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Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Lyon

The Archdiocese of Lyon (Latin: Archidiœcesis Lugdunensis; French: Archidiocèse de Lyon), formerly the Archdiocese of Lyon–Vienne–Embrun, is a Latin Church metropolitan archdiocese of the Catholic Church in France. The archbishops of Lyon serve as successors to Saints Pothinus and Irenaeus, the first and second bishops of Lyon, respectively,[2] and are also called primates of Gaul.[3] He is usually elevated to the rank of cardinal. Bishop Olivier de Germay was appointed archbishop on 22 October 2020.

Archdiocese of Lyon

Archidiœcesis Lugdunensis

Archidiocèse de Lyon
Location
CountryFrance
TerritoryRhône, Loire
Ecclesiastical provinceLyon
Coordinates45°45′39″N 4°49′37″E / 45.76083°N 4.82694°E / 45.76083; 4.82694
Statistics
Area5,087 km2 (1,964 sq mi)
Population
- Total
- Catholics
(as of 2016)
1,936,940
1,240,272 (64%)
Information
DenominationCatholic
Sui iuris churchLatin Church
RiteRoman Rite
Established150
CathedralPrimatial Cathedral of St. John the Baptist in Lyon
Patron saintSt. Irenaeus of Lyon
Saint Pothinus
Current leadership
PopeFrancis
Metropolitan ArchbishopOlivier de Germay
Auxiliary BishopsPatrick Le Gal
Emmanuel Marie Anne Alain Gobilliard[1]
Vicar GeneralYves Baumgarten
Map
Website
lyon.catholique.fr

History edit

Persecution edit

The "Deacon of Vienne", who was martyred at Lyon during the persecution of 177, was probably a deacon installed at Vienne by the ecclesiastical authority of Lyon. The confluence of the Rhône and the Saône, where sixty Gallic tribes had erected the famous altar to Rome and Augustus, was also the centre from which Christianity was gradually propagated throughout Gaul. The presence at Lyon of numerous Asiatic Christians and their almost daily communications with the Orient were likely to arouse the susceptibilities of the Gallo-Romans. A persecution arose under Marcus Aurelius. Its victims at Lyon numbered forty-eight, half of them of Greek origin, half Gallo-Roman, among others Saint Blandina, and Saint Pothinus, first Bishop of Lyon, sent to Gaul by Saint Polycarp about the middle of the 2nd century. The legend according to which he was sent by Saint Clement dates from the 12th century and is without foundation. The letter addressed to the Christians of Asia and Phrygia in the name of the faithful of Vienne and Lyon, and relating the persecution of 177, is considered by Ernest Renan as one of the most extraordinary documents possessed by any literature; it is the baptismal certificate of Christianity in France. The successor of Saint Pothinus was the illustrious Saint Irenaeus (177-202).[2]

The discovery on the Hill of Saint Sebastian of ruins of a naumachia capable of being transformed into an amphitheatre, and of some fragments of inscriptions apparently belonging to an altar of Augustus, has led several archæologists to believe that the martyrs of Lyon suffered death on this hill. Very ancient tradition, however, represents the church of Ainay as erected at the place of their martyrdom. The crypt of Saint Pothinus, under the choir of the church of St. Nizier, was destroyed in 1884. But there are still revered at Lyon the prison cell of Saint Pothinus, where Anne of Austria, Louis XIV, and Pius VII came to pray, and the crypt of Saint Irenaeus built at the end of the 5th century by Saint Patiens, which contains the body of Saint Irenaeus. There are numerous funerary inscriptions of primitive Christianity in Lyon; the earliest dates from the year 334. In the 2nd and 3rd centuries, the See of Lyon enjoyed great renown throughout Gaul: witness the local legends of Besançon and of several other cities relative to the missionaries sent out by Saint Irenaeus. Faustinus, bishop in the second half of the 3rd century, wrote to Saint Cyprian and Pope Stephen I, in 254, regarding the Novatian tendencies of Marcian, Bishop of Arles. But when Diocletian's new provincial organization (tetrarchy) had taken away from Lyon its position as metropolis of the three Gauls, the prestige of Lyon diminished for a time.[2]

Merovingian period edit

At the end of the empire and during the Merovingian period several saints, as follows, are counted among the Bishops of Lyon. Saint Justus (374-381) who died in a monastery in the Thebaid (Egypt) and was renowned for the orthodoxy of his doctrine in the struggle against Arianism (the church of the Maccabees, whither his body was brought, was as early as the 5th century a place of pilgrimage under the name of the collegiate church of Saint Justus). Saint Alpinus and Saint Martin (disciple of Saint Martin of Tours; end of 4th century); Saint Antiochus (400–410); Saint Elpidius (410–422); Saint Sicarius (422–33); Saint Eucherius (c. 433–50), a monk of Lérins and the author of homilies, from whom doubtless dates the foundation at Lyon of the "hermitages" of which more will be said below; Saint Patiens (456-98) who successfully combated the famine and Arianism, and whom Sidonius Apollinaris praised in a poem; Saint Lupicinus (491-94); Saint Rusticus (494-501); Saint Stephanus (d. before 515), who with Saint Avitus of Vienne convoked a council at Lyon for the conversion of the Arians; Saint Viventiolus (515-523), who in 517 presided with Saint Avitus at the Council of Epaone; Saint Lupus, a monk, afterwards bishop (535-42), probably the first archbishop, who when signing in 438 the Council of Orléans added the title of "metropolitanus"; Saint Sardot or Sacerdos (549-542), who presided in 549 at the Council of Orléans, and who obtained from King Childebert the foundation of the general hospital; Saint Nicetius or Nizier (552-73), who received from the pope the title of patriarch, and whose tomb was honoured by miracles. The prestige of Saint Nicetius was lasting; his successor Saint Priseus (573-588) bore the title of patriarch, and brought the council of 585 to decide that national synods should be convened every three years at the instance of the patriarch and of the king; Saint Ætherius (588-603), who was a correspondent of Saint Gregory the Great and who perhaps consecrated Saint Augustine, the Apostle of England; Saint Aredius (603-615); Saint Annemundus or Chamond (c. 650), friend of Saint Wilfrid, godfather of Clotaire III, put to death by Ebroin together with his brother, and patron of the town of Saint-Chamond, Loire; Saint Genesius or Genes (660-679 or 680), Benedictine abbot of Fontenelle, grand almoner and minister of Queen Bathilde; Saint Lambertus (c. 680-690), also abbot of Fontenelle.[2]

