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Roman Catholic Diocese of Guastalla

The Diocese of Guastalla (Dioecesis Guastallensis) was a Catholic suffragan bishopric in the province of Reggio Emilia, Italy, from 1828 to 1986. It began as a small chapel, ordered by a Holy Roman Emperor in 865; it was promoted into being a parish; it then became a territorial abbey; and finally, after the Napoleonic occupation of Italy, it was made a diocese at the request of his second wife. The diocese employed the Roman rite.[1][2]

Cathedral of S. Peter

History edit

Guastalla began as a chapel, built on order of the Emperor Louis II dated 2 November 865, on territory given to his wife Engelberga.[3] Ecclesiastically, the chapel was part of the diocese of Reggio; the bishop subinfeudated the chapel into the hands of Boniface, Count of Toscana.

The parish edit

The chapel of S. Peter was promoted into being a parish church (plebes, piave) c. 996–999 by Pope Gregory V.[4] In 1101 Countess Matilda of Tuscany bestowed liberty upon the church of Guastalla.[5]

On 21 October 1106, Pope Paschal II held a council in Guastalla of bishops from France, Germany and Italy. He declared that, since the See of Ravenna had so frequently opposed the leadership of the Church of Rome, the dioceses of Parma, Reggio, Modena, and Bologna should never thereafter be subject to Ravenna as their metropolitan.[6]

By 1145 the Church of S. Peter at Guastalla was presided over by an Archpriest, as Pope Eugene III noted in his bull which took the Church of Guastalla under the protection of the Holy See. He also granted them the right to seek holy oils, consecrations and ordinations from whichever Catholic bishop they wished.[7] The archive of the Archpriest of the Pieve of Guastalla was destroyed in 1557 as a casualty of war.[8]

Guastalla formed part of the diocese of Reggio until 1471, when the Collegiate Church of S. Peter of Guastalla was declared to be nullius dioecesis (of no diocese) and was territorially detached from the jurisdiction of the bishop of Reggio Emilia.[9]

The territorial abbey edit

On 5 November 1585 Pope Sixtus V promoted the parish to the status of a secular territorial abbey nullius dioecesis (belonging to no diocese), as the abbey of San Pietro Apostolo di Guastalla.[10]

The territorial Abbots edit

  1. Bernardino Baldi d'Urbino (1585–1607)
  2. Pietro Baruffoni (1607–1613)
  3. Marcello Celio Arcelli of Piacenza(1613–1615)
  4. Troilo Accorsini d'Acquapendente (1616–1623)
  5. Vincenzio Loiani of Bologna (1623–1624)
  6. Giambattista Gherardini (1624–1651)
  7. Giacopo Quinziani of Reggio (1652–1686)
  8. Cesare Spilimbergo (1686 1710)
  9. Guidobono Mazzucchini (1711–1755)
  10. Francesco Tirelli of Guastalla (1755–1792)
  11. Francesco Scutellari (1792–1826)
  12. Giovanni Neuschel (1826–1828)

The eleventh Abbot Ordinary of Guastalla, Francesco Maria Scutellari of Parma, was also titular bishop of Joppa (Palestine).[11] He ruled Guastalla from 1792 until his death in 1826. His death brought about a major change in the status of the Pieve. He was succeeded by the chaplain of Marie Louise, Duchess of Parma, Giovanni Neuschel, titular bishop of Alessandria Troas (Ilio), from 1826 to 1828.[12]

By a decree of Pope Pius VII in an apostolic letter of 1 December 1821, as part of a general reorganization of the hierarchy of Italy following the expulsion of the French, the territory of the Abbey of Guastalla became subject to the Diocese of Parma. It had been subject to the Diocese of Milan, under the French organization of the Cisalpine Republic (1797–1802) and the Napoleonic Kingdom of Italy (1805–1814).[13]

The diocese edit

In his papal bull De commisso of 13 September 1828, Pope Leo XII, at the request of Marie Louise, Duchess of Parma, created the bishopric of Guastalla. He decreed that the diocese be directly subject to the Holy See (Papacy) unless and until the pope decided otherwise. He suppressed the abbatial college chapter, and ordered the creation of a new cathedral Chapter. The Chapter was to consist of five dignities (the Archpriest, the Archdeacon, the Provost, the Dean, and the Primicerius), sixteen Canons, and seven mansionarii. The two senior Canons were to be the Theologus and the Penitentiarius, in accordance with the decrees of the Council of Trent.[14]

