishop of Agen (1375–1382). He was appointed Bishop of Albi on 30 May 1382 by Pope Clement VII. Crozes, p. 86. Eubel, I, p. 77, 81, 97, 310.
  69. ^ Dominique of Florence was transferred back to Albi from Saint-Pons by Pope Clement VII on 24 October 1392, following the death of Guillaume de la Voulte. He took part in the Council of Pisa in 1409. He was transferred to the diocese of Toulouse on 5 September 1410. Dominique died on 17 March 1422. Crozes, p. 87. Eubel, I, pp. 81, 406, 488.
  70. ^ Cardinal Jouffroy had previously been Bishop of Arras (1453–1462). He was provided to the See of Albi by Pope Pius II on 10 December 1462. He died on 11 December 1473. Compayre, pp. 82–85. Eubel, II, p. 84.
  71. ^ Louis d'Amboise was the brother of Cardinal Georges d'Amboise. He was granted his bulls of consecration and installation on 24 January 1474. He was responsible for the construction of the choir of the Cathedral of Saint Cecilia. In 1498 he was appointed to the commission that investigated the legality of the marriage of King Louis XII and Jeanne de Valois. He wrote his Testament in 1481 and died in Lyon on 1 July 1503. Sainte-Marthe, Gallia christiana I, pp. 33–35. Crozes, pp. 106–111. Eubel, II, p. 84.
  72. ^ On 22 May 1497, with the consent of Louis d'Amboise the Elder and the Chapter of Albi, Louis d'Amboise the younger (House of Amboise) was granted the right of succession upon the resignation or decease of his uncle. He succeeded on 1 July 1503, and resigned the diocese in September 1510. He was created a cardinal on 18 December 1506, and named Cardinal Priest of SS. Pietro e Marcellino on 11 January 1510. He died in 1517. Crozes, pp. 111–112. Eubel, II, p. 84 with note 3; III, p. 11 no. 16; 101 with note 2.
  73. ^ Cardinal de Britto was appointed Administrator of the diocese of Albi on 30 September 1510. He died on 9 November 1513. Eubel, III, p. 101.
  74. ^ Charles de Robertet was the nephew of Florimond de Robert, Secretaire des Commandemens du Roi, was elected bishop in December 1510, and took possession on 17 April 1511. He was appointed on 14 March 1515. He resigned in favor of Jacques de Robertet on 25 May 1515. Compayre, p. 91. Crozes, pp. 112–114. Eubel, III, p. 101.
  75. ^ Jean-Jacques was the brother of Charles Robertet, with whom he entered into an agreement for the succession to the diocese. He was appointed on 25 May 1515, and his brother died on 9 August. The succession was contested however. The Canons of the Cathedral held an election on 10 August 1515, and chose the Archbishop of Auch, François de Clermont-Lodève, who accepted and entered a suit against Jean-Jacques Robertet before the Parlement of Toulouse, which he won. This irritated King Francis, who by that time had the Concordat of Bologna in his hand, had the case revoked to the Parlement of Paris; but the Parlement also found in favor of Clermont-Lodève. The Cardinal, however, considering the royal interest, yielded to Robertet. He took possession on 27 November 1517. Compayre, pp. 91–92. Crozes, pp. 114–115. Eubel, III, p. 101.
  76. ^ Cardinal Adrien de Boissy died on 24 July 1523. Crozes, pp. 115–116. Eubel, III, p. 14, 101.
  77. ^ Aymar Gouffier de Boissy was the brother of Cardinal Adrien de Boissy. He was elected by the Chapter, despite the terms of the Concordat of Bologna, which gave the right of nomination to the King of France. Francis I later gave his assent, on 1 August 1523. He took possession of the See by proxy on 19 June 1524, and in person on 10 November 1527. He died on 9 October 1528. Sainte-Marthe, Gallia christiana I, pp. 37–38. Eubel, III, p. 101.
  78. ^ Duprat was never consecrated a bishop. He was therefore only Administrator of the diocese of Albi. He was preconised by Pope Clement VII on 23 December 1528. He had as Coadjutor Pierre de la Porte. He died on 9 July 1535. Sainte-Marthe, Gallia christiana I, p. 38. Compayre, p. 95. Crozes, pp. 116–118. Eubel, III, p. 101.
  79. ^ The Cardinal de Lorraine was the son of René II, Duc de Lorraine. He was named a cardinal in 1518 by Pope Leo X. He took possession of the diocese of Albi on 5 October 1535. He was non-resident. He died on 10 May 1550. Compayre, p. 96. Crozes, p. 118-119. Eubel, III, p. 101.
  80. ^ The future Cardinal de Guise was transferred to the diocese of Albi from Troyes, where he was only Bishop-elect and Administrator, since he was well below the minimum age for consecration as a bishop. He was only 22 when appointed to Albi. He resigned the diocese of Albi before 9 May 1561. He was finally consecrated a bishop on 1 April 1571. Eubel, III, p. 101, 317.
  81. ^ Eubel, III, p. 101.
  82. ^ Bishop Filippo was a Florentine, and a Doctor in utroque iure (Civil Law and Canon Law) from the University of Avignon. He was the nephew of Archbishop Lorenzo Strozzi. He had been Abbot Commendatory of Saint-Victor-de-Marseille before being appointed Archbishop by King Charles IX and approved by Pope Pius IV. Denis de Sainte-Marthe, Gallia christiana I (Paris 1716), p. 39. Eubel, III, p. 101.
  83. ^ Bishop Alfonso's father was a Florentine, del Bene, who had migrated to Lyon. He was nominated by King Henri III in August 1588, and was approved by Pope Sixtus V on 25 September 1589, by which time King Henri was dead at the hand of an assassin. Gallia christiana, I, pp. 39–40. Eubel, III, p. 101.
  84. ^ a b Gallia christiana, I, p. 40. Gauchat, IV, p. 75.
  85. ^ Born in Rome, Serroni was a protege of Michel Mazarin, O.P., the Cardinal's brother. He had previously been Bishop of Mende. He was nominated by King Louis XIV on 26 August 1676, and approved by Pope Innocent XI on 3 October 1678, becoming the first Archbishop. He took possession on 22 February 1679. In 1682 he took part in the Assembly of the French Clergy. He died in Paris on 7 January 1687. Jean, p. 2. Ritzler, V, p. 75 with note 2.
  86. ^ Because of the Four Gallican Articles, Pope Innocent XI and Pope Alexander VIII refused to preconise any of the episcopal nominations of Louis XIV.
  87. ^ Le Goux had previously been Bishop of Lavaur (1677–1692). He was nominated to the diocese of Albi by Louis XIV on 31 January 1687, but the King's quarrel with the Papacy over the Four Articles of 1682 postponed the granting of the bulls of transfer and appointment to Albi until 12 October 1693. Le Goux nonetheless enjoyed the temporal Administration of the diocese from 1687 to 1693. He was transferred to Narbonne on 12 November 1703. Jean, pp. 2–3. Crozes, pp. 133–137. Ritzler, V, p. 75 with note 3; p. 406 with note 5.
  88. ^ Nesmond was born in the diocese of Bordeaux, and was Doctor in theology (Paris). He had previously been Bishop of Montaubon (1692–1703), and was transferred to Albi on 12 November 1703. He became a member of the Académie Française in 1710. He was transferred to Toulouse on 14 January 1722, where he died on 26 May 1727. Jean, p. 3. Ritzler, V, p. 75, with note 4; p. 273; p. 378.
  89. ^ De Castries, a native of Montpellier, was the second son of René Gaspard, Marquis de Castries and Isabelle Bonzi, the sister of Cardinal Bonzi of Narbonne. He was a Doctor of Theology (Paris), and became Archdeacon of Narbonne, thanks to the patronage of his uncle. He was Aumonier of the Dauphine and Grand Aumonier of the Duchesse de Berry. He had been named Bishop of Tours (1719–1723) in 1717, but did not receive his bulls until 1719, due to problems with his Jansenism. He was finally consecrated on 29 October 1719, but he was named Archbishop of Albi on 5 November 1719. He again suffered delays, and did not take possession of the temporalities of the diocese of Albi until 14 January 1722; his bulls were issued on 22 September 1722. He died at Albi on 15 April 1747. Jean, pp. 3 and 423. Ritzler, V, p. 75, with note 5; p. 395 with note 6.