At the end of the 5th century Lyon was the capital of the Kingdom of Burgundy, but after 534 it passed under the domination of the kings of France. Ravaged by the Saracens in 725, the city was restored through the liberality of Charlemagne who established a rich library in the monastery of Ile Barbe. In the time of Saint Patiens and the priest Constans (d. 488) the school of Lyon was famous; Sidonius Apollinaris was educated there. The letter of Leidrade to Charlemagne (807) shows the care taken by the emperor for the restoration of learning in Lyon. With the aid of the deacon Florus he made the school so prosperous that in the 10th century Englishmen went there to study.[2]

Carolingian period edit

Under Charlemagne and his immediate successors, the Bishops of Lyon, whose ascendancy was attested by the number of councils over which they were called to preside, played an important theological part. Adoptionism had no more active enemies than Leidrade (798-814) and Agobard (814-840). When Felix of Urgel continued rebellious to the condemnations pronounced against adoptionism from 791-799 by the Councils of Ciutad, Friuli, Ratisbon, Frankfort, and Rome, Charlemagne conceived the idea of sending to Urgel with Nebridius, Bishop of Narbonne, Benedict of Aniane, and Archbishop Leidrade, a native of Nuremberg and Charlemagne's librarian. They preached against Adoptionism in Spain, conducted Felix in 799 to the Council of Aachen where he seemed to submit to the arguments of Alcuin, and then brought him back to his diocese. But the submission of Felix was not complete; Agobard, "Chorepiscopus" of Lyon, convicted him anew of adoptionism in a secret conference, and when Felix died in 815 there was found among his papers a treatise in which he professed adoptionism. Then Agobard, who had become Archbishop of Lyon in 814 after Leidrade's retirement to the Abbey of St. Medard, Soissons, composed a long treatise against that heresy.[2]

Agobard edit

Agobard displayed great activity as a pastor and a publicist in his opposition to the Jews and to various superstitions. His rooted hatred for all superstition led him in his treatise on images into certain expressions which savoured of Iconoclasm. The five historical treatises which he wrote in 833 to justify the deposition of Louis the Pious, who had been his benefactor, are a stain on his life. Louis the Pious, having been restored to power, caused Agobard to be deposed in 835 by the Council of Thionville, but three years later gave him back his see, in which he died in 840. During the exile of Agobard the See of Lyon had been for a short time administered by Amalarius of Metz, whom the deacon Florus charged with heretical opinions regarding the "triforme corpus Christi", and who took part in the controversies with Gottschalk on the subject of predestination.[2]

Amolon (841-852) and Saint Remy (852-75) continued the struggle against the heresy of Valence, which condemned this heresy, and also was engaged in strife with Hincmar. From 879-1032 Lyon formed part of the Kingdom of Provence and afterwards of the second Kingdom of Burgundy.[2] In 1032 Rudolph III of Burgundy died and his kingdom eventually went to Conrad II.[4] The portion of Lyon situated on the left bank of the Saône became, at least nominally, an imperial city. Finally Archbishop Burchard II, brother of Rudolph,[5][2] claimed rights of sovereignty over Lyon as inherited from his mother, Matilda, daughter of Louis IV of France; in this way the government of Lyon, instead of being exercised by the distant emperor, became a matter of dispute between the counts who claimed the inheritance and the successive archbishops.[2]

Lyon attracted the attention of Cardinal Hildebrand, who held a council there in 1055 against the simoniacal bishops. In 1076, as Gregory VII, he deposed Archbishop Humbert (1063–76) for simony.[2]

Saint Gebuin (Jubinus), who succeeded Humbert, was the confidant of Gregory VII and contributed to the reform of the Church by the two councils of 1080 and 1082, at which were excommunicated Manasses of Reims, Fulk of Anjou, and the monks of Marmoutiers.[2]

It was under the episcopate of Saint Gebuin that Gregory VII (20 April 1079) established the primacy of the Church of Lyon over the Provinces of Rouen, Tours, and Sens, which primacy was specially confirmed by Callistus II, despite the letter written to him in 1126 by Louis VI in favour of the church of Sens. As far as it regarded the Province of Rouen this letter was later suppressed by a decree of the king's council in 1702, at the request of Jacques-Nicolas Colbert, Archbishop of Rouen.[2]

Hugh of Die (1081–1106), the successor of Saint Gebuin, friend of Saint Anselm, and for a while legate of Gregory VII in France and Burgundy, had differences later on with Victor III, who excommunicated him for a time. The latter pope came to Lyon in 1106, consecrated the church of Ainay Abbey, and dedicated one of its altars in honour of the Immaculate Conception. The Feast of the Immaculate Conception was solemnized at Lyon about 1128, perhaps at the instance of Saint Anselm of Canterbury, and Saint Bernard wrote to the canons of Lyon to complain that they should not have instituted a feast without consulting the pope.[2]

Sovereignty edit

As soon as Thomas Becket, Archbishop of Canterbury, had been proclaimed Blessed (1173), his cult was instituted at Lyon. Lyon of the 12th century thus has a glorious place in the history of Catholic liturgy and even of dogma, but the 12th century was also marked by the heresy of Peter Waldo and the Waldenses, the Poor Men of Lyon, who were opposed by John of Canterbury (1181–1193), and by an important change in the political situation of the archbishops.[2]

In 1157 Emperor Frederick Barbarossa confirmed the sovereignty of the Archbishops of Lyon; thenceforth there was a lively contest between them and the counts. An arbitration effected by the pope in 1167 had no result, but by the treaty of 1173, Guy, Count of Forez, ceded to the canons of the primatial church of St. John his title of count of Lyon and his temporal authority.[2]

Then came the growth of the Commune, more belated in Lyon than in many other cities, but in 1193 the archbishop had to make some concession to the citizens. The 13th century was a period of conflict. Three times, in 1207, 1269, and 1290, grave troubles broke out between the partisans of the archbishop who dwelt in the château of Pierre Seize, those of the count-canons who lived in a separate quarter near the cathedral, and partisans of the townsfolk. Gregory X attempted without success to restore peace by two Acts, 2 April 1273 and 11 November 1274. The kings of France were always inclined to side with the commune; after the siege of Lyon by Louis X (1310), the treaty of 10 April 1312 definitively attached Lyon to the Kingdom of France, but until the beginning of the 15th century the Church of Lyon was allowed to coin its own money.[2]

