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Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Palermo

The Roman Catholic Metropolitan Archdiocese of Palermo (Latin: Archidioecesis Panormitana) was founded as the Diocese of Palermo in the first century and raised to the status of archdiocese in the 11th century.[1][2] The archbishop is Corrado Lorefice.

Archdiocese of Palermo

Archidioecesis Panormitana

Arcidiocesi di Palermo
Palermo Cathedral
Location
CountryItaly
Ecclesiastical provincePalermo
Statistics
Area1,366 km2 (527 sq mi)
Population
- Total
- Catholics (including non-members)
(as of 2013)
912,800 (est.)
905,700 (est.) (99.2%)
Parishes178
Information
DenominationCatholic Church
RiteRoman Rite
Established1st Century
CathedralCattedrale di l’Assunzione di Maria
Secular priests233 (diocesan)
245 (Religious Orders)
Current leadership
PopeFrancis
ArchbishopCorrado Lorefice
Bishops emeritusSalvatore De Giorgi
Paolo Romeo
Map
Website
www.arcidiocesi.palermo.it

The archdiocese has the following suffragans in the ecclesiastical Province of Palermo:

History

Palermo is just south of a major active seismic zone, and is subject to frequent earthquakes and occasional inundations (tsunamis).[3] The events of 1693, 1726 and 1823 were particularly destructive.[4]

Pope Gregory I personally founded six monasteries in Sicily, including the monastery of S. Hermes at Palermo, according to Ugo Benigni in his article on Sicily in the Catholic Encyclopedia.[5] He also founded the monastery of S. Hadrian and the Praetoritanum.[6] Ugo Benigni attributes this interest to the numbers of bishops and monks who emigrated from Africa as a result of the policy of the Arian Vandals to the Orthodox Christians.

In 718 the Emperor Leo III the Isaurian (718–741) suppressed a revolt in Sicily, and then detached southern Italy and Sicily from the metropolitan jurisdiction of the pope in Rome. In the ninth century, the patriarch of Constantinople raised the See of Palermo to the rank of metropolitan of all of Sicily. A protest against these actions was entered by Pope Nicholas I (858–867),[7] in a letter of 25 September 860 to the Emperor Michael III.[8]

Arab control over Palermo and its church

Benigni states,[9] "Concerning the state of the Sicilian Church during the Saracen domination we have no information: not the name of a single bishop is known." This is misleading. There were bishops, but they were part of the Patriarchate of Constantinople, not that of Rome, and Constantinople was in communion with Rome until the Great Schism of 1054. In 883, Pope Marinus I paid a ransom to the emir of Palermo for the archbishop of Syracuse and the bishop of Malta, who were being held in prison in Palermo.[10] In 897, the archbishop of Palermo was Sofronios (or Sonfronius).[11] In 930, there was a seminary in operation under the direction of the archbishop of Palermo; when Eustatius was about to pay the 12,000 'krus' per annum which was owed, the collector, who noticed the extreme poverty of the students, gave part of the funds to the archbishop for the benefit of the seminary.[12] In 957 an archbishop named Arimattea was already occupying the see; in 964, Archbishop Arimattea was abused and imprisoned by the Grand Mufti of Palermo, from which he died.[13] In 965, the Archbishop of Palermo was Andreas, who had been vicar of Archbishop Arimattea.[14] In 976, according to Arabic sources, the archbishop of Palermo died, and the priests and monks elected a new archbishop named Ananiah, who had been vicar of his predecessor. Patriarch Antony III of Constantinople was requested by an embassy from Palermo to approve the election, which he did, expressing the wish that the archbishop-elect should come to Constantinople and be consecrated by him. The emperor did not approve of these patriarchal pretensions, and the patriarch renounced them.[15] The priests and monks told the emir of Sicily that the custom had been for the bishops of Sicily to consecrate the archbishop. They asked permission to write to the pope, which was refused.[16]

Arab invasions of Sicily had begun at the beginning of the eighth century with the capture of the island of Cossura (modern Pantelleria). Raids were launched in 730–731, 734–735, 740 and 752–753.[17] Palermo was temporarily captured in 820, but the Arabs were driven out by pirates. The serious conquest of the island began in 827, from the Tunisian port of Susa, led by Asad Ibn Al-Furàt. Palermo fell in 831,[18] Messina in 843, Leontini in 847, and Syracuse in 878. Taormina was captured in 902, completing the conquest of the entire island.[19] From then until 1061, when the Norman conquests began, Sicily was an Arab land.[20]

After the famine of 940, the Arabs deliberately drove Christians out of the western part of the island.[21]

Norman control over the church of Palermo

On Christmas Day, 1130, Count Roger II was crowned King of Sicily in the Cathedral in Palermo. It is uncertain who crowned the king. One source names Count Roger of Capua, another Archbishop Peter of Palermo.[22] The cathedral was rebuilt by Archbishop Walter between 1170 and 1190.[23]

The Archdiocese of Palermo was united with the Archdiocese of Monreale on 7 July 1775.[24] The union was dissolved on 12 March 1802.[25] Monreale lost its metropolitan status in 2000, however, and it is now a suffragan of the Archdiocese of Palermo.

The Cathedral of Palermo is dedicated to the Bodily Assumption of the Virgin Mary into Heaven. The Chapter of the cathedral had three dignities in 1677, and two dignities in 1775. In 1211 there were eighteen canons, but the number grew to twenty-four in 1431, when Pope Eugenius IV ordered their reduction to eighteen again. In 1523 the Emperor Charles V added six more canons, bringing the number back up to twenty-four.[26] There were again twenty-four canons in 1677 and twenty-six canons in 1775.[27] The chapter had the right to elect the archbishop.[28]

List of Archbishops of Palermo

to 1200

 
Map of the ecclesiastical province of Palermo.
...
  • Anonymous[29]
  • Anonymous (447)[30]
  • Gratianus (450–503)[31]
  • Agatho (c. 578–590)[32]
  • Victor (attested 591–599)[33]
  • Ioannes (attested 603)[34]
  • Felix (649)[35]
  • Theodorus (787)[36]
  • Anonymous (c. 800)
  • Anonymous (819)[37]
Arab Conquest of Sicily[38]

from 1200 to 1400

  • Parisius[50] (22 May 1201 – before 10 May 1213)
  • Berardus de Castacca[51] (11 September 1213 – 8 September 1252)
  • Guilelmus[52]
  • Leonardus (1261 – c. 1270)
  • Giovanni Misnelli (2 June 1273 – ? )
  • Petrus de Santafede[53] (c. 1278 – 1284?)
  • Licius (10 January 1304 – 12 December 1304)
  • Bartolommeo (de Antiochia)[54] (31 January 1306 – 1312)
  • Franciscus (de Antiochia)[55] (9 May 1312 – 1320)
  • Giovanni Orsini[56] (10 October 1320 – c. 1333)
  • Cardinal Matteo Orsini, O.P.[57] (1334 – 1336 Resigned)
  • Theobaldus (24 April 1336 – c. 1350)
  • Roger de Palheriis (Pulcheriis), O.Min. (17 November 1351 – 1360–1361)
  • Arnaldus Caprarii, O.Min. (11 March 1361 – 1362)[58]
  • Octavianus de Labro (8 November 1362 – 1363)[59]
  • Melchiore Bevilacqua (20 December 1363 – 1364)[60]
  • Martinus de Aretio (15 January 1365 – 1366)[61]
  • Matthaeus de Cumis (13 November 1366 – 1376–1377)[62]
  • Nicolaus de Agrigento, O.Min. (18 February 1377 – after 1384)[63]
  • Ludovico Bonito (Ludovicus Bonitus)[64] (before 1 June 1387 – 1395)
  • Gilfortus Riccobono (23 October 1395 – 1398)[65]
[Franciscus Vitalis][66]

from 1400 to 1600

from 1600 to 1800

  • Diego Haëdo (14 Aug 1589 – 5 Jul 1608 Died)
  • Cardinal Giovanni Doria[77] (5 Jul 1608 – 19 Nov 1642)
  • Fernando Andrade Castro (28 Nov 1644 – 6 Jul 1648 Appointed, Archbishop (Personal Title) of Jaén)
  • Martín de León Cárdenas, O.S.A. (27 Aug 1650 – 15 Nov 1655 Died)
  • Pietro Jerónimo Martínez y Rubio (15 Jan 1657 – 22 Nov 1667 Died)
  • Juan Lozano, O.S.A. (4 Feb 1669 – 26 Apr 1677[78]
  • Jaime de Palafox y Cardona[79] (8 Nov 1677 – 13 Nov 1684)
  • Ferdinando Bazan y Manriquez[80] (1 Apr 1686 – 11 Aug 1702 Died)
  • José Gasch (Casch), O.M.[81] (26 Nov 1703 – 11 Jun 1729 Died)
  • Giovanni Maurizio Gustavo[82] (1730 – 1731 Died)
  • Paolo Basile (Mathaeus de Pareta), O.F.M. Obs.[83] (3 Sep 1731 – Jan 1736 Died)
  • Domenico Rossi (Rosso e Colonna), O.S.B.[84] (8 Jul 1737 – 6 Jul 1747 Died)
  • José Alfonso Meléndez, O.F.M. Disc.[85] (19 Feb 1748 – 31 Oct 1753 Died)
  • Marcello Papiniano-Cusani[86] (11 Feb 1754 – 16 Jun 1762 Resigned)
  • Serafino Filangeri, O.S.B.[87] (23 Aug 1762 – 29 Jan 1776 Appointed, Archbishop of Naples)
  • Francesco Ferdinando Sanseverino, C.P.O.[88] (15 Apr 1776 – 31 Mar 1793 Died)
  • Filippo López y Rojo, C.R.[89] (17 Jun 1793 – 4 Sep 1801 Resigned)