In 1920, the diocese of Guastalla had 26 parishes, 58 other churches and chapels, 76 diocesan priests, and 25 students in the seminary.[15] In 1980, it had 30 parishes, 47 diocesan priests, and 3 priests belonging to Religious Orders.[16]

After a vacancy of nearly thirty months, following the death of Bishop Angelo Zambarbieri, Pope Paul VI appointed Bishop Gilberto Baroni, who was already bishop of Reggio Emilia, to also be bishop of Guastalla. Bishop Baroni had been acting as Apostolic Administrator of the diocese of Guastalla during the Sede vacante. On 30 September 1986, the diocese was suppressed by Pope John Paul II, and its territory and title merged into the Diocese of Reggio Emilia, with the new name of Reggio Emilia–Guastalla. Guastalla became Vicariate IV of the diocese of Reggio Emilia-Guastalla.[17][1]

Bishops edit

  • Giovanni Tommaso Neuschel (1828–1836)[18]
  • Pietro Giovanni Zanardi (1836–1854)[19]
  • Pietro Rota (1855–1871)[20]
  • Francesco Benassi (1871–retired 1884)[21]
  • Prospero Curti (1884–1890)[22]
  • Andrea Carlo Ferrari (1890–1891)[23]
  • Pietro Respighi (1891–1896)[24]
  • Enrico Grazioli (1896–1897)[25]
  • Andrea Sarti (1897–1909)[26]
  • Agostino Cattaneo (1910–1923)[27]
  • Giordano Corsini (1923–1932)[28]
  • Giacomo Zaffrani (1932–1960)[29]
  • Angelo Zambarbieri (1960–1970)[30]
Sede vacante (1970–1973)
  • Gilberto Baroni (1973–1986)[31]