If the 13th century had imperiled the political sovereignty of the archbishops, it had on the other hand made Lyon a kind of second Rome. Gregory X was a former canon of Lyon, while the future Innocent V was Archbishop of Lyon from 1272 to 1273. Innocent IV and Gregory X sought refuge at Lyon from the Hohenstaufen, and held there two general councils of Lyon. Local tradition relates that it was on seeing the red hat of the canons of Lyon that the courtiers of Innocent IV conceived the idea of obtaining from the Council of Lyon its decree that the cardinals should henceforth wear red hats. The sojourn of Innocent IV at Lyon was marked by numerous works of public utility, to which the pope gave vigorous encouragement. He granted indulgences to the faithful who should assist in the construction of the bridge over the Rhône, replacing that destroyed about 1190 by the passage of the troops of Richard Cœur de Lion on their way to the Crusade. The building of the churches of St. John and St. Justus was pushed forward with activity; he sent delegates even to England to solicit alms for this purpose and he consecrated the high altar in both churches.[2]

At Lyon were crowned Clement V (1305) and Pope John XXII (1310); at Lyon in 1449 the antipope Felix V renounced the tiara; there, too, was held in 1512, without any definite conclusion, the last session of the schismatical Council of Pisa against Julius II. In 1560 the Calvinists took Lyon by surprise, but they were driven out by Antoine d'Albon, Abbot of Savigny and later Archbishop of Lyon. Again masters of Lyon in 1562, they were driven thence by the Maréchal de Vieuville. At the command of the famous Baron des Adrets they committed numerous acts of violence in the region of Montbrison. It was at Lyon that Henry IV of France, the converted Calvinist king, married Marie de' Medici (9 December 1600).[2]

Later Middle Ages edit

Gerson, whose old age was spent at Lyon in the abbey of St. Paul, where he instructed poor children, died there in 1429. Saint Francis de Sales died at Lyon on 28 December 1622. The Curé Colombet de St. Amour was celebrated at St. Etienne in the 17th century for the generosity with which he founded the Hôtel-Dieu (the charity hospital) and free schools, and also fed the workmen during the famine of 1693.[2]

M. Guigue has catalogued the eleven "hermitages" (eight of them for men and three for women) which were distinctive of the ascetical life of Christian Lyon in the Middle Ages; these were cells in which persons shut themselves up for life after four years of trial. The system of hermitages along the lines described by Grimalaius and Olbredus in the 9th century flourished especially from the 11th to the 13th century, and disappeared completely in the 16th. These hermitages were the private property of a neighbouring church or monastery, which installed therein for life a male or female recluse. The general almshouse of Lyon, or charity hospital, was founded in 1532 after the great famine of 1531, under the supervision of eight administrators chosen from among the more important citizens.[2]

The institution of the jubilee of Saint Nizier dates beyond a doubt to the stay of Innocent IV at Lyon. This jubilee, which had all the privileges of the secular jubilees of Rome, was celebrated each time that Low Thursday, the feast of Saint Nizier, coincided with 2 April, i.e. whenever the feast of Easter itself was on the earliest day allowed by the paschal cycle, namely 22 March. In 1818, when this coincidence occurred, the feast of Saint Nizier was not celebrated. But the cathedral of St. John also enjoys a great jubilee each time that the feast of Saint John the Baptist coincides with Corpus Christi, that is, whenever the feast of Corpus Christi falls on 24 June. It is certain that in 1451 the coincidence of these two feasts was celebrated with special splendour by the population of Lyon, then emerging from the troubles of the Hundred Years' War, but there is no document to prove that the jubilee indulgence existed at that date. However, Lyonnese tradition places the first great jubilee in 1451; subsequent jubilees took place in 1546, 1666, 1734 and 1886.[2]

"Among the Churches of France", wrote Saint Bernard to the canons of Lyon, "that of Lyon has hitherto had ascendancy over all the others, as much for the dignity of its see as for its praiseworthy institutions. It is especially in the Divine Office that this judicious Church has never readily acquiesced in unexpected and sudden novelties, and has never submitted to be tarnished by innovations which are becoming only to youth."[2]

Montazet controversy edit

In the 18th century Archbishop Antoine de Montazet, contrary to the Bull of Pius V on the breviary, changed the text of the breviary and the missal, from which there resulted a century of conflict for the Church of Lyon. The efforts of Pope Pius IX and Cardinal Bonald to suppress the innovations of Montazet provoked resistance on the part of the canons, who feared an attempt against the traditional Lyonnese ceremonies. This culminated in 1861 in a protest on the part of the clergy and the laity, as much with regard to the civil power as to the Vatican. Finally, on 4 February 1864, at a reception of the parish priests of Lyon, Pius IX declared his displeasure at this agitation and assured them that nothing should be changed in the ancient Lyonnese ceremonies; by a Brief of 17 March 1864, he ordered the progressive introduction of the Roman breviary and missal in the diocese. The primatial church of Lyon adopted them for public services on 8 December 1869. One of the rites of the ancient Gallican liturgy, retained by the Church of Lyon, is the blessing of the people by the bishop at the moment of Communion.[2]

1800s edit

The Concordat of 1801 assigned as the boundaries of the Archdiocese of Lyon the Departments of the Rhône and Loire and the Ain and as suffragans the Dioceses of Mende, Grenoble, and Chambéry. The Archdiocese of Lyon was authorized by Letters Apostolic of 29 November 1801, to unite with his title the titles of the suppressed metropolitan Sees of Vienne and Embrun.[2] Thus the dioceses of Belley and Mâcon, were suppressed on November 29, 1801 with all of Belley's and some of Mâcon's territory added to the Archdiocese. The Diocese of Belley was restored on October 6, 1822, while the Archdiocese's name changed to Lyon-Vienne,[1] with the title of Embrun passing to the Archbishop of Aix (from whence, 2008, to the Bishop of Gap).

1900s edit

A new diocese of Saint-Étienne was erected on December 26, 1970, from the Archdiocese's territory. The Archdiocese's name returned to Lyon on December 15, 2006[1] (with the title of Vienne passing to its suffragan Grenoble).