since 1800

  • Cardinal Domenico Pignatelli di Belmonte, C.R. (29 Mar 1802 – 5 Feb 1803 Died)
  • Raffaele Mormile, C.R. (28 Mar 1803 – 31 Dec 1813 Died)
  • Cardinal Pietro Gravina (23 Sep 1816 – 6 Dec 1830 Died)
  • Cardinal Gaetano Maria Giuseppe Benedetto Placido Vincenzo Trigona e Parisi (15 Apr 1833 – 5 Jul 1837 Died)
  • Cardinal Ferdinando Maria Pignatelli, C.R. (21 Feb 1839 – 10 May 1853 Died)
  • Giovanni Battista Naselli, C.O. (27 Jun 1853 – 3 May 1870 Died)
  • Cardinal Michelangelo Celesia, O.S.B.[90] (27 Oct 1871 – 14 April 1904)
  • Cardinal Alessandro Lualdi (14 Nov 1904 – 12 Nov 1927 Died)
  • Cardinal Luigi Lavitrano (29 Sep 1928 – Dec 1944 Resigned)
  • Cardinal Ernesto Ruffini[91] (11 Oct 1945 – 11 Jun 1967 Died)
  • Cardinal Francesco Carpino (26 Jun 1967 – 17 Oct 1970 Resigned)
  • Cardinal Salvatore Pappalardo[92] (17 Oct 1970 – 4 Apr 1996)
  • Cardinal Salvatore De Giorgi (4 Apr 1996 – 19 Dec 2006 Retired)
  • Cardinal Paolo Romeo (19 Dec 2006 – 27 Oct 2015 Retired)
  • Corrado Lorefice (27 Oct 2015 – )

