fbpx
Wikipedia

Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Turin

The Archdiocese of Turin (Latin: Archidioecesis Taurinensis) is a Latin Church ecclesiastical territory of the Catholic Church in Italy.[1][2]

Archdiocese of Turin

Archidioecesis Taurinensis

Arcidiocesi di Torino
Location
CountryItaly
Statistics
Area3,350 km2 (1,290 sq mi)
Population
- Total
- Catholics
(as of 2014)
2,153,000
2,057,000 (95.5%)
Parishes355
Information
DenominationCatholic Church
Sui iuris churchLatin Church
RiteRoman Rite
Established4th century
CathedralMetropolitan Cathedral of Saint John the Baptist
Secular priests520 diocesan
535 Religious Orders
133 Permanent Deacons
Current leadership
PopeFrancis
ArchbishopRoberto Repole
Auxiliary BishopsAlessandro Giraudo
Bishops emeritus
Map
Website
www.diocesi.torino.it

The diocese of Turin was founded in the 4th century and elevated to the dignity of an archdiocese on 21 May 1515 by Pope Leo X. As a metropolitan archdiocese, it has as suffragan dioceses: Acqui, Alba, Aosta, Asti, Cuneo, Fossano, Ivrea, Mondovì, Pinerolo, Saluzzo and Susa.[3] Its mother church is the Cathedral of Saint John the Baptist.

History edit

The earliest bishop of Turin whose name has survived was Maximus of Turin. Fedele Savio argues that Maximus was the first bishop of Turin.[4] Maximus, many of whose homilies are extant, died between 408 and 423.[5]

Bishop Ursicinus (569-609) underwent captivity and loss of his property at the hands of the Franks. Pope Gregory I complained to Bishop Syagrius of Autun that someone else was made bishop in place of Ursicinus, in violation of canon law, and Ursicinus' diocese was taken away from him.[6] It has been inferred that the Diocese of Moriana (Maurienne) was detached from that of Turin on this occasion.[7]

Duke Garibold of Turin, who had assassinated the Lombard King Godebert in 662, was murdered in an act of revenge, in the Baptistry of S. Giovanni il Battisto in the Cathedral of Turin.[8]

Other bishops were:

  • Claudius of Turin (817-27), a copious and controversial writer, famous for his opposition to the veneration of images[9]
  • Regimirus (of uncertain date, in the 9th century), who established a rule of common life among his canons
  • Amulo (880-98), who incurred the ill-will of the Turinese and was driven out by them; Gezo (1000), who founded the monastery of San Solutore in Turin
  • Landulf (1037), who founded the Abbey of Cavour and repaired the damage inflicted on his church by the Saracen incursions
  • Cunibert of Turin (1046–1080), to whom Peter Damian wrote a letter (Epistolae IV.iii) exhorting him to repress the laxity of his clergy in matters of clerical celibacy
  • Boso (1122–c.1127), who resigned as a cardinal to become bishop.

In 1074, Bishop Cunibert of Turin (1046–1080) was summoned by Pope Gregory VII to attend a synod which was announced for 30 November in that year. One of the matters to be treated was the controversy between Cunibert and Abbot Benedict of S. Michele di Chiusa.[10] The bishop claimed that the monastery was situated on allodial property of the diocese, and therefore the bishop had the right to install the abbot and collect the decima tax. On 12 December 1074, the Pope wrote again, in considerable anger, because Cunibert had refused to attend the synod (venire contempsit); the Pope further advised Cunibert that another synod was going to be held toward the end of February 1075, which he was warned he must attend, and in the meantime he was to stop disturbing the monastery. When the synod took place, Cunibert was suspended from office, and in a letter of 9 April 1075, Gregory again chastised him for breaking his promise and continuing to harass the monks of S. Michele. Cunibert was given until 11 November, the next synod meeting day, to reach a peaceable settlement with Benedict, or else to put in an appearance at the synod, where his case would be given final judgement. The case dragged on, however, and on 24 November 1078, after Cunibert finally appeared at the Papal Court, the Pope gave final judgement, requiring Cunibert to return whatever he had taken from the monks, and the monks likewise, under the supervision of the Bishops of Asti and Aqui and the Abbot of Fruttuaria. If the Bishop still wished to assert that the monastery had been built on land belonging to the diocese and was under his jurisdiction, he should come to the next synod and present his proofs; otherwise, he should hold his peace.[11]

Two episcopal 'elections' edit

In 1243, Bishop Hugo (Uguccione) de Cagnola (1231–1243) abdicated the bishopric of Turin and became a Cistercian. Before he retired to a monastery (the house of the Cistercians in Genoa) though, he was required to administer his diocese until a successor was elected. On 15 November 1243, Pope Innocent IV ordered Hugo to see to the election of the Pope's Chamberlain, Nicholas, Provost of Genoa as the next Bishop of Turin.[12] On 10 May 1244, Innocent ordered the Papal Legate Gregorio de Montelongo, Papal Subdeacon and Notary, to see to the election of the Abbot of San Gennaro near Trino in the diocese of Vercelli, Giovanni Arborio, as the next bishop of Turin.[13]

An episcopal election edit

The episcopal election of 1319 is unusually well-attested. Bishop Teodisius Revelli (1301–1319) died in the Spring of 1319. The cathedral chapter met on 16 May to choose his successor. One of the electors, the Primicerius Thomas de Pellizonus, was ill and was the subject of threats on the part of some disaffected citizens of Turin, and was therefore unable to attend the meeting. He sent a notarized explanation of his absence by means of two procurators, Guilelmus de Cavaglata and Guido de Canalibus. The electoral assembly duly took place later that day, and de Canalibus was elected Bishop of Turin. An electoral statement was drawn up immediately, and carried to the home of de Pellizonus, who approved and ratified the election, still on 16 May. This too was written down and properly notarized. The documents indicate that Bishop Guido was the immediate successor of the late Bishop Teodisius.[14]

Bishop Guido Canale had the task of annulling the marriage of Frederick of Saluzzo and Jacobina de Blandrata in 1333, on the grounds of affinity in the third degree. The matter needed to be repaired by papal bulls of Pope John XXII.[15]

The bishops of Turin had a palace at Pinerolo, from which numerous surviving documents have been dated.

Creation of the archdiocese edit

On 21 May 1515, during the Tenth Session of the Fifth Lateran Council, Pope Leo X removed the diocese of Turin from metropolitan obedience of Milan, and made Turin an archiepiscopal see with the dioceses of Mondovì and Ivrea as its suffragans, other sees being added later.[16] On the same day, the Pope sent a letter to Bishop Giovanni Francesco della Rovere, notifying him of his promotion to the rank of archbishop, and another to the new suffragans, notifying them of the creation of the archdiocese.[17]

In the 16th century the diocese saw the rise the Waldensian sect[18] and of Calvinism. It is known that, in the spring of 1536, John Calvin visited Aosta as he was returning to France from Ferrara. His preaching, however, brought him to the attention of Bishop Pietro Gazino of Aosta, and he was forced to flee.[19] The Council of Trent called upon bishops everywhere to attempt to restore Roman Catholicism. Archbishop Girolamo della Rovere, in 1566, engaged in a public disputation with the Protestants of the Piedmont and was victorious, which was greeted with great satisfaction by the Duke. In 1567, he conducted a visitation of the valley of the Stura, and preached to and conversed with many Protestants who had come into Piedmont from France, again with some success.[20] During his episcopacy, Duke Emanuele Filiberto brought to Turin from his castle in Chambéry the Holy Shroud, the personal property of his family, and, on 29 December 1590, the body of St Maurice, the martyr.[21]

At the conclusion of the wars between France and Savoy with the Peace of Cateau Cambresis and the French withdrawal, in 1563 the permanent principal residence of the Dukes of Savoy became the city of Turin. The university was moved from Mondovì, where it had retreated during the French occupation. A Jesuit college was opened in Turin in 1567 with an annual subsidy from the Duke, and the Jesuit Collegio dei Nobili in 1572.[22] In 1577, Archbishop della Rovere began the construction of the church Santi Martiri for the Jesuits in Turin.[23]

Cardinal Gerolamo della Rovere died on 25 January 1592 while in conclave in Rome to elect a successor to Pope Innocent IX (Facchinetti).[24]

From 1713 to 1727, owing to difficulties with the Holy See, the See of Turin remained vacant.

After 1848, Archbishop Luigi Fransoni (1832–62) became notable for his opposition to the Piedmontese government's reform program led by Camillo Benso, first as Minister of Agriculture, then as Minister of Finance, and finally in 1852, as Prime Minister of Savoy. At the same time the Risorgimento and the operations of Giuseppe Garibaldi had brought about a revolution in Rome, which drove Pope Pius IX into exile. Piedmontese policy called for a reform of the rights of the Catholic church, especially of the regular clergy. Fransoni's vocal reaction to these events and policies helped to stimulate the already widespread anticlericalism in Italy,[25] and he found himself forced to leave Turin and Italy in 1852 for exile under French protection.[26]

Cathedral and Chapter edit

 
Cathedral of Turin

The circumstances of the founding of the original cathedral of Turin are obscure. It is conjectured that the building was the work of the first bishop, Maximus, which would place the date around the beginning of the 5th century.[27] It was constituted of three interconnected churches, San Salvatore, San Giovanni Battista, and Santa Maria. Bishop Guido Canale (1319–1348) found it necessary to completely reconstruct the Chapel of San Michele in the cathedral, which he endowed.[28]

With the old cathedral in a state of collapse, Bishop Domenico della Rovere (1482–1501) had the cathedral rebuilt in the 1490s, to designs by Meo (Amadeo) del Caprina da Settignano of Florence. Demolition began in May 1491. Cardinal della Rovere visited Turin in 1496 to inspect the progress of the works. The new cathedral was consecrated on 21 September 1505 by Bishop Giovanni Ludovico della Rovere.[29]

The existence of a college of Canons in Turin is very old. A diploma of Emperor Henry III of 1047 attributes them to Bishop Regimir in the mid-ninth century.[30] The Cathedral Chapter consisted of five dignities and twenty Canons and twenty prebends. The dignities were: the Provost, the Archdeacon, the Treasurer, the Archpriest, and the Primicerius (Cantor). In addition there were five officials called Trinitatis.[31] The earliest known Provost was Walpert in 890.[32] The earliest known Archdeacon was Ansprand, who signed a document in 863.[33] The earliest known Archpriest was Erchempert, Sanctae Taurinensis Ecclesiae Archipresbyter Cardinalis.[34] The earliest known Primicerius (Cantor) was Adalwert, who signed a document in 890 Sancte Taurinensis Ecclesie Diaconus Cardinalis Cantor.[35] The Provost and Primicerius subscribe a document of Bishop Milo in 1185.[36] The office of treasurer was established by a bull of Pope Sixtus IV of 15 January 1472.[37] In 1690 there were twenty-nine canons.[38] In 1744, there were six dignities and twenty canons.[39]

In addition to the cathedral chapter, there were seven collegiate churches in the diocese, which had chapters of canons. At Carmagnola there was a chapter of an archpriest and nine canons. At Chieri, at S. Maria della Scala there were an archpriest, a cantor, and ten canons. In Courgnè there was a provost and six canons. In Giaveno, at San Lorenzo, there was a provost and eight canons. In Moncalieri, at Santa Maria della Scala, there was a chapter composed of a provost and six canons. At Santa Maria di Rivoli, there was a chapter composed of a provost, an archpriest, a cantor, and five canons. At Savigliano, at S. Andrea, founded in 1028, which was in charge of four parishes, there was a college of canons regular; Pope Clement XII secularized the canons, who were thereafter sixteen in number (of whom one was the penitentiary), presided over by an abbot, an archpriest and a primicerius.[40]

Seminary edit

The seminary of the diocese of Turin was established by Cardinal Girolamo della Rovere on 4 June 1567, in accordance with the decrees of the Council of Trent. Since 1988, the seminary has been located in a building that once belonged to the Suore Fedele Compagne di Gesu. The old building became the Minor Seminary in 1992.[41]

Synods edit

A diocesan synod was an irregularly held, but important, meeting of the bishop of a diocese and his clergy. Its purpose was:[42]

  1. to proclaim generally the various decrees already issued by the bishop;
  2. to discuss and ratify measures on which the bishop chose to consult with his clergy;
  3. to publish statutes and decrees of the diocesan synod, of the provincial synod, and of the Holy See.

The Diocese di Torino maintains a list of diocesan synods on its website.[43]

The earliest known diocesan synod is that of Bishop Boso, who also attended a provincial synod in Milan in December 1125; no records survive.[44] Another synod was held by Bishop Giovanni Arborio on 26 October 1246. Bishop Goffredo di Montanaro presided at a diocesan synod which was held in S. Salvatore de Domno on Wednesday, 14 May 1270.[45] Bishop Goffredo presided over a second synod on 16 May 1276 in S. Salvatore de Domno; its acts survive.[46] Synods also took place in 1332, 1335, 1339, 1351, 1368, 1403, 1428, 1448, 1465, 1467, 1469, and 1500. In 1502 a collection of twelve Constitutions of synods was published.[47]

There were synods in 1514, 1575,[48] 1597, 1606, 1608, 1610, 1614, 1624, and 1633.