Saints edit

The Diocese of Lyon honours as saints: Saint Epipodius and his companion Saint Alexander, probably martyrs under Marcus Aurelius; the priest Saint Peregrinus (3rd century); Saint Baldonor (Galmier), a native of Aveizieux, at first a locksmith, whose piety was remarked by the bishop, Saint Viventiolus: he became a cleric at the Abbey of St. Justus, then subdeacon, and died about 760; the thermal resort of "Aquæ Segestæ", in whose church Viventiolus met him, has taken the name of Saint Galmier; Saint Viator (d. about 390), who followed the Bishop Saint Justus to the Thebaid; Saints Romanus and Lupicinus (5th century), natives of the Diocese of Lyon, who lived as solitaries within the present territory of the Diocese of Saint-Claude; Saint Consortia, d. about 578, who, according to a legend criticized by Tillemont, was a daughter of Saint Eucherius; Saint Rambert, soldier and martyr in the 7th century, patron of the town of the same name; Blessed Jean Pierre Néel, b. in 1832 at Ste. Catherine sur Riviere, martyred at Kay-Tcheou in 1862.[2]

Suffragan edit

Prelates edit

Bishops of Lyon edit

incomplete

Archbishops of Lyon edit

incomplete

Primates of Gauls and Archbishop of Lyon edit

Primates of Gauls and Archbishop of Lyon-Vienne edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d "Archdiocese of Lyon". Catholic-Hierarchy.org. David M. Cheney. Retrieved March 13, 2012.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad Goyau, Pierre-Louis-Théophile-Georges (1910). "Lyons" . In Herbermann, Charles (ed.). Catholic Encyclopedia. Vol. 9. New York: Robert Appleton Company.
  3. ^ Boudinhon, Auguste (1911). "Primate" . In Herbermann, Charles (ed.). Catholic Encyclopedia. Vol. 12. New York: Robert Appleton Company.
  4. ^ Previté-Orton 1912, pp. 33–36.
  5. ^ Previté-Orton 1912, p. 10.
  6. ^ "Archdiocese of Sens". Catholic-Hierarchy.org. David M. Cheney. Retrieved March 13, 2012.
  7. ^ Previté-Orton 1912, pp. 10–11.
  8. ^ Previté-Orton 1912, p. 37.
  9. ^ HALINARD, Erzbischof von Lyon
  10. ^ Winfield, Nicole (6 March 2020). "Pope lets French cardinal embroiled in abuse cover-up resign". Crux. Retrieved 23 October 2020.

Bibliography edit

Reference works edit

  • Gams, Pius Bonifatius (1873). Series episcoporum Ecclesiae catholicae: quotquot innotuerunt a beato Petro apostolo. Ratisbon: Typis et Sumptibus Georgii Josephi Manz. (Use with caution; obsolete)
  • Eubel, Conradus, ed. (1913). Hierarchia catholica, Tomus 1 (second ed.). Münster: Libreria Regensbergiana. (in Latin)
  • Eubel, Conradus, ed. (1914). Hierarchia catholica, Tomus 2 (second ed.). Münster: Libreria Regensbergiana. (in Latin)
  • Eubel, Conradus (ed.); Gulik, Guilelmus (1923). Hierarchia catholica, Tomus 3 (second ed.). Münster: Libreria Regensbergiana. {{cite book}}: |first1= has generic name (help)
  • Gauchat, Patritius (Patrice) (1935). Hierarchia catholica IV (1592-1667). Münster: Libraria Regensbergiana. Retrieved 2016-07-06.
  • Previté-Orton, C.W. (1912). Early History of the House of Savoy. Cambridge: University Press.
  • 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.
  • Pięta, 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.
  • Société bibliographique (France) (1907). L'épiscopat français depuis le Concordat jusqu'à la Séparation (1802-1905). Paris: Librairie des Saints-Pères. pp. 346–350.

Studies edit

  • Fisquet, Honore (1864). La France pontificale (Gallia Christiana): Metropole de Lyon et Vienne: Lyon (in French). Paris: Etienne Repos.