References

  1. ^ "Archdiocese of Palermo" Catholic-Hierarchy.org. David M. Cheney. Retrieved February 29, 2016
  2. ^ "Metropolitan Archdiocese of Palermo" GCatholic.org. Gabriel Chow. Retrieved February 29, 2016
  3. ^ C. Chiarabba et al., Tectonophysics 395 (2005) 251–268., page 251 figure 1(a), and p. 255 figure 4; retrieved: 2017-02-05.
  4. ^ Cappelletti, p. 523.
  5. ^ U. Benigni, "Sicily," The Catholic Encyclopedia: An International Work of Reference on the Constitution, Doctrine, Discipline, and History of the Catholic Church. Vol. 13. New York: Encyclopedia Press. 1913. p. 774.
  6. ^ Annliese Nef, ed. (2013). A Companion to Medieval Palermo: The History of a Mediterranean City from 600 to 1500. Boston-Leiden: Brill. p. 27. ISBN 978-90-04-25253-0. Paul Fridolin Kehr, Italia Pontificia X (Berlin 1975), pp. 239-241.
  7. ^ Benigni, "Sicily", p. 774. This took place in the context of the conflict with Patriarch Photios I of Constantinople and the 'Photian Schism'.
  8. ^ Philippus Jaffé, Regesta pontificum Romanorum Tomus I, editio altera (Leipzig: Veit 1884), p. 343, no. 2682.
  9. ^ p. 774.
  10. ^ Giuseppe Vella (1789). Codice diplomatico di Sicilia sotto il governo degli Arabi (in Italian). Vol. Tomo primo, parte seconda. Palermo: Dalla Reale Stamperia. pp. 244–245.
  11. ^ Vella, p. 203.
  12. ^ Giuseppe Vella (1790). Codice diplomatico di Sicilia sotto il governo degli Arabi (in Italian). Vol. Tomo secondo, parte prima. Palermo: Dalla Reale Stamperia. pp. 294–295.
  13. ^ Giuseppe Vella (1790). Codice diplomatico di Sicilia sotto il governo degli Arabi (in Italian). Vol. Tomo secondo, parte seconda. Palermo: Dalla Reale Stamperia. pp. 273, 369–370.
  14. ^ Vella, pp. 382-383.
  15. ^ Vella, p. 534, 545.
  16. ^ Vella, pp. 528-529.
  17. ^ Giuseppe Quatriglio (1991). A Thousand Years in Sicily: From the Arabs to the Bourbons (third ed.). Mineola NY: Legas / Gaetano Cipolla. p. 14. ISBN 978-0-921252-17-7.
  18. ^ Jeremy Dummett (2015). Palermo, City of Kings: The Heart of Sicily. London-New York: I.B.Tauris. p. 16. ISBN 978-1-78453-083-9.
  19. ^ Quatriglio, p. 15-17.
  20. ^ Quatriglio, p. 19.
  21. ^ Dummett, p. 20.
  22. ^ Dummett, p. 36. Falco of Benevento, 108 [J. P. Migne (editor) Patrologiae Latinae Cursus Completus Tomus 173 (Paris 1854), p. 1204], says that Cardinal Comes crowned Roger King, and that Count Robert placed the crown on the King's head. Falco's narrative is disputed by Hubert Houben (2002). Roger II of Sicily: A Ruler Between East and West. Cambridge University Press. pp. 55–57, esp. p. 56 note 48. ISBN 978-0-521-65573-6.
  23. ^ Nef, p. 172. Leonardo Urbani (1993). La Cattedrale di Palermo: studi per l'ottavo centenario dalla fondazione (in Italian). Palermo: Sellerio.
  24. ^ Ritzler-Sefrin, VI, p. 327, note 1.
  25. ^ Ritzler-Sefrin, VI, p. 297, note 1.
  26. ^ Pirro, p. 137, 171, 188. The canons created by Charles V were always nominated by the King of Spain and installed by the archbishop. The archbishop nominated the others. Pirro, pp. 289-290.
  27. ^ Statistics of 1677: Ritzler-Sefrin, V, p. 305, note 1; Statistics of 1775: Ritzler-Sefrin, VI, p. 327, note 1.
  28. ^ Pirro, pp. 102, 156, 161, 165, 170.
  29. ^ prioris episcopi: Lanzoni, p. 649.
  30. ^ A bull of Pope Leo I, dated 21 October 447, notes that a recently consecrated bishop was alienating church property, according to complaints from his clergy: etiam Panormitani clerici, quibus nuper est ordinatus antistes simile querimonium, in sancta synodo, cui praesidebamus, de usurpatione prioris episcopi causam detulerunt. P. Jaffé, Regesta Pontificum Romanorum I, editio altera (Leipzig 1884), p. 61, no. 415. Lanzoni, p. 649.
  31. ^ Gratianus episcopus Panormi: J.-D. Mansi, Sacrorum Conciliorum nova et amplissima collectio, editio novissima, Tomus VI (Florence: A. Zatta 1761), p. 1086. Cappelletti, p. 528. Gams, p. 951. Lanzoni, p. 649.
  32. ^ Agatho's name appears in Pope Gregory I's Dialogues IV. 57. Lanzoni, II, p. 649, no. 4.
  33. ^ Victor: Lanzoni, p. 649, no. 5.
  34. ^ Gregory I granted Bishop Ioannes the use of the pallium in a letter of July 603. Lanzoni, p. 650, no. 6.
  35. ^ Felix: Mansi, Tomus X (Florence 1764), p. 867. Cappelletti, p. 529. Gams, p. 951.
  36. ^ Bishop Theodorus took part in the II Ecumenical Council of Nicaea. Mansi, Tomus XIII (Florence 1767), p. 383.
  37. ^ Both anonymous archbishops are mentioned in a letter of Pope Paschal I of 819 addressed to the latter. Pirro, I, pp. 39-40. Pirro argues strenuously against critics, pp. 40-42, that the letter is genuine. Cappelletti, p. 529.
  38. ^ "Saracen Invasions: Sede Vacante": Gams, p. 951.
  39. ^ Pope Leo IX brought Humbert from Lotharingia to evangelize Sicily, and ordained him Archbishop of Palermo. Pirro, pp. 51-53. Cappelletti, p. 529. Gams, p. 951. He is not the same Humbert that Leo IX brought from France to make Abbot of Subiaco in 1052: Cesare Baronio (1869). Annales ecclesiastici denuo excusi et ad nostra usque tempora perducti ab Augustino Theiner... (in Latin). Vol. Tomus septimus decimus (17). Barri-Ducis: Ludovicus Guerin. p. 56.
  40. ^ Pirro, pp. 53-69. Cappelletti, p. 529. Gams, p. 951.
  41. ^ Alcherius: Pirro, pp. 69-80. Cappelletti, p. 529. Gams, p. 951.
  42. ^ Gualterius was a Norman. Pirro, pp. 80-81. Cappelletti, p. 529. Gams, p. 951.
  43. ^ Pietro had been Bishop of Squillace; he was transferred to Palermo by Pope Calixtus II before 2 April 1223. Pirro, pp. 81-85. Cappelletti, p. 529. Gams, p. 951. Jaffé, p. 811, no. 7045. Bullarum diplomatum et privilegiorum sanctorum Romanorum pontificum Taurinensis editio (in Latin). Vol. Tomus II. Turin: Franco et Dalmazzo. 1859. pp. 332–333.
  44. ^ Roger was a Norman. Pirro, pp. 85-88. Cappelletti, p. 529. Gams, p. 951; Loud, p. 230, makes him archbishop-elect from 1143 to March 1147.
  45. ^ Loud, p. 230.
  46. ^ Ugo: Pirro, pp. 88-102. Cappelletti, p. 530. Gams, p. 951.
  47. ^ Stephanus: Pirro, pp. 102-103. Cappelletti, p. 530. Gams, p. 951.
  48. ^ Gualterius Ophamil: Pirro, pp. 103-113. Cappelletti, p. 530. Gams, p. 951.
  49. ^ Bartolommeo was the brother of Walterius Ophamil and Bishop of Agrigento. He spent three years in Constantinople as ambassador of King William II of Sicily. He was Chancellor of Sicily for William III. Pirro, pp. 113-122. Cappelletti, p. 530. Gams, p. 951
  50. ^ Pope Innocent III notified the Chapter of the Cathedral of Palermo that they should proceed to elect another Archbishop, since the Bishop-elect Parisius had been deposed. Eubel, I, p. 388, with note 2.
  51. ^ Berardus was already Bishop of Bari, and was transferred to Palermo by the Pope. He died on 8 September 1252. Eubel, I, p. 388.
  52. ^ Guilelmus had been Bishop of Olenenus, a suffragan of Patras (Greece). Eubel, I, p. 388, with note 3.
  53. ^ Gams, p. 952, notes that he was killed in the Sicilian Vespers.
  54. ^ Bartolommeo: Gams, p. 952. Eubel, I, p. 388.
  55. ^ Franciscus: Gams, p. 952. Eubel, I, p. 388.
  56. ^ Giovanni Orsini: Eubel, I, p. 388.
  57. ^ Matteo Orsini: Gams, p. 952.
  58. ^ Arnaldus: Eubel, I, p. 388.
  59. ^ Octavianus: Eubel, I, p. 388.
  60. ^ Melchiore Bevilacqua: Eubel, I, p. 388.
  61. ^ Martinus: Eubel, I, p. 388.
  62. ^ Matthaeus: Eubel, I, p. 388.
  63. ^ In 1384 Nicolaus was compelled by the citizens of Palermo, led by Count Manfred of Clermont, to pay an annual tribute. Nicolaus instituted an annual observance on 15 August, delli Cilii Panormitani. This so annoyed the Clarimontani that they drove him from his See and forced his resignation. They then managed the election of one of their own partisans, one of the Cathedral Canons, Ludovico Bonito, the son of the nobleman Antonio Bonito. Pirro, p. 163. Eubel, I, p. 388.
  64. ^ Pirro, p. 163, states that Ludovicus was elected in 1385; in any case he was sent the pallium by Urban VI. He was expelled from his See in 1392 and ended up in Rome. Ludovicus was transferred to the titular diocese of Antivari in Epirus in 1395 by Boniface IX (Roman Obedience). On 22 May 1396 he was named titular Archbishop of Thessalonica (Greece), and then, on 5 September 1399, Bishop of Bergamo. He was promoted to the Archdiocese of Pisa on 15 November 1400, and finally to Taranto on 29 July 1407. He was promoted to the Cardinalate by Gregory XII in 1408, but removed from his diocese after Gregory's fall. He died on 18 September 1413. Pirro, pp. 163-167. Gams, p. 952. Eubel, I, pp. 31, 388, 396, 400, 473.
  65. ^ Gilfortus was deprived of his diocese by King Martin I of Sicily. He died in 1398, according to Eubel. Pirro, pp. 167-168. Gams, p. 952. Eubel, I, p. 388.
  66. ^ Franciscus, Bishop of Mazzara, was elected to succeed Gilfortus in 1398, but King Martin did not approve. Pirro, p. 168.
  67. ^ Pirro, pp. 168-169.
  68. ^ Ubertino was a Doctor in utroque iure, and a judge of the Royal Curia. (Civil and Canon Law). He was nominated by King Martin of Aragon, on 3 May 1409, but was resisted by the Chapter and people of Palermo. In 1411 Queen Bianca attempted to coerce the Canons, but they put her off, waiting until King Martin returned from Aragon. Ubertino was approved by the Pope on 20 June 1414, and was consecrated by John XXIII (1410–1415). He made his formal entry into Palermo on 21 October 1414. He wrote his Testament on 21 December 1433. His tombstone states that he died in 1434. Pirro, pp. 170-171, no. XXXIII. Eubel, I, p. 388.