A diocesan synod was held by Archbishop Giulio Cesare Bergera (1643-1660) in 1647.[49] On 28 May 1670 Archbishop Michele Beggiamo (1662-1689) held a diocesan synod.[50]

A synod was held by Archbishop Gian Francesco Arborio di Gattinara (1727-1743) on 1–3 May 1729. Archbishop Giambattista Roero di Pralormo (1744-1766) held his first diocesan synod on 21 and 22 April 1755.[51] Archbishop Vittorio Maria Costa d'Arignano (1778-1796) held a diocesan synod on 20–22 August 1788.[52]

Archbishop Lorenzo Gastaldi held several synods, in 1873, 1874, 1875, 1878, and 1880. There was then a lapse of more than a century, until Cardinal Giovanni Saldarini held one in 1994, and another in 1997. Since 2012, however, the diocese prefers to hold annual meetings, which are called an "Assemblea diocesana".[53]

Bishops of Turin edit

to 900 edit

  • Maximus I (390 – 408/423)[54]
  • Maximus II (before 451 – after 465)[55]
  • Victor (attested 494)[56]
  • Tigridius (Tigridus) (attested 501, 502, 503)[57]
  • Rufus (before 562)[58]
  • Ursicinus [it] (562 – 609)[59]
  • Rusticus [it] (before 680 - 691)[60]
  • ? Valcuno (mentioned in 739?)[61]
  • Andreas (after 773 – c. 800)
  • Claudius (c. 818 – 827)[62]
  • Witgerius (attested 832, 838)[63]
  • Regimirus [it] (ninth century)
  • Guglielmo I [it] (c. 849)[64]
  • Claudius II (c. 873)
[Lancius] (mentioned in 887)[65]

900 to 1200 edit

  • ? Eginolf (attested in 901)[67]
  • Guglielmo (before 906 – after 920)[68]
  • Ricolfus (mentioned in 945)
  • Amalric (955–969)[69]
  • Amizo (989 – after 998)[70]
  • Gezo (after 998 – 1011)
  • Landulf (1011–1037)
  • Guido (1037–1046)
  • Cunibertus (1046 – c. 1081)[71]
  • Vitelmo (c. 1081 – 1092)[72]
  • Guibert (Wibertus) (attested 1098, 1099)[73]
  • Mainard (Maginard) (1100–1117/8)[74]
  • Guibert II (mentioned in 1118)
  • Boso (attested 1122, 1125[75])
  • Arberto (mentioned in 1140)
  • Oberto [it] (1144 – after 1145)
  • Carl I [it] (1147–1162)
  • Guglielmo [it] (attested 1162, 1163)[76]
  • Carlo [it] (1165–1169)[77]
  • Milo (attested 1170–1187)[78]
  • Arduino (1188–1207)[79]

1200 to 1515 edit

  • Jacobus de Carisio (1207–1226)[80]
  • Jacobus (1227-1231)
  • Hugo de Cagnola (1231–1243)[81]
  • Joannes Arborio (1244–1257)[82]
  • Gandolfus (1259–1260 ?)
  • H( ), O.Min.
  • Gaufridus de Montanaro (1264–1300)
  • Teodisius Revelli (1301–1319)[83]
  • Guido Canale (1319–1348)[84]
  • Thomas de Sabaudia (1348–c. 1362)[85]
  • Bartholomeus de Roma (1362–1364)
  • Giovanni Orsini de Rivalta (1365–1411)
  • Aimo de Romagnano (1415–1438)[86]
  • Ludovicus de Romagnano (1438–1469)[87]
  • Giovanni Compresio (Compuys) (1469–1482)[88]
  • Cardinal Domenico della Rovere (1482–1501)[89]
  • Giovanni Ludovico della Rovere (1501–1510)[90]
  • Giovanni Francesco della Rovere (1510–1515–1516)[91]

Archbishops of Turin, since 1515 edit

  • Giovanni Francesco della Rovere (1515–1516)[92]
Cardinal Innocenzo Cybo (1516–1517) Administrator[93]
Innocenzo Cybo (1520–1548) Administrator[95]
Cardinal Innico d'Avalos d'Aragona, O.S. (1563–1564) Administrator[97]
Sede vacante (1627–1632)[102]
Sede vacante (1713–1727)[107]
  • Gian Francesco Arborio di Gattinara, B. (1727–1743)[108]
  • Giambattista Roero (Rotario) di Pralormo (1744–1766)[109]
  • Francesco Luserna Rorengo di Rorà (1768–1778)[110]
  • Vittorio Maria Costa d'Arignano (1778–1796)[111]
  • Carlo Luigi Buronzo del Signore (1797–1805)[112]
  • Giacinto della Torre, O.E.S.A. (1805–1814)[113]
Sede vacante (1814–1818)[114]
  • Columbano Chiaverotti, O.S.B.Cam. (1818–1831)[115]
  • Luigi Fransoni (1832–1862)
Sede vacante (1862–1867)