External links edit

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

roman, catholic, archdiocese, lyon, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Lyon news newspapers books scholar JSTOR December 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Archdiocese of Lyon Latin Archidiœcesis Lugdunensis French Archidiocese de Lyon formerly the Archdiocese of Lyon Vienne Embrun is a Latin Church metropolitan archdiocese of the Catholic Church in France The archbishops of Lyon serve as successors to Saints Pothinus and Irenaeus the first and second bishops of Lyon respectively 2 and are also called primates of Gaul 3 He is usually elevated to the rank of cardinal Bishop Olivier de Germay was appointed archbishop on 22 October 2020 Archdiocese of LyonArchidiœcesis LugdunensisArchidiocese de LyonLyon CathedralLocationCountryFranceTerritoryRhone LoireEcclesiastical provinceLyonCoordinates45 45 39 N 4 49 37 E 45 76083 N 4 82694 E 45 76083 4 82694StatisticsArea5 087 km2 1 964 sq mi Population Total Catholics as of 2016 1 936 9401 240 272 64 InformationDenominationCatholicSui iuris churchLatin ChurchRiteRoman RiteEstablished150CathedralPrimatial Cathedral of St John the Baptist in LyonPatron saintSt Irenaeus of LyonSaint PothinusCurrent leadershipPopeFrancisMetropolitan ArchbishopOlivier de GermayAuxiliary BishopsPatrick Le GalEmmanuel Marie Anne Alain Gobilliard 1 Vicar GeneralYves BaumgartenMapWebsitelyon catholique fr Contents 1 History 1 1 Persecution 1 2 Merovingian period 1 3 Carolingian period 1 4 Agobard 1 5 Sovereignty 1 6 Later Middle Ages 1 7 Montazet controversy 1 8 1800s 1 9 1900s 2 Saints 3 Suffragan 3 1 Dioceses 3 2 Province 4 Prelates 4 1 Bishops of Lyon 4 2 Archbishops of Lyon 4 3 Primates of Gauls and Archbishop of Lyon 4 4 Primates of Gauls and Archbishop of Lyon Vienne 5 See also 6 References 7 Bibliography 7 1 Reference works 7 2 Studies 8 External linksHistory editPersecution edit The Deacon of Vienne who was martyred at Lyon during the persecution of 177 was probably a deacon installed at Vienne by the ecclesiastical authority of Lyon The confluence of the Rhone and the Saone where sixty Gallic tribes had erected the famous altar to Rome and Augustus was also the centre from which Christianity was gradually propagated throughout Gaul The presence at Lyon of numerous Asiatic Christians and their almost daily communications with the Orient were likely to arouse the susceptibilities of the Gallo Romans A persecution arose under Marcus Aurelius Its victims at Lyon numbered forty eight half of them of Greek origin half Gallo Roman among others Saint Blandina and Saint Pothinus first Bishop of Lyon sent to Gaul by Saint Polycarp about the middle of the 2nd century The legend according to which he was sent by Saint Clement dates from the 12th century and is without foundation The letter addressed to the Christians of Asia and Phrygia in the name of the faithful of Vienne and Lyon and relating the persecution of 177 is considered by Ernest Renan as one of the most extraordinary documents possessed by any literature it is the baptismal certificate of Christianity in France The successor of Saint Pothinus was the illustrious Saint Irenaeus 177 202 2 The discovery on the Hill of Saint Sebastian of ruins of a naumachia capable of being transformed into an amphitheatre and of some fragments of inscriptions apparently belonging to an altar of Augustus has led several archaeologists to believe that the martyrs of Lyon suffered death on this hill Very ancient tradition however represents the church of Ainay as erected at the place of their martyrdom The crypt of Saint Pothinus under the choir of the church of St Nizier was destroyed in 1884 But there are still revered at Lyon the prison cell of Saint Pothinus where Anne of Austria Louis XIV and Pius VII came to pray and the crypt of Saint Irenaeus built at the end of the 5th century by Saint Patiens which contains the body of Saint Irenaeus There are numerous funerary inscriptions of primitive Christianity in Lyon the earliest dates from the year 334 In the 2nd and 3rd centuries the See of Lyon enjoyed great renown throughout Gaul witness the local legends of Besancon and of several other cities relative to the missionaries sent out by Saint Irenaeus Faustinus bishop in the second half of the 3rd century wrote to Saint Cyprian and Pope Stephen I in 254 regarding the Novatian tendencies of Marcian Bishop of Arles But when Diocletian s new provincial organization tetrarchy had taken away from Lyon its position as metropolis of the three Gauls the prestige of Lyon diminished for a time 2 Merovingian period edit At the end of the empire and during the Merovingian period several saints as follows are counted among the Bishops of Lyon Saint Justus 374 381 who died in a monastery in the Thebaid Egypt and was renowned for the orthodoxy of his doctrine in the struggle against Arianism the church of the Maccabees whither his body was brought was as early as the 5th century a place of pilgrimage under the name of the collegiate church of Saint Justus Saint Alpinus and Saint Martin disciple of Saint Martin of Tours end of 4th century Saint Antiochus 400 410 Saint Elpidius 410 422 Saint Sicarius 422 33 Saint Eucherius c 433 50 a monk of Lerins and the author of homilies from whom doubtless dates the foundation at Lyon of the hermitages of which more will be said below Saint Patiens 456 98 who successfully combated the famine and Arianism and whom Sidonius Apollinaris praised in a poem Saint Lupicinus 491 94 Saint Rusticus 494 501 Saint Stephanus d before 515 who with Saint Avitus of Vienne convoked a council at Lyon for the conversion of the Arians Saint Viventiolus 515 523 who in 517 presided with Saint Avitus at the Council of Epaone Saint Lupus a monk afterwards bishop 535 42 probably the first archbishop who when signing in 438 the Council of Orleans added the title of metropolitanus Saint Sardot or Sacerdos 549 542 who presided in 549 at the Council of Orleans and who obtained from King Childebert the foundation of the general hospital Saint Nicetius or Nizier 552 73 who received from the pope the title of patriarch and whose tomb was honoured by miracles The prestige of Saint Nicetius was lasting his successor Saint Priseus 573 588 bore the title of patriarch and brought the council of 585 to decide that national synods should be convened every three years at the instance of the patriarch and of the king Saint AEtherius 588 603 who was a correspondent of Saint Gregory the Great and who perhaps consecrated Saint Augustine the Apostle of England Saint Aredius 603 615 Saint Annemundus or Chamond c 650 friend of Saint Wilfrid godfather of Clotaire III put to death by Ebroin together with his brother and patron of the town of Saint Chamond Loire Saint Genesius or Genes 660 679 or 680 Benedictine abbot of Fontenelle grand almoner and minister of Queen Bathilde Saint Lambertus c 680 690 also abbot of Fontenelle 2 At the end of the 5th century Lyon was the capital of the Kingdom of Burgundy but after 534 it passed under the domination of the kings of France Ravaged by the Saracens in 725 the city was restored through the liberality of Charlemagne who established a rich library in the monastery of Ile Barbe In the time of