  69. ^ Nicolas was born in Catania, and was a Canon of the cathedral. He studied law in Bologna. He was a teacher of Canon Law in Siena, Parma, and Bologna. He was brought to Rome and made Auditor of the Rota under Martin V, and Apostolic Referendary under Eugenius IV. Alessandro Casano (1849). Del Sotterraneo della chiesa cattedrale di Palermo (in Italian). Palermo: Solli. pp. 42–43. He participated in the Council of Basel as a vigorous and vociferous defender of Eugenius IV and the Papacy against the Conciliarists. Mandell Creighton (1882). A History of the Papacy. Vol. II: The Council of Basel – the papal restoration, 1418–1464. London: Longmans. pp. 201–206.
  70. ^ Orsini was transferred to Taranto on 30 July 1445 while still Archbishop-elect of Palermo. Eubel, II, pp. 211, 246.
  71. ^ Simone Beccatelli was a member of a Sicilian noble family which had emigrated from Bologna. He was trained in Canon Law. His memorial inscription lauds him as Iuris pontificii non indoctus interpres ('a learned interpreter of Canon Law'. 'non indoctus' might suggest he held a doctorate). Beccatelli was nominated, at the age of 28, by King Alfonso, and approved by Pope Eugenius IV. He was consecrated in January 1446. He was rebuked by Pope Nicholas V on 24 March 1446 for attempting to assert his metropolitan authority over the Church of Agrigento, which was directly subject to the Holy See without a metropolitan intervening. In the decade 1450–1460 he was six times a delegate to the King of Aragon in the matter of the revision of the Sicilian law code. Simon died in the episcopal palace in Palermo on 8 January 1465. Pirro, pp. 174-178. Gams, p. 952. Eubel, II, p. 211.
  72. ^ Pujades was a native of Mari (diocese of Barcelona), and a nephew of Guglielmo Puxades, Viceroy of Sicily. He had been Archdeacon of S. Maria de Man in Barcelona. He was consecrated by Pope Paul II. Pirro, p. 138, no. XXXVI. Eubel, II, p. 211.
  73. ^ Visconti, a master of theology, had been the confessor of Pope Nicholas V and Pope Paul II. He was Provincial of the Sicilian Province of his Order in 1444, of the Roman Province in 1451, and again of the Sicilian Province in 1461. He rose to be Vicar General of Italy, and then Procurator General at the Roman Curia. He was appointed Bishop of Mazzara (a suffragan of Palermo) on 16 November 1467. Pirro, pp. 179-180, no. XXXIX. Eubel, II, pp. 188, 211.
  74. ^ A native of Lerida in Catalonia, Remolins studied law at the University of Pisa, and became secretary of King Ferdinand of Aragon. He was named Governor of Rome in 1501. He was bishop of Fermo (1504–1518), and Archbishop of Sorrento (1501–1512). He was created a cardinal by Pope Alexander VI on 31 May 1503, and named Cardinal Priest of Ss. Giovanni e Paolo. He was Viceroy of Naples from 1511 to 1513. He was nominated Archbishop of Palermo by King Philip III, and approved by Pope Leo X on 23 January 1512. He attended the sessions of the V Lateran Council (1512–1517). Occupied with business in Rome, Remolins ruled Palermo through vicars. He died in Rome on 5 February 1518. Pirro, pp. 185-187. Lorenzo Cardella (1793). Memorie storiche de'cardinali della santa Romana chiesa (in Italian). Vol. Tomo terzo. Roma: Pagliarini. pp. 294–296. Eubel, II, p. 25, no. 36; III, p. 8, no. 38; p. 268.
  75. ^ Cajetan was named a cardinal by Pope Leo X on 1 July 1517, and assigned the titular church of S. Sisto. He was appointed to Palermo on 8 February 1518 by Leo X, who claimed the right because Cardinal Remolins had died in the Roman Curia. According to Pirro, however, De Vio was rejected by the Royal Council of Sicily because he had not been appointed by the King, who held the right of nomination. De Vio never took possession of the diocese, and he resigned on 19 December 1519. He died in Rome on 10 August 1534. Pirro, pp. 187-188. Gams, p. 952. Eubel, III, p. 16, no. 27; p. 268-269.
  76. ^ Carondelet was named a Councilor of the Ducal Council of Philip the Fair in 1497. In 1508 he became a member of the Secret Council of the Burgundian Netherlands. In 1522 he was named Chairman of the Council by Charles V, a position he held until 1540. He was named Archbishop of Palermo by Emperor Charles V, but Pope Leo X imposed the condition that he resign his Deanship of Besancon. In addition, Cardinal de Vio contested Carondelet's title to the office. Carondelet never visited the island of Sicily or his See, but spent nearly all of his time in Mechlen. He was a correspondent of Erasmus. He died on 26 March 1544. Pirro, pp. 188-196. John C. Olin (1979). Six Essays on Erasmus and a Translation of Erasmus' Letter to Carondelet, 1523. NY: Fordham Univ Press. pp. 41, 46, 64, 95. ISBN 978-0-8232-1024-4. Peter G. Bietenholz; Thomas Brian Deutscher (2003). Contemporaries of Erasmus: A Biographical Register of the Renaissance and Reformation. Vol. I. University of Toronto Press. pp. 272–273. ISBN 978-0-8020-8577-1. Eubel, III, p. 269.
  77. ^ Giovanni Doria was a native of Genoa. He was named a cardinal at the age of 31 by Pope Clement VIII on 9 June 1604, and was appointed Cardinal Deacon of S. Adriano; he was not yet a priest. Cardinal Doria was named Coadjutor Archbishop and titular Archbishop of Thessalonica (Macedonia) on 4 February 1608. He was consecrated in Rome by Pope Paul V on 4 May 1608. He succeeded to the See of Palermo on 5 July 1608. He died on 19 November 1642. Lorenzo Cardella (1793). Memorie storiche de' cardinali della santa Romana chiesa (in Italian). Vol. Tomo sesto (6). Rome: Pagliarini. pp. 113–115. Gauchat, Hierarchia catholica IV, p. 8; p. 272, with note 2; p. 335.
  78. ^ Lozano was appointed bishop of the Diocese of Plasencia in Spain, and granted the personal title of archbishop. He died on 3 July 1669. David M. Cheney. Catholic-Hierarchy.org, "Archbishop Juan Lozano, O.S.A." Catholic-Hierarchy.org, Retrieved March 21, 2016. Gams, p. 952. Ritzler-Sefrin, V, p. 305 with note 2.
  79. ^ Palafox was born in the diocese of Sagunto (Valencia, Spain). He was Doctor in utroque iure (Salamanca). He was presented to the See of Palermo by the King of Spain on 15 August 1677, and preconized (approved) by Pope Clement IX on 8 November 1677. He was consecrated in Rome by Cardinal Carlo Pio on 11 November 1677. He was presented by King Charles II of Spain on 20 September 1684, and appointed by Pope Innocent XI as Archbishop of Seville on 13 November 1684. Palafox died on 2 December 1701. Gams, p. 952. Ritzler-Sefrin, V, p. 222, with note 4; p. 305 with note 3.
  80. ^ Bazan y Manriquez: Gams, p. 952. Ritzler-Sefrin, V, p. 305 with note 4.
  81. ^ Gasch: Gams, p. 952. Ritzler-Sefrin, V, p. 305 with note 5.
  82. ^ Gams, p. 952.
  83. ^ In secular life his name was Paolo Basile. As a Franciscan he was Fra Matteo from Pareta. Gams, p. 952. Ritzler-Sefrin, VI, p. 327, with note 2.
  84. ^ Rossi: Gams, p. 952. Ritzler-Sefrin, VI, p. 327, with note 3.
  85. ^ Meléndez: Gams, p. 952. Ritzler-Sefrin, VI, p. 327, with note 4.
  86. ^ Papiniano-Cusani: Gams, p. 952. Ritzler-Sefrin, VI, p. 327, with note 5.
  87. ^ Filangeri: Gams, p. 952. Ritzler-Sefrin, VI, p. 327, with note 6.
  88. ^ Sanseverino: Gams, p. 952. Ritzler-Sefrin, VI, p. 327, with note 8.
  89. ^ Lopez: Gams, p. 952. Ritzler-Sefrin, VI, p. 327, with note 9.
  90. ^ Born in Palermo in 1814, Pietro Celesia entered the monastery of S. Martino in Palermo and took the name Michelangelo, professing his vows in 1835. In 1840 he was named a lecturer in philosophy in the monastery, and in 1843 docent in theology. In 1846 he became Prior at Messina, and in 1850 Prior at Militello; in 1850 Pope Pius IX named him Abbot of Montecassino; in 1858 he was appointed Abbot of Farfa and Procurator General of the Benedictine Order at the Roman Curia. Celesia was named Bishop of Patti on 23 March 1860, and consecrated a bishop on 15 April 1860 by Cardinal Girolamo d'Andrea; he could not enter his diocese, however, until 1866 because of the liberation movement led by Giuseppe Garibaldi. He was appointed Archbishop of Palermo on 27 October 1871, and named a cardinal by Pope Leo XIII on 10 November 1884. He died on 14 April 1904. Martin Bräuer (2014). Handbuch der Kardinäle: 1846-2012 (in German). Berlin: De Gruyter. p. 129. ISBN 978-3-11-026947-5.
  91. ^ Giuseppe Petralia (1989). Il Cardinale Ernesto Ruffini, Arcivescovo di Palermo (in Italian). Vatican City: Libreria Editrice Vaticana. ISBN 978-88-209-1650-3.
  92. ^ Born in 1918, Pappalardo was a native of Villafranca Sicula (Agrigento Sicily), the son of an officer in the Carabinieri. He attended the Roman Seminary and the Gregorian University, taking doctorates in theology and Canon and Civil Law; he was ordained in 1941. After additional study he served as a staff member of the Secretariat of State and teacher at the Pontifical Ecclesiastical Academy. He was pro-Nuncio in Indonesia, 1965–1969, and for that assignment he was made titular bishop of Miletus (Turkey). On his return, he became President of the Pontifical Ecclesiastical Academy. 17 Oct 1970 he was named Archbishop of Palermo. He was made a cardinal in 1973 by Pope Paul VI. As Archbishop of Palermo he was a vocal opponent of the Mafia for a time. His resignation of the diocese was accepted on 4 Apr 1996 after passing the age of 75. He died in Palermo on 10 December 2006. Harris M. Lentz (2009). Popes and Cardinals of the 20th Century: A Biographical Dictionary. London: McFarland. p. 139. ISBN 978-1-4766-2155-5. Vincenzo Noto (2011). Il cardinale Salvatore Pappalardo. Amen. ISBN 978-88-96063-08-8. John Dickie (2014). Blood Brotherhoods: A History of Italy's Three Mafias. New York: PublicAffairs. pp. 538–539. ISBN 978-1-61039-427-7. He has been accused of being a member of a Masonic lodge: Paul L. Williams (2009). The Vatican Exposed: Money, Murder, and the Mafia. Amherst NY USA: Prometheus Books. p. 118. ISBN 978-1-61592-142-3.