Notes and references edit

  1. ^ "Archdiocese of Torino {Turin}" Catholic-Hierarchy.org. David M. Cheney. Retrieved January 4, 2017.[self-published source]
  2. ^ "Metropolitan Archdiocese of Torino" GCatholic.org. Gabriel Chow. Retrieved February 29, 2016.[self-published source]
  3. ^ Diocesi di Torino, Diocesi: Storia; retrieved: 9 July 2018. (in Italian)
  4. ^ Savio, pp. 285-286: Ma niuna memoria essendo rimasta di vescovi anteriori a S. Massimo e l'episcopato di questo Santo non potendosi protrarre molto in su nel secolo IV, noi incliniamo a credere che l'episcopato di Torino fosse instituto insieme con quello di Novara nel 398, oppure verso questo tempo.
  5. ^ Savio, pp. 283-294, at p. 293. Semeria, pp. 24-26.
  6. ^ Savio, pp. 225-226. Kehr, p. 81, no. 1. J. P. Migne, Patrologia Latina Vol 77, p. 1045 no 115.
  7. ^ Herbermann 1913.
  8. ^ Rondolino, p. 10, citing Paul the Deacon at p. 23 note 10. Semeria, p. 50.
  9. ^ Cross & Livingstone 1997, p. 359
  10. ^ H. E. J. Cowdrey (20 August 1998). Pope Gregory VII, 1073-1085. Clarendon Press. pp. 66, 282–283. ISBN 978-0-19-158459-6. The controversy had already involved Pope Alexander II, according to William of Chiusa, the biographer of Abbot Benedict: Monumenta Germaniae Historica: Scriptores Tomus XII (Hannover: Hahn 1856), p. 204.
  11. ^ Semeria, pp. 80-83. Kehr, pp. 82-84, nos. 7-13.
  12. ^ Savio, p. 372. Élie Berger, Les registres d'Innocent IV, Tome premier (Paris: Ernest Thorin 1884), p. 41 no. 228.
  13. ^ Savio, pp. 372-373. Berger, p. 115, no. 675.
  14. ^ Chiuso, pp. 443-445. Semeria, p. 492. These documents make it clear that there was no intermediate bishop, the alleged Thomas de Sabaudia, as indicated by Eubel, I, p. 475, repeating information from Gams, p. 824. The alleged date of Bishop Teodesius' death, October 1318, is merely the date of his latest known document.
  15. ^ Chiuso, pp. 448-453.
  16. ^ Semeria, p. 265.
  17. ^ Ughelli, IV, pp. 1058-1060.
  18. ^ Semeria, pp. 161-164.
  19. ^ Jean Mary Stone (1904). Reformation and Renaissance (circa 1377-1610). London: Duckworth and Company. p. 313. ISBN 9780837070247.
  20. ^ Semeria, p. 287.
  21. ^ Semeria, pp. 338-341.
  22. ^ Aldo Scaglione (1986). The Liberal Arts and the Jesuit College System. Amsterdam-Philadelphia: John Benjamins Publishing. pp. 137–138. ISBN 90-272-2035-2.
  23. ^ Semeria, p. 288-289.
  24. ^ G. Cappelletti, Le chiese d'Italia XIV (Venezia: Stabilimento nazionale 1858), pp. 68-69.
  25. ^ Manuel Borutta, "Anti-Catholicism and the Culture War in Risorgimento Italy," in: S. Patriarca; L. Riall (2011). "Chapter 10". The Risorgimento Revisited: Nationalism and Culture in Nineteenth-Century Italy. New York: Saint Martins (Palgrave Macmillan). p. 323. ISBN 978-0-230-36275-8.
  26. ^ Maria Franca Mellano (1964). Il caso Fransoni e la politica ecclesiastica piemontese (1848-1850) (in Italian). Rome: Gregorian Biblical BookShop. ISBN 978-88-7652-447-9. Emanuele Colomiatti (1902). Mons. Luigi dei marchesi Fransoni, arcivescovo di Torino 1832-1862 (in Italian). Torino: G. Derossi. pp. 490–494.
  27. ^ Rondolino, pp. 9-10.
  28. ^ Semeria, p. 195.
  29. ^ Giovanni Romano (1990). Domenico Della Rovere e il Duomo Nuovo di Torino: rinascimento a Roma e in Piemonte (in Italian). Turin: Cassa di Risparmio di Torino. Giuseppe Tuninetti; Gianluca D'Antino (2000). Il cardinal Domenico Della Rovere, costruttore della cattedrale, e gli arcivescovi di Torino dal 1515 al 2000 (in Italian). Cantalupa (Torino): Effata Editrice IT. ISBN 978-88-86617-54-3.
  30. ^ Savio, p. 320. Semeria, pp. 406-407. Colleges of Canons were being created at cathedrals in accordance with the French Council of Aquisgranda (816) and the Roman council of Pope Eugene II (826).
  31. ^ Ughelli, p. 1021.
  32. ^ Bosio, p. 1775, who labels Walpert a "diacono cardinale".
  33. ^ Bosio, p. 1784.
  34. ^ Bosio, p. 1800.
  35. ^ Bosio, p. 1805.
  36. ^ Chiuso, p. 435.
  37. ^ Bosio, p. 1794.
  38. ^ Ritzler-Sefrin, V, p. 370 note 1.
  39. ^ Ritzler-Sefrin, VI, p. 395 note 1.
  40. ^ Cappelletti, pp. 72-73
  41. ^ Diocesi di Torino, Seminari; retrieved: 07-14-2018. (in Italian)
  42. ^ Benedictus XIV (1842). "Lib. I. caput secundum. De Synodi Dioecesanae utilitate". Benedicti XIV ... De Synodo dioecesana libri tredecim (in Latin). Vol. Tomus primus. Mechlin: Hanicq. pp. 42–49. John Paul II, Constitutio Apostolica de Synodis Dioecesanis Agendis (March 19, 1997): Acta Apostolicae Sedis 89 (1997), pp. 706-727.
  43. ^ Diocesi di Torino, Sinodi; retrieved: 13 July 2018. (in Italian) The list is derived ultimately from Antonio Bosio's notes to Josephus Franciscus Myranesius' De Episcopis et Archiepiscopis Taurinensibus in: Historiae patriae monumenta (in Latin and Italian). Vol. Tomus XI: Scriptores Tomus IV. Turin: e regio typographeo. 1863. pp. 1727–1739. Savio, pp. 281-282, warns of Myranesio's habit of falsifying documents, charters, and inscriptions.
  44. ^ Savio, p. 356. Schwartz, p. 134.
  45. ^ The text is published by Bosio, pp. 1728-1735. The contents are standard synodal regulations, especially for the conduct of the clergy and the proper administration of the sacraments.
  46. ^ Bosio, pp. 1735-1736. It established a fixed time for a synod to meet, on the Tuesday before Rogation Days (quatuor temporum), and forbade persons from ordering their tombs in any other place than where their ancestors were buried. The synod also adapted several canons from a synod at Lyon concerning usury. It was required of all clergy to read the constitutions of the synod in their churches on three successive Sundays after the synod.
  47. ^ Bosio, pp. 1736-1737.
  48. ^ Semeria, p. 288, provides details.
  49. ^ Synodus prima dioecesana Taurinensis, à Julio Coesare Bergera, archiepiscopo Taurinensi habita ann. 1647 (in Latin). Turin: J. Sinibaldus. 1647.
  50. ^ Synodus Dioecesana Taurinensis habita in Ecclesia Metropolitana ab. lII.mo ac Rev.mo Domino Michaele Beyamo Archiep. Taurinensi die XXVIII Maij MDCLXX, 2 ed., reimpressa Taurini, ex Typ. Joannis Jacobi Ghiringhelli, 1719.
  51. ^ Prima diœcesana Synodus Taurinensis celebrata 12. et 11. Kal. Majas 1755. Ab excellentissimo, & reverendissimo domino D. Joanne Baptista Rotario Archiepiscopo Taurinensi . (in Latin). Turin: typis Zappatæ, & Avondi. 1755.
  52. ^ Synodus discesana Taurinensis quam excellentissimus et reverendissimus D.D. Victorius Cajetanus Costa archiepiscopus Taurinensis habuit 13. 12. 11. Calendas septembris anni 1788 (in Latin). Turin: heredes Avondo. 1788.
  53. ^ Diocesi di Torino, Assemblea diocesana; retrieved: 2018-07-14 (in Italian). It is not clear whether they have the same significance as a diocesan synod.
  54. ^ Maximus: Savio, pp. 283-294. Savio deduces that Maximus I presided over the synod of Turin in 398, and that he died in 420. Lanzoni, pp. 1046-1047.
  55. ^ Bishop Maximus was present at the provincial council of Milan in 451 under Archbishop Eusebius. He was also present at the Roman council of Pope Hilarius in November 465. J. D. Mansi, Sacrorum Conciliorum nova et amplissima collectio, editio novissima, Tomus sextus (6) (Florence 1761), p. 528; Tomus Septimus (7) (Florence: A. Zatta 1762), p. 959. Ughelli, IV, p. 1022.
  56. ^ In May 494, Bishos Victor of Turin and Epiphanius of Pavia were sent on an embassy to the King of Burgundy by King Theoderic. Savio, pp. 295-296. Lanzoni, pp. 1047-1048.
  57. ^ Tigridius was present at the Roman synods of Pope Symmachus in 501, 502, and 503. Ughelli, p. 1022. J. D. Mansi, Sacrorum Conciliorum nova et amplissima collectio, editio novissima, Tomus octavus (8) (Florence 1762), pp. 252, 263, 268. Savio, p. 296.
  58. ^ He is mentioned in one of Gregory of Tours' miraculous stories. Savio, pp. 296-297. Lanzoni, pp. 1048-1049.
  59. ^ Bishop Ursicinus was consecrated in 560 and died on 20 October 609. His tombstone, discovered in 1843, states that he was bishop for 46 years, and died around the age of 80. Rondolino, p. 34-35 (with photo). Savio, pp. 297-299. Lanzoni, pp. 1049-1050.
  60. ^ Rusticus was present at the Roman synod of Pope Agatho, in 679 or 680. He was buried on 15 September 691. Semeria, p. 45. Rondolino, pp. 36-37 (with photo).
  61. ^ Savio, p. 300, makes no mention of this person, nor does Bosio, pp. 1609-1610, nor does Semeria, p. 50, nor does Ughelli, p. 1025.
  62. ^ Claudius was an iconoclast, and he rejected the use of images, the cult of the cross, and the practice of pilgrimages. Claudius died in 827; he was not deposed for heresy, though refutations of his opinions were beginning to circulate (Noble, p. 290). Semeria, pp. 53-59. Savio, pp. 301-319. Thomas F. X. Noble (2012). "Chapter Seven: Art and Argument in the Age of Louis the Pious". Images, Iconoclasm, and the Carolingians. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press. pp. 287–364. ISBN 978-0-8122-0296-0.
  63. ^ Witgerius served on at least one occasion as missus dominicus. Savio, pp. 319-320. Semeria, p. 59, is out-of-date in his rejection of Witgerius, as Savio points out.
  64. ^ Semeria, p. 59.
  65. ^ The document which mentions Lancius has been identified as a forgery by Semeria, p. 66; and as a copyist's error for Amulo by Savio, p. 324. There was no Bishop Lancius.
  66. ^ Amolone was accused of having been involved in the death of the Emperor Lambert, who died on 15 October 898. Semeria, p. 61-62. Carlo Cipolla, Di Audace vescovo di Asti e di due documenti inediti che lo riguardano (Torino 1887), p. 228. Savio, pp. 322-325.
  67. ^ Eginolf (Heginulfus, Hegilulfus): Ughelli, p. 1027. Savio, pp. 325-326, suggests that the bishop is actually Bishop Heilulfus of Asti.
  68. ^ In 906, during an invasion of Saracens, Bishop Guglielmo received the monks of Novalesa and gave them the church of S. Andrea; it was at this time that the remains of S. Solutore were brought to Turin. The monks were still there in 929. Savio, pp. 326-328.
  69. ^ In 955 he served as a Missus for the Emperor. In 969 he was unable to attend the synod of Milan, but sent the Archdeacon Guntard to represent him. Schwartz, p. 130.
  70. ^ In 989 Amizo made a donation to the monastery of S. Pietro. Bishop Amizo was present at the synod of Pope Gregory V at Pavia in the Spring of 997. Savio, pp. 331-334. Schwartz, p. 130.
  71. ^ In October 1046, Bishop Cunibertus was present at the synod of Pavia. He was at the Roman synod of 1049, and was summoned to the Roman synod of Pope Nicholas II in 1059. In 1063 Pope Alexander II wrote to him, replying to an inquiry and stating that a special penance for breaking the newly invented 'Truce of God' could not be imposed, since it was not covered by canon law. He is said to have been a follower of the Emperor Henry IV, and, after the Emperor's excommunication, to have been a schismatic: William of Chiusa, Monumenta Germaniae Historica: Scriptores Tomus XII, p. 204. Savio, pp. 347-350. Schwartz, pp. 131-132.Carlo Cipolla (1900). La "Bulla Maior" di Cuniberto: vescovo di Torino. Memorie della Reale Accademia delle Scienze di Torino, Serie II, Tom. L (in Italian). Torino: C. Clausen.
  72. ^ Witelmus (loosely called Wilelmus by some) is known from only two documents, one dated 3 August 1083, in the third year of his episcopate; the other is dated 15 March 1089. The author of the Life of St. Benedict Abbot of Chiusa characterizes him as omnium quos terra sustinet, moribus esset turpissimus (Of all living people, his morals were the worst). Savio, pp. 350-351.
  73. ^ Guiberto: Savio, pp. 352-353. Cipolla, p. 12 (114).
  74. ^ On 15 July 1100 Bishop Mainardus took part in the consecration of Bishop Grossolano of Savona. He may have joined the schism of Wibert (Antipope Clement III, 1084–1100). He died on 10 September 1117 or 1118. Savio, pp. 353-354.
  75. ^ On 13 December 1122 he appears in a document, and again in December 1125 in a document of Archbishop Olrich of Milan. Schwartz, p. 134.
  76. ^ Guilelmus: Savio, pp. 353-354.
  77. ^ Carlo: Savio, p. 364.
  78. ^ Milo had been Archdeacon of the Church of Milan before becoming Bishop of Turin, and continued to hold the Archdiaconate during his term as bishop. He was elected Archbishop of Milan on 5 December 1187. Savio, p. 365. Chiuso, p. 434.
  79. ^ Arduino's latest document is dated 7 June 1207. Savio, pp. 366-369. Cf. Eubel, I, p. 475, who cites Savio, but follows the older incorrect date given by Gams, p. 824.
  80. ^ Carisio: Eubel, I, p. 475.
  81. ^ Hugo resigned in 1243, and retired to the Cistercian house in Genoa, where he was seen by Fra Salimbene in 1249. Savio, p. 372.
  82. ^ Joannes was elected by mandate of Pope Innocent IV, carried out by the Papal Legate Gregorio de Montelongo. Savio, p. 372.
  83. ^ Teodisius: Eubel, I, p. 475 with note 3.
  84. ^ Guido Canale: Semeria, pp. 192-193.
  85. ^ The second Thomas of Savoy was only 24 years old when appointed, by Pope Clement VI. He was consecrated a bishop on 3 April 1351, by Bishop Nicholas of Aosta. Eubel, I, p. 475 with note 5.
  86. ^ Aimo: Eubel, I, p. 475; II, p. 247.
  87. ^ Ludovicus de Romagnano: Eubel, II, p. 247.
  88. ^ Giovanni had been Abbot of Six in Geneva. He received his bulls for Turin on 21 November 1469. He was transferred to the diocese of Geneva on 24 July 1482 by Pope Sixtus IV (della Rovere). On 14 June 1484 he was transferred to the diocese of Tarentaise, where he died on 28 June 1492. Eubel, II, pp. 158, 245, 247.
  89. ^ Domenico, born in Turin in 1442, was the brother of Cardinal Cristoforo della Rovere. Domenico was named a cardinal in the Consistory of 10 February 1478 by Pope Sixtus IV (della Rovere), and was elected Archbishop of Tarentaise in 1478. He was transferred to the diocese of Geneva on 19 July 1482, and to the diocese of Turin on 24 July 1482. He spent most of his time at the Roman Curia, where died on 22 April 1501. G. C. Alessi, "Biografia e bibliografia di Domenico della Rovere," in: Italia medioevale e umanistica 27 (1984), pp. 175-231. Eubel, II, p. 18 no. 23; 158; 245; 247.