  90. ^ Rochefoucauld the nephew of Cardinal Frédéric-Jérome de la Rochefoucauld, who named him Vicar General of Bourges. He was nominated by King Louis XV on 1 May 1747, and preconised (approved) by Pope Benedict XIV on 29 May 1747. He was consecrated a bishop on 20 June 1747 by Bishop Gabriel-Florent de Choiseul of Mende. He was transferred to the diocese of Rouen on 2 June 1759. He was created a cardinal on 1 June 1778; his red biretta was sent to him, but he never visited Rome and never obtained a titular church. He died in exile from the French Revolution on 23 September 1800 in Münster. Jean, p. 3. Ritzler, VI, p. 32, with notes 50 and 51; p. 73, with note 2; p. 359 with note 3.
  91. ^ Choiseul had previously been Bishop of Évreux. He was transferred to Albi on 28 May 1759, thanks to the influence of his brother, the minister of Louis XV. He was transferred to the diocese of Cambrai on 9 July 1764. Jean, p. 4. Julien Loth (1893). Histoire du cardinal de la Rochefoucauld et du diocèse de Rouen pendant la Révolution (in French). Evreux: l'Eure. pp. 13–20. Ritzler, VI, p. 73, with note 3; 143 with note 2.
  92. ^ Bernis was created a cardinal by Pope Clement XIII on 2 October 1758, and assigned the titular church of San Silvestro in Capite on 26 June 1769. He was immediately named French Ambassador to the Holy See, and resided in Rome from 1769 to November 1791. Jean, p. 4. Ritzler, VI, p. 73, with note 4; p. 20, with notes 12 and 13.
  93. ^ Pisani, pp. 403–407.
  94. ^ Nephew of the Cardinal, François de Bernis was consecrated a bishop in Rome by Pope Pius VI on 30 December 1781, and appointed titular bishop of Apollonia and auxiliary bishop of his uncle in Albi. He was then named Coadjutor Archbishop with the right of succession on 14 July 1784, and given the title Archbishop of Damascus. He succeeded his uncle on his death in 1794, and like all the other bishops in France was dismissed by Pope Pius VII in 1801. He was Administrator of Lyon from 1817 to 1819, and became Archbishop of Rouen on 27 September 1819. Bernis died in 1823. Jean, p. 4. Gams, p. 483.
  95. ^ Brault was previously Bishop of Bayeux, 1802-1806. He attended the National Council in Paris in 1811, under the Emperor Bonaparte. He was designated Archbishop of Albi in 1817, but the appointment was never approved in Rome, due to disagreements between the French government and the Papacy over a new concordat, and therefore he remained at Bayeux. In 1819 he was offered the Archbishopric of Rouen, but he declined. In 1823 he was again offered Albi, and he was preconised on 26 February 1823. He died on 25 February 1833. Gams, p. 483. L'Ami de la religion et du roi: journal ecclésiastique, politique et littéraire (in French). Vol. Tome 75. Paris: A. Le Clère. 1833. pp. 263–264. Blot, Thierry (1989). La reconstruction concordataire dans le diocèse de Bayeux sous l'épiscopat de Monseigneur Charles Brault (1802-1823). thèse soutenue à l'Université de Caen en 1989 sous la direction de Maurice Quenet. Abbé Puesch, in: Société bibliographique (France) (1907), L'épiscopat français..., pp. 25–26.
  96. ^ Gualy had been Grand Vicar of Chartres from 1824. He was nominated Bishop of Saint-Flour on 8 July 1829, and preconised on 28 September 1829. He was consecrated bishop by his uncle Joseph-Julien Gualy, the Bishop of Carcassonne, on 30 November 1829. On 18 March 1833 he was nominated Archbishop of Albi, and was transferred to Albi from Saint-Flour on 30 September 1833 by Pope Gregory XVI. He died on 16 June 1842. Abbé Puesch, in: Société bibliographique (France) (1907), L'épiscopat français..., p. 26.
  97. ^ Jerphanion died on 22 November 1864. n.a. (1865). Notice sur Mgr. de Jerphanion, archevêque d'Albi (in French). Castres: V.-J. Abeilhou. Crozes, pp. 268–275. Abbé Puesch, in: Société bibliographique (France) (1907), L'épiscopat français..., p. 27/
  98. ^ Lyonnet had been Bishop of Saint-Flour (from 1852), then Bishop of Valence in 1857. He was nominated Archbishop of Albi by the French government on 4 December 1864, and transferred to Albi by Pope Pius IX on 29 March 1865. He died on 24 December 1875. Crozes, pp. 276–290. Abbé Puesch, in: Société bibliographique (France) (1907), L'épiscopat français..., pp. 27–28.
  99. ^ Ramadié had previously been Bishop of Perpignan (1865–1876). He was nominated Archbishop of Albi by President MacMahon on 17 January 1876, and preconised by Pope Pius IX on 26 June 1876. Gérard Cholvy, "Gallicans et ultramontains. Mgr. Ramadié succeseur de Mgr. Gerbet à Perpignan," in: Jean-Dominique Durand; Régis Ladous (1992). Histoire religieuse: histoire globale, histoire ouverte : mélanges offerts à Jacques Gadille (in French). Paris: Editions Beauchesne. pp. 301–316. ISBN 978-2-7010-1245-2. Crozes, pp. 290–291. Abbé Puesch, in: Société bibliographique (France) (1907), L'épiscopat français..., pp. 28–29/
  100. ^ Fonteneau: Abbé Puesch, in: Société bibliographique (France) (1907), L'épiscopat français..., pp. 29–30.
  101. ^ Mingot had been Vicar General of Soissons. He was named Bishop of Fréjus on 6 June 1890, and was preconised by Pope Leo XIII on 26 June. He was named Archbishop of Albi on 7 September 1900, and preconised on 14 September. He took possession of the diocese in person on 21 February 1901. Joseph Hyacinthe Albanés; Ulysse Chevalier (1899). Gallia christiana novissima: Aix, Apt, Fréjus, Gap, Riez et Sisteron (in French). Montbéliard: Société anonyme d'imprimerie montbéliardaise. pp. 425–426. Abbé Puesch, in: Société bibliographique (France) (1907), L'épiscopat français..., p. 30.
  102. ^ Coffey had previously been Bishop of Gap (1967–1974). He was transferred to the diocese of Marseille on 13 April 1985, and was named a cardinal on 28 June 1991. He died on 15 July 1995.
  103. ^ Diocèse d'Albi, Monseigneur Jean Legrez, Biographie; retrieved: 2017-12-12.
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External links edit

  • (in French) Centre national des Archives de l'Église de France, L’Épiscopat francais depuis 1919, retrieved: 2016-12-24.