Saint Patiens and the priest Constans d 488 the school of Lyon was famous Sidonius Apollinaris was educated there The letter of Leidrade to Charlemagne 807 shows the care taken by the emperor for the restoration of learning in Lyon With the aid of the deacon Florus he made the school so prosperous that in the 10th century Englishmen went there to study 2 Carolingian period edit Under Charlemagne and his immediate successors the Bishops of Lyon whose ascendancy was attested by the number of councils over which they were called to preside played an important theological part Adoptionism had no more active enemies than Leidrade 798 814 and Agobard 814 840 When Felix of Urgel continued rebellious to the condemnations pronounced against adoptionism from 791 799 by the Councils of Ciutad Friuli Ratisbon Frankfort and Rome Charlemagne conceived the idea of sending to Urgel with Nebridius Bishop of Narbonne Benedict of Aniane and Archbishop Leidrade a native of Nuremberg and Charlemagne s librarian They preached against Adoptionism in Spain conducted Felix in 799 to the Council of Aachen where he seemed to submit to the arguments of Alcuin and then brought him back to his diocese But the submission of Felix was not complete Agobard Chorepiscopus of Lyon convicted him anew of adoptionism in a secret conference and when Felix died in 815 there was found among his papers a treatise in which he professed adoptionism Then Agobard who had become Archbishop of Lyon in 814 after Leidrade s retirement to the Abbey of St Medard Soissons composed a long treatise against that heresy 2 Agobard edit Agobard displayed great activity as a pastor and a publicist in his opposition to the Jews and to various superstitions His rooted hatred for all superstition led him in his treatise on images into certain expressions which savoured of Iconoclasm The five historical treatises which he wrote in 833 to justify the deposition of Louis the Pious who had been his benefactor are a stain on his life Louis the Pious having been restored to power caused Agobard to be deposed in 835 by the Council of Thionville but three years later gave him back his see in which he died in 840 During the exile of Agobard the See of Lyon had been for a short time administered by Amalarius of Metz whom the deacon Florus charged with heretical opinions regarding the triforme corpus Christi and who took part in the controversies with Gottschalk on the subject of predestination 2 Amolon 841 852 and Saint Remy 852 75 continued the struggle against the heresy of Valence which condemned this heresy and also was engaged in strife with Hincmar From 879 1032 Lyon formed part of the Kingdom of Provence and afterwards of the second Kingdom of Burgundy 2 In 1032 Rudolph III of Burgundy died and his kingdom eventually went to Conrad II 4 The portion of Lyon situated on the left bank of the Saone became at least nominally an imperial city Finally Archbishop Burchard II brother of Rudolph 5 2 claimed rights of sovereignty over Lyon as inherited from his mother Matilda daughter of Louis IV of France in this way the government of Lyon instead of being exercised by the distant emperor became a matter of dispute between the counts who claimed the inheritance and the successive archbishops 2 Lyon attracted the attention of Cardinal Hildebrand who held a council there in 1055 against the simoniacal bishops In 1076 as Gregory VII he deposed Archbishop Humbert 1063 76 for simony 2 Saint Gebuin Jubinus who succeeded Humbert was the confidant of Gregory VII and contributed to the reform of the Church by the two councils of 1080 and 1082 at which were excommunicated Manasses of Reims Fulk of Anjou and the monks of Marmoutiers 2 It was under the episcopate of Saint Gebuin that Gregory VII 20 April 1079 established the primacy of the Church of Lyon over the Provinces of Rouen Tours and Sens which primacy was specially confirmed by Callistus II despite the letter written to him in 1126 by Louis VI in favour of the church of Sens As far as it regarded the Province of Rouen this letter was later suppressed by a decree of the king s council in 1702 at the request of Jacques Nicolas Colbert Archbishop of Rouen 2 Hugh of Die 1081 1106 the successor of Saint Gebuin friend of Saint Anselm and for a while legate of Gregory VII in France and Burgundy had differences later on with Victor III who excommunicated him for a time The latter pope came to Lyon in 1106 consecrated the church of Ainay Abbey and dedicated one of its altars in honour of the Immaculate Conception The Feast of the Immaculate Conception was solemnized at Lyon about 1128 perhaps at the instance of Saint Anselm of Canterbury and Saint Bernard wrote to the canons of Lyon to complain that they should not have instituted a feast without consulting the pope 2 Sovereignty edit As soon as Thomas Becket Archbishop of Canterbury had been proclaimed Blessed 1173 his cult was instituted at Lyon Lyon of the 12th century thus has a glorious place in the history of Catholic liturgy and even of dogma but the 12th century was also marked by the heresy of Peter Waldo and the Waldenses the Poor Men of Lyon who were opposed by John of Canterbury 1181 1193 and by an important change in the political situation of the archbishops 2 In 1157 Emperor Frederick Barbarossa confirmed the sovereignty of the Archbishops of Lyon thenceforth there was a lively contest between them and the counts An arbitration effected by the pope in 1167 had no result but by the treaty of 1173 Guy Count of Forez ceded to the canons of the primatial church of St John his title of count of Lyon and his temporal authority 2 Then came the growth of the Commune more belated in Lyon than in many other cities but in 1193 the archbishop had to make some concession to the citizens The 13th century was a period of conflict Three times in 1207 1269 and 1290 grave troubles broke out between the partisans of the archbishop who dwelt in the chateau of Pierre Seize those of the count canons who lived in a separate quarter near the cathedral and partisans of the townsfolk Gregory X attempted without success to restore peace by two Acts 2 April 1273 and 11 November 1274 The kings of France were always inclined to side with the commune after the siege of Lyon by Louis X 1310 the treaty of 10 April 1312 definitively attached Lyon to the Kingdom of France but until the beginning of the 15th century the Church of Lyon was allowed to coin its own money 2 If the 13th century had imperiled the political sovereignty of the archbishops it had on the other hand made Lyon a kind of second Rome Gregory X was a former canon of Lyon while the future Innocent V was Archbishop of Lyon from 1272 to 1273 Innocent IV and Gregory X sought refuge at Lyon from the Hohenstaufen and held there two general councils of Lyon Local tradition relates that it was on seeing the red hat of the canons of Lyon that the courtiers of Innocent IV conceived the idea of obtaining from the Council of Lyon its decree that the cardinals should henceforth wear red hats The sojourn of Innocent IV at Lyon was marked by numerous works of public utility to which the pope gave vigorous encouragement He granted indulgences to the faithful who should assist in the construction of the bridge over the Rhone