  90. ^ Giovanni Ludovico, son of Giacomo della Rovere, was the first cousin of Cardinal Domenico, and acted as his Vicar General from 1484 to 1489.
  91. ^ Giovanni della Rovere was appointed Coadjutor with the right of succession on 10 May 1504 by Pope Julius II. He was promoted to the rank of Metropolitan Archbishop by Pope Leo X on 21 May 1515. He died towards the end of 1516. Eubel, Hierarchia catholica III, p. 309.
  92. ^ Giovanni della Rovere was promoted to the rank of Metropolitan Archbishop by Pope Leo X on 21 May 1515. He died towards the end of 1516. Eubel, Hierarchia catholica III, p. 309.
  93. ^ Cybo was the nephew of Pope Leo X (1513–1521), and the cousin of Pope Clement VII (1523–1534). He was created a cardinal at the age of twenty-two, and was twenty-five years old at the time of his appointment to Turin. He was never consecrated a bishop, and therefore could only be Administrator. He could, however, collect the income. Innocenzo Cybo and his nephew Cesare Cybo have been accused of lack of interest in the diocese, and ignorant and neglectful of their pastoral duties: Lucia Felici (2009). Profezie di riforma e idee di concordia religiosa: visioni e speranze dell'esule piemontese Giovanni Leonardo Sartori (in Italian). Rome: L.S. Olschki. p. 20. ISBN 978-88-222-5822-9., Innocenzo e Cesare Cybo, sempre assenti dalla loro sedi e disinteressati alla cura delle anime e delle istituzioni; ignoranti e inadempienti dei loro doveri pastorali (soprattutto nelle Valli Valdesi) i sacerdoti; incline al libertinaggio gran parte del clero regolare.... Luigi Staffetti, Il cardinale Innocenzo Cybo (Firenze 1894).
  94. ^ Seyssel held the degree Doctor in utroque iure (civil and canon law), and had been a Councilor and Master of Requests of King Louis XII, through whose influence he was elected Canon and Archdeacon of the Cathedral Chapter of Bourges. He had then been Bishop of Marseille (1511–1517). He was transferred to the diocese of Turin by Pope Leo X on 11 May 1517. He was a prolific author of works on history, law, and moral theology. He died on 1 June 1520. His Last Will and Testament, dated 27 May 1520, along with several inventories, survives: Chiusi, pp. 499-519. According to those documents (p. 506) notarized by a Public Notary, he died Die Mercurii penultima die mensis Maji...hora XVIa dicti diei. (30 May 1520) Semeria, pp. 267-275. Eubel, III, pp. 237 with note 3; 309.
  95. ^ Innocenzo Cybo's Vicar in Turin was Bishop Filippo Mari of Ventimiglia. Semeria, pp. 276-282. Staffetti, pp. 235-236.
  96. ^ Born in Genoa in 1495, Cesare Cybo (Usodimare) had been Administrator (until he was 27 years of age) and then Bishop of Mariana (Sardinia) from 1 December 1531. He was succeeded there on 22 June 1548 by his brother Ottaviano Cybo, as he was promoted to the diocese of Turin. He died on 26 December 1562. Semeria, pp. 282-284. Eubel, III, pp. 235, 309.
  97. ^ D'Avalos was appointed on 3 January 1563, and resigned on 12 May 1564. Semeria, pp. 284-285. Eubel, III, p. 309.
  98. ^ Della Rovere had been Provost of the Cathedral Chapter of Turin. He was nominated Bishop of Toulon by the King of France, and preconised (approved) by Pope Pius IV on 26 January 1560. King Charles IX of France appointed della Rovere his ambassador to the Duke of Savoy, and he so impressed both the Duke and Cardinal d'Avalos that the Cardinal resigned in his favor. Della Rovere was transferred to the diocese of Turin on 12 May 1564. He was named a cardinal on 16 November 1586, and assigned the titular church of San Pietro in Vincoli, the sixth of his family to hold that title since Pope Sixtus IV in 1467. He died in Rome on 26 January 1592, or on 7 February (Eubel contradicts himself). Semeria, pp. 285-293. Eubel, III, pp. 51 no. 10; 309; 315.
  99. ^ Born in Chieri in 1552 of the family of the lords of Santena, in 1591 he was elected Abbot of Fruttuaria. Broglia had been Abbot of S. Benigno. He had been tutor of the sons of Charles Emmanuel I, Duke of Savoy. He was appointed Archbishop of Turin by Pope Clement VIII on 20 November 1592, and was consecrated in Rome by Cardinal Agostino Valerio, Bishop of Verona, on 30 November. He held a diocesan visitation and then a diocesan synod in 1595. He died on 8 February 1617. Semeria, pp. 293-305. Eubel, III, p. 309. Gauchat, Hierarchia catholica IV, p. 329 with note 2.
  100. ^ Born in 1564, Milliet was the son of Baron Ludovico of Faverges, the Archchancellor of Duke Carlo Emanuele I. He obtained the degree Doctor in utroque iure (civil and canon law) from the Sapienza in Rome in 1585, and was appointed rector of the church of S. Andrea ai Monti. Pope Gregory XIII appointed him Prior Commendatory of S. Pietro di Lemens and Dean of Viry (diocese of Geneva). Pope Sixtus V named him titular Bishop of Hierapolis (Turkey) in 1590, and appointed him Coadjutor of his uncle Pietro Lamberto Milliet, Bishop of Mariana (Corsica). He succeeded to the diocese on the death of his uncle on 6 May 1591. On 15 March 1608 the Duke named him Abbot of Aulps. Milliet was transferred to the diocese of Turin on 17 December 1618 by Pope Paul V. He died on 17 November 1624. Semeria, pp. 305-307. Gauchat, p. 329.
  101. ^ Ferrero: Semeria, pp. 307-308. Gauchat, p. 329 with note 4.
  102. ^ The principal cause of the disruption was the war between Francis I of France and the Holy Roman Emperor Charles V. It brought in its wake, death, pillage, plague, and famine. Semeria, pp. 308-309.
  103. ^ Provana was the son of Giovanni Francesco de' Conti di Bussolino e di Collegno, Grand Chancellor of Duke Carlo Emanuele of Savoy. Antonio obtained a degree of Doctor in utroque iure from Turin in 1604. He was appointed Savoyard Ambassador to Venice in 1605, during the strife between Pope Paul V and the Serene Republic. He enjoyed the patronage of Cardinal Maurizio di Savoia in Rome. He was named to the office of Protonotary Apostolic by papal bull of 20 July 1622, and titular bishop of Dyrrachium (Durazzo, Albania) on 21 July 1622. His transfer to Turin was approved in Consistory by Pope Urban VIII on 19 January 1632. He died on 25 July 1640. Semeria, pp. 308-313. Gauchat, pp. 179 with note 3; 329 with note 5. Carlo Pio de Magistris (1906). Carlo Emanuele I e la contesa fra la repubblica veneta e Paolo V (1605–1607).: Documenti editi a cura di Carlo De Magistris. Miscellanea di storia veneta, serie seconda, Tom. X (in Italian). Venezia: a spese della Società. p. passim. Giuseppe Tuninetti; Gianluca D'Antino (2000). Il cardinal Domenico Della Rovere, costruttore della cattedrale, e gli arcivescovi di Torino dal 1515 al 2000: stemmi, alberi genealogici e profili biografici (in Italian). Effata Editrice IT. pp. 94–95. ISBN 978-88-86617-54-3.
  104. ^ Bergera (Bergeria, on his tombstone) was a native of Turin, and held the degree Doctor in utroque iure (civil and canon law). He was Provost of the Cathedral Chapter of Turin, and was elected Vicar Capitular during the Sede Vacante of 1640–1643. He was named Archbishop of Turin on 23 February 1643. In 1646 he conducted a formal visitation of the Collegiate Church of Chieri, for whose Chapter he issued new statutes. He also visited the Collegiate Church of Rivoli in September 1646. He held a synod on 15 May 1647. He died in 1660 at the age of sixty-seven. Semeria, pp. 314-317. Gauchat, p. 329 with note 6.
  105. ^ Beggiamo had previously been Bishop of Mondovì. He died in October 1689. Gauchat, p. 329 with note 7.
  106. ^ Vibo was born in Turin in 1630, and was ordained a priest in 1654. He held the degree doctor of philosophy and master of theology from the University of Turin (1658) He also held the degree Doctor in utroque iure (civil and canon law) from Turin. He was named Abbot Commendatory of SS. Pietro ed Andrea di Ripalta. He served as Internuncio in Paris from April 1666 to November 1668, and again from July 1671 to June 1672. He was named Governor of Carpentras and the Comtat Venaissin in 1672, a post he held for ten years. He was appointed Archbishop of Turin in Consistory on 27 November 1690 by Pope Alexander VIII, on the nomination of Duke Vittore Amadeo of Savoy. He died on 13 February 1713, at the age of 83. Semeria, pp. 320-325. Ritzler-Sefrin, Hierarchia catholica V, p. 370 with note 2.
  107. ^ Victor Amadeus of Savoy had become King of Sardinia at the conclusion of the War of the Spanish Succession in 1713. He and the papacy were at odds concerning the claims of the King to regalian rights in his domain, that is, the right to claim the income of vacant dioceses and monasteries during the vacancy, and the right to nominate a new incumbent. The model for the King's claim was the similar claim of Louis XIV. During the Vacancy in Turin, the diocese was governed by vicars capitular, Ignacio Carocio (1713–1716) and Filippo Domenico Tarino (1716–1727).Semeria, pp. 321-323. Domenico Carutti (barone di Cantogno) (1879). Storia della diplomazia della corte di Savoia: 1663-1730 (in Italian). Torino: Fratelli Bocca. pp. 583–614. Pier Carlo Boggio (1854). La chiesa e lo stato in Piemonte: sposizione storico-critica dei rapporti fra la S. Sede e la corte di Sardegna dal 1000 al 1854 (in Italian). Vol. primo. Torino: Seb. Franco e figlii e Company. pp. 113–118.
  108. ^ Francesco was born in the town of Gravellona (diocese of Vigevano) in 1656. As a youth he entered the Barnabite Congregation (Clerics Regular of St. Paul), and engaged in the usual studies of philosophy and theology. He was named Bishop of Alessandria in 1706, and was transferred to the diocese of Turin on 25 June 1727 by Pope Benedict XIII, on the nomination of Victor Amadeus II of Savoy, King of Sardinia, on 11 June 1727. He conducted a diocesan visitation immediately, and then held a diocesan synod in 1729. He was Chancellor of the Royal Athenaeum, and Prefect of the Royal Chapel. Gattinara died in Turin in October 1743. Semeria, pp. 360-362. Ritzler-Sefrin, V, pp. 370-371 with note 3.
  109. ^ Semeria, pp. 362-364. Ritzler-Sefrin, VI, p. 395 with note 2.
  110. ^ Semeria, pp. 364-366. Ritzler-Sefrin, VI, p. 395 with note 3.
  111. ^ Costa was born in Turin in 1737, and held the degree Doctor in utroque iure (Civil and Canon Law) (1767). He had been Rector of the Royal University and Almoner to the King of Sardinia, and was then, on the King's nomination, Bishop of Vercelli (1769–1778). Costa was transferred to the diocese of Turin, on the King's nomination, on 28 September 1778. He was named a cardinal by Pope Pius VI on 30 March 1789, and sent the red biretta. He died on 16 May 1796. Semeria, pp. 367-370. Ritzler-Sefrin, VI, pp. 36 no. 55; 395 with note 4; 438 with note 3. Oreste Favaro, "Costa, Vittorio Gaetano," Dizionario Biografico degli Italiani Volume 30 (1984). (in Italian)
  112. ^ Named on 24 July 1797. Semeria, pp. 370-374. Ritzler-Sefrin, VI, p. 395 with note 5.
  113. ^ Born in Saluzzo in 1757, Della Torre was a member of the family of the Counts of Luserna e Valle. He entered the Congregation of S. Agostino di Lombardia, and held the offices of teacher of philosophy and theology, Master of Novices, and Prior of the Convent in Turin. In 1789 he was named Bishop of Sassari (Sardinia). On 24 July 1797 he was transferred to the diocese of Acqui, and on 24 July 1805 he was transferred by Pope Pius VII to the diocese of Turin, on the approval of Napoleon I. He restored the seminary. In 1811 he went to Paris for the national assembly of French bishops, and was elected Secretary of the assembly. When the Calvinists and other heretical sects wanted to open a church in Turin, he lobbied Prince Borghese, the Provincial Governor General, and the Minister of Cults in Paris, and had the plan dropped. He died on 8 April 1814. Semeria, pp. 375-377. Ritzler-Sefrin, VI, pp. 93, 423; VII, p. 360.
  114. ^ During the Sede vacante, which included the fall of Napoleon after Waterloo, the Hundred Days, the Congress of Vienna, the restoration of the Kingdom of Sardinia, and the restoration of the Papal States, the diocese of Turin was governed by the Vicar Capitular, Emanuele Gonetti. Semeria, p. 377. Bosio, p. 1771.
  115. ^ Chiaverotti had been Bishop of Ivrea from 1817 to 1818. He was named Archbishop of Turin by Pope Pius VII on 21 December 1818. He died on 6 August 1831. Semeria, pp. 377-379. Ritzler-Sefrin, VII, pp. 225, 361.
  116. ^ A native of Turin, Gastaldi had previously been Bishop of Saluzzo (1867–1871). He was transferred to the diocese of Turin by Pope Pius IX on 27 October 1871. He died on 25 March 1883. Ritzler-Sefrin, Hierarchia catholica VIII, pp. 51, 86, 538.
  117. ^ Ritzler-Sefrin, Hierarchia catholica VIII, pp. 494, 538.
  118. ^ Riccardi: Ritzler-Sefrin, Hierarchia catholica VIII, pp. 324, 420, 538.
  119. ^ Richelmy had previously been Bishop of Ivrea (1886–1897). He was transferred to the diocese of Turin by Pope Leo XIII on 18 September 1897, and was named a cardinal on 19 June 1899. He died in Turin on 10 August 1923. Harris M. Lentz (2002). Popes and Cardinals of the 20th Century: A Biographical Dictionary. London: McFarland & Company. pp. 155–156. ISBN 978-0-7864-1094-1. Martin Bräuer (2014). Handbuch der Kardinäle: 1846-2012 (in German). Berlin: De Gruyter. pp. 1901–1902. ISBN 978-3-11-037077-5. Ritzler-Sefrin, Hierarchia catholica VIII, pp. 48, 52, 324, 538.
  120. ^ Gamba had been Canon and Vicar-General of Asti. He was named Bishop of Biella in 1901, and was transferred to the diocese of Novara in 1906. On 20 December 1923 he was transferred by Pope Pius IX to the diocese of Turin. On 20 December 1926 he was named a cardinal. He died in Turin on 26 December 1929, and was buried in the Cathedral. Lentz, p. 76. Bräuer, p. 1910.
  121. ^ Lentz, p. 73. Bräuer, p. 1910-1911.
  122. ^ Bräuer, p. 1966.
  123. ^ Bräuer, p. 1996-1997.
  124. ^ Lentz, p. 163.
  125. ^ Lentz, p. 210.
  126. ^ a b "Rinunce e nomine, 19.02.2022" (Press release) (in Italian). Holy See Press Office. 19 February 2022. Retrieved 19 February 2022.