Notes and references edit

  1. ^ a b "Diocese of Guastalla" Catholic-Hierarchy.org. David M. Cheney. Retrieved 7 October 2016.[self-published source]
  2. ^ "Diocese of Guastalla" GCatholic.org. Gabriel Chow. Retrieved 7 October 2016.[self-published source]
  3. ^ Affò, Antichità, pp. 4-6.
  4. ^ Affò, Istoria, Tomo primo, p. 73. Philippus Jaffé and S. Loewenfeld, Regesta pontificum Romanorum I, editio altera (Leipzig: Veit 1884), p. 494, no 3893.
  5. ^ The Countess' charter makes specific mention of Pope Gregory V's promotion of the chapel into a church. Affò, Antichità, pp. 31-34. Cappelletti, p. 426-427.
  6. ^ Monumenta Germaniae Historica 2, Leges 4, Constitutiones 1 (Hannover: Hahn 1893), p. 565. Uta-Renate Blumenthal (1978). The Early Councils of Pope Paschal II, 1100-1110. Toronto: Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies. pp. 37, 51–54. ISBN 978-0-88844-043-3.
  7. ^ J. P. Migne (editor). Patrologiae Series Latina Tomus CLXXX (Paris: Garnier 1902), pp. 1048-1050. The bull of Pope Lucius II of 1144, in which it is alleged that Guastalla was subject to Reggio, is interpolated: Cappelletti, pp. 427-428.
  8. ^ Palese et al., Guida degli archivi capitolari (2003), p. 72.
  9. ^ Cappelletti, p. 430.
  10. ^ "abbatiam vero collegiatam et parochialem ecclesiam Deo et Sancto Petro apostolorum principi dicatam". Bullarii Romani Continuatio (in Latin). Vol. Tomus Decimus Septimus (17). Rome. 1855. pp. 391–393, § 3.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) Affò (1787). Istoria. Vol. Tomo terzo. pp. 83–84. Cappelletti, pp. 430-432.
  11. ^ Scutellari was born in Parma in 1742. He held the degree Doctor in utroque iure from the Sapienza, Rome (1789). He was a Canon of the Cathedral Chapter of Parma, and had been Vicar Capitular. Ritzler-Sefrin, VI, p. 245 with note 3.
  12. ^ Gaetano Buttafuoco (1854). Dizionario corografico dei ducati di Parma, Piacenza e Guastalla (in Italian). Vol. 2. Milano: Giuseppe Civelli e Comp. p. 44.
  13. ^ Bullarii Romani Continuatio. 1855. p. 392, § 7. Ritzler-Sefrin, VI, p. 245, note 3.
  14. ^ Bullarii Romani Continuatio. 1855. p. 392. In § 8, Leo XII writes, "Declaramus interea quod Guastallensis episcopalis ecclesia apostolicae Sedi immediate subjecta censeri debeat, nisi Nobis et Romanis pontificibus successoribus Nostris aliter in posterum visum fuerit."
  15. ^ The Catholic Encyclopedia. Vol. Supplement 1 (c1922). New York: Encyclopedia Press. 1922. p. 355.
  16. ^ David M. Cheney, Catholic-Hierarchy.org, "Diocese of Guastalla"; retrieved: 28 September 2018.[self-published source]
  17. ^ Sassuolo2000.it Quotidiana online, "Reggio Emilia: intitolazione via a monsignor Gilberto Baroni", 10 November 2012; retrieved: 29 September 2018. (in Italian)
  18. ^ Neuschel was a Hungarian abbot, and chaplain to the regnant Duchess of Parma, Maria Luisa. He had previously been Titular Bishop of Troas (1828); and was appointed to the diocese of Guastalla by Pope Leo XII on 20 September 1828. He was transferred to the diocese of Borgo San Donnino on 21 November 1836. On 27 January 1843, he was appointed Bishop of Parma He retired on 17 September 1852, and on his retirement he was appointed Titular Archbishop of Theodosiopolis (Aprus) (Armenia Minor). He died on 10 December 1863. Gams, pp. 743, 759. Ritzler-Sefrin, VII, pp. 122, 208, 300, 379; VIII, p. 547.
  19. ^ Zanardi was a priest of the diocese of Parma. He was appointed bishop of Guastalla on 21 November 1836. He died on 15 September 1854. Ritzler-Sefrin, VII, p. 208.
  20. ^ Rota was named Bishop of Guastalla on 23 March 1855 by Pope Pius IX. On 27 October 1871 he was made Bishop of Mantova (Mantua), from which he retired on 12 May 1879. On retirement he was named Titular Archbishop of Carthage, then on 4 November 1884, Titular Archbishop of Thebes. He died on 3 February 1890. Massimiliano Franzini (1893). Pietro Rota Arcivescovo tit. di Tebe: Canonico vaticano già Vescovo di Guastalla e di Mantova; memorie (in Italian). Roma: P. Kohler.