Books

Reference works

  • Eubel, Conradus, ed. (1913). Hierarchia catholica, Tomus 1 (second ed.). Münster: Libreria Regensbergiana. (in Latin)
  • Eubel, Conradus, ed. (1914). Hierarchia catholica, Tomus 2 (second ed.). Münster: Libreria Regensbergiana. (in Latin)
  • Eubel, Conradus, ed. (1923). Hierarchia catholica, Tomus 3 (second ed.). Münster: Libreria Regensbergiana.
  • Gams, Pius Bonifatius (1873). Series episcoporum Ecclesiae catholicae: quotquot innotuerunt a beato Petro apostolo. Ratisbon: Typis et Sumptibus Georgii Josephi Manz. pp. 946–947. (Use with caution; obsolete)
  • Gauchat, Patritius (Patrice) (1935). Hierarchia catholica 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. (in Latin)
  • Ritzler, Remigius; Sefrin, Pirminus (1958). Hierarchia catholica medii et recentis aevi 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.
  • Ritzler, Remigius; 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

  • Cappelletti, Giuseppe (1870). Le chiese d'Italia dalla loro origine sino ai nostri giorni (in Italian). Vol. vigesimoprimo (21). Venezia: Antonelli. pp. 572–579.
  • Lanzoni, Francesco (1927). Le diocesi d'Italia dalle origini al principio del secolo VII (an. 604) (in Italian). Rome: Biblioteca Apostolica Vaticana. pp. 644-650.
  • Backman, Clifford R. (2002). The Decline and Fall of Medieval Sicily: Politics, Religion, and Economy in the Reign of Frederick III, 1296-1337. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-52181-9.
  • D'Angelo, Franco, ed. (2002). La città di Palermo nel Medioevo (in Italian). Palermo: Officina di Studi Medievali. ISBN 978-88-88615-39-4.
  • Kamp, Norbert (1975). Kirche und Monarchie im staufischen Königreich Sizilien: I. Prosopographische Grundlegung, Bistumer und Bischofe des Konigreichs 1194–1266: 3. Sizilien München: Wilhelm Fink 1975, pp. 1109–1145.
  • Loud, G. A. (2007). The Latin Church in Norman Italy. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
  • Mongitore, Antonino; Lo Piccolo, Francesco (2009). Storia delle chiese di Palermo: i conventi (in Italian). Palermo: CRICD. ISBN 978-88-903321-5-9.
  • Piccolus, Albertus (1623). De antiquo iure Ecclesiae Siculae dissertatio Alberti Piccoli ex congregatione oratorij Messanensis (in Latin). Messina: Giovanni Martinelli. pp. 18–20, 23–28, 141–147.
  • Pirro, Rocco (1733). Mongitore, Antonino (ed.). Sicilia sacra disquisitionibus et notitiis illustrata. Vol. Tomus primus (third ed.). Palermo: haeredes P. coppulae. pp. 1–312.