  • Catholic Encyclopedia article

roman, catholic, archdiocese, albi, archdiocese, albi, latin, archidioecesis, albiensis, castrensis, vauriensis, french, archidiocèse, albi, castres, lavaur, latin, archdiocese, catholic, church, france, part, archdiocese, toulouse, comprises, department, tarn. The Archdiocese of Albi Latin Archidioecesis Albiensis Castrensis Vauriensis French Archidiocese d Albi Castres Lavaur is a Latin archdiocese of the Catholic Church in France a It is part of the Archdiocese of Toulouse comprises the department of Tarn Archdiocese of Albi Castres LavaurArchidioecesis AlbiensisAlbi CathedralLocationEcclesiastical provinceToulouseMetropolitanArchdiocese of ToulouseStatisticsArea5 780 km2 2 230 sq mi Population Total Catholics as of 2018 396 341289 700 guess Parishes507InformationDenominationRoman CatholicSui iuris churchLatin ChurchRiteRoman RiteEstablishedc 5th Century3 October 1678 Archdiocese of Albi 17 February 1922 Archdiocese of Albi Castres Lavaur CathedralCathedral Basilica of St Cecilia in AlbiPatron saintSaint CeciliaSecular priests105 diocesan 31 Religious Orders 21 Permanent DeaconsCurrent leadershipPopeFrancisMajor ArchbishopGuy de KerimelArchbishopJean Louis BalsaBishops emeritusJean LegrezWebsiteWebsite of the ArchdioceseIn the 12th century the spread of alternative beliefs in the region led to the arrival of church authorities to refute and try the heretics Among them were the Good Men from whom the Cathars became known as Albigensians The latter held their own council in 1167 and their bishopric was defined In 1179 Pope Alexander III summoned the Third Lateran Council where he condemned them In the early 1200s a religious and military crusade was waged against the movement and they were largely destroyed The Diocese of Albi was established in the 5th century and was under the Archdiocese of Bourges for centuries On 3 October 1678 Pope Innocent XI made it an archdiocese With the arrival of the French Revolution it was suppressed in favor of Tarn With the Concordat of 1801 it was integrated into the See of Montpellier Finally with the Concordat of 11 June 1817 the Archdiocese of Albi was restored In May 2018 Legrez restructured the diocese to reflect the reality of the church in the region The totality of parishes which had been around since the Middle Ages were reduced from 503 to 21 Contents 1 History 1 1 Growth of heresy 1 2 Albigensian Crusade 1 3 Archbishopric 1 3 1 Cathedral and canons 1 4 Revolution 1 5 Bourbon restoration 1 6 20th and 21st centuries 2 Bishops and Archbishops 2 1 To 1000 2 2 1000 1300 2 3 1300 1500 2 4 1500 1700 2 5 1700 present 3 See also 4 Notes 5 References 6 External linksHistory editOriginally erected around the 5th century as the Diocese of Albi 1 the diocese was for centuries a suffragan of the Archdiocese of Bourges Growth of heresy edit In 1145 2 Pope Eugenius sent Cardinal Albericus the bishop of Ostia to Toulouse as his legate against the Petrobusian heretics and Cardinal Albericus took the Cistercian monk Bernard of Clairvaux along with him Gofridus of Clarivaux an associate of Bernard left a highly colored account of Bernard s work in confuting the Petrobosian leader Henry of Lausanne after several days of preaching in Toulouse Bernard caused Henri to flee but he was quickly captured and turned over to the bishop of Toulouse Bernard also preached against the Manichaean heretics of the neighborhood though at the castle town of Verfeil some ten miles east of Toulouse he was completely unsuccessful 3 The cardinal followed some days later by Bernard then visited Albi The Cardinal s reception was cold and jeering reflecting no doubt the well known anti clerical attitudes of the Albigensians in particular the luxury and arrogance of the higher clergy Bernard s reception was more friendly his reputation as an ascetic and celibate approximating the Albigensian view of the good men He was favorably received in his sermon in the cathedral on 29 June and at least in his own imagination he persuaded large numbers to return to the true and orthodox faith His companion and biographer Geoffrey of Auxerre was less certain an evaluation which appeared more realistic in the outcome Geoffrey also wrote to the monks at Clairvaux that Bernard s return should be expected some time after the Octave of the Assumption the last week of August The cardinal was back with the pope in time for Christmas in Rome 4 In 1147 while he was still on his journey to France Pope Eugene III received reports charges that Bishop Gilibertus of Poitiers was guilty of heresy the information was brought by two of Gilibertus own Archdeacons Gilibertus was summoned to answer to the charges As the two Archdeacons were returning to France they consulted with the well known Cistercian monk Bernard of Clairvaux who became eager to help them in bringing Gilibertus to account The Bishop was examined first at Auxerre then in Paris April June and finally at the Council of Reims in March 1148 In 1165 a judicial meeting was assembled by Bishop Guillaume de Dorgne of Albi at the castle town of Lombers two leagues c 10 miles south of Albi a place agreed upon by the good men boni homines of the Vaudois where they believed they would be safe under the protection of the knights who held the castle in fief The good men were under suspicion of heresy and they were expected to answer the charges against them 5 The Bishop fortified his court with a large assembly of notables the archbishop of Narbonne and the bishops of Agde Lodeve Nimes and Toulouse the abbots of S Pons Castres Sendrac Saint Guilham Gaillac Candeil and others the provosts of Toulouse and of Albi the archdeacons of Narbonne and Agde Countess Constance of Toulouse Trincavel the Vicomte of Beziers and the Vicomte of Laurac and practically the entire population of Albi and Lombers 6 Bishop Gaucelinus of Lodeve who acted as inquisitor had six topics concerning the theological doctrine and practices of the good men on which he interrogated them closely sometimes in fact engaging in debate The good men refused to use or respond to arguments or texts from the Old Testament They were reluctant to discuss the eucharist though they admitted that any good man cleric or layman could consecrate marriage or penance They would only say that the sick could confess to anyone they wanted 7 In return the good men accused the prelates of being guilty of unchristian greed and luxury lupi rapaces and they named Bishop William a heretic Bishop Gaucelinus pronounced sentence on the good men as heretics and offered them an oath of purgation in which they could demonstrate their orthodoxy They refused Bishop Guillaume could not bring himself to compel them to swear or to impose a penalty since there was considerable support among the people for their cause Thereafter the good men were called Albigensians 8 In 1167 the Albigensians were numerous and confident enough that they held their own Council at Saint Felix de Caraman A Bogomil bishop Nicetas and Marcus a representative of the Lombard community were present This council defined the geographical span of the Albigensian Bishoprics of Agenais Toulouse Albigeios and Carcasses Carcassonne The Albigensian bishop of Albi Sicard Cellarier took part 9 In 1179 Pope Alexander III summoned a general council of the Church which met in Rome at the Lateran Basilica beginning on 5 March and came to be called the Third Lateran Council The 27th Canon of the Council addressed the heresies which were to be found in Gascony the Albigeois and Toulouse in Gasconia Albegesio et partibus Tolosanis et aliis locis under the names Cathars Patrines Publicani and other names Anathemas were hurled against them forbidding anyone to favor or to do business with them in their homes or on their properties 10 In 1180 Pope Alexander appointed Cardinal Henri de Marsiac who had once been Abbot of Clairvaux and who had been promoted Bishop of Albano at the Lateran Council to serve as Legate in France against the Albigensians In June 1181 he led a body of knights against the town of Lavaur which served as the headquarters