Books 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. pp. 813–814. (in Latin)
  • Eubel, Conradus, ed. (1913). Hierarchia catholica. Vol. Tomus 1 (second ed.). Münster: Libreria Regensbergiana. (in Latin)
  • Eubel, Conradus, ed. (1914). Hierarchia catholica. Vol. Tomus 2 (second ed.). Münster: Libreria Regensbergiana. (in Latin)
  • Gulik, Guilelmus (1923). Eubel, Conradus (ed.). Hierarchia catholica. Vol. Tomus 3 (second ed.). Münster: Libreria Regensbergiana. (in Latin)
  • Gauchat, Patritius (Patrice) (1935). Hierarchia catholica. Vol. Tomus IV (1592-1667). Münster: Libraria Regensbergiana. Retrieved 2016-07-06. (in Latin)
  • 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. Vol. Tomus VI (1730-1799). Patavii: Messagero di S. Antonio. Retrieved 2016-07-06. (in Latin)
  • 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.

Studies edit

  • Casiraghi, Giampietro (1979). La diocesi di Torino nei medioevo. Biblioteca storica subalpina, 196 (in Italian). Turin: Deputazione subalpina di storia patria.
  • Chiuso, Tomaso. "Saggio di antichi documenti dell' Archivio arcivescovile di Torino." In: Miscellanea di storia italiana Tomo XVIII (Torino: Fratelli Bocca 1889), pp. 421–522.
  • Cross, F. L.; Livingstone, E. A., eds. (13 March 1997). The Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church, 3rd edition. USA: Oxford University Press. p. 359. ISBN 0-19-211655-X.
  • Kehr, Paul Fridolin (1914). Italia pontificia : sive, Repertorium privilegiorum et litterarum a romanis pontificibus ante annum 1598 Italiae ecclesiis, monasteriis, civitatibus singulisque personis concessorum. Vol. VI. pars ii. Berolini: Weidmann. pp. 79–139.
  • Lanzoni, Francesco (1927). Le diocesi d'Italia dalle origini al principio del secolo VII (an. 604). Faenza: F. Lega; pp. 1044–1050. (in Italian)
  • Savio, Fedele (1898). Gli antichi Vescovi d'Italia: il Piemonte (in Italian). Torino: Bocca. pp. 281–376.
  • Schwartz, Gerhard (1907). Die Besetzung der Bistümer Reichsitaliens unter den sächsischen und salischen Kaisern: mit den Listen der Bischöfe, 951-1122. Leipzig: B.G. Teubner. (in German)
  • Semeria, Giovanni Battista (1840). Storia della chiesa metropolitana di Torino (in Italian). Torino: Fontana.
  • Ughelli, Ferdinando; Coleti, Niccolo (1719). Italia sacra, sive de episcopis Italiae et insularum adjacentium (in Latin). Vol. Tomus quartus (4) (2nd ed.). Venice: Apud Sebastianum Coleti. pp. 925–979.
  • Tuninetti, Giuseppe; D'Antino, Gianluca (2000). Il cardinal Domenico Della Rovere, costruttore della cattedrale, e gli arcivescovi di Torino dal 1515 al 2000: stemmi, alberi genealogici e profili biografici (in Italian). Torino: Effata Editrice IT. ISBN 978-88-86617-54-3.

acknowledgment edit

  This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainHerbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). "Turin". Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company.

External links edit

  • Official Website (in Italian)

45°04′24″N 7°41′07″E / 45.0733°N 7.6854°E / 45.0733; 7.6854

roman, catholic, archdiocese, turin, archdiocese, turin, latin, archidioecesis, taurinensis, latin, church, ecclesiastical, territory, catholic, church, italy, archdiocese, turinarchidioecesis, taurinensisarcidiocesi, torinoturin, cathedrallocationcountryitaly. The Archdiocese of Turin Latin Archidioecesis Taurinensis is a Latin Church ecclesiastical territory of the Catholic Church in Italy 1 2 Archdiocese of TurinArchidioecesis TaurinensisArcidiocesi di TorinoTurin CathedralLocationCountryItalyStatisticsArea3 350 km2 1 290 sq mi Population Total Catholics as of 2014 2 153 0002 057 000 95 5 Parishes355InformationDenominationCatholic ChurchSui iuris churchLatin ChurchRiteRoman RiteEstablished4th centuryCathedralMetropolitan Cathedral of Saint John the BaptistSecular priests520 diocesan535 Religious Orders133 Permanent DeaconsCurrent leadershipPopeFrancisArchbishopRoberto RepoleAuxiliary BishopsAlessandro GiraudoBishops emeritusCesare NosigliaGuido FiandinoMapWebsitewww diocesi torino it The diocese of Turin was founded in the 4th century and elevated to the dignity of an archdiocese on 21 May 1515 by Pope Leo X As a metropolitan archdiocese it has as suffragan dioceses Acqui Alba Aosta Asti Cuneo Fossano Ivrea Mondovi Pinerolo Saluzzo and Susa 3 Its mother church is the Cathedral of Saint John the Baptist Contents 1 History 1 1 Two episcopal elections 1 2 An episcopal election 1 3 Creation of the archdiocese 1 4 Cathedral and Chapter 1 5 Seminary 1 6 Synods 2 Bishops of Turin 2 1 to 900 2 2 900 to 1200 2 3 1200 to 1515 3 Archbishops of Turin since 1515 4 Notes and references 5 Books 5 1 Reference works 5 2 Studies 5 3 acknowledgment 6 External linksHistory editThe earliest bishop of Turin whose name has survived was Maximus of Turin Fedele Savio argues that Maximus was the first bishop of Turin 4 Maximus many of whose homilies are extant died between 408 and 423 5 Bishop Ursicinus 569 609 underwent captivity and loss of his property at the hands of the Franks Pope Gregory I complained to Bishop Syagrius of Autun that someone else was made bishop in place of Ursicinus in violation of canon law and Ursicinus diocese was taken away from him 6 It has been inferred that the Diocese of Moriana Maurienne was detached from that of Turin on this occasion 7 Duke Garibold of Turin who had assassinated the Lombard King Godebert in 662 was murdered in an act of revenge in the Baptistry of S Giovanni il Battisto in the Cathedral of Turin 8 Other bishops were Claudius of Turin 817 27 a copious and controversial writer famous for his opposition to the veneration of images 9 Regimirus of uncertain date in the 9th century who established a rule of common life among his canons Amulo 880 98 who incurred the ill will of the Turinese and was driven out by them Gezo 1000 who founded the monastery of San Solutore in Turin Landulf 1037 who founded the Abbey of Cavour and repaired the damage inflicted on his church by the Saracen incursions Cunibert of Turin 1046 1080 to whom Peter Damian wrote a letter Epistolae IV iii exhorting him to repress the laxity of his clergy in matters of clerical celibacy Boso 1122 c 1127 who resigned as a cardinal to become bishop In 1074 Bishop Cunibert of Turin 1046 1080 was summoned by Pope Gregory VII to attend a synod which was announced for 30 November in that year One of the matters to be treated was the controversy between Cunibert and Abbot Benedict of S Michele di Chiusa 10 The bishop claimed that the monastery was situated on allodial property of the diocese and therefore the bishop had the right to install the abbot and collect the decima tax On 12 December 1074 the Pope wrote again in considerable anger because Cunibert had refused to attend the synod venire contempsit the Pope further advised Cunibert that another synod was going to be held toward the end of February 1075 which he was warned he must attend and in the meantime he was to stop disturbing the monastery When the synod took place Cunibert was suspended from office and in a letter of 9 April 1075 Gregory again chastised him for breaking his promise and continuing to harass the monks of S Michele Cunibert was given until 11 November the next synod meeting day to reach a peaceable settlement with Benedict or else to put in an appearance at the synod where his case would be given final judgement The case dragged on however and on 24 November 1078 after Cunibert finally appeared at the Papal Court the Pope gave final judgement requiring Cunibert to return whatever he had taken from the monks and the monks likewise under the supervision of the Bishops of Asti and Aqui and the Abbot of Fruttuaria If the Bishop still wished to assert that the monastery had been built on land belonging to the diocese and was under his jurisdiction he should come to the next synod and present his proofs otherwise he should hold his peace 11 Two episcopal elections edit In 1243 Bishop Hugo Uguccione de Cagnola 1231 1243 abdicated the bishopric of Turin and became a Cistercian Before he retired to a monastery the house of the Cistercians in Genoa though he was required to administer his diocese until a successor was elected On 15 November 1243 Pope Innocent IV ordered Hugo to see to the election of the Pope s Chamberlain Nicholas Provost of Genoa as the next Bishop of Turin 12 On 10 May 1244 Innocent ordered the Papal Legate Gregorio de Montelongo Papal Subdeacon and Notary to see to the election of the Abbot of San Gennaro near Trino in the diocese of Vercelli Giovanni Arborio as the next bishop of Turin 13 An episcopal election edit The episcopal election of 1319 is unusually well attested Bishop Teodisius Revelli 1301 1319 died in the Spring of 1319 The cathedral chapter met on 16 May to choose his successor One of the electors the Primicerius Thomas de Pellizonus was ill and was the subject of threats on the part of some disaffected citizens of Turin and was therefore unable to attend the meeting He sent a notarized explanation of his absence by means of two procurators Guilelmus de Cavaglata and Guido de Canalibus The electoral assembly duly took place later that day and de Canalibus was elected Bishop of Turin An electoral statement was drawn up immediately and carried to the home of de Pellizonus who approved and ratified the election still on 16 May This too was written down and properly notarized The documents indicate that Bishop Guido was the immediate successor of the late Bishop Teodisius 14 Bishop Guido Canale had the task of annulling the marriage of Frederick of Saluzzo and Jacobina de Blandrata in 1333 on the grounds of affinity in the third degree The matter needed to be repaired by papal bulls of Pope John XXII 15 The bishops of Turin had a palace at Pinerolo from which numerous surviving documents have been dated Creation of the archdiocese edit On 21 May 1515 during the Tenth Session of the Fifth Lateran Council Pope Leo X removed the diocese of Turin from metropolitan obedience of Milan and made Turin an archiepiscopal see with the dioceses of Mondovi and Ivrea as its suffragans other sees being added later 16 On the same day the Pope sent a letter to Bishop Giovanni Francesco della Rovere notifying him of his promotion to the rank of archbishop and another to the new suffragans notifying them of the creation of the archdiocese 17 In the 16th century the diocese saw the rise the Waldensian sect 18 and of Calvinism It is known that in the spring of 1536 John Calvin visited Aosta as he was returning to France from Ferrara His preaching however brought him to the attention of Bishop Pietro Gazino of Aosta and he was forced to flee 19 The Council of Trent called upon bishops everywhere to attempt to restore Roman Catholicism Archbishop Girolamo della Rovere in 1566 engaged in a public disputation with the Protestants of the Piedmont and was victorious which was greeted with great satisfaction by the Duke In 1567 he conducted a visitation of the valley of the Stura and preached to and conversed with many Protestants who had come into Piedmont from France again with some success 20 During his episcopacy Duke Emanuele Filiberto brought to Turin from his castle in Chambery the Holy Shroud the personal property of his family and on 29 December 1590 the body of St Maurice the martyr 21 At the conclusion of the wars between France and Savoy with the Peace of Cateau Cambresis and the French withdrawal in 1563 the permanent principal residence of the Dukes of Savoy became the city of Turin The university was moved from Mondovi where it had retreated during the French occupation A Jesuit college was opened in Turin in 1567 with an annual subsidy from the Duke and the Jesuit Collegio dei Nobili in 1572 22 In 1577 Archbishop della Rovere began the construction of the church Santi Martiri for the Jesuits in Turin 23 Cardinal Gerolamo della Rovere died on 25 January 1592 while in conclave in Rome to elect a successor to Pope Innocent IX Facchinetti 24 From 1713 to 1727 owing to difficulties with the Holy See the See of Turin remained vacant After 1848 Archbishop Luigi Fransoni 1832 62 became notable for his opposition to the Piedmontese government s reform program led by Camillo Benso first as Minister of Agriculture then as Minister of Finance and finally in 1852 as Prime Minister of Savoy At the same time the Risorgimento and the operations of Giuseppe Garibaldi had brought about a revolution in Rome which drove Pope Pius IX into exile Piedmontese policy called for a reform of the rights of the Catholic church especially of the regular clergy Fransoni s vocal reaction to these events and policies helped to stimulate the already widespread anticlericalism in Italy 25 and he found himself forced to leave Turin and Italy in 1852 for exile under French protection 26 Cathedral and Chapter edit nbsp Cathedral of Turin The circumstances of the founding of the original cathedral of Turin are obscure It is conjectured that the building was the work of the first bishop Maximus which would place the date around the beginning of the 5th century 27 It was constituted of three interconnected churches San Salvatore San Giovanni Battista and Santa Maria Bishop Guido Canale 1319 1348 found it necessary to completely reconstruct the Chapel of San Michele in the cathedral which he endowed 28 With the old cathedral in a state of collapse Bishop Domenico della Rovere 1482 1501 had the cathedral rebuilt in the 1490s to designs by Meo Amadeo del Caprina da Settignano of Florence Demolition began in May 1491 Cardinal della Rovere visited Turin in 1496 to inspect the progress of the works The new cathedral was consecrated on 21 September 1505 by Bishop Giovanni Ludovico della Rovere 29 The existence of a college of Canons in Turin is very old A diploma of Emperor Henry III of 1047 attributes them to Bishop Regimir in the mid ninth century 30 The Cathedral Chapter consisted of five dignities and twenty Canons and twenty prebends The dignities were the Provost the Archdeacon the Treasurer the Archpriest and the Primicerius Cantor In addition there were five officials called Trinitatis 31 The earliest known Provost was Walpert in 890 32 The earliest known Archdeacon was Ansprand who signed a document in 863 33 The earliest known Archpriest was Erchempert Sanctae Taurinensis Ecclesiae Archipresbyter Cardinalis 34 The earliest known Primicerius Cantor was Adalwert who signed a document in 890 Sancte Taurinensis Ecclesie Diaconus Cardinalis Cantor 35 The Provost and Primicerius subscribe a document of Bishop Milo in 1185 36 The office of treasurer was established by a bull of Pope Sixtus IV of 15 January 1472 37 In 1690 there were twenty nine canons 38 In 1744 there were six dignities and twenty canons 39 In addition to the cathedral chapter there were seven collegiate churches in the diocese which had chapters of canons At Carmagnola there was a chapter of an archpriest and nine canons At Chieri at S Maria della Scala there were an archpriest a cantor and ten canons In Courgne there was a provost and six canons In Giaveno at San Lorenzo there was a provost and eight canons In Moncalieri at Santa Maria della Scala there was a chapter composed of a provost and six canons At Santa Maria di Rivoli there was a chapter composed of a provost an archpriest a cantor and five canons At Savigliano at S Andrea founded in 1028 which was in charge of four parishes there was a college of canons regular Pope Clement XII secularized the canons who were thereafter sixteen in number of whom one was the penitentiary presided over by an abbot an archpriest and a primicerius 40 Seminary edit The seminary of the diocese of Turin was established by Cardinal Girolamo della Rovere on 4 June 1567 in accordance with the decrees of the Council of Trent Since 1988 the seminary has been located in a building that once belonged to the Suore Fedele Compagne di Gesu The old building became the Minor Seminary in 1992 41 Synods edit A diocesan synod was an irregularly held but important meeting of the bishop of a diocese and his clergy Its purpose was 42 to proclaim generally the various decrees already issued by the bishop to discuss and ratify measures on which the bishop chose to consult with his clergy to publish statutes and decrees of the diocesan synod of the provincial synod and of the Holy See The Diocese di Torino maintains a list of diocesan synods on its website 43 The earliest known diocesan synod is that of Bishop Boso who also attended a provincial synod in Milan in December 1125 no records survive 44 Another synod was held by Bishop Giovanni Arborio on 26 October 1246 Bishop Goffredo di Montanaro presided at a diocesan synod which was held in S Salvatore de Domno on Wednesday 14 May 1270 45 Bishop Goffredo presided over a second synod on 16 May 1276 in S Salvatore de Domno its acts survive 46 Synods also took place in 1332 1335 1339 1351 1368 1403 1428 1448 1465 1467 1469 and 1500 In 1502 a collection of twelve Constitutions of synods was published 47 There were synods in 1514 1575 48 1597 1606 1608 1610 1614 1624 and 1633 A diocesan synod was held by Archbishop Giulio Cesare Bergera 1643 1660 in 1647 49 On 28 May 1670 Archbishop Michele Beggiamo 1662 1689 held a diocesan synod 50 A synod was held by Archbishop Gian Francesco Arborio di Gattinara 1727 1743 on 1 3 May 1729 Archbishop Giambattista Roero di Pralormo 1744 1766 held his first diocesan synod on 21 and 22 April 1755 51 Archbishop Vittorio Maria Costa d Arignano 1778 1796 held a diocesan synod on 20 22 August 1788 52 Archbishop Lorenzo Gastaldi held several synods in 1873 1874 1875 1878 and 1880 There was then a lapse of more than a century until Cardinal Giovanni Saldarini held one in 1994 and another in 1997 Since 2012 however the diocese prefers to hold annual meetings which are called an Assemblea diocesana 53 Bishops of Turin editto 900 edit This list is incomplete you can help by adding missing items October 2016 Maximus I 390 408 423 54 Maximus II before 451 after 465 55 Victor attested 494 56 Tigridius Tigridus attested 501 502 503 57 Rufus before 562 58 Ursicinus it 562 609 59 Rusticus it before 680 691 60 Valcuno mentioned in 739 61 Andreas after 773 c 800 Claudius c 818 827 62 Witgerius attested 832 838 63 Regimirus it ninth century Guglielmo I it c 849 64 Claudius II c 873 Lancius mentioned in 887 65 Amulo attested 880 898 66 900 to 1200 edit Eginolf attested in 901 67 Guglielmo before 906 after 920 68 Ricolfus mentioned in 945 Amalric 955 969 69 Amizo 989 after 998 70 Gezo after 998 1011 Landulf 1011 1037 Guido 1037 1046 Cunibertus 1046 c 1081 71 Vitelmo c 1081 1092 72 Guibert Wibertus attested 1098 1099 73 Mainard Maginard 1100 1117 8 74 Guibert II mentioned in 1118 Boso attested 1122 1125 75 Arberto mentioned in 1140 Oberto it 1144 after 1145 Carl I it 1147 1162 Guglielmo it attested 1162 1163 76 Carlo it 1165 1169 77 Milo attested 1170 1187 78 Arduino 1188 1207 79 1200 to 1515 edit Jacobus de Carisio 1207 1226 80 Jacobus 1227 1231 Hugo de Cagnola 1231 1243 81 Joannes Arborio 1244 1257 82 Gandolfus 1259 1260 H O Min Gaufridus de Montanaro 1264 1300 Teodisius Revelli 1301 1319 83 Guido Canale 1319 1348 84 Thomas de Sabaudia 1348 c 1362 85 Bartholomeus de Roma 1362 1364 Giovanni Orsini de Rivalta 1365 1411 Aimo de Romagnano 1415 1438 86 Ludovicus de Romagnano 1438 1469 87 Giovanni Compresio Compuys 1469 1482 88 Cardinal Domenico della Rovere 1482 1501 89 Giovanni Ludovico della Rovere 1501 1510 90 Giovanni Francesco della Rovere 1510 1515 1516 91 Archbishops of Turin since 1515 editGiovanni Francesco della Rovere 1515 1516 92 Cardinal Innocenzo Cybo 1516 1517 Administrator 93 Claudio di Seyssel 1517 1520 94 Innocenzo Cybo 1520 1548 Administrator 95 Cesare Cybo 1548 1562 96 Cardinal Innico d Avalos d Aragona O S 1563 1564 Administrator 97 Gerolamo della Rovere 1564 1592 98 Carlo Broglia 1592 1617 99 Filiberto Milliet 1618 1625 100 Giovanni Battista Ferrero O P 1626 1627 101 Sede vacante 1627 1632 102 Antonio Provana 1632 1640 103 Giulio Cesare Bergera 1643 1660 104 Michele Beggiamo 1662 1689 105 Michele Antonio Vibo 1690 1713 106 Sede vacante 1713 1727 107 Gian Francesco Arborio di Gattinara B 1727 1743 108 Giambattista Roero Rotario di Pralormo 1744 1766 109 Francesco Luserna Rorengo di Rora 1768 1778 110 Vittorio Maria Costa d Arignano 1778 1796 111 Carlo Luigi Buronzo del Signore 1797 1805 112 Giacinto della Torre O E S A 1805 1814 113 Sede vacante 1814 1818 114 Columbano Chiaverotti O S B Cam 1818 1831 115 Luigi Fransoni 1832 1862 Sede vacante 1862 1867 Alessandro Riccardi di Netro 1867 1870 Lorenzo Gastaldi 1871 1883 116 Cardinal Gaetano Alimonda 9 Aug 1883 30 May 1891 117 Davide Riccardi 14 Dec 1891 20 May 1897 118 Cardinal Agostino Richelmy 1897 1923 119 Cardinal Giuseppe Gamba 1923 1929 120 Cardinal Maurilio Fossati 11 December 1930 30 March 1965 121 Cardinal Michele Pellegrino 18 Sep 1965 27 July 1977 122 Cardinal Anastasio Ballestrero 1 August 1977 31 January 1989 123 Cardinal Giovanni Saldarini 31 January 1989 19 June 1999 124 Cardinal Severino Poletto 19 June 1999 11 October 2010 125 Cesare Nosiglia 11 October 2010 19 February 2022 126 Roberto Repole 19 February 2022 126 present Notes and references edit Archdiocese of Torino Turin Catholic Hierarchy org David M Cheney Retrieved January 4 2017 self published source Metropolitan Archdiocese of Torino GCatholic org Gabriel Chow Retrieved February 29 2016 self published source Diocesi di Torino Diocesi Storia retrieved 9 July 2018 in Italian Savio pp 285 286 Ma niuna memoria essendo rimasta di vescovi anteriori a S Massimo e l episcopato di questo Santo non potendosi protrarre molto in su nel secolo IV noi incliniamo a credere che l episcopato di Torino fosse instituto insieme con quello di Novara nel 398 oppure verso questo tempo Savio pp 283 294 at p 293 Semeria pp 24 26 Savio pp 225 226 Kehr p 81 no 1 J P Migne Patrologia Latina Vol 77 p 1045 no 115 Herbermann 1913 Rondolino p 10 citing Paul the Deacon at p 23 note 10 Semeria p 50 Cross amp Livingstone 1997 p 359 H E J Cowdrey 20 August 1998 Pope Gregory VII 1073 1085 Clarendon Press pp 66 282 283 ISBN 978 0 19 158459 6 The controversy had already involved Pope Alexander II according to William of Chiusa the biographer of Abbot Benedict Monumenta Germaniae Historica Scriptores Tomus XII Hannover Hahn 1856 p 204 Semeria pp 80 83 Kehr pp 82 84 nos 7 13 Savio p 372 Elie Berger Les registres d Innocent IV Tome premier Paris Ernest Thorin 1884 p 41 no 228 Savio pp 372 373 Berger p 115 no 675 Chiuso pp 443 445 Semeria p 492 These documents make it clear that there was no intermediate bishop the alleged Thomas de Sabaudia as indicated by Eubel I p 475 repeating information from Gams p 824 The alleged date of Bishop Teodesius death October 1318 is merely the date of his latest known document Chiuso pp 448 453 Semeria p 265 Ughelli IV pp 1058 1060 Semeria pp 161 164 Jean Mary Stone 1904 Reformation and Renaissance circa 1377 1610 London Duckworth and Company p 313 ISBN 9780837070247 Semeria p 287 Semeria pp 338 341 Aldo Scaglione 1986 The Liberal Arts and the Jesuit College System Amsterdam Philadelphia John Benjamins Publishing pp 137 138 ISBN 90 272 2035 2 Semeria p 288 289 G Cappelletti Le chiese d Italia XIV Venezia Stabilimento nazionale 1858 pp 68 69 Manuel Borutta Anti Catholicism and the Culture War in Risorgimento Italy in S Patriarca L Riall 2011 Chapter 10 The Risorgimento Revisited Nationalism and Culture in Nineteenth Century Italy New York Saint Martins Palgrave Macmillan p 323 ISBN 978 0 230 36275 8 Maria Franca Mellano 1964 Il caso Fransoni e la politica ecclesiastica piemontese 1848 1850 in Italian Rome Gregorian Biblical BookShop ISBN 978 88 7652 447 9 Emanuele Colomiatti 1902 Mons Luigi dei marchesi Fransoni arcivescovo di Torino 1832 1862 in Italian Torino G Derossi pp 490 494 Rondolino pp 9 10 Semeria p 195 Giovanni Romano 1990 Domenico Della Rovere e il Duomo Nuovo di Torino rinascimento a Roma e in Piemonte in Italian Turin Cassa di Risparmio di Torino Giuseppe Tuninetti Gianluca D Antino 2000 Il cardinal Domenico Della Rovere costruttore della cattedrale e gli arcivescovi di Torino dal 1515 al 2000 in Italian Cantalupa Torino Effata Editrice IT ISBN 978 88 86617 54 3 Savio p 320 Semeria pp 406 407 Colleges of Canons were being created at cathedrals in accordance with the French Council of Aquisgranda 816 and the Roman council of Pope Eugene II 826 Ughelli p 1021 Bosio p 1775 who labels Walpert a diacono cardinale Bosio p 1784 Bosio p 1800 Bosio p 1805 Chiuso p 435 Bosio p 1794 Ritzler Sefrin V p 370 note 1 Ritzler Sefrin VI p 395 note 1 Cappelletti pp 72 73 Diocesi di Torino Seminari retrieved 07 14 2018 in Italian Benedictus XIV 1842 Lib I caput secundum De Synodi Dioecesanae utilitate Benedicti XIV De Synodo dioecesana libri tredecim in Latin Vol Tomus primus Mechlin Hanicq pp 42 49 John Paul II Constitutio Apostolica de Synodis Dioecesanis Agendis March 19 1997 Acta Apostolicae Sedis 89 1997 pp 706 727 Diocesi di Torino Sinodi retrieved 13 July 2018 in Italian The list is derived ultimately from Antonio Bosio s notes to Josephus Franciscus Myranesius De Episcopis et Archiepiscopis Taurinensibus in Historiae patriae monumenta in Latin and Italian Vol Tomus XI Scriptores Tomus IV Turin e regio typographeo 1863 pp 1727 1739 Savio pp 281 282 warns of Myranesio s habit of falsifying documents charters and inscriptions Savio p 356 Schwartz p 134 The text is published by Bosio pp 1728 1735 The contents are standard synodal regulations especially for the conduct of the clergy and the proper administration of the sacraments Bosio pp 1735 1736 It established a fixed time for a synod to meet on the Tuesday before Rogation Days quatuor temporum and forbade persons from ordering their tombs in any other place than where their ancestors were buried The synod also adapted several canons from a synod at Lyon concerning usury It was required of all clergy to read the constitutions of the synod in their churches on three successive Sundays after the synod Bosio pp 1736 1737 Semeria p 288 provides details Synodus prima dioecesana Taurinensis a Julio Coesare Bergera archiepiscopo Taurinensi habita ann 1647 in Latin Turin J Sinibaldus 1647 Synodus Dioecesana Taurinensis habita in Ecclesia Metropolitana ab lII mo ac Rev mo Domino Michaele Beyamo Archiep Taurinensi die XXVIII Maij MDCLXX 2 ed reimpressa Taurini ex Typ Joannis Jacobi Ghiringhelli 1719 Prima diœcesana Synodus Taurinensis celebrata 12 et 11 Kal Majas 1755 Ab excellentissimo amp reverendissimo domino D Joanne Baptista Rotario Archiepiscopo Taurinensi in Latin Turin typis Zappatae amp Avondi 1755 Synodus discesana Taurinensis quam excellentissimus et reverendissimus D D Victorius Cajetanus Costa archiepiscopus Taurinensis habuit 13 12 11 Calendas septembris anni 1788 in Latin Turin heredes Avondo 1788 Diocesi di Torino Assemblea diocesana retrieved 2018 07 14 in Italian It is not clear whether they have the same significance as a diocesan synod Maximus Savio pp 283 294 Savio deduces that Maximus I presided over the synod of Turin in 398 and that he died in 420 Lanzoni pp 1046 1047 Bishop Maximus was present at the provincial council of Milan in 451 under Archbishop Eusebius He was also present at the Roman council of Pope Hilarius in November 465 J D Mansi Sacrorum Conciliorum nova et amplissima collectio editio novissima Tomus sextus 6 Florence 1761 p 528 Tomus Septimus 7 Florence A Zatta 1762 p 959 Ughelli IV p 1022 In May 494 Bishos Victor of Turin and Epiphanius of Pavia were sent on an embassy to the King of Burgundy by King Theoderic Savio pp 295 296 Lanzoni pp 1047 1048 Tigridius was present at the Roman synods of Pope Symmachus in 501 502 and 503 Ughelli p 1022 J D Mansi Sacrorum Conciliorum nova et amplissima collectio editio novissima Tomus octavus 8 Florence 1762 pp 252 263 268 Savio p 296 He is mentioned in one of Gregory of Tours miraculous stories Savio pp 296 297 Lanzoni pp 1048 1049 Bishop Ursicinus was consecrated in 560 and died on 20 October 609 His tombstone discovered in 1843 states that he was bishop for 46 years and died around the age of 80 Rondolino p 34 35 with photo Savio pp 297 299 Lanzoni pp 1049 1050 Rusticus was present at the Roman synod of Pope Agatho in 679 or 680 He was buried on 15 September 691 Semeria p 45 Rondolino pp 36 37 with photo Savio p 300 makes no mention of this person nor does Bosio pp 1609 1610 nor does Semeria p 50 nor does Ughelli p 1025 Claudius was an iconoclast and he rejected the use of images the cult of the cross and the practice of pilgrimages Claudius died in 827 he was not deposed for heresy though refutations of his opinions were beginning to circulate Noble p 290 Semeria pp 53 59 Savio pp 301 319 Thomas F X Noble 2012 Chapter Seven Art and Argument in the Age of Louis the Pious Images Iconoclasm and the Carolingians Philadelphia University of Pennsylvania Press pp 287 364 ISBN 978 0 8122 0296 0 Witgerius served on at least one occasion as missus dominicus Savio pp 319 320 Semeria p 59 is out of date in his rejection of Witgerius as Savio points out Semeria p 59 The document which mentions Lancius has been identified as a forgery by Semeria p 66 and as a copyist s error for Amulo by Savio p 324 There was no Bishop Lancius Amolone was accused of having been involved in the death of the Emperor Lambert who died on 15 October 898 Semeria p 61 62 Carlo Cipolla Di Audace vescovo di Asti e di due documenti inediti che lo riguardano Torino 1887 p 228 Savio pp 322 325 Eginolf Heginulfus Hegilulfus Ughelli p 1027 Savio pp 325 326 suggests that the bishop is actually Bishop Heilulfus of Asti In 906 during an invasion of Saracens Bishop Guglielmo received the monks of Novalesa and gave them the church of S Andrea it was at this time that the remains of S Solutore were brought to Turin The monks were still there in 929 Savio pp 326 328 In 955 he served as a Missus for the Emperor In 969 he was unable to attend the synod of Milan but sent the Archdeacon Guntard to represent him Schwartz p 130 In 989 Amizo made a donation to the monastery of S Pietro Bishop Amizo was present at the synod of Pope Gregory V at Pavia in the Spring of 997 Savio pp 331 334 Schwartz p 130 In October 1046 Bishop Cunibertus was present at the synod of Pavia He was at the Roman synod of 1049 and was summoned to the Roman synod of Pope Nicholas II in 1059 In 1063 Pope Alexander II wrote to him replying to an inquiry and stating that a special penance for breaking the newly invented Truce of God could not be imposed since it was not covered by canon law He is said to have been a follower of the Emperor Henry IV and after the Emperor s excommunication to have been a schismatic William of Chiusa Monumenta Germaniae Historica Scriptores Tomus XII p 204 Savio pp 347 350 Schwartz pp 131 132 Carlo Cipolla 1900 La Bulla Maior di Cuniberto vescovo di Torino Memorie della Reale Accademia delle Scienze di Torino Serie II Tom L in Italian Torino C Clausen Witelmus loosely called Wilelmus by some is known from only two documents one dated 3 August 1083 in the third year of his episcopate the other is dated 15 March 1089 The author of the Life of St Benedict Abbot of Chiusa characterizes him as omnium quos terra sustinet moribus esset turpissimus Of all living people his morals were the worst Savio pp 350 351 Guiberto Savio pp 352 353 Cipolla p 12 114 On 15 July 1100 Bishop Mainardus took part in the consecration of Bishop Grossolano of Savona He may have joined the schism of Wibert Antipope Clement III 1084 1100 He died on 10 September 1117 or 1118 Savio pp 353 354 On 13 December 1122 he appears in a document and again in December 1125 in a document of Archbishop Olrich of Milan Schwartz p 134 Guilelmus Savio pp 353 354 Carlo Savio p 364 Milo had been Archdeacon of the Church of Milan before becoming Bishop of Turin and continued to hold the Archdiaconate during his term as bishop He was elected Archbishop of Milan on 5 December 1187 Savio p 365 Chiuso p 434 Arduino s latest document is dated 7 June 1207 Savio pp 366 369 Cf Eubel I p 475 who cites Savio but follows the older incorrect date given by Gams p 824 Carisio Eubel I p 475 Hugo resigned in 1243 and retired to the Cistercian house in Genoa where he was seen by Fra Salimbene in 1249 Savio p 372 Joannes was elected by mandate of Pope Innocent IV carried out by the Papal Legate Gregorio de Montelongo Savio p 372 Teodisius Eubel I p 475 with note 3 Guido Canale Semeria pp 192 193 The second Thomas of Savoy was only 24 years old when appointed by Pope Clement VI He was consecrated a bishop on 3 April 1351 by Bishop Nicholas of Aosta Eubel I p 475 with note 5 Aimo Eubel I p 475 II p 247 Ludovicus de Romagnano Eubel II p 247 Giovanni had been Abbot of Six in Geneva He received his bulls for Turin on 21 November 1469 He was transferred to the diocese of Geneva on 24 July 1482 by Pope Sixtus IV della Rovere On 14 June 1484 he was transferred to the diocese of Tarentaise where he died on 28 June 1492 Eubel II pp 158 245 247 Domenico born in Turin in 1442 was the brother of Cardinal Cristoforo della Rovere Domenico was named a cardinal in the Consistory of 10 February 1478 by Pope Sixtus IV della Rovere and was elected Archbishop of Tarentaise in 1478 He was transferred to the diocese of Geneva on 19 July 1482 and to the diocese of Turin on 24 July 1482 He spent most of his time at the Roman Curia where died on 22 April 1501 G C Alessi Biografia e bibliografia di Domenico della Rovere in Italia medioevale e umanistica 27 1984 pp 175 231 Eubel II p 18 no 23 158 245 247 Giovanni Ludovico son of Giacomo della Rovere was the first cousin of Cardinal Domenico and acted as his Vicar General from 1484 to 1489 Giovanni della Rovere was appointed Coadjutor with the right of succession on 10 May 1504 by Pope Julius II He was promoted to the rank of Metropolitan Archbishop by Pope Leo X on 21 May 1515 He died towards the end of 1516 Eubel Hierarchia catholica III p 309 Giovanni della Rovere was promoted to the rank of