  21. ^ Benassi was born at Villa San Sisto (Parma) in 1811. He was appointed bishop of Borgo San Donnino on 20 June 1859. On 27 October 1871 Pope Pius IX transferred him to the diocese of Guastalla, which he governed until his resignation on 10 November 1884. He was then named Titular Bishop of Argos (1884–1892). He died on 15 March 1892. Ritzler-Sefrin, VIII, pp. 120, 163, 294.
  22. ^ Curti was born in the village of San Polo d'Enza, in the foothills of the Apennines, west of Reggio. He was appointed Bishop of Guastalla on 10 November 1884, and was consecrated in Rome on 16 November by Cardinal Lucido Parocchi. He died on 21 March 1890. Ritzler-Sefrin, VIII, p. 294.
  23. ^ Ferrari was born in Lalatta, Pratopiano (Parma) in 1850. He was a parish priest in the diocese of Parma, and taught mathematics and physics at the Minor Seminary, eventually being appointed Rector. He then taught theology and church history at the Major Seminary. He was appointed Bishop of Guastalla by Pope Leo XIII on 29 May 1890. After only a year he was transferred to the diocese of Como on 1 June 1891. 21 May 1894. He was named a cardinal on 18 May 1894, and appointed Cardinal-Priest of S. Anastasia. Three days later he was appointed Archbishop of Milan. He died on 2 February 1921. Ritzler-Sefrin, VIII, pp. 46, 219, 294, 376. Martin Bräuer (2014). Handbuch der Kardinäle: 1846-2012 (in German). Berlin: De Gruyter. pp. 1901–1902. ISBN 978-3-11-037077-5.
  24. ^ A native of Bologna, Respighi studied in Rome at the Pio Roman Seminary, and obtained doctorates in theology and Canon and Civil Laws in 1870. He was appointed Bishop of Guastalla on 14 December 1891. On 30 November 1896, he was transferred to the diocese of Ferrara. (1896.11.30 – resigned 1900.04.19), He was created Cardinal-Priest of Santi Quattro Coronati by Pope Leo XIII on 22 June 1899. He resigned the diocese of Ferrara when he was named Vicar-General of His Holiness for the city of Rome. He died on 22 March 1913. Ritzler-Sefrin, VIII, pp. 48, 270, 294.
  25. ^ Grazioli was previously Titular Bishop of Samosata (1895– 1896) and Auxiliary Bishop of Ferrara. On 30 November 1896 he was appointed Bishop of Guastalla. He resigned on 13 April 1897. After his resignation he was named Titular Archbishop of Nicopolis on 24 March 1898. He died on 6 March 1906. Ritzler-Sefrin, VIII, pp. 294, 413, 497.
  26. ^ Sarti was appointed Bishop of Guastalla on 19 April 1897. He was transferred to the diocese of Pistoia on 29 April 1909. On 7 November 1915, he was named Bishop of Prato He died on 7 November 1915. Ritzler-Sefrin, VIII, p. 295.
  27. ^ Born in Crema in 1853, Cattaneo had been a priest of the diocese of Crema. He served as the bishop's secretary and as diocesan chancellor. He taught theology at the seminary, and was appointed Vicar General. He was appointed Bishop of Guastalla on 15 March 1910. He died on 9 April 1923. The Catholic Encyclopedia. Vol. Supplement 1 (c1922). New York: Encyclopedia Press. 1922. p. 355.
  28. ^ Corsini was appointed Titular Bishop of Hebron and Auxiliary Bishop of Verona on 7 March 1922. On 23 May 1923 he was transferred to the diocese of Guastalla. On his retirement he was named Titular Bishop of Arca in Armenia on 7 July 1932. He died on 14 April 1933.
  29. ^ Zaffrani was appointed Bishop of Guastalla on 16 September 1932. He died on 6 May 1960.
  30. ^ Zambarbieri had been appointed Coadjutor Bishop of Guastalla and Titular Bishop of Sita on 12 March 1959. He succeeded to the diocese on 6 May 1960, on the death of Bishop Zaffrani. He died on 15 August 1970. Serafino Cavazza (1972). Angelo Zambarbieri arciprete di Borzonasca, vescovo di Guastalla (in Italian). Tortona: Scuola tipografica S. Giuseppe [Don Orione].
  31. ^ Baroni was appointed Titular Bishop of Thagaste and Auxiliary Bishop of Bologna on 4 December 1954. On 30 May 1963, he was transferred to the diocese of Albenga. On 27 March 1965 he was transferred to the diocese of Reggio Emilia. On 10 February 1973 he was named Bishop of Guastalla, while continuing to be Bishop of Reggio. The diocese of Guastalla was abolished on 30 September 1986, and Baroni continued as Bishop of the renamed see Reggio Emilia–Guastalla. His resignation in accordance with the norms of Canon Law was accepted by Pope John Paul II on 11 July 1989. He died on 14 March 1999.