replacing that destroyed about 1190 by the passage of the troops of Richard Cœur de Lion on their way to the Crusade The building of the churches of St John and St Justus was pushed forward with activity he sent delegates even to England to solicit alms for this purpose and he consecrated the high altar in both churches 2 At Lyon were crowned Clement V 1305 and Pope John XXII 1310 at Lyon in 1449 the antipope Felix V renounced the tiara there too was held in 1512 without any definite conclusion the last session of the schismatical Council of Pisa against Julius II In 1560 the Calvinists took Lyon by surprise but they were driven out by Antoine d Albon Abbot of Savigny and later Archbishop of Lyon Again masters of Lyon in 1562 they were driven thence by the Marechal de Vieuville At the command of the famous Baron des Adrets they committed numerous acts of violence in the region of Montbrison It was at Lyon that Henry IV of France the converted Calvinist king married Marie de Medici 9 December 1600 2 Later Middle Ages edit Gerson whose old age was spent at Lyon in the abbey of St Paul where he instructed poor children died there in 1429 Saint Francis de Sales died at Lyon on 28 December 1622 The Cure Colombet de St Amour was celebrated at St Etienne in the 17th century for the generosity with which he founded the Hotel Dieu the charity hospital and free schools and also fed the workmen during the famine of 1693 2 M Guigue has catalogued the eleven hermitages eight of them for men and three for women which were distinctive of the ascetical life of Christian Lyon in the Middle Ages these were cells in which persons shut themselves up for life after four years of trial The system of hermitages along the lines described by Grimalaius and Olbredus in the 9th century flourished especially from the 11th to the 13th century and disappeared completely in the 16th These hermitages were the private property of a neighbouring church or monastery which installed therein for life a male or female recluse The general almshouse of Lyon or charity hospital was founded in 1532 after the great famine of 1531 under the supervision of eight administrators chosen from among the more important citizens 2 The institution of the jubilee of Saint Nizier dates beyond a doubt to the stay of Innocent IV at Lyon This jubilee which had all the privileges of the secular jubilees of Rome was celebrated each time that Low Thursday the feast of Saint Nizier coincided with 2 April i e whenever the feast of Easter itself was on the earliest day allowed by the paschal cycle namely 22 March In 1818 when this coincidence occurred the feast of Saint Nizier was not celebrated But the cathedral of St John also enjoys a great jubilee each time that the feast of Saint John the Baptist coincides with Corpus Christi that is whenever the feast of Corpus Christi falls on 24 June It is certain that in 1451 the coincidence of these two feasts was celebrated with special splendour by the population of Lyon then emerging from the troubles of the Hundred Years War but there is no document to prove that the jubilee indulgence existed at that date However Lyonnese tradition places the first great jubilee in 1451 subsequent jubilees took place in 1546 1666 1734 and 1886 2 Among the Churches of France wrote Saint Bernard to the canons of Lyon that of Lyon has hitherto had ascendancy over all the others as much for the dignity of its see as for its praiseworthy institutions It is especially in the Divine Office that this judicious Church has never readily acquiesced in unexpected and sudden novelties and has never submitted to be tarnished by innovations which are becoming only to youth 2 Montazet controversy edit In the 18th century Archbishop Antoine de Montazet contrary to the Bull of Pius V on the breviary changed the text of the breviary and the missal from which there resulted a century of conflict for the Church of Lyon The efforts of Pope Pius IX and Cardinal Bonald to suppress the innovations of Montazet provoked resistance on the part of the canons who feared an attempt against the traditional Lyonnese ceremonies This culminated in 1861 in a protest on the part of the clergy and the laity as much with regard to the civil power as to the Vatican Finally on 4 February 1864 at a reception of the parish priests of Lyon Pius IX declared his displeasure at this agitation and assured them that nothing should be changed in the ancient Lyonnese ceremonies by a Brief of 17 March 1864 he ordered the progressive introduction of the Roman breviary and missal in the diocese The primatial church of Lyon adopted them for public services on 8 December 1869 One of the rites of the ancient Gallican liturgy retained by the Church of Lyon is the blessing of the people by the bishop at the moment of Communion 2 1800s edit The Concordat of 1801 assigned as the boundaries of the Archdiocese of Lyon the Departments of the Rhone and Loire and the Ain and as suffragans the Dioceses of Mende Grenoble and Chambery The Archdiocese of Lyon was authorized by Letters Apostolic of 29 November 1801 to unite with his title the titles of the suppressed metropolitan Sees of Vienne and Embrun 2 Thus the dioceses of Belley and Macon were suppressed on November 29 1801 with all of Belley s and some of Macon s territory added to the Archdiocese The Diocese of Belley was restored on October 6 1822 while the Archdiocese s name changed to Lyon Vienne 1 with the title of Embrun passing to the Archbishop of Aix from whence 2008 to the Bishop of Gap 1900s edit A new diocese of Saint Etienne was erected on December 26 1970 from the Archdiocese s territory The Archdiocese s name returned to Lyon on December 15 2006 1 with the title of Vienne passing to its suffragan Grenoble Saints editThe Diocese of Lyon honours as saints Saint Epipodius and his companion Saint Alexander probably martyrs under Marcus Aurelius the priest Saint Peregrinus 3rd century Saint Baldonor Galmier a native of Aveizieux at first a locksmith whose piety was remarked by the bishop Saint Viventiolus he became a cleric at the Abbey of St Justus then subdeacon and died about 760 the thermal resort of Aquae Segestae in whose church Viventiolus met him has taken the name of Saint Galmier Saint Viator d about 390 who followed the Bishop Saint Justus to the Thebaid Saints Romanus and Lupicinus 5th century natives of the Diocese of Lyon who lived as solitaries within the present territory of the Diocese of Saint Claude Saint Consortia d about 578 who according to a legend criticized by Tillemont was a daughter of Saint Eucherius Saint Rambert soldier and martyr in the 7th century patron of the town of the same name Blessed Jean Pierre Neel b in 1832 at Ste Catherine sur Riviere martyred at Kay Tcheou in 1862 2 Suffragan editDioceses edit Annecy Belley Ars Archdiocese of Chambery Grenoble Vienne Saint Etienne Valence Die Saint Paul Trois Chateaux Viviers 1 Province edit Suffragan as Primate of the Gauls Rouen Tours Sens 2 former province 6 Prelates editBishops of Lyon edit incompleteSaint Pothinus 177 Saint Irenaeus 2 Archbishops of Lyon edit incompleteZechariah of Lyon 195 after 202 Helios of Lyon Faustinus second half of the 3rd century Lucius Verus Julius Ptolemaeus Vocius fl 314 Maximus Maxime Tetradius Tetrade