Metropolitan Archbishop by Pope Leo X on 21 May 1515 He died towards the end of 1516 Eubel Hierarchia catholica III p 309 Cybo was the nephew of Pope Leo X 1513 1521 and the cousin of Pope Clement VII 1523 1534 He was created a cardinal at the age of twenty two and was twenty five years old at the time of his appointment to Turin He was never consecrated a bishop and therefore could only be Administrator He could however collect the income Innocenzo Cybo and his nephew Cesare Cybo have been accused of lack of interest in the diocese and ignorant and neglectful of their pastoral duties Lucia Felici 2009 Profezie di riforma e idee di concordia religiosa visioni e speranze dell esule piemontese Giovanni Leonardo Sartori in Italian Rome L S Olschki p 20 ISBN 978 88 222 5822 9 Innocenzo e Cesare Cybo sempre assenti dalla loro sedi e disinteressati alla cura delle anime e delle istituzioni ignoranti e inadempienti dei loro doveri pastorali soprattutto nelle Valli Valdesi i sacerdoti incline al libertinaggio gran parte del clero regolare Luigi Staffetti Il cardinale Innocenzo Cybo Firenze 1894 Seyssel held the degree Doctor in utroque iure civil and canon law and had been a Councilor and Master of Requests of King Louis XII through whose influence he was elected Canon and Archdeacon of the Cathedral Chapter of Bourges He had then been Bishop of Marseille 1511 1517 He was transferred to the diocese of Turin by Pope Leo X on 11 May 1517 He was a prolific author of works on history law and moral theology He died on 1 June 1520 His Last Will and Testament dated 27 May 1520 along with several inventories survives Chiusi pp 499 519 According to those documents p 506 notarized by a Public Notary he died Die Mercurii penultima die mensis Maji hora XVIa dicti diei 30 May 1520 Semeria pp 267 275 Eubel III pp 237 with note 3 309 Innocenzo Cybo s Vicar in Turin was Bishop Filippo Mari of Ventimiglia Semeria pp 276 282 Staffetti pp 235 236 Born in Genoa in 1495 Cesare Cybo Usodimare had been Administrator until he was 27 years of age and then Bishop of Mariana Sardinia from 1 December 1531 He was succeeded there on 22 June 1548 by his brother Ottaviano Cybo as he was promoted to the diocese of Turin He died on 26 December 1562 Semeria pp 282 284 Eubel III pp 235 309 D Avalos was appointed on 3 January 1563 and resigned on 12 May 1564 Semeria pp 284 285 Eubel III p 309 Della Rovere had been Provost of the Cathedral Chapter of Turin He was nominated Bishop of Toulon by the King of France and preconised approved by Pope Pius IV on 26 January 1560 King Charles IX of France appointed della Rovere his ambassador to the Duke of Savoy and he so impressed both the Duke and Cardinal d Avalos that the Cardinal resigned in his favor Della Rovere was transferred to the diocese of Turin on 12 May 1564 He was named a cardinal on 16 November 1586 and assigned the titular church of San Pietro in Vincoli the sixth of his family to hold that title since Pope Sixtus IV in 1467 He died in Rome on 26 January 1592 or on 7 February Eubel contradicts himself Semeria pp 285 293 Eubel III pp 51 no 10 309 315 Born in Chieri in 1552 of the family of the lords of Santena in 1591 he was elected Abbot of Fruttuaria Broglia had been Abbot of S Benigno He had been tutor of the sons of Charles Emmanuel I Duke of Savoy He was appointed Archbishop of Turin by Pope Clement VIII on 20 November 1592 and was consecrated in Rome by Cardinal Agostino Valerio Bishop of Verona on 30 November He held a diocesan visitation and then a diocesan synod in 1595 He died on 8 February 1617 Semeria pp 293 305 Eubel III p 309 Gauchat Hierarchia catholica IV p 329 with note 2 Born in 1564 Milliet was the son of Baron Ludovico of Faverges the Archchancellor of Duke Carlo Emanuele I He obtained the degree Doctor in utroque iure civil and canon law from the Sapienza in Rome in 1585 and was appointed rector of the church of S Andrea ai Monti Pope Gregory XIII appointed him Prior Commendatory of S Pietro di Lemens and Dean of Viry diocese of Geneva Pope Sixtus V named him titular Bishop of Hierapolis Turkey in 1590 and appointed him Coadjutor of his uncle Pietro Lamberto Milliet Bishop of Mariana Corsica He succeeded to the diocese on the death of his uncle on 6 May 1591 On 15 March 1608 the Duke named him Abbot of Aulps Milliet was transferred to the diocese of Turin on 17 December 1618 by Pope Paul V He died on 17 November 1624 Semeria pp 305 307 Gauchat p 329 Ferrero Semeria pp 307 308 Gauchat p 329 with note 4 The principal cause of the disruption was the war between Francis I of France and the Holy Roman Emperor Charles V It brought in its wake death pillage plague and famine Semeria pp 308 309 Provana was the son of Giovanni Francesco de Conti di Bussolino e di Collegno Grand Chancellor of Duke Carlo Emanuele of Savoy Antonio obtained a degree of Doctor in utroque iure from Turin in 1604 He was appointed Savoyard Ambassador to Venice in 1605 during the strife between Pope Paul V and the Serene Republic He enjoyed the patronage of Cardinal Maurizio di Savoia in Rome He was named to the office of Protonotary Apostolic by papal bull of 20 July 1622 and titular bishop of Dyrrachium Durazzo Albania on 21 July 1622 His transfer to Turin was approved in Consistory by Pope Urban VIII on 19 January 1632 He died on 25 July 1640 Semeria pp 308 313 Gauchat pp 179 with note 3 329 with note 5 Carlo Pio de Magistris 1906 Carlo Emanuele I e la contesa fra la repubblica veneta e Paolo V 1605 1607 Documenti editi a cura di Carlo De Magistris Miscellanea di storia veneta serie seconda Tom X in Italian Venezia a spese della Societa p passim Giuseppe Tuninetti Gianluca D Antino 2000 Il cardinal Domenico Della Rovere costruttore della cattedrale e gli arcivescovi di Torino dal 1515 al 2000 stemmi alberi genealogici e profili biografici in Italian Effata Editrice IT pp 94 95 ISBN 978 88 86617 54 3 Bergera Bergeria on his tombstone was a native of Turin and held the degree Doctor in utroque iure civil and canon law He was Provost of the Cathedral Chapter of Turin and was elected Vicar Capitular during the Sede Vacante of 1640 1643 He was named Archbishop of Turin on 23 February 1643 In 1646 he conducted a formal visitation of the Collegiate Church of Chieri for whose Chapter he issued new statutes He also visited the Collegiate Church of Rivoli in September 1646 He held a synod on 15 May 1647 He died in 1660 at the age of sixty seven Semeria pp 314 317 Gauchat p 329 with note 6 Beggiamo had previously been Bishop of Mondovi He died in October 1689 Gauchat p 329 with note 7 Vibo was born in Turin in 1630 and was ordained a priest in 1654 He held the degree doctor of philosophy and master of theology from the University of Turin 1658 He also held the degree Doctor in utroque iure civil and canon law from Turin He was named Abbot Commendatory of SS Pietro ed Andrea di Ripalta He served as Internuncio in Paris from April 1666 to November 1668 and again from July 1671 to June 1672 He was named Governor of Carpentras and the Comtat Venaissin in 1672 a post he held for ten years He was appointed Archbishop of Turin in Consistory on 27 November 1690 by Pope Alexander VIII on the nomination of Duke Vittore Amadeo of Savoy He died on 13 February 1713 at the age of 83 Semeria pp 320 325 Ritzler Sefrin Hierarchia catholica V p 370 with note 2 Victor Amadeus of Savoy had become King of Sardinia at the conclusion of the War of the Spanish Succession in 1713 He and the papacy were at odds concerning the claims of the King to regalian rights in his domain that is the right to claim the income of vacant dioceses and monasteries during the vacancy and the right to nominate a new incumbent The model for the King s claim was the similar claim of Louis XIV During the Vacancy in Turin the diocese was governed by vicars capitular Ignacio Carocio 1713 1716 and Filippo Domenico Tarino 1716 1727 Semeria pp 321 323 Domenico Carutti barone di Cantogno 1879 Storia della diplomazia della corte di Savoia 1663 1730 in Italian Torino Fratelli Bocca pp 583 614 Pier Carlo Boggio 1854 La chiesa e lo stato in Piemonte sposizione storico critica dei rapporti fra la S Sede e la corte di Sardegna dal 1000 al 1854 in Italian Vol primo Torino Seb Franco e figlii e Company pp 113 118 Francesco was born in the town of Gravellona diocese of Vigevano in 1656 As a youth he entered the Barnabite Congregation Clerics Regular of St Paul and engaged in the usual studies of philosophy and theology He was named Bishop of Alessandria in 1706 and was transferred to the diocese of Turin on 25 June 1727 by Pope Benedict XIII on the nomination of Victor Amadeus II of Savoy King of Sardinia on 11 June 1727 He conducted a diocesan visitation immediately and then held a diocesan synod in 1729 He was Chancellor of the Royal Athenaeum and Prefect of the Royal Chapel Gattinara died in Turin in October 1743 Semeria pp 360 362 Ritzler Sefrin V pp 370 371 with note 3 Semeria pp 362 364 Ritzler Sefrin VI p 395 with note 2 Semeria pp 364 366 Ritzler Sefrin VI p 395 with note 3 Costa was born in Turin in 1737 and held the degree Doctor in utroque iure Civil and Canon Law 1767 He had been Rector of the Royal University and Almoner to the King of Sardinia and was then on the King s nomination Bishop of Vercelli 1769 1778 Costa was transferred to the diocese of Turin on the King s nomination on 28 September 1778 He was named a cardinal by Pope Pius VI on 30 March 1789 and sent the red biretta He died on 16 May 1796 Semeria pp 367 370 Ritzler Sefrin VI pp 36 no 55 395 with note 4 438 with note 3 Oreste Favaro Costa Vittorio Gaetano Dizionario Biografico degli Italiani Volume 30 1984 in Italian Named on 24 July 1797 Semeria pp 370 374 Ritzler Sefrin VI p 395 with note 5 Born in Saluzzo in 1757 Della Torre was a member of the family of the Counts of Luserna e Valle He entered the Congregation of S Agostino di Lombardia and held the offices of teacher of philosophy and theology Master of Novices and Prior of the Convent in Turin In 1789 he was named Bishop of Sassari Sardinia On 24 July 1797 he was transferred to the diocese of Acqui and on 24 July 1805 he was transferred by Pope Pius VII to the diocese of Turin on the approval of Napoleon I He restored the seminary In 1811 he went to Paris for the national assembly of French bishops and was elected Secretary of the assembly When the Calvinists and other heretical sects wanted to open a church in Turin he lobbied Prince Borghese the Provincial Governor General and the Minister of Cults in Paris and had the plan dropped He died on 8 April 1814 Semeria pp 375 377 Ritzler Sefrin VI pp 93 423 VII p 360 During the Sede vacante which included the fall of Napoleon after Waterloo the Hundred Days the Congress of Vienna the restoration of the Kingdom of Sardinia and the restoration of the Papal States the diocese of Turin was governed by the Vicar Capitular Emanuele Gonetti Semeria p 377 Bosio p 1771 Chiaverotti had been Bishop of Ivrea from 1817 to 1818 He was named Archbishop of Turin by Pope Pius VII on 21 December 1818 He died on 6 August 1831 Semeria pp 377 379 Ritzler Sefrin VII pp 225 361 A native of Turin Gastaldi had previously been Bishop of Saluzzo 1867 1871 He was transferred to the diocese of Turin by Pope Pius IX on 27 October 1871 He died on 25 March 1883 Ritzler Sefrin Hierarchia catholica VIII pp 51 86 538 Ritzler Sefrin Hierarchia catholica VIII pp 494 538 Riccardi Ritzler Sefrin Hierarchia catholica VIII pp 324 420 538 Richelmy had previously been Bishop of Ivrea 1886 1897 He was transferred to the diocese of Turin by Pope Leo XIII on 18 September 1897 and was named a cardinal on 19 June 1899 He died in Turin on 10 August 1923 Harris M Lentz 2002 Popes and Cardinals of the 20th Century A Biographical Dictionary London McFarland amp Company pp 155 156 ISBN 978 0 7864 1094 1 Martin Brauer 2014 Handbuch der Kardinale 1846 2012 in German Berlin De Gruyter pp 1901 1902 ISBN 978 3 11 037077 5 Ritzler Sefrin Hierarchia catholica VIII pp 48 52 324 538 Gamba had been Canon and Vicar General of Asti He was named Bishop of Biella in 1901 and was transferred to the diocese of Novara in 1906 On 20 December 1923 he was transferred by Pope Pius IX to the diocese of Turin On 20 December 1926 he was named a cardinal He died in Turin on 26 December 1929 and was buried in the Cathedral Lentz p 76 Brauer p 1910 Lentz p 73 Brauer p 1910 1911 Brauer p 1966 Brauer p 1996 1997 Lentz p 163 Lentz p 210 a b Rinunce e nomine 19 02 2022 Press release in Italian Holy See Press Office 19 February 2022 Retrieved 19 February 2022 Books editReference works edit Gams Pius Bonifatius 1873 Series episcoporum Ecclesiae catholicae quotquot innotuerunt a beato Petro apostolo Ratisbon Typis et Sumptibus Georgii Josephi Manz pp 813 814 in Latin Eubel Conradus ed 1913 Hierarchia catholica Vol Tomus 1 second ed Munster Libreria Regensbergiana in Latin Eubel Conradus ed 1914 Hierarchia catholica Vol Tomus 2 second ed Munster Libreria Regensbergiana in Latin Gulik Guilelmus 1923 Eubel Conradus ed Hierarchia catholica Vol Tomus 3 second ed Munster Libreria Regensbergiana in Latin Gauchat Patritius Patrice 1935 Hierarchia catholica Vol Tomus IV 1592 1667 Munster Libraria Regensbergiana Retrieved 2016 07 06 in Latin 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 Vol Tomus VI 1730 1799 Patavii Messagero di S Antonio Retrieved 2016 07 06 in Latin 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 Studies edit Casiraghi Giampietro 1979 La diocesi di Torino nei medioevo Biblioteca storica subalpina 196 in Italian Turin Deputazione subalpina di storia patria Chiuso Tomaso Saggio di antichi documenti dell Archivio arcivescovile di Torino In Miscellanea di storia italiana Tomo XVIII Torino Fratelli Bocca 1889 pp 421 522 Cross F L Livingstone E A eds 13 March 1997 The Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church 3rd edition USA Oxford University Press p 359 ISBN 0 19 211655 X Kehr Paul Fridolin 1914 Italia pontificia sive Repertorium privilegiorum et litterarum a romanis pontificibus ante annum 1598 Italiae ecclesiis monasteriis civitatibus singulisque personis concessorum Vol VI pars ii Berolini Weidmann pp 79 139 Lanzoni Francesco 1927 Le diocesi d Italia dalle origini al principio del secolo VII an 604 Faenza F Lega pp 1044 1050 in Italian Savio Fedele 1898 Gli antichi Vescovi d Italia il Piemonte in Italian Torino Bocca pp 281 376 Schwartz Gerhard 1907 Die Besetzung der Bistumer Reichsitaliens unter den sachsischen und salischen Kaisern mit den Listen der Bischofe 951 1122 Leipzig B G Teubner in German Semeria Giovanni Battista 1840 Storia della chiesa metropolitana di Torino in Italian Torino Fontana Ughelli Ferdinando Coleti Niccolo 1719 Italia sacra sive de episcopis Italiae et insularum adjacentium in Latin Vol Tomus quartus 4 2nd ed Venice Apud Sebastianum Coleti pp 925 979 Tuninetti Giuseppe D Antino Gianluca 2000 Il cardinal Domenico Della Rovere costruttore della cattedrale e gli arcivescovi di Torino dal 1515 al 2000 stemmi alberi genealogici e profili biografici in Italian Torino Effata Editrice IT ISBN 978 88 86617 54 3 acknowledgment edit nbsp This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Herbermann Charles ed 1913 Turin Catholic Encyclopedia New York Robert Appleton Company External links editOfficial Website in Italian 45 04 24 N 7 41 07 E 45 0733 N 7 6854 E 45 0733 7 6854 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Turin amp oldid 1215420701, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.