of the Cathar bishop of Toulouse The Cardinal also held councils at Le Puy Bazas Limoges Bourges and Bordeaux He returned to Rome only after the death of Pope Alexander 11 Albigensian Crusade edit This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it December 2017 Main article Albigensian Crusade The Vicomte d Albi was united with the crown by King Louis VIII in 1226 during his visit to the Albigeois in October 12 In 1275 the Dominicans held their General Chapter meeting in Perpignan At that meeting they took the decision to establish a convent of Dominicans in Albi and they sent eight members of the Order to undertake the task In the next year the convent opened with Bernard Bociat elected the first Prior Conventual The first stone of their church Saint Louis was laid by Bishop de Castenet in 1293 13 On 6 March 1474 King Louis XI of France by patent letters granted Bishop Louis d Amboise and his successors the Presidency of the Three Estates of Languedoc which included the lands of Perpignan and Roussillon as well as the Bordelais and Guienne 14 Archbishopric edit On 3 October 1678 Pope Innocent XI in the Bull Triumphans pastor aeternus raised the diocese to the status of a metropolitan archbishopric The province was composed of the dioceses of Albi Rodez Castres Cahors Vabres and Mende 15 The bull was confirmed by King Louis XIV in letters patent dated 14 June 1680 16 Cathedral and canons edit The canons priests of the cathedral chapter of Albi had once lived under the rule of Saint Augustine since perhaps the 11th century 17 Bishop Frotardus at some point before his deposition in 1075 carried out a reform of the cathedral chapter complaining of the greed lack of chastity and neglect of duty of the canons Most of the canons returned to their duty The document attesting to the reform mentions two sacristans capiscolaris cantor a treasurer and a dean A provost is also mentioned under Frotardus 18 Pope Boniface VIII in a bull of 29 September 1297 secularized the canons This led to an immediate and intense struggle between the bishop Bernard de Castanet and the canons of the cathedral chapter over the redistribution of the property and rights which had belonged to the monks of the monastery Prebends had to be created and issues over the rights of presentation to various churches and priories which ones were to belong to the bishop and which to the canons had to be settled The hostility that grew out of this situation certainly influenced the attempt in 1307 1308 to have Bishop de Castenet deposed by the pope The cathedral chapter was composed of seven dignities not dignitaries and twenty canons The dignities were the provost the cantor the succentor the three archdeacons and the theologian Their prebends were granted by the bishop 19 In 1678 there were eight dignities twenty canons and forty eight prebends 20 In 1747 there were nine dignities and twenty canons 21 There was also a collegiate church in Albi the Church of Saint Salvi which was also served by a college of canons at least since the mid eleventh century The canons twelve in number followed the rule of Saint Augustine and were headed by a provost The provost was elected by the canons and confirmed by the bishop and had the right to confer all the benefices that belonged to the collegiate church 22 The College of Albi was established on 19 May 1623 by Bishop Alphonse d Elbene and provided with an endowment of 3 000 livres The Seminary of Albi was erected by the first archbishop Hyacinthe Serroni in 1684 23 Revolution edit In 1790 the National Constituent Assembly decided to bring the French church under the control of the state Civil government of the provinces was to be reorganized into new units called departements originally intended to be 83 or 84 in number The dioceses of the Roman Catholic Church were to be reduced in number to coincide as much as possible with the new departments Since there were more than 130 bishoprics at the time of the Revolution more than fifty dioceses needed to be suppressed and their territories consolidated 24 Clergy would need to take an oath of allegiance to the state and its constitution specified by the Civil Constitution of the Clergy and they would become salaried officials of the state Both bishops and priests would be elected by special electors in each department This brought schism since bishops would no longer need to be approved preconised by the papacy the transfer of bishops likewise which had formerly been the exclusive prerogative of the pope in canon law would be the privilege of the state the election of bishops no longer lay with the Cathedral Chapters which were all abolished with other responsible clergy or the pope but with electors who did not have to be Catholics or Christians 25 A new civil department called Tarn was created by the French Legislative Assembly The old diocese of Albi was suppressed and a new Diocese of Tarn was created with its center at Albi It was assigned as a suffragan to the Metropole du Sud Archbishop Francois Joachim de Bernis of Albi refused to take the oath to the Civil Constitution of the Clergy and therefore his see was declared by the Legislative Assembly to be vacant Cardinal de Bernis died on 2 November 1794 His nephew and coadjutor succeeded to the diocese canonically receiving the pallium on 1 June 1795 He did not actually resign canonically however until 2 March 1802 26 The electors of Tarn meeting at Castres on 13 March 1791 chose in his place Jean Joachim Gausserand who was a beneficier of the cathedral chapter of Albi and promoter forain of the district of Gaillac He had been elected a deputy to the Estates General of 1789 and had taken the constitutional oath on 27 December 1790 He was consecrated a Constitutional Bishop in Paris at Notre Dame on 3 April 1791 by Constitutuonal Bishop Antoine Adrien Lamourette The consecration was valid but canonically irregular schismatic and blasphemous as a parody of genuine Catholic sacraments Gausserand took possession of the diocese of Tarn on 1 May 1791 When religion was formally abolished in 1793 and replaced by the Cult of Reason the bishop went into hiding and his diocese was abolished but after the Terror when it was restored he found that more than 200 of his priests had resigned and 40 of them had married Gausserand held three synods in the diocese in 1797 and 1801 He refused the opportunity to reconcile at the time of the Concordat of 1801 In 1808 he was struck with the interdict and he died in exile in Toulouse on 12 February 1820 without having been reconciled with the Roman Catholic Church 27 Bourbon restoration edit After the signing of the Concordat of 1801 with First Consul Napoleon Bonaparte Pope Pius VII demanded the resignation of all bishops in France in order to leave no doubt as to who was a legitimate bishop and who was a Constitutional imposter 28 He then immediately abolished all of the dioceses in France for the same reason Then he began to restore the old Ancien Regime dioceses or most of them though not with the same boundaries as before the Revolution but instead taking account of the abolition of the Estates and Provinces and the creation of the new department system of civil government The diocese of Albi was not one of those revived by Pope Pius VII in his bull Qui Christi Domini of 29 November 1801 The territory of the former diocese of Albi was assigned to the diocese of Montpellier which also received the territories of the suppressed dioceses of Agde Lavaur Narbonne Saint Pons and Vabres 29 Following the Concordat of 11 June 1817 the archdiocese was restored in 1822 to its former borders and title During the First World War 349 members of the clergy of the diocese of Albi were mobilized Seventeen died six won the Legion d honneur three won the Medaille militaire and sixty three were awarded the Croix de guerre 30 20th and 21st centuries edit In February 1922 the name was changed to its current designation of the Archdiocese of Albi Castres Lavour In May 2018 Archbishop Jean Legrez restructured the diocese to take into account the severe decline in the number of priests and parishioners The number of parishes was reduced from 503 to 21 31 Bishops and Archbishops editTo 1000 edit Clair 32 Anthimius 33 c 406 Diogenianus 34 451 Anemius 35 506 Sabinus 36 549 Ambroise 37 580 584 Salvius Salvy 38 585 Desiderius Didier 39 614 Fredemundus 40 625 647 Constantius 41 664 Dido Didon 42 c 673 Richard 43 692 30 May 698 Citruin 44 c 700 Amarand 45 722 Hugo 45 734 Johannes 45 c 804 Deodatus Verdatus 46 825 Guilelmus 45 844 Balduin 45 854 Pandevius 45 876 Lupus 47 886 Eligius Eloi 48 887 891 Adolenus Adolence 49 921 Paterne 926 Godebric 936 Angelvin 941 942 Miron 961 967 Bernard 972 Frotaire Frotarius 975 987 Amelius or Ameil 990 Ingelbin 992 Honorat 998 Amblard 1000 1300 edit 1020 1040 Amelius or Ameil II 50 1040 1054 Guilielmus 51 1062 1079 Frotardus 52 1079 1090 Guilelmus III 1096 Galterus Galterius Walter Gauthier 53 1098 1099 Hugo II 1100 1103 Adelgaire I 1103 Arnaldus de Cecenno 54 1109 1110 Adelgarius 1115 Sicard 1115 1125 Bertrandus 1125 1132 Humbertus 55 1136 1143 Hugo III 1143 1155 Rigaud 1157 1174 Guilelmus 56 Gerard 57 1183 Claude Andre 58 1185 1227 Guilelmus Petri 59 1228 c 1254 Durand 1254 c 1271 Bernard II de Combret 60 1271 1276 Sede Vacante 61 1276 1308 Bernard de Castanet 62 1300 1500 edit 1308 1311 Bertrand des Bordes 1311 1314 Geraud II 1314 1333 Beraud de Farges 1334 1337 Pierre de la Vie 63 1337 Bernard de Camiet 64 1337 1338 Guillaume Court 1339 1350 Pictavinus de Montesquiou 65 1351 1354 Arnaud Guillaume 66 1355 1379 Hugues Auberti Hugo Alberti 1379 1382 Dominique de Florence O P Avignon Obedience 67 1382 1383 Jean de Saie Avignon Obedience 68 1383 1392 Guillaume de la Voulte Avignon Obedience 1393 1410 Dominique de Florence again 69 1410 1434 Pierre III Neveu 1435 Bernard V de Cazilhac 1435 1462 Robert Dauphin 1462 1473 Cardinal Jean Jouffroy 70 1474 1503 Louis d Amboise 71 the Elder 1500 1700 edit 1503 1510 Louis d Amboise 72 the Younger nephew 1510 1511 Robert de Britto 73 Administrator 1511 1515 Charles de Robertet 74 1515 1518 Jean Jacques Robertet 75 1519 1520 Cardinal Adrien Gouffier de Boissy Administrator 76 1524 1528 Aymar Gouffier O S B 77 1528 1535 Antoine Duprat 78 Administrator 1535 1550 Cardinal Jean de Guise Lorraine 79 1550 1561 Louis de Guise Lorraine 80 Administrator 1561 1567 Cardinal Lorenzo Strozzi 81 1568 1574 Filippo de Rodolfis 82 1575 1588 Giuliano de Medici 1588 1608 Alphonse del Bene d Elbene 83 1608 1635 Alphonse d Elbene 84 1635 1676 Gaspard de Daillon du Lude 84 1678 1687 Hyacinthe Serroni O P first archbishop 85 1687 1693 Sede Vacante 86 1693 1703 Charles Le Goux de la Berchere 87 1700 present edit 1703 1722 Henri de Nesmond 88 1722 1747 Armand Pierre de la Croix de Castries 89 1747 1759 Dominique de La Rochefoucauld 90 1759 1764 Leopold Charles de Choiseul Stainville 91 1764 1794 Cardinal Francois Joachim de Pierre de Bernis 92 3 April 1791 Jean Joachim Gausserand Constitutional Bishop of Tarn 93 1794 1801 Francois de Pierre de Bernis 94 1801 1823 Sede Vacante1823 1833 Charles Brault 95 1833 1842 Francois Marie Edouard de Gually 96 1842 1864 Jean Joseph Marie Eugene de Jerphanion 97 1865 1875 Jean Paul Francois Marie Felix Lyonnet 98 1876 1884 Etienne Emile Ramadie 99 1884 1899 Jean Emile Fonteneau 100 1900 1918 Eudoxe Irenee Edouard Mignot 101 1918 1940 Pierre Celestin Cezerac 1940 1956 Jean Joseph Aime Moussaron 1957 1961 Jean Emmanuel Marques 1961 1974 Claude Dupuy 1974 1985 Robert Joseph Coffy 102 1986 1988 Joseph Marie Henri Rabine 1989 1999 Roger Lucien Meindre 2000 2010 Pierre Marie Joseph Carre 2011 2023 Jean Legrez O P 103 2023 present Jean Louis BalsaSee also editCatholic Church in France List of Catholic dioceses in FranceNotes edit A suffragan diocese is usually a diocese rather than an archdiocese and led by a bishop rather than an archbishop References edit Compayre p 61 DeVic Vaissete IV p 383 column 1 Adrian H Bredero 2004 Bernard Of Clairvaux A amp C Black p 25 ISBN 978 0 567 08285 5 The Encyclopaedia Britannica article Albigeois Volume 1 Cambridge 1910 p 505 gives the date of 1147 which however is inconsistent with the known whereabouts of Cardinal Albericus Cesare Baronio ed Augustin Theiner Annales Ecclesiastici Tomus XIX Bar le Duc 1870 pp 3 9 De Vic and Vaissete Histoire generale de Languedoc Tome III Toulouse 1872 p 745 746 Pilar Jimenez Sources juridiques pour l etude du catharisme les actes du concile de Lombers 1165 Clio amp Crimen no 1 Durango ES 2014 p 358 372 Martin Bouquet ed 1877 Recueil des historiens des Gaules et de la France in French and Latin Vol Tome quatorzieme Paris Victor Palme pp 431 434 Damian J Smith 2010 Crusade Heresy and Inquisition in the Lands of the Crown of Aragon c 1167 1276 Boston Leiden Brill p 77 ISBN 90 04 18289 6 Mark Gregory Pegg 2009 A Most Holy War The Albigensian Crusade and the Battle for Christendom Oxford University Press pp 42 44 ISBN 978 0 19 539310 1 Crozes pp 58 59 Crozes p 59 Bernard Hamilton Cathar Links with the Balkans and Byzantium Antonio Sennis ed 2016 Cathars in Question Woodbridge Suffolk UK Boydell amp Brewer pp 131 150 ISBN 978 1 903153 68 0 at 141 144 C J Hefele Histoire des conciles tr Delarc Tome VII Paris 1872 pp 509 510 Hefele p 514 Michael D Costen The Cathars and the Albigensian Crusade Manchester 1997 pp 105 106 Cardinal Henri missed the Conclave of 1181 Compayre p 8 270 Julien Thery Astruc 2016 The Heretical Dissidence p 103 Compayre p 58 Compayre pp 85 87 Sainte Marthe Gallia christiana I Instrumenta p 1 3 Ritzler Sefrin V p 75 note 1 Compayre p 65 DeVic Vaissete IV p 383 column 1 Sainte Marthe Gallia christiana I p 11 and Instrumenta pp 5 6 Compayre pp 70 71 Sainte Marthe Gallia christiana I p 2 Ritzler Sefrin V p 75 note 1 Ritzler Sefrin VI p 73 note 1 J L Biget Sainte Cecile et Saint Salvi chapitre de cathedrale et chapitre de collegiale a Albi Cahiers de Fanjoux 24 1989 65 104 Sainte Marthe Gallia christiana I pp 49 52 DeVic Vaissete IV p 383 column 2 Louis Marie Prudhomme 1793 La Republique francaise en quatre vingt quatre departements dictionnaire geographique et methodique in French Paris Chez l editeur rue des Marais pp 7 11 Ludovic Sciout 1872 Historie de la constitution civile du clerge 1790 1801 in French Vol Tome I Paris Firmin Didot freres fils et cie pp 204 208 Bernis was appointed Archbishop of Rouen on 27 September 1819 and died on 4 February 1823 Ritzler Sefrin VI p 73 notes 4 and 5 Paul Pisani 1907 Repertoire biographique de l episcopat constitutionnel 1791 1802 in French Paris A Picard et fils pp 403 407 456 Em Sevestre Emile Sevestre 1905 L histoire le texte et la destinee du Concordat de 1801 in French Paris Lethielleux pp 238 249 488 496 Pius VI Pius VII 1821 Collectio per epitomen facta Bullarum Brevium Allocutionum Epistolarumque Pii VI contra constitutionem civilem Cleri Gallicani ejusque authores et fautores item Concordatorum inter Pium VII et Gubernium Rei publicae in Galliis atque alia varia regimina post modum in hac regione sibi succedentia tum expostulationum apud Pium Papam VII Contra varia Acta ad Ecclesiam Gallicanam spectantia a triginta et octo Episcopis Archiepiscop et Cardinal antiquae Ecclesiae Gallicanae subscriptarum etc 6 Avril 1803 in Latin London Cox amp Baylis pp 111 121 at p 116 Almanach catholique francais in French Paris 1920 p 71 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Vaillant Gauthier 9 August 2018 Restructuring parishes a move from necessity to audacity La Croix International Bayard Retrieved 28 May 2018 Clair is a name in the Proprium diocesis Auscitanensis a list of diocesan Mass commemorations for June 1 the name also occurs in Bordeaux Auch Limoges Perigueux Sarlat and Lectoure A church was named after him De Vic Vaissete Histoire de Languedoc IV p 383 Crozes pp 8 18 provides an extensive treatment of the legend and the objections to its authenticity For the legend see Daniele Papebrochius Francois Baert Conrad Janninck 1695 Acta Sanctorum Junii in Latin Vol Tomus I Antwerp typographia Henrici Thieullier pp 7 16 De Vic Vaissete IV p 383 states Antime etait disciple de S Clair amp passe pour avoir ete son successeur Antime was a disciple of S Clair and passes as having been his successor He is known only from the Proprium Crozes p 18 note 2 quotes their meager content Sainte Marthe Gallia christiana I p 3 Diogenianus is mentioned by Gregory of Tours Historia Francorum Book II 13 Duchesne II p 42 The name appears without reference to diocese in a list of subscribers to a synodal letter addressed to Pope Leo III Duchesne p 42 note 2 notes that the name is derived from Polycarpe de la Riviere a known forger of documents Carolus Munier Concilia Galliae A 314 A 506 Turnholt Brepols 1963 p 107 110 who cites no manuscript source Sabinus was present at the Council of Agde in 506 Sirmond Jacques ed 1789 Concilium Agathense Conciliorum Galliae tam editorum quam ineditorum collectio temporum ordine digesta ab anno Christi 177 ad ann 1563 cum epistolis pontificum principum constitutionibus et aliis ecclesiasticae rei gallicanae monimentis in Latin Vol 1 Paris P Didot col 796 Ambrosius was represented by the Archdeacon Viventius at the Council of Orleans in 549 Sirmond I col 1044 Duchesne p 42 Salvius is mentioned by Gregory of Tours Historia Francorum Book V 44 and 50 VI 29 VII 1 VIII 22 Duchesne p 43 Desiderius was the successor of Salvius Gregory of Tours VIII 22 Fredemund signed the decrees of the Council of Paris in 614 Duchesne II p 43 no 7 Constantius was present at the Council of Clichy in 627 Duchesne II p 43 no 8 Duchesne p 43 argues that Dido is a contemporary of Pope Gregory I 590 604 and belongs before Bishop Constantius The date of 664 667 is only the date of the manuscript in which his name is found DeVic Vaisette IV p 656 column 2 remarks that the reference in the manuscript is the work of a falsifier The name is known only from a list constructed by a modern scholar N Sabatier president of the Parlement of Toulouse The source is conjectural according to Louis Duchesne II pp 41 42 and 44 no 9 Cf also Compayre p 68 note 4 Text of the list Luc d Achery ed 1666 Veterum aliquot scriptorum qui in Galliae bibliothecis maxime Benedictinorum latuerant Spicilegium in Latin Paris Apud C Savereux pp 335 338 Duchesne II pp 41 42 and 44 a b c d e f The name does not appear in the list supplied by Duchesne p 42 or in his list of authentic bishops at p 44 Compayre p 8 notes Bishop Deodatus who had been an Aumonier of Charlemagne who had established at Albi a judge a fiscal procurator and two notaries Compayre p 69 suggests that Verdat c 812 of the list is Deodatus Lupus was present at the Council of Ponthion in 876 His name may be mentioned in the catalogue list three times by error Duchesne II p 44 no 10 Eligius subscribed at the Council in villa Portu in the diocese of Nimes in 886 Duchesne II p 44 no 11 J D Mansi ed Sacrorum Conciliorum nova et amplissima collectio editio novissima Tomus 18 Venice Antonio Zatta 1773 p 45 Duchesne II p 44 no 12 Amelius was present at the Council of Bourges in 1031 and at the Council of Limoges He participated in the dedication of the monastery of Vendome in 1040 Saint Marthe Gallia christiana I p 10 De Vic Vaissete IV pp 384 column 2 653 column 2 Crozes pp 52 53 Gams p 484 The See of Albi was purchased for Bishop Guilelmus Guillem son of Bernard Aymard at the price of 5 000 sols for Count Pons of Toulouse and a similar sum for Vicomte Bernard Athon of Albi and Bishop Frotarius of Nimes Saint Marthe Gallia christiana I pp 10 11 Crozes p 53 De Vic Vaissete IV pp 384 column 2 653 column 2 Frotard was excommunicated in the Council of Toulouse in 1075 for simony and deposed by Pope Gregory VII He had purchased the See of Albi for the value of fifteen first class horses He went to Rome and appealed his sentence but was refused by Pope Gregory VII 1073 1085 When Wibertus of Ravenna was set up as antipope Clement III he appealed again and was successful in c 1083 Etienne Baluze 1761 Stephani Baluzii Tutelensis miscellanea novo ordine digesta et non paucis ineditis monumentis opportunisque animadversionibus aucta in Latin Vol Tomus I novo ordine ed Junctinium p 125 Crozes p 54 Stephanus Baluzius Miscellaneorum Tomus sextus hoc est Collectio veterum monumentorum Paris 1713 p 431 432 for the date J D Mansi ed Sacrorum Conciliorum nova et amplissima collectio editio novissima Tomus XX Venice 1775 pp 457 458 Gams p 484 Duchesne II p 42 Saint Marthe Gallia christiana I p 12 Saint Marthe Gallia christiana I pp 12 13 Humbertus is mentioned in documents of 1125 1126 and 1127 In 1132 Humbert subscribed a charter in which Vicomte Roger of Albi was given the diocese of Albi in fief by Count Jourdain of Toulouse and granted the right to participate in the election of a bishop of Albi Compayre p 72 Sainte Marthe Gallia christiana I p 13 Crozes pp 55 56 William of Dourgne was imprisoned by Vicomte Roger of Beziers in 1178 apparently in a conflict over seigneurial rights Radoslaw Kotecki Jacek Maciejewski 2014 Ecclesia et Violentia Violence against the Church and Violence within the Church in the Middle Ages Cambridge Scholars Publishing pp 35 36 ISBN 978 1 4438 7002 3 Jean Dufour Les eveques d Albi de Cahors et de Rodez des origines a la fin du XIIe siecle Paris 1989 pp 38 39 Crozes pp 58 60 A Bishop Gerard is claimed for the diocese of Albi in 1176 but the only documentary evidence the Concilium Lumbarense has been redated from 1165 so that his dates do not conflict with those of Bishop Guilelmus The names of other bishops in the document do not fit the period either and Countess Constance of Toulouse who was separated from Count Raymond V in 1165 signed the decrees A real bishop Pons d Arsac of Narbonne confirmed the decrees of the Council of Lombers at the Council of Capestang in 1166 Sainte Marthe Gallia christiana I p 15 C J Hefele Histoire des conciles tr Delarc VII Paris 1872 pp 432 434 Crozes pp 58 60 Claude Andre is known from a single act of 1183 Gams p 484 column 2 De Vic Vaissete IV p 386 Guilelmus is also called Guillaume Pierre de Brens William Peyre Guilliame Peyre and Guilhem Peyre He had been Provost of the Cathedral Chapter and was Administrator of the diocese at least from 1177 during the imprisonment of Bishop Guilelmus by Roger II Trencavel Bishop Guilelmus Petri died on 21 May 1230 and was buried on 22 May according to a necrology and a manuscript in the episcopal archives quoted by D Auriac p 90 note 1 p 91 note 1 Eugene d Auriac pp 63 91 Sainte Marthe Gallia christiana I Instrumenta p 7 Gams p 484 Eubel I p 81 Eubel I p 81 Julien Thery Astruc 2016 The Heretical Dissidence p 103 Bernard was appointed on 7 March 1275 or 1276 He was transferred to the diocese of Le Puy on 30 July 1308 by Pope Clement V He was named a cardinal by Pope John XXII and was promoted to the Suburbicarian See of Porto and Santa Rufina on 18 December 1316 He died on 14 August 1317 Crozes pp 62 74 Eubel I pp 15 no 1 36 81 91 Pierre de la Vie Archdeacon of Fenohelto Narbonne was the nephew of Cardinal Arnaud de la Vie and grand nephew of Pope John XXII He was appointed Bishop of Albi on 15 June 1334 He died on 27 August 1337 Crozes p 82 Eubel I p 81 Bernard de Camiet was appointed on 20 October 1337 and died on 28 November 1337 Crozes p 82 Eubel I p 81 He is also called Peitavin de Montesquiou and Pectin de Montesquieu He had previously been Bishop of Bazas 1325 1334 and then Bishop of Maguelonne 1334 1339 He was appointed Bishop of Albi on 27 January 1339 and named a cardinal by Pope Clement VI on 17 December 1350 in consequence of which he resigned the bishopric He died on 1 February 1355 Crozes p 84 Eubel I pp 19 no 19 81 320 516 Bishop Arnaldus Guillelmi made his solemn entry into Albi on 10 July 1351 Sainte Marthe Gallia christiana I Instrumenta p 12 Dominique was appointed by Pope Clement VII on 18 May 1379 He was transferred to the diocese of Saint Pons de Thomeres on 30 May 1382 Crozes p 87 Eubel I p 81 406 Jean de Saie had previously been Bishop of Lombes 1362 1363 Bishop of Dax 1363 1375 and then Bishop of Agen 1375 1382 He was appointed Bishop of Albi on 30 May 1382 by Pope Clement VII Crozes p 86 Eubel I p 77 81 97 310 Dominique of Florence was transferred back to Albi from Saint Pons by Pope Clement VII on 24 October 1392 following the death of Guillaume de la Voulte He took part in the Council of Pisa in 1409 He was transferred to the diocese of Toulouse on 5 September 1410 Dominique died on 17 March 1422 Crozes p 87 Eubel I pp 81 406 488 Cardinal Jouffroy had previously been Bishop of Arras 1453 1462 He was provided to the See of Albi by Pope Pius II on 10 December 1462 He died on 11 December 1473 Compayre pp 82 85 Eubel II p 84 Louis d Amboise was the brother of Cardinal Georges d Amboise He was granted his bulls of consecration and installation on 24 January 1474 He was responsible for the construction of the choir of the Cathedral of Saint Cecilia In 1498 he was appointed to the commission that investigated the legality of the marriage of King Louis XII and Jeanne de Valois He wrote his Testament in 1481 and died in Lyon on 1 July 1503 Sainte Marthe Gallia christiana I pp 33 35 Crozes pp 106 111 Eubel II p 84 On 22 May 1497 with the consent of Louis d Amboise the Elder and the Chapter of Albi Louis d Amboise the younger House of Amboise was granted the right of succession upon the resignation or decease of his uncle He succeeded on 1 July 1503 and resigned the diocese in September 1510 He was created a cardinal on 18 December 1506 and named Cardinal Priest of SS Pietro e Marcellino on 11 January 1510 He died in 1517 Crozes pp 111 112 Eubel II p 84 with note 3 III p 11 no 16 101 with note 2 Cardinal de Britto was appointed Administrator of the diocese of Albi on 30 September 1510 He died on 9 November 1513 Eubel III p 101 Charles de Robertet was the nephew of Florimond de Robert Secretaire des Commandemens du Roi was elected bishop in December 1510 and took possession on 17 April 1511 He was appointed on 14 March 1515 He resigned in favor of Jacques de Robertet on 25 May 1515 Compayre p 91 Crozes pp 112 114 Eubel III p 101 Jean Jacques was the brother of Charles Robertet with whom he entered into an agreement for the succession to the diocese He was appointed on 25 May 1515 and his brother died on 9 August The succession was contested however The Canons of the Cathedral held an election on 10 August 1515 and chose the Archbishop of Auch Francois de Clermont Lodeve who accepted and entered a suit against Jean Jacques Robertet before the Parlement of Toulouse which he won This irritated King Francis who by that time had the Concordat of Bologna in his hand had the case revoked to the Parlement of Paris but the Parlement also found in favor of Clermont Lodeve The Cardinal however considering the royal interest yielded to Robertet He took possession on 27 November 1517 Compayre pp 91 92 Crozes pp 114 115 Eubel III p 101 Cardinal Adrien de Boissy died on 24 July 1523 Crozes pp 115 116 Eubel III p 14 101 Aymar Gouffier de Boissy was the brother of Cardinal Adrien de Boissy He was elected by the Chapter despite the terms of the Concordat of Bologna which gave the right of nomination to the King of France Francis I later gave his assent on 1 August 1523 He took possession of the See by proxy on 19 June 1524 and in person on 10 November 1527 He died on 9 October 1528 Sainte Marthe Gallia christiana I pp 37 38 Eubel III p 101 Duprat was never consecrated a bishop He was therefore only Administrator of the diocese of Albi He was preconised by Pope Clement VII on 23 December 1528 He had as Coadjutor Pierre de la Porte He died on 9 July 1535 Sainte Marthe Gallia christiana I p 38 Compayre p 95 Crozes pp 116 118 Eubel III p 101 The Cardinal de Lorraine was the son of Rene II Duc de Lorraine He was named a cardinal in 1518 by Pope Leo X He took possession of the diocese of Albi on 5 October 1535 He was non resident He died on 10 May 1550 Compayre p 96 Crozes p 118 119 Eubel III p 101 The future Cardinal de Guise was transferred to the diocese of Albi from Troyes where he was only Bishop elect and Administrator since he was well below the minimum age for consecration as a bishop He was only 22 when appointed to Albi He resigned the diocese of Albi before 9 May 1561 He was finally consecrated a bishop on 1 April 1571 Eubel III p 101 317 Eubel III p 101 Bishop Filippo was a Florentine and a Doctor in utroque iure Civil Law and Canon Law from the University of Avignon He was the nephew of Archbishop Lorenzo Strozzi He had been Abbot Commendatory of Saint Victor de Marseille before being appointed Archbishop by King Charles IX and approved by Pope Pius IV Denis de Sainte Marthe Gallia christiana I Paris 1716 p 39 Eubel III p 101 Bishop Alfonso s father was a Florentine del Bene who had migrated to Lyon He was nominated by King Henri III in August 1588 and was approved by Pope Sixtus V on 25 September 1589 by which time King Henri was dead at the hand of an assassin Gallia christiana I pp 39 40 Eubel III p 101 a b Gallia christiana I p 40 Gauchat IV p 75 Born in Rome Serroni was a protege of Michel Mazarin O P the Cardinal s brother He had previously been Bishop of Mende He was nominated by King Louis XIV on 26 August 1676 and approved by Pope Innocent XI on 3 October 1678 becoming the first Archbishop He took possession on 22 February 1679 In 1682 he took part in the Assembly of the French Clergy He died in Paris on 7 January 1687 Jean p 2 Ritzler V p 75 with note 2 Because of the Four Gallican Articles Pope Innocent XI and Pope Alexander VIII refused to preconise any of the episcopal nominations of Louis XIV Le Goux had previously been Bishop of Lavaur 1677 1692 He was nominated to the diocese of Albi by Louis XIV on 31 January 1687 but the King s quarrel with the Papacy over the Four Articles of 1682 postponed the granting of the bulls of transfer and appointment to Albi until 12 October 1693 Le Goux nonetheless enjoyed the temporal Administration of the diocese from 1687 to 1693 He was transferred to Narbonne on 12 November 1703 Jean pp 2 3 Crozes pp 133 137 Ritzler V p 75 with note 3 p 406 with note 5 Nesmond was born in the diocese of Bordeaux and was Doctor in theology Paris He had previously been Bishop of Montaubon 1692 1703 and was transferred to Albi on 12 November 1703 He became a member of the Academie Francaise in 1710 He was transferred to Toulouse on 14 January 1722 where he died on 26 May 1727 Jean p 3 Ritzler V p 75 with note 4 p 273 p 378 De Castries a native of Montpellier was the second son of Rene Gaspard Marquis de Castries and Isabelle Bonzi the sister of Cardinal Bonzi of Narbonne He was a Doctor of Theology Paris and became Archdeacon of Narbonne thanks to the patronage of his uncle He was Aumonier of the Dauphine and Grand Aumonier of the Duchesse de Berry He had been named Bishop of Tours 1719 1723 in 1717 but did not receive his bulls until 1719 due to problems with his Jansenism He was finally consecrated on 29 October 1719 but he was named Archbishop of Albi on 5 November 1719 He again suffered delays and did not take possession of the temporalities of the diocese of Albi until 14 January 1722 his bulls were issued on 22 September 1722 He died at Albi on 15 April 1747 Jean pp 3 and 423 Ritzler V p 75 with note 5 p 395 with note 6 Rochefoucauld the nephew of Cardinal Frederic Jerome de la Rochefoucauld who named him Vicar General of Bourges He was nominated by King Louis XV on 1 May 1747 and preconised approved by Pope Benedict XIV on 29 May 1747 He was consecrated a bishop on 20 June 1747 by Bishop Gabriel Florent de Choiseul of Mende He was transferred to the diocese of Rouen on 2 June 1759 He was created a cardinal on 1 June 1778 his red biretta was sent to him but he never visited Rome and never obtained a titular church He died in exile from the French Revolution on 23 September 1800 in Munster Jean p 3 Ritzler VI p 32 with notes 50 and 51 p 73 with note 2 p 359 with note 3 Choiseul had previously been Bishop of Evreux He was transferred to Albi on 28 May 1759 thanks to the influence of his brother the minister of Louis XV He was transferred to the diocese of Cambrai on 9 July 1764 Jean p 4 Julien Loth 1893 Histoire du cardinal de la Rochefoucauld et du diocese de Rouen pendant la Revolution in French Evreux l Eure pp 13 20 Ritzler VI p 73 with note 3 143 with note 2 Bernis was created a cardinal by Pope Clement XIII on 2 October 1758 and assigned the titular church of San Silvestro in Capite on 26 June 1769 He was immediately named French Ambassador to the Holy See and resided in Rome from 1769 to November 1791 Jean p 4 Ritzler VI p 73 with note 4 p 20 with notes 12 and 13 Pisani pp 403 407 Nephew of the Cardinal Francois de Bernis was consecrated a bishop in Rome by Pope Pius VI on 30 December 1781 and appointed titular bishop of Apollonia and auxiliary bishop of his uncle in Albi He was then named Coadjutor Archbishop with the right of succession on 14 July 1784 and given the title Archbishop of Damascus He succeeded his uncle on his death in 1794 and like all the other bishops in France was dismissed by Pope Pius VII in 1801 He was Administrator of Lyon from 1817 to 1819 and became Archbishop of Rouen on 27 September 1819 Bernis died in 1823 Jean p 4 Gams p 483 Brault was previously Bishop of Bayeux 1802 1806 He attended the National Council in Paris in 1811 under the Emperor Bonaparte He was designated Archbishop of Albi in 1817 but the appointment was never approved in Rome due to disagreements between the French government and the Papacy over a new concordat and therefore he remained at Bayeux In 1819 he was offered the Archbishopric of Rouen but he declined In 1823 he was again offered Albi and he was preconised on 26 February 1823 He died on 25 February 1833 Gams p 483 L Ami de la religion et du roi journal ecclesiastique politique et litteraire in French Vol Tome 75 Paris A Le Clere 1833 pp 263 264 Blot Thierry 1989 La reconstruction concordataire dans le diocese de Bayeux sous l episcopat de Monseigneur Charles Brault 1802 1823 these soutenue a l Universite de Caen en 1989 sous la direction de Maurice Quenet Abbe Puesch in Societe bibliographique France 1907 L episcopat francais pp 25 26 Gualy had been Grand Vicar of Chartres from 1824 He was nominated Bishop of Saint Flour on 8 July 1829 and preconised on 28 September 1829 He was consecrated bishop by his uncle Joseph Julien Gualy the Bishop of Carcassonne on 30 November 1829 On 18 March 1833 he was nominated Archbishop of Albi and was transferred to Albi from Saint Flour on 30 September 1833 by Pope Gregory XVI He died on 16 June 1842 Abbe Puesch in Societe bibliographique France 1907 L episcopat francais p 26 Jerphanion died on 22 November 1864 n a 1865 Notice sur Mgr de Jerphanion archeveque d Albi in French Castres V J Abeilhou Crozes pp 268 275 Abbe Puesch in Societe bibliographique France 1907 L episcopat francais p 27 Lyonnet had been Bishop of Saint Flour from 1852 then Bishop of Valence in 1857 He was nominated Archbishop of Albi by the French government on 4 December 1864 and transferred to Albi by Pope Pius IX on 29 March 1865 He died on 24 December 1875 Crozes pp 276 290 Abbe Puesch in Societe bibliographique France 1907 L episcopat francais pp 27 28 Ramadie had previously been Bishop of Perpignan 1865 1876 He was nominated Archbishop of Albi by President MacMahon on 17 January 1876 and preconised by Pope Pius IX on 26 June 1876 Gerard Cholvy Gallicans et ultramontains Mgr Ramadie succeseur de Mgr Gerbet a Perpignan in Jean Dominique Durand Regis Ladous 1992 Histoire religieuse histoire globale histoire ouverte melanges offerts a Jacques Gadille in French Paris Editions Beauchesne pp 301 316 ISBN 978 2 7010 1245 2 Crozes pp 290 291 Abbe Puesch in Societe bibliographique France 1907 L episcopat francais pp 28 29 Fonteneau Abbe Puesch in Societe bibliographique France 1907 L episcopat francais pp 29 30 Mingot had been Vicar General of Soissons He was named Bishop of Frejus on 6 June 1890 and was preconised by Pope Leo XIII on 26 June He was named Archbishop of Albi on 7 September 1900 and preconised on 14 September He took possession of the diocese in person on 21 February 1901 Joseph Hyacinthe Albanes Ulysse Chevalier 1899 Gallia christiana novissima Aix Apt Frejus Gap Riez et Sisteron in French Montbeliard Societe anonyme d imprimerie montbeliardaise pp 425 426 Abbe Puesch in Societe bibliographique France 1907 L episcopat francais p 30 Coffey had previously been Bishop of Gap 1967 1974 He was transferred to the diocese of Marseille on 13 April 1985 and was named a cardinal on 28 June 1991 He died on 15 July 1995 Diocese d Albi Monseigneur Jean Legrez Biographie retrieved 2017 12 12 BibliographyAuriac Eugene d 1858 Histoire de l ancienne cathedrale et des eveques d Alby in French Paris Impr Imperiale Biget Jean Louis 1998 Les Albigeois remarques sur une denomination In Inventer l heresie Discours polemiques et pouvoirs avant l Inquisition ed Monique Zerner Centre d etudes medievales 1998 pp 219 255 Compayre Clement 1841 Etudes historiques et documents inedits sur l Albigeois le Castrais et l ancien diocese e Lavaur in French Albi M Papilhiau Crozes Hippolyte 1878 Le diocese d Albi ses eveques et archeveques in French Toulouse Albi Delboy De Vic Claude Vaissete Joseph 1876 Histoire generale de Languedoc avec des notes et les pieces justificatives in French Vol Tome quatrieme Toulouse E Privat pp 383 391 652 674 Duchesne Louis 1910 Fastes episcopaux de l ancienne Gaule II L Aquitaine et les Lyonnaises Paris Fontemoing second edition in French Eubel Conradus ed 1913 Hierarchia catholica Tomus 1 second ed Munster Libreria Regensbergiana pp 333 334 in Latin Eubel Conradus ed 1914 Hierarchia catholica Tomus 2 second ed Munster Libreria Regensbergiana in Latin Gulik Guilelmus 1923 Eubel Conradus ed Hierarchia catholica Tomus 3 second ed Munster Libreria Regensbergiana Gams Pius Bonifatius 1873 Series episcoporum Ecclesiae catholicae quotquot innotuerunt a beato Petro apostolo in Latin Ratisbon Typis et Sumptibus Georgii Josephi Manz Gauchat Patritius Patrice 1935 Hierarchia catholica IV 1592 1667 Munster Libraria Regensbergiana Retrieved 2016 07 06 Jean Armand 1891 Les eveques et les archeveques de France depuis 1682 jusqu a 1801 in French Paris A Picard Luchaire Achille 1905 Innocent III La croisade des Albigeois in French 2d ed Paris Hachette Pisani Paul 1907 Repertoire biographique de l episcopat constitutionnel 1791 1802 in French Paris A Picard et fils Ritzler Remigius Sefrin Pirminus 1952 Hierarchia catholica medii et recentis aevi V 1667 1730 Patavii Messagero di S Antonio Retrieved 2016 07 06 Ritzler Remigius Sefrin Pirminus 1958 Hierarchia catholica medii et recentis aevi VI 1730 1799 Patavii Messagero di S Antonio Retrieved 2016 07 06 Ritzler Remigius Sefrin Pirminus 1968 Hierarchia Catholica medii et recentioris aevi sive summorum pontificum S R E cardinalium ecclesiarum antistitum series A pontificatu Pii PP VII 1800 usque ad pontificatum Gregorii PP XVI 1846 in Latin Vol VII Monasterii Libr Regensburgiana Remigius Ritzler Pirminus Sefrin 1978 Hierarchia catholica Medii et recentioris aevi A Pontificatu PII PP IX 1846 usque ad Pontificatum Leonis PP XIII 1903 in Latin Vol VIII Il Messaggero di S Antonio Pieta Zenon 2002 Hierarchia catholica medii et recentioris aevi A pontificatu Pii PP X 1903 usque ad pontificatum Benedictii PP XV 1922 in Latin Vol IX Padua Messagero di San Antonio ISBN 978 88 250 1000 8 Societe bibliographique France 1907 L episcopat francais depuis le Concordat jusqu a la Separation 1802 1905 Paris Librairie des Saints Peres Thery Julien 2000 Les Albigeois et la procedure inquisitoire Le proces pontifical contre Bernard de Castanet eveque d Albi et inquisiteur 1307 1308 Heresis 33 2000 p 7 48 retrieved 2017 12 19 Julien Thery Astruc 2016 The Heretical Dissidence of the Good Men in the Albigeois 1276 1329 Localism and Resistance to Roman Clericalism dans Cathars in Question ed Antonio Sennis York Medieval Press 2016 p 79 111 retrieved 2017 12 24 External links edit in French Centre national des Archives de l Eglise de France L Episcopat francais depuis 1919 retrieved 2016 12 24 Catholic Encyclopedia article Portals nbsp Catholicism nbsp France Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Albi amp oldid 1180039604, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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