Verissimus fl 343 St Justus 374 381 St Alpinus fl 254 St Martin disciple of St Martin of Tours end of 4th century St Antiochus 400 410 St Elpidius 410 422 St Sicarius 422 433 St Eucherius c 433 450 St Patiens 456 498 who successfully combated the famine and Arianism and whom Sidonius Apollinaris praised in a poem St Lupicinus 491 494 St Rusticus 494 501 St Stephanus 501 Before 515 who with St Avitus of Vienne convoked a council at Lyon for the conversion of the Arians St Viventiolus 515 523 who in 517 presided with St Avitus at the Council of Epaone St Lupus 535 542 a monk probably the first archbishop who when signing in 538 the Council of Orleans added the title of metropolitanus Licontius Leonce St Sardot or Sacerdos 549 552 St Nicetius or Nizier 552 73 Patriarch St Priscus of Lyon 573 588 Patriarch St AEtherius 588 603 who was a correspondent of St Gregory the Great and who perhaps consecrated St Augustine the Apostle of England St Aredius 603 615 St Viventius St Annemund or Chamond c 650 friend of St Wilfrid godfather of Clotaire III put to death by Ebroin together with his brother and patron of the town of Saint Chamond Loire St Genesius or Genes 660 679 or 680 Benedictine Abbot of Fontenelle grand almoner and minister of Queen Bathilde St Lambertus c 680 690 also Abbot of Fontenelle Leidrad 798 814 Agobard Chorbishop 814 Agobard 814 834 837 840 Amalarius of Metz 834 837 administrator 2 Amulo 840 852 Remigius 852 875 St Aurelian d 895 Burchard II of Lyon 7 Burchard III of Lyon 1036 8 Halinard 1046 1052 9 Primates of Gauls and Archbishop of Lyon edit This list is incomplete you can help by adding missing items October 2020 1077 1082 Saint Gebuin 2 1081 1106 Hugh of Die 1128 1129 Renaud of Semur 1131 1139 Peter I fl 1180 Guichard of Pontigny 1193 1226 Renaud de Forez 1227 1234 Robert of Auvergne 1289 Berard de Got 1290 1295 Louis of Naples 1301 1308 Louis de Villars 1308 1332 Peter of Savoy 1340 1342 Guy III d Auvergne Cardinal de Boulogne papal diplomat 1342 1354 Henri II de Villars 1356 1358 Raymond Saquet 1358 1365 Guillaume II de Thurey 1365 1375 Charles d Alencon 1375 1389 Jean II de Talaru 1389 1415 Philippe III de Thurey 1415 1444 Amedee II de Talaru 1444 1446 Geoffroy II de Versailles 1447 1488 Charles II of Bourbon 1488 1499 Hugues II de Talaru 1499 1500 Andre d Espinay cardinal 1501 1536 Francois II de Rohan 1537 1539 John Cardinal of Lorraine 1539 1551 Ippolito II d Este whom king Francis I of France named Cardinal protector of the crown of France at the court of Pope Paul III and a patron of scholars 1551 1562 Cardinal Francois de Tournon who negotiated several times between Francis I and Emperor Charles V combated the Reformation and founded the College de Tournon which the Jesuits later made one of the most celebrated educational establishments of the kingdom 1562 1564 Ippolito II d Este whom king Francis I of France named Cardinal protector of the crown of France at the court of Pope Paul III and a patron of scholars 1564 1573 Antoine d Albon editor of Rufinus and Ausonius 1573 1599 Pierre d Epinac active auxiliary of the League 1612 1626 Denis Simon de Marquemont 1628 1653 Alphonse Louis du Plessis de Richelieu Sep 1628 23 Mar 1653 1653 1693 Camille de Neufville de Villeroy 1714 1731 Francois Paul de Neufville de Villeroy 15 Aug 1714 6 Feb 1731 1732 1739 Charles Francois de Chateauneuf de Rochebonne 1740 1758 Pierre Guerin de Tencin 11 Nov 1740 2 Mar 1758 1758 1788 Antoine de Malvin de Montazet 16 Mar 1758 2 May 1788 of Jansenist tendencies and who had published for his seminary by the Oratorian Joseph Valla six volumes of Institutiones theologicae known as Theologie de Lyon and spread throughout Italy by Scipio Ricci until condemned by the Index in 1792 1788 1799 Yves Alexandre de Marbeuf 12 May 1788 15 Apr 1799 1791 1794 Antoine Adrien Lamourette 1742 1794 constitutional bishop of Lyon from 27 March 1791 to 11 January 1794 the date of his death on the scaffold Primates of Gauls and Archbishop of Lyon Vienne edit Cardinal Joseph Fesch 29 July 1802 13 May 1839 Archbishop of Lyon Vienne Embrun until 1822 Cardinal Joachim Jean d Isoard 13 June 1839 7 October 1839 Cardinal Louis Jacques Maurice de Bonald 4 December 1839 25 February 1870 Jacques Marie Ginoulhiac 2 March 1870 17 November 1875 known for his Histoire du dogme catholique pendant let trois premiers siecles Cardinal Louis Marie Caverot 20 April 1876 23 January 1887 Cardinal Joseph Alfred Foulon 23 March 1887 23 January 1893 Cardinal Pierre Hector Coullie 14 June 1893 11 September 1912 Cardinal Hector Sevin 2 December 1912 4 May 1916 Cardinal Louis Joseph Maurin 1 December 1916 16 November 1936 Cardinal Pierre Marie Gerlier 30 July 1937 17 January 1965 Cardinal Jean Marie Villot 17 January 1965 7 April 1967 Cardinal Alexandre Renard 28 May 1967 29 October 1981 Cardinal Albert Decourtray 29 October 1981 16 September 1994 Cardinal Jean Marie Balland 27 May 1995 1 March 1998 Cardinal Louis Marie Bille 10 July 1998 12 March 2002 Cardinal Philippe Barbarin 16 July 2002 6 March 2020 10 Olivier de Germay 20 December 2020 present See also editCatholic Church in France History of LyonReferences edit a b c d Archdiocese of Lyon Catholic Hierarchy org David M Cheney Retrieved March 13 2012 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad Goyau Pierre Louis Theophile Georges 1910 Lyons In Herbermann Charles ed Catholic Encyclopedia Vol 9 New York Robert Appleton Company Boudinhon Auguste 1911 Primate In Herbermann Charles ed Catholic Encyclopedia Vol 12 New York Robert Appleton Company Previte Orton 1912 pp 33 36 Previte Orton 1912 p 10 Archdiocese of Sens Catholic Hierarchy org David M Cheney Retrieved March 13 2012 Previte Orton 1912 pp 10 11 Previte Orton 1912 p 37 HALINARD Erzbischof von Lyon Winfield Nicole 6 March 2020 Pope lets French cardinal embroiled in abuse cover up resign Crux Retrieved 23 October 2020 Bibliography editReference works edit Gams Pius Bonifatius 1873 Series episcoporum Ecclesiae catholicae quotquot innotuerunt a beato Petro apostolo Ratisbon Typis et Sumptibus Georgii Josephi Manz Use with caution obsolete Eubel Conradus ed 1913 Hierarchia catholica Tomus 1 second ed Munster Libreria Regensbergiana in Latin Eubel Conradus ed 1914 Hierarchia catholica Tomus 2 second ed Munster Libreria Regensbergiana in Latin Eubel Conradus ed Gulik Guilelmus 1923 Hierarchia catholica Tomus 3 second ed Munster Libreria Regensbergiana a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a first1 has generic name help Gauchat Patritius Patrice 1935 Hierarchia catholica IV 1592 1667 Munster Libraria Regensbergiana Retrieved 2016 07 06 Previte Orton C W 1912 Early History of the House of Savoy Cambridge University Press 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 pp 346 350 Studies edit Fisquet Honore 1864 La France pontificale Gallia Christiana Metropole de Lyon et Vienne Lyon in French Paris Etienne Repos External links editCentre national des Archives de l Eglise de France L Episcopat francais depuis 1919 retrieved 2016 12 24 in French Official website in French Portals nbsp Catholicism nbsp France Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Lyon amp oldid 1180090366, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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