Bibliography edit

  • Affò, Ireneo (1783). Vita di Bernardino Baldi da Urbino primo abate di Guastalla (in Italian). Parma: Filippo Carmignani.
  • Affò, Ireneo (1785). Istoria della cittá e ducato di Guastalla (in Italian). Vol. Tomo primo. Guastalla: Salvatore Costa e compagno.
  • Affò, Ireneo (1786). Istoria della cittá e ducato di Guastalla (in Italian). Vol. Tomo secondo. Guastalla: Salvatore Costa e compagno.
  • Affò, Ireneo (1787). Istoria della cittá e ducato di Guastalla (in Italian). Vol. Tomo terzo. Guastalla: Salvatore Costa e compagno.
  • Affò, Ireneo (1787). Istoria della cittá e ducato di Guastalla (in Italian). Vol. Tomo quarto (4). Guastalla: Salvatore Costa e compagno.
  • Cappelletti, Giuseppe (1859). Le chiese d'Italia: dalla loro origine sino ai nostri giorni (in Italian). Vol. Tomo decimoquinto (15). Venezia: G. Antonelli. pp. 425–440.
  • Gams, Pius Bonifatius (1873). Series episcoporum Ecclesiae catholicae: quotquot innotuerunt a beato Petro apostolo. Ratisbon: Typis et Sumptibus Georgii Josephi Manz. (in Latin)
  • Palese, Salvatore; Emanuele Boaga; Francesco De Luca; Lorella Ingrosso (editors). Guida degli Archivi Capitolari d’italia, II. Roma: Ministero per i beni e le attività culturali, Direzione Generale per gli archivi 2003 (Pubblicazioni degli Archivi Di Stato. Strumenti ClVIII), pp. 71–74. (in Italian)
  • Ritzler, Remigius; Sefrin, Pirminus (1968). Hierarchia Catholica medii et recentioris aevi (in Latin). Vol. VII (1800–1846). Monasterii: Libr. Regensburgiana.
  • Remigius Ritzler; Pirminus Sefrin (1978). Hierarchia catholica Medii et recentioris aevi (in Latin). Vol. VIII (1846–1903). Il Messaggero di S. Antonio.
  • Pięta, Zenon (2002). Hierarchia catholica medii et recentioris aevi (in Latin). Vol. IX. Padua: Messagero di San Antonio. ISBN 978-88-250-1000-8.

External links edit

  • GCatholic with incumbent bio links

Acknowledgment edit

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

roman, catholic, diocese, guastalla, diocese, guastalla, dioecesis, guastallensis, catholic, suffragan, bishopric, province, reggio, emilia, italy, from, 1828, 1986, began, small, chapel, ordered, holy, roman, emperor, promoted, into, being, parish, then, beca. The Diocese of Guastalla Dioecesis Guastallensis was a Catholic suffragan bishopric in the province of Reggio Emilia Italy from 1828 to 1986 It began as a small chapel ordered by a Holy Roman Emperor in 865 it was promoted into being a parish it then became a territorial abbey and finally after the Napoleonic occupation of Italy it was made a diocese at the request of his second wife The diocese employed the Roman rite 1 2 Cathedral of S Peter Contents 1 History 1 1 The parish 1 2 The territorial abbey 1 2 1 The territorial Abbots 1 3 The diocese 2 Bishops 3 Notes and references 4 Bibliography 4 1 External links 4 1 1 AcknowledgmentHistory editThis section needs expansion You can help by adding to it September 2018 Guastalla began as a chapel built on order of the Emperor Louis II dated 2 November 865 on territory given to his wife Engelberga 3 Ecclesiastically the chapel was part of the diocese of Reggio the bishop subinfeudated the chapel into the hands of Boniface Count of Toscana The parish edit The chapel of S Peter was promoted into being a parish church plebes piave c 996 999 by Pope Gregory V 4 In 1101 Countess Matilda of Tuscany bestowed liberty upon the church of Guastalla 5 On 21 October 1106 Pope Paschal II held a council in Guastalla of bishops from France Germany and Italy He declared that since the See of Ravenna had so frequently opposed the leadership of the Church of Rome the dioceses of Parma Reggio Modena and Bologna should never thereafter be subject to Ravenna as their metropolitan 6 By 1145 the Church of S Peter at Guastalla was presided over by an Archpriest as Pope Eugene III noted in his bull which took the Church of Guastalla under the protection of the Holy See He also granted them the right to seek holy oils consecrations and ordinations from whichever Catholic bishop they wished 7 The archive of the Archpriest of the Pieve of Guastalla was destroyed in 1557 as a casualty of war 8 Guastalla formed part of the diocese of Reggio until 1471 when the Collegiate Church of S Peter of Guastalla was declared to be nullius dioecesis of no diocese and was territorially detached from the jurisdiction of the bishop of Reggio Emilia 9 The territorial abbey edit On 5 November 1585 Pope Sixtus V promoted the parish to the status of a secular territorial abbey nullius dioecesis belonging to no diocese as the abbey of San Pietro Apostolo di Guastalla 10 The territorial Abbots edit Bernardino Baldi d Urbino 1585 1607 Pietro Baruffoni 1607 1613 Marcello Celio Arcelli of Piacenza 1613 1615 Troilo Accorsini d Acquapendente 1616 1623 Vincenzio Loiani of Bologna 1623 1624 Giambattista Gherardini 1624 1651 Giacopo Quinziani of Reggio 1652 1686 Cesare Spilimbergo 1686 1710 Guidobono Mazzucchini 1711 1755 Francesco Tirelli of Guastalla 1755 1792 Francesco Scutellari 1792 1826 Giovanni Neuschel 1826 1828 The eleventh Abbot Ordinary of Guastalla Francesco Maria Scutellari of Parma was also titular bishop of Joppa Palestine 11 He ruled Guastalla from 1792 until his death in 1826 His death brought about a major change in the status of the Pieve He was succeeded by the chaplain of Marie Louise Duchess of Parma Giovanni Neuschel titular bishop of Alessandria Troas Ilio from 1826 to 1828 12 By a decree of Pope Pius VII in an apostolic letter of 1 December 1821 as part of a general reorganization of the hierarchy of Italy following the expulsion of the French the territory of the Abbey of Guastalla became subject to the Diocese of Parma It had been subject to the Diocese of Milan under the French organization of the Cisalpine Republic 1797 1802 and the Napoleonic Kingdom of Italy 1805 1814 13 The diocese edit In his papal bull De commisso of 13 September 1828 Pope Leo XII at the request of Marie Louise Duchess of Parma created the bishopric of Guastalla He decreed that the diocese be directly subject to the Holy See Papacy unless and until the pope decided otherwise He suppressed the abbatial college chapter and ordered the creation of a new cathedral Chapter The Chapter was to consist of five dignities the Archpriest the Archdeacon the Provost the Dean and the Primicerius sixteen Canons and seven mansionarii The two senior Canons were to be the Theologus and the Penitentiarius in accordance with the decrees of the Council of Trent 14 In 1920 the diocese of Guastalla had 26 parishes 58 other churches and chapels 76 diocesan priests and 25 students in the seminary 15 In 1980 it had 30 parishes 47 diocesan priests and 3 priests belonging to Religious Orders 16 After a vacancy of nearly thirty months following the death of Bishop Angelo Zambarbieri Pope Paul VI appointed Bishop Gilberto Baroni who was already bishop of Reggio Emilia to also be bishop of Guastalla Bishop Baroni had been acting as Apostolic Administrator of the diocese of Guastalla during the Sede vacante On 30 September 