External links

  • Official site

Coordinates: 38°06′56″N 13°25′41″E / 38.1156°N 13.4281°E / 38.1156; 13.4281

roman, catholic, archdiocese, palermo, roman, catholic, metropolitan, archdiocese, palermo, latin, archidioecesis, panormitana, founded, diocese, palermo, first, century, raised, status, archdiocese, 11th, century, archbishop, corrado, lorefice, archdiocese, p. The Roman Catholic Metropolitan Archdiocese of Palermo Latin Archidioecesis Panormitana was founded as the Diocese of Palermo in the first century and raised to the status of archdiocese in the 11th century 1 2 The archbishop is Corrado Lorefice Archdiocese of PalermoArchidioecesis PanormitanaArcidiocesi di PalermoPalermo CathedralLocationCountryItalyEcclesiastical provincePalermoStatisticsArea1 366 km2 527 sq mi Population Total Catholics including non members as of 2013 912 800 est 905 700 est 99 2 Parishes178InformationDenominationCatholic ChurchRiteRoman RiteEstablished1st CenturyCathedralCattedrale di l Assunzione di MariaSecular priests233 diocesan 245 Religious Orders Current leadershipPopeFrancisArchbishopCorrado LoreficeBishops emeritusSalvatore De GiorgiPaolo RomeoMapWebsitewww arcidiocesi palermo itThe archdiocese has the following suffragans in the ecclesiastical Province of Palermo Diocese of Cefalu Diocese of Mazara del Vallo Archdiocese of Monreale Diocese of Trapani dd Contents 1 History 1 1 Arab control over Palermo and its church 1 2 Norman control over the church of Palermo 2 List of Archbishops of Palermo 2 1 to 1200 2 2 from 1200 to 1400 2 3 from 1400 to 1600 2 4 from 1600 to 1800 2 5 since 1800 3 References 4 Books 4 1 Reference works 4 2 Studies 5 External linksHistory EditThis section needs expansion You can help by adding to it October 2016 Palermo is just south of a major active seismic zone and is subject to frequent earthquakes and occasional inundations tsunamis 3 The events of 1693 1726 and 1823 were particularly destructive 4 Pope Gregory I personally founded six monasteries in Sicily including the monastery of S Hermes at Palermo according to Ugo Benigni in his article on Sicily in the Catholic Encyclopedia 5 He also founded the monastery of S Hadrian and the Praetoritanum 6 Ugo Benigni attributes this interest to the numbers of bishops and monks who emigrated from Africa as a result of the policy of the Arian Vandals to the Orthodox Christians In 718 the Emperor Leo III the Isaurian 718 741 suppressed a revolt in Sicily and then detached southern Italy and Sicily from the metropolitan jurisdiction of the pope in Rome In the ninth century the patriarch of Constantinople raised the See of Palermo to the rank of metropolitan of all of Sicily A protest against these actions was entered by Pope Nicholas I 858 867 7 in a letter of 25 September 860 to the Emperor Michael III 8 Arab control over Palermo and its church Edit Benigni states 9 Concerning the state of the Sicilian Church during the Saracen domination we have no information not the name of a single bishop is known This is misleading There were bishops but they were part of the Patriarchate of Constantinople not that of Rome and Constantinople was in communion with Rome until the Great Schism of 1054 In 883 Pope Marinus I paid a ransom to the emir of Palermo for the archbishop of Syracuse and the bishop of Malta who were being held in prison in Palermo 10 In 897 the archbishop of Palermo was Sofronios or Sonfronius 11 In 930 there was a seminary in operation under the direction of the archbishop of Palermo when Eustatius was about to pay the 12 000 krus per annum which was owed the collector who noticed the extreme poverty of the students gave part of the funds to the archbishop for the benefit of the seminary 12 In 957 an archbishop named Arimattea was already occupying the see in 964 Archbishop Arimattea was abused and imprisoned by the Grand Mufti of Palermo from which he died 13 In 965 the Archbishop of Palermo was Andreas who had been vicar of Archbishop Arimattea 14 In 976 according to Arabic sources the archbishop of Palermo died and the priests and monks elected a new archbishop named Ananiah who had been vicar of his predecessor Patriarch Antony III of Constantinople was requested by an embassy from Palermo to approve the election which he did expressing the wish that the archbishop elect should come to Constantinople and be consecrated by him The emperor did not approve of these patriarchal pretensions and the patriarch renounced them 15 The priests and monks told the emir of Sicily that the custom had been for the bishops of Sicily to consecrate the archbishop They asked permission to write to the pope which was refused 16 Arab invasions of Sicily had begun at the beginning of the eighth century with the capture of the island of Cossura modern Pantelleria Raids were launched in 730 731 734 735 740 and 752 753 17 Palermo was temporarily captured in 820 but the Arabs were driven out by pirates The serious conquest of the island began in 827 from the Tunisian port of Susa led by Asad Ibn Al Furat Palermo fell in 831 18 Messina in 843 Leontini in 847 and Syracuse in 878 Taormina was captured in 902 completing the conquest of the entire island 19 From then until 1061 when the Norman conquests began Sicily was an Arab land 20 After the famine of 940 the Arabs deliberately drove Christians out of the western part of the island 21 Norman control over the church of Palermo Edit On Christmas Day 1130 Count Roger II was crowned King of Sicily in the Cathedral in Palermo It is uncertain who crowned the king One source names Count Roger of Capua another Archbishop Peter of Palermo 22 The cathedral was rebuilt by Archbishop Walter between 1170 and 1190 23 The Archdiocese of Palermo was united with the Archdiocese of Monreale on 7 July 1775 24 The union was dissolved on 12 March 1802 25 Monreale lost its metropolitan status in 2000 however and it is now a suffragan of the Archdiocese of Palermo The Cathedral of Palermo is dedicated to the Bodily Assumption of the Virgin Mary into Heaven The Chapter of the cathedral had three dignities in 1677 and two dignities in 1775 In 1211 there were eighteen canons but the number grew to twenty four in 1431 when Pope Eugenius IV ordered their reduction to eighteen again In 1523 the Emperor Charles V added six more canons bringing the number back up to twenty four 26 There were again twenty four canons in 1677 and twenty six canons in 1775 27 The chapter had the right to elect the archbishop 28 List of Archbishops of Palermo Editto 1200 Edit Map of the ecclesiastical province of Palermo Anonymous 29 Anonymous 447 30 Gratianus 450 503 31 Agatho c 578 590 32 Victor attested 591 599 33 Ioannes attested 603 34 Felix 649 35 Theodorus 787 36 Anonymous c 800 Anonymous 819 37 Arab Conquest of Sicily 38 Humbertus c 1052 1054 39 Nicodemus 1065 40 Alcherius 1083 1099 41 Gualterius 1112 1113 1117 42 Pietro ca 1123 after 1130 43 Rogerius Frescra c 1141 July 1143 44 Hugh Ugo 1150 45 c 1161 46 Stephen du Perche 1166 1170 47 Walterius Ophamil 1170 1187 48 Bartholomeus 1194 1201 49 from 1200 to 1400 Edit Parisius 50 22 May 1201 before 10 May 1213 Berardus de Castacca 51 11 September 1213 8 September 1252 Guilelmus 52 Leonardus 1261 c 1270 Giovanni Misnelli 2 June 1273 Petrus de Santafede 53 c 1278 1284 Licius 10 January 1304 12 December 1304 Bartolommeo de Antiochia 54 31 January 1306 1312 Franciscus de Antiochia 55 9 May 1312 1320 Giovanni Orsini 56 10 October 1320 c 1333 Cardinal Matteo Orsini O P 57 1334 1336 Resigned Theobaldus 24 April 1336 c 1350 Roger de Palheriis Pulcheriis O Min 17 November 1351 1360 1361 Arnaldus Caprarii O Min 11 March 1361 1362 58 Octavianus de Labro 8 November 1362 1363 59 Melchiore Bevilacqua 20 December 1363 1364 60 Martinus de Aretio 15 January 1365 1366 61 Matthaeus de Cumis 13 November 1366 1376 1377 62 Nicolaus de Agrigento O Min 18 February 1377 after 1384 63 Ludovico Bonito Ludovicus Bonitus 64 before 1 June 1387 1395 Gilfortus Riccobono 23 October 1395 1398 65 Franciscus Vitalis 66 from 1400 to 1600 Edit Joannes de Procida 1400 1408 67 Cardinal Rinaldo Brancaccio 4 Aug 1410 1414 Resigned Administrator Ubertinus de Marinis 68 20 June 1414 1434 Niccolo Tedeschi O S B 69 9 Mar 1435 24 Feb 1445 Died Marino Orsini 70 4 June 1445 30 July 1445 Simone Beccatelli Bonovius 71 1446 1465 Nicolaus Pujades 72 23 August 1465 1467 Giovanni Burgio 16 Nov 1467 1469 Died Paolo Visconti O Carm 73 6 Sep 1469 1473 Died Philip of Viana Filippo di Navarra 31 Jan 1477 1485 Resigned Cardinal Pierre de Foix le jeune 14 May 1485 6 Jul 1489 Appointed Administrator of Malta Giovanni Paterno O S B 6 Jul 1489 1511 Died Cardinal Francisco de Remolins 74 23 Jan 1512 5 Feb 1518 Cardinal Tommaso De Vio Thomas Cajetan O P 75 8 February 1518 19 December 1519 Administrator Giovanni Carondelet Jean Carondelet 76 19 Dec 1519 26 Mar 1544 Cardinal Pietro Tagliavia d Aragonia 10 Oct 1544 5 Aug 1558 Died Francisco Orozco de Arce 15 Mar 1559 11 Oct 1561 Died Ottaviano Preconio O F M Conv 18 Mar 1562 18 Aug 1568 Died Juan Segria Cengria 16 Sep 1569 1570 Died Giacomo Lomellino del Canto 10 Jan 1571 9 Aug 1575 Died Cesare Marullo 11 Sep 1577 12 Nov 1588 Died from 1600 to 1800 Edit Diego Haedo 14 Aug 1589 5 Jul 1608 Died Cardinal Giovanni Doria 77 5 Jul 1608 19 Nov 1642 Fernando Andrade Castro 28 Nov 1644 6 Jul 1648 Appointed Archbishop Personal Title of Jaen Martin de Leon Cardenas O S A 27 Aug 1650 15 Nov 1655 Died Pietro Jeronimo Martinez y Rubio 15 Jan 1657 22 Nov 1667 Died Juan Lozano O S A 4 Feb 1669 26 Apr 1677 78 Jaime de Palafox y Cardona 79 8 Nov 1677 13 Nov 1684 Ferdinando Bazan y Manriquez 80 1 Apr 1686 11 Aug 1702 Died Jose Gasch Casch O M 81 26 Nov 1703 11 Jun 1729 Died Giovanni Maurizio Gustavo 82 1730 1731 Died Paolo Basile Mathaeus de Pareta O F M Obs 83 3 Sep 1731 Jan 1736 Died Domenico Rossi Rosso e Colonna O S B 84 8 Jul 1737 6 Jul 1747 Died Jose Alfonso Melendez O F M Disc 85 19 Feb 1748 31 Oct 1753 Died Marcello Papiniano Cusani 86 11 Feb 1754 16 Jun 1762 Resigned Serafino Filangeri O S B 87 23 Aug 1762 29 Jan 1776 Appointed Archbishop of Naples Francesco Ferdinando Sanseverino C P O 88 15 Apr 1776 31 Mar 1793 Died Filippo Lopez y Rojo C R 89 17 Jun 1793 4 Sep 1801 Resigned since 1800 Edit Cardinal Domenico Pignatelli di Belmonte C R 29 Mar 1802 5 Feb 1803 Died Raffaele Mormile C R 28 Mar 1803 31 Dec 1813 Died Cardinal Pietro Gravina 23 Sep 1816 6 Dec 1830 Died Cardinal Gaetano Maria Giuseppe Benedetto Placido Vincenzo Trigona e Parisi 15 Apr 1833 5 Jul 1837 Died Cardinal Ferdinando Maria Pignatelli C R 21 Feb 1839 10 May 1853 Died Giovanni Battista Naselli C O 27 Jun 1853 3 May 1870 Died Cardinal Michelangelo Celesia O S B 90 27 Oct 1871 14 April 1904 Cardinal Alessandro Lualdi 14 Nov 1904 12 Nov 1927 Died Cardinal Luigi Lavitrano 29 Sep 1928 Dec 1944 Resigned Cardinal Ernesto Ruffini 91 11 Oct 1945 11 Jun 1967 Died Cardinal Francesco Carpino 26 Jun 1967 17 Oct 1970 Resigned Cardinal Salvatore Pappalardo 92 17 Oct 1970 4 Apr 1996 Cardinal Salvatore De Giorgi 4 Apr 1996 19 Dec 2006 Retired Cardinal Paolo Romeo 19 Dec 2006 27 Oct 2015 Retired Corrado Lorefice 27 Oct 2015 References Edit Archdiocese of Palermo Catholic Hierarchy org David M Cheney Retrieved February 29 2016 Metropolitan Archdiocese of Palermo GCatholic org Gabriel Chow Retrieved February 29 2016 C Chiarabba et al Tectonophysics 395 2005 251 268 page 251 figure 1 a and p 255 figure 4 retrieved 2017 02 05 Cappelletti p 523 U Benigni Sicily The Catholic Encyclopedia An International Work of Reference on the Constitution Doctrine Discipline and History of the Catholic Church Vol 13 New York Encyclopedia Press 1913 p 774 Annliese Nef ed 2013 A Companion to Medieval Palermo The History of a Mediterranean City from 600 to 1500 Boston Leiden Brill p 27 ISBN 978 90 04 25253 0 Paul Fridolin Kehr Italia Pontificia X Berlin 1975 pp 239 241 Benigni Sicily p 774 This took place in the context of the conflict with Patriarch Photios I of Constantinople and the Photian Schism Philippus Jaffe Regesta pontificum Romanorum Tomus I editio altera Leipzig Veit 1884 p 343 no 2682 p 774 Giuseppe Vella 1789 Codice diplomatico di Sicilia sotto il governo degli Arabi in Italian Vol Tomo primo parte seconda Palermo Dalla Reale Stamperia pp 244 245 Vella p 203 Giuseppe Vella 1790 Codice diplomatico di Sicilia sotto il governo degli Arabi in Italian Vol Tomo secondo parte prima Palermo Dalla Reale Stamperia pp 294 295 Giuseppe Vella 1790 Codice diplomatico di Sicilia sotto il governo degli Arabi in Italian Vol Tomo secondo parte seconda Palermo Dalla Reale Stamperia pp 273 369 370 Vella pp 382 383 Vella p 534 545 Vella pp 528 529 Giuseppe Quatriglio 1991 A Thousand Years in Sicily From the Arabs to the Bourbons third ed Mineola NY Legas Gaetano Cipolla p 14 ISBN 978 0 921252 17 7 Jeremy Dummett 2015 Palermo City of Kings The Heart of Sicily London New York I B Tauris p 16 ISBN 978 1 78453 083 9 Quatriglio p 15 17 Quatriglio p 19 Dummett p 20 Dummett p 36 Falco of Benevento 108 J P Migne editor Patrologiae Latinae Cursus Completus Tomus 173 Paris 1854 p 1204 says that Cardinal Comes crowned Roger King and that Count Robert placed the crown on the King s head Falco s narrative is disputed by Hubert Houben 2002 Roger II of Sicily A Ruler Between East and West Cambridge University Press pp 55 57 esp p 56 note 48 ISBN 978 0 521 65573 6 Nef p 172 Leonardo Urbani 1993 La Cattedrale di Palermo studi per l ottavo centenario dalla fondazione in Italian Palermo Sellerio Ritzler Sefrin VI p 327 note 1 Ritzler Sefrin VI p 297 note 1 Pirro p 137 171 188 The canons created by Charles V were always nominated by the King of Spain and installed by the archbishop The archbishop nominated the others Pirro pp 289 290 Statistics of 1677 Ritzler Sefrin V p 305 note 1 Statistics of 1775 Ritzler Sefrin VI p 327 note 1 Pirro pp 102 156 161 165 170 prioris episcopi Lanzoni p 649 A bull of Pope Leo I dated 21 October 447 notes that a recently consecrated bishop was alienating church property according to complaints from his clergy etiam Panormitani clerici quibus nuper est ordinatus antistes simile querimonium in sancta synodo cui praesidebamus de usurpatione prioris episcopi causam detulerunt P Jaffe Regesta Pontificum Romanorum I editio altera Leipzig 1884 p 61 no 415 Lanzoni p 649 Gratianus episcopus Panormi J D Mansi Sacrorum Conciliorum nova et amplissima collectio editio novissima Tomus VI Florence A Zatta 1761 p 1086 Cappelletti p 528 Gams p 951 Lanzoni p 649 Agatho s name appears in Pope Gregory I s Dialogues IV 57 Lanzoni II p 649 no 4 Victor Lanzoni p 649 no 5 Gregory I granted Bishop Ioannes the use of the pallium in a letter of July 603 Lanzoni p 650 no 6 Felix Mansi Tomus X Florence 1764 p 867 Cappelletti p 529 Gams p 951 Bishop Theodorus took part in the II Ecumenical Council of Nicaea Mansi Tomus XIII Florence 1767 p 383 Both anonymous archbishops are mentioned in a letter of Pope Paschal I of 819 addressed to the latter Pirro I pp 39 40 Pirro argues strenuously against critics pp 40 42 that the letter is genuine Cappelletti p 529 Saracen Invasions Sede Vacante Gams p 951 Pope Leo IX brought Humbert from Lotharingia to evangelize Sicily and ordained him Archbishop of Palermo Pirro pp 51 53 Cappelletti p 529 Gams p 951 He is not the same Humbert that Leo IX brought from France to make Abbot of Subiaco in 1052 Cesare Baronio 1869 Annales ecclesiastici denuo excusi et ad nostra usque tempora perducti ab Augustino Theiner in Latin Vol Tomus septimus decimus 17 Barri Ducis Ludovicus Guerin p 56 Pirro pp 53 69 Cappelletti p 529 Gams p 951 Alcherius Pirro pp 69 80 Cappelletti p 529 Gams p 951 Gualterius was a Norman Pirro pp 80 81 Cappelletti p 529 Gams p 951 Pietro had been Bishop of Squillace he was transferred to Palermo by Pope Calixtus II before 2 April 1223 Pirro pp 81 85 Cappelletti p 529 Gams p 951 Jaffe p 811 no 7045 Bullarum diplomatum et privilegiorum sanctorum Romanorum pontificum Taurinensis editio in Latin Vol Tomus II Turin Franco et Dalmazzo 1859 pp 332 333 Roger was a Norman Pirro pp 85 88 Cappelletti p 529 Gams p 951 Loud p 230 makes him archbishop elect from 1143 to March 1147 Loud p 230 Ugo Pirro pp 88 102 Cappelletti p 530 Gams p 951 Stephanus Pirro pp 102 103 Cappelletti p 530 Gams p 951 Gualterius Ophamil Pirro pp 103 113 Cappelletti p 530 Gams p 951 Bartolommeo was the brother of Walterius Ophamil and Bishop of Agrigento He spent three years in Constantinople as ambassador of King William II of Sicily He was Chancellor of Sicily for William III Pirro pp 113 122 Cappelletti p 530 Gams p 951 Pope Innocent III notified the Chapter of the Cathedral of Palermo that they should proceed to elect another Archbishop since the Bishop elect Parisius had been deposed Eubel I p 388 with note 2 Berardus was already Bishop of Bari and was transferred to Palermo by the Pope He died on 8 September 1252 Eubel I p 388 Guilelmus had been Bishop of Olenenus a suffragan of Patras Greece Eubel I p 388 with note 3 Gams p 952 notes that he was killed in the Sicilian Vespers Bartolommeo Gams p 952 Eubel I p 388 Franciscus Gams p 952 Eubel I p 388 Giovanni Orsini Eubel I p 388 Matteo Orsini Gams p 952 Arnaldus Eubel I p 388 Octavianus Eubel I p 388 Melchiore Bevilacqua Eubel I p 388 Martinus Eubel I p 388 Matthaeus Eubel I p 388 In 1384 Nicolaus was compelled by the citizens of Palermo led by Count Manfred of Clermont to pay an annual tribute Nicolaus instituted an annual observance on 15 August delli Cilii Panormitani This so annoyed the Clarimontani that they drove him from his See and forced his resignation They then managed the election of one of their own partisans one of the Cathedral Canons Ludovico Bonito the son of the nobleman Antonio Bonito Pirro p 163 Eubel I p 388 Pirro p 163 states that Ludovicus was elected in 1385 in any case he was sent the pallium by Urban VI He was expelled from his See in 1392 and ended up in Rome Ludovicus was transferred to the titular diocese of Antivari in Epirus in 1395 by Boniface IX Roman Obedience On 22 May 1396 he was named titular Archbishop of Thessalonica Greece and then on 5 September 1399 Bishop of Bergamo He was promoted to the Archdiocese of Pisa on 15 November 1400 and finally to Taranto on 29 July 1407 He was promoted to the Cardinalate by Gregory XII in 1408 but removed from his diocese after Gregory s fall He died on 18 September 1413 Pirro pp 163 167 Gams p 952 Eubel I pp 31 388 396 400 473 Gilfortus was deprived of his diocese by King Martin I of Sicily He died in 1398 according to Eubel Pirro pp 167 168 Gams p 952 Eubel I p 388 Franciscus Bishop of Mazzara was elected to succeed Gilfortus in 1398 but King Martin did not approve Pirro p 168 Pirro pp 168 169 Ubertino was a Doctor in utroque iure and a judge of the Royal Curia Civil and Canon Law He was nominated by King Martin of Aragon on 3 May 1409 but was resisted by the Chapter and people of Palermo In 1411 Queen Bianca attempted to coerce the Canons but they put her off waiting until King Martin returned from Aragon Ubertino was approved by the Pope on 20 June 1414 and was consecrated by John XXIII 1410 1415 He made his formal entry into Palermo on 21 October 1414 He wrote his Testament on 21 December 1433 His tombstone states that he died in 1434 Pirro pp 170 171 no XXXIII Eubel I p 388 Nicolas was born in Catania and was a Canon of the cathedral He