1986 the diocese was suppressed by Pope John Paul II and its territory and title merged into the Diocese of Reggio Emilia with the new name of Reggio Emilia Guastalla Guastalla became Vicariate IV of the diocese of Reggio Emilia Guastalla 17 1 Bishops editGiovanni Tommaso Neuschel 1828 1836 18 Pietro Giovanni Zanardi 1836 1854 19 Pietro Rota 1855 1871 20 Francesco Benassi 1871 retired 1884 21 Prospero Curti 1884 1890 22 Andrea Carlo Ferrari 1890 1891 23 Pietro Respighi 1891 1896 24 Enrico Grazioli 1896 1897 25 Andrea Sarti 1897 1909 26 Agostino Cattaneo 1910 1923 27 Giordano Corsini 1923 1932 28 Giacomo Zaffrani 1932 1960 29 Angelo Zambarbieri 1960 1970 30 Sede vacante 1970 1973 Gilberto Baroni 1973 1986 31 Notes and references edit a b Diocese of Guastalla Catholic Hierarchy org David M Cheney Retrieved 7 October 2016 self published source Diocese of Guastalla GCatholic org Gabriel Chow Retrieved 7 October 2016 self published source Affo Antichita pp 4 6 Affo Istoria Tomo primo p 73 Philippus Jaffe and S Loewenfeld Regesta pontificum Romanorum I editio altera Leipzig Veit 1884 p 494 no 3893 The Countess charter makes specific mention of Pope Gregory V s promotion of the chapel into a church Affo Antichita pp 31 34 Cappelletti p 426 427 Monumenta Germaniae Historica 2 Leges 4 Constitutiones 1 Hannover Hahn 1893 p 565 Uta Renate Blumenthal 1978 The Early Councils of Pope Paschal II 1100 1110 Toronto Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies pp 37 51 54 ISBN 978 0 88844 043 3 J P Migne editor Patrologiae Series Latina Tomus CLXXX Paris Garnier 1902 pp 1048 1050 The bull of Pope Lucius II of 1144 in which it is alleged that Guastalla was subject to Reggio is interpolated Cappelletti pp 427 428 Palese et al Guida degli archivi capitolari 2003 p 72 Cappelletti p 430 abbatiam vero collegiatam et parochialem ecclesiam Deo et Sancto Petro apostolorum principi dicatam Bullarii Romani Continuatio in Latin Vol Tomus Decimus Septimus 17 Rome 1855 pp 391 393 3 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Affo 1787 Istoria Vol Tomo terzo pp 83 84 Cappelletti pp 430 432 Scutellari was born in Parma in 1742 He held the degree Doctor in utroque iure from the Sapienza Rome 1789 He was a Canon of the Cathedral Chapter of Parma and had been Vicar Capitular Ritzler Sefrin VI p 245 with note 3 Gaetano Buttafuoco 1854 Dizionario corografico dei ducati di Parma Piacenza e Guastalla in Italian Vol 2 Milano Giuseppe Civelli e Comp p 44 Bullarii Romani Continuatio 1855 p 392 7 Ritzler Sefrin VI p 245 note 3 Bullarii Romani Continuatio 1855 p 392 In 8 Leo XII writes Declaramus interea quod Guastallensis episcopalis ecclesia apostolicae Sedi immediate subjecta censeri debeat nisi Nobis et Romanis pontificibus successoribus Nostris aliter in posterum visum fuerit The Catholic Encyclopedia Vol Supplement 1 c1922 New York Encyclopedia Press 1922 p 355 David M Cheney Catholic Hierarchy org Diocese of Guastalla retrieved 28 September 2018 self published source Sassuolo2000 it Quotidiana online Reggio Emilia intitolazione via a monsignor Gilberto Baroni 10 November 2012 retrieved 29 September 2018 in Italian Neuschel was a Hungarian abbot and chaplain to the regnant Duchess of Parma Maria Luisa He had previously been Titular Bishop of Troas 1828 and was appointed to the diocese of Guastalla by Pope Leo XII on 20 September 1828 He was transferred to the diocese of Borgo San Donnino on 21 November 1836 On 27 January 1843 he was appointed Bishop of Parma He retired on 17 September 1852 and on his retirement he was appointed Titular Archbishop of Theodosiopolis Aprus Armenia Minor He died on 10 December 1863 Gams pp 743 759 Ritzler Sefrin VII pp 122 208 300 379 VIII p 547 Zanardi was a priest of the diocese of Parma He was appointed bishop of Guastalla on 21 November 1836 He died on 15 September 1854 Ritzler Sefrin VII p 208 Rota was named Bishop of Guastalla on 23 March 1855 by Pope Pius IX On 27 October 1871 he was made Bishop of Mantova Mantua from which he retired on 12 May 1879 On retirement he was named Titular Archbishop of Carthage then on 4 November 1884 Titular Archbishop of Thebes He died on 3 February 1890 Massimiliano Franzini 1893 Pietro Rota Arcivescovo tit di Tebe Canonico vaticano gia Vescovo di Guastalla e di Mantova memorie in Italian Roma P Kohler Benassi was born at Villa San Sisto Parma in 1811 He was appointed bishop of Borgo San Donnino on 20 June 1859 On 27 October 1871 Pope Pius IX transferred him to the diocese of Guastalla which he governed until his resignation on 10 November 1884 He was then named Titular Bishop of Argos 1884 1892 He died on 15 March 1892 Ritzler Sefrin VIII pp 120 163 294 Curti was born in the village of San Polo d Enza in the foothills of the Apennines west of Reggio He was appointed Bishop of Guastalla on 10 November 1884 and was consecrated in Rome on 16 November by Cardinal Lucido Parocchi He died on 21 March 1890 Ritzler Sefrin VIII p 294 Ferrari was born in Lalatta Pratopiano Parma in 1850 He was a parish priest in the diocese of Parma and taught mathematics and physics at the Minor Seminary eventually being appointed Rector He then taught theology and church history at the Major Seminary He was appointed Bishop of Guastalla by Pope Leo XIII on 29 May 1890 After only a year he was transferred to the diocese of Como on 1 June 1891 21 May 1894 He was named a cardinal on 18 May 1894 and appointed Cardinal Priest of S Anastasia Three days later he was appointed Archbishop of Milan He died on 2 February 1921 Ritzler Sefrin VIII pp 46 219 294 376 Martin Brauer 2014 Handbuch der Kardinale 1846 2012 in German Berlin De Gruyter pp 1901 1902 ISBN 978 3 11 037077 5 A native of Bologna Respighi studied in Rome at the Pio Roman Seminary and obtained doctorates in theology and Canon and Civil Laws in 1870 He was appointed Bishop of Guastalla on 14 December 1891 On 30 November 1896 he was transferred to the diocese of Ferrara 1896 11 30 resigned 1900 04 19 He was created Cardinal Priest of Santi Quattro Coronati by Pope Leo XIII on 22 June 1899 He resigned the diocese of Ferrara when he was named Vicar General of His Holiness for the city of Rome He died on 22 March 1913 Ritzler Sefrin VIII pp 48 270 294 Grazioli was previously Titular Bishop of Samosata 1895 1896 and Auxiliary Bishop of Ferrara On 30 November 1896 he was appointed Bishop of Guastalla He resigned on 13 April 1897 After his resignation he was named Titular Archbishop of Nicopolis on 24 March 1898 He died on 6 March 1906 Ritzler Sefrin VIII pp 294 413 497 Sarti was appointed Bishop of Guastalla on 19 April 1897 He was transferred to the diocese of Pistoia on 29 April 1909 On 7 November 1915 he was named Bishop of Prato He died on 7 November 1915 Ritzler Sefrin VIII p 295 Born in Crema in 1853 Cattaneo had been a priest of the diocese of Crema He served as the bishop s secretary and as diocesan chancellor He taught theology at the seminary and was appointed Vicar General He was appointed Bishop of Guastalla on 15 March 1910 He died on 9 April 1923 The Catholic Encyclopedia Vol Supplement 1 c1922 New York Encyclopedia Press 1922 p 355 Corsini was appointed Titular Bishop of Hebron and Auxiliary Bishop of Verona on 7 March 1922 On 23 May 1923 he was transferred to the diocese of Guastalla On his retirement he was named Titular Bishop of Arca in Armenia on 7 July 1932 He died on 14 April 1933 Zaffrani was appointed Bishop of Guastalla on 16 September 1932 He died on 6 May 1960 Zambarbieri had been appointed Coadjutor Bishop of Guastalla and Titular Bishop of Sita on 12 March 1959 He succeeded to the diocese on 6 May 1960 on the death of Bishop Zaffrani He died on 15 August 1970 Serafino Cavazza 1972 Angelo Zambarbieri arciprete di Borzonasca vescovo di Guastalla in Italian Tortona Scuola tipografica S Giuseppe Don Orione Baroni was appointed Titular Bishop of Thagaste and Auxiliary Bishop of Bologna on 4 December 1954 On 30 May 1963 he was transferred to the diocese of Albenga On 27 March 1965 he was transferred to the diocese of Reggio Emilia On 10 February 1973 he was named Bishop of Guastalla while continuing to be Bishop of Reggio The diocese of Guastalla was abolished on 30 September 1986 and Baroni continued as Bishop of the renamed see Reggio Emilia Guastalla His resignation in accordance with the norms of Canon Law was accepted by Pope John Paul II on 11 July 1989 He died on 14 March 1999 Bibliography editAffo Ireneo 1783 Vita di Bernardino Baldi da Urbino primo abate di Guastalla in Italian Parma Filippo Carmignani Affo Ireneo 1785 Istoria della citta e ducato di Guastalla in Italian Vol Tomo primo Guastalla Salvatore Costa e compagno Affo Ireneo 1786 Istoria della citta e ducato di Guastalla in Italian Vol Tomo secondo Guastalla Salvatore Costa e compagno Affo Ireneo 1787 Istoria della citta e ducato di Guastalla in Italian Vol Tomo terzo Guastalla Salvatore Costa e compagno Affo Ireneo 1787 Istoria della citta e ducato di Guastalla in Italian Vol Tomo quarto 4 Guastalla Salvatore Costa e compagno Cappelletti Giuseppe 1859 Le chiese d Italia dalla loro origine sino ai nostri giorni in Italian Vol Tomo decimoquinto 15 Venezia G Antonelli pp 425 440 Gams Pius Bonifatius 1873 Series episcoporum Ecclesiae catholicae quotquot innotuerunt a beato Petro apostolo Ratisbon Typis et Sumptibus Georgii Josephi Manz in Latin Palese Salvatore Emanuele Boaga Francesco De Luca Lorella Ingrosso editors Guida degli Archivi Capitolari d italia II Roma Ministero per i beni e le attivita culturali Direzione Generale per gli archivi 2003 Pubblicazioni degli Archivi Di Stato Strumenti ClVIII pp 71 74 in Italian Ritzler Remigius Sefrin Pirminus 1968 Hierarchia Catholica medii et recentioris aevi in Latin Vol VII 1800 1846 Monasterii Libr Regensburgiana Remigius Ritzler Pirminus Sefrin 1978 Hierarchia catholica Medii et recentioris aevi in Latin Vol VIII 1846 1903 Il Messaggero di S Antonio Pieta Zenon 2002 Hierarchia catholica medii et recentioris aevi in Latin Vol IX Padua Messagero di San Antonio ISBN 978 88 250 1000 8 External links edit GCatholic with incumbent bio linksAcknowledgment edit nbsp This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Herbermann Charles ed 1913 Diocese of Guastalla Catholic Encyclopedia New York Robert Appleton Company dd Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Roman Catholic Diocese of Guastalla amp oldid 1215582827, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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