studied law in Bologna He was a teacher of Canon Law in Siena Parma and Bologna He was brought to Rome and made Auditor of the Rota under Martin V and Apostolic Referendary under Eugenius IV Alessandro Casano 1849 Del Sotterraneo della chiesa cattedrale di Palermo in Italian Palermo Solli pp 42 43 He participated in the Council of Basel as a vigorous and vociferous defender of Eugenius IV and the Papacy against the Conciliarists Mandell Creighton 1882 A History of the Papacy Vol II The Council of Basel the papal restoration 1418 1464 London Longmans pp 201 206 Orsini was transferred to Taranto on 30 July 1445 while still Archbishop elect of Palermo Eubel II pp 211 246 Simone Beccatelli was a member of a Sicilian noble family which had emigrated from Bologna He was trained in Canon Law His memorial inscription lauds him as Iuris pontificii non indoctus interpres a learned interpreter of Canon Law non indoctus might suggest he held a doctorate Beccatelli was nominated at the age of 28 by King Alfonso and approved by Pope Eugenius IV He was consecrated in January 1446 He was rebuked by Pope Nicholas V on 24 March 1446 for attempting to assert his metropolitan authority over the Church of Agrigento which was directly subject to the Holy See without a metropolitan intervening In the decade 1450 1460 he was six times a delegate to the King of Aragon in the matter of the revision of the Sicilian law code Simon died in the episcopal palace in Palermo on 8 January 1465 Pirro pp 174 178 Gams p 952 Eubel II p 211 Pujades was a native of Mari diocese of Barcelona and a nephew of Guglielmo Puxades Viceroy of Sicily He had been Archdeacon of S Maria de Man in Barcelona He was consecrated by Pope Paul II Pirro p 138 no XXXVI Eubel II p 211 Visconti a master of theology had been the confessor of Pope Nicholas V and Pope Paul II He was Provincial of the Sicilian Province of his Order in 1444 of the Roman Province in 1451 and again of the Sicilian Province in 1461 He rose to be Vicar General of Italy and then Procurator General at the Roman Curia He was appointed Bishop of Mazzara a suffragan of Palermo on 16 November 1467 Pirro pp 179 180 no XXXIX Eubel II pp 188 211 A native of Lerida in Catalonia Remolins studied law at the University of Pisa and became secretary of King Ferdinand of Aragon He was named Governor of Rome in 1501 He was bishop of Fermo 1504 1518 and Archbishop of Sorrento 1501 1512 He was created a cardinal by Pope Alexander VI on 31 May 1503 and named Cardinal Priest of Ss Giovanni e Paolo He was Viceroy of Naples from 1511 to 1513 He was nominated Archbishop of Palermo by King Philip III and approved by Pope Leo X on 23 January 1512 He attended the sessions of the V Lateran Council 1512 1517 Occupied with business in Rome Remolins ruled Palermo through vicars He died in Rome on 5 February 1518 Pirro pp 185 187 Lorenzo Cardella 1793 Memorie storiche de cardinali della santa Romana chiesa in Italian Vol Tomo terzo Roma Pagliarini pp 294 296 Eubel II p 25 no 36 III p 8 no 38 p 268 Cajetan was named a cardinal by Pope Leo X on 1 July 1517 and assigned the titular church of S Sisto He was appointed to Palermo on 8 February 1518 by Leo X who claimed the right because Cardinal Remolins had died in the Roman Curia According to Pirro however De Vio was rejected by the Royal Council of Sicily because he had not been appointed by the King who held the right of nomination De Vio never took possession of the diocese and he resigned on 19 December 1519 He died in Rome on 10 August 1534 Pirro pp 187 188 Gams p 952 Eubel III p 16 no 27 p 268 269 Carondelet was named a Councilor of the Ducal Council of Philip the Fair in 1497 In 1508 he became a member of the Secret Council of the Burgundian Netherlands In 1522 he was named Chairman of the Council by Charles V a position he held until 1540 He was named Archbishop of Palermo by Emperor Charles V but Pope Leo X imposed the condition that he resign his Deanship of Besancon In addition Cardinal de Vio contested Carondelet s title to the office Carondelet never visited the island of Sicily or his See but spent nearly all of his time in Mechlen He was a correspondent of Erasmus He died on 26 March 1544 Pirro pp 188 196 John C Olin 1979 Six Essays on Erasmus and a Translation of Erasmus Letter to Carondelet 1523 NY Fordham Univ Press pp 41 46 64 95 ISBN 978 0 8232 1024 4 Peter G Bietenholz Thomas Brian Deutscher 2003 Contemporaries of Erasmus A Biographical Register of the Renaissance and Reformation Vol I University of Toronto Press pp 272 273 ISBN 978 0 8020 8577 1 Eubel III p 269 Giovanni Doria was a native of Genoa He was named a cardinal at the age of 31 by Pope Clement VIII on 9 June 1604 and was appointed Cardinal Deacon of S Adriano he was not yet a priest Cardinal Doria was named Coadjutor Archbishop and titular Archbishop of Thessalonica Macedonia on 4 February 1608 He was consecrated in Rome by Pope Paul V on 4 May 1608 He succeeded to the See of Palermo on 5 July 1608 He died on 19 November 1642 Lorenzo Cardella 1793 Memorie storiche de cardinali della santa Romana chiesa in Italian Vol Tomo sesto 6 Rome Pagliarini pp 113 115 Gauchat Hierarchia catholica IV p 8 p 272 with note 2 p 335 Lozano was appointed bishop of the Diocese of Plasencia in Spain and granted the personal title of archbishop He died on 3 July 1669 David M Cheney Catholic Hierarchy org Archbishop Juan Lozano O S A Catholic Hierarchy org Retrieved March 21 2016 Gams p 952 Ritzler Sefrin V p 305 with note 2 Palafox was born in the diocese of Sagunto Valencia Spain He was Doctor in utroque iure Salamanca He was presented to the See of Palermo by the King of Spain on 15 August 1677 and preconized approved by Pope Clement IX on 8 November 1677 He was consecrated in Rome by Cardinal Carlo Pio on 11 November 1677 He was presented by King Charles II of Spain on 20 September 1684 and appointed by Pope Innocent XI as Archbishop of Seville on 13 November 1684 Palafox died on 2 December 1701 Gams p 952 Ritzler Sefrin V p 222 with note 4 p 305 with note 3 Bazan y Manriquez Gams p 952 Ritzler Sefrin V p 305 with note 4 Gasch Gams p 952 Ritzler Sefrin V p 305 with note 5 Gams p 952 In secular life his name was Paolo Basile As a Franciscan he was Fra Matteo from Pareta Gams p 952 Ritzler Sefrin VI p 327 with note 2 Rossi Gams p 952 Ritzler Sefrin VI p 327 with note 3 Melendez Gams p 952 Ritzler Sefrin VI p 327 with note 4 Papiniano Cusani Gams p 952 Ritzler Sefrin VI p 327 with note 5 Filangeri Gams p 952 Ritzler Sefrin VI p 327 with note 6 Sanseverino Gams p 952 Ritzler Sefrin VI p 327 with note 8 Lopez Gams p 952 Ritzler Sefrin VI p 327 with note 9 Born in Palermo in 1814 Pietro Celesia entered the monastery of S Martino in Palermo and took the name Michelangelo professing his vows in 1835 In 1840 he was named a lecturer in philosophy in the monastery and in 1843 docent in theology In 1846 he became Prior at Messina and in 1850 Prior at Militello in 1850 Pope Pius IX named him Abbot of Montecassino in 1858 he was appointed Abbot of Farfa and Procurator General of the Benedictine Order at the Roman Curia Celesia was named Bishop of Patti on 23 March 1860 and consecrated a bishop on 15 April 1860 by Cardinal Girolamo d Andrea he could not enter his diocese however until 1866 because of the liberation movement led by Giuseppe Garibaldi He was appointed Archbishop of Palermo on 27 October 1871 and named a cardinal by Pope Leo XIII on 10 November 1884 He died on 14 April 1904 Martin Brauer 2014 Handbuch der Kardinale 1846 2012 in German Berlin De Gruyter p 129 ISBN 978 3 11 026947 5 Giuseppe Petralia 1989 Il Cardinale Ernesto Ruffini Arcivescovo di Palermo in Italian Vatican City Libreria Editrice Vaticana ISBN 978 88 209 1650 3 Born in 1918 Pappalardo was a native of Villafranca Sicula Agrigento Sicily the son of an officer in the Carabinieri He attended the Roman Seminary and the Gregorian University taking doctorates in theology and Canon and Civil Law he was ordained in 1941 After additional study he served as a staff member of the Secretariat of State and teacher at the Pontifical Ecclesiastical Academy He was pro Nuncio in Indonesia 1965 1969 and for that assignment he was made titular bishop of Miletus Turkey On his return he became President of the Pontifical Ecclesiastical Academy 17 Oct 1970 he was named Archbishop of Palermo He was made a cardinal in 1973 by Pope Paul VI As Archbishop of Palermo he was a vocal opponent of the Mafia for a time His resignation of the diocese was accepted on 4 Apr 1996 after passing the age of 75 He died in Palermo on 10 December 2006 Harris M Lentz 2009 Popes and Cardinals of the 20th Century A Biographical Dictionary London McFarland p 139 ISBN 978 1 4766 2155 5 Vincenzo Noto 2011 Il cardinale Salvatore Pappalardo Amen ISBN 978 88 96063 08 8 John Dickie 2014 Blood Brotherhoods A History of Italy s Three Mafias New York PublicAffairs pp 538 539 ISBN 978 1 61039 427 7 He has been accused of being a member of a Masonic lodge Paul L Williams 2009 The Vatican Exposed Money Murder and the Mafia Amherst NY USA Prometheus Books p 118 ISBN 978 1 61592 142 3 Books EditReference works Edit Eubel Conradus ed 1913 Hierarchia catholica Tomus 1 second ed Munster Libreria Regensbergiana in Latin Eubel Conradus ed 1914 Hierarchia catholica Tomus 2 second ed Munster Libreria Regensbergiana in Latin Eubel Conradus ed 1923 Hierarchia catholica Tomus 3 second ed Munster Libreria Regensbergiana Gams Pius Bonifatius 1873 Series episcoporum Ecclesiae catholicae quotquot innotuerunt a beato Petro apostolo Ratisbon Typis et Sumptibus Georgii Josephi Manz pp 946 947 Use with caution obsolete Gauchat Patritius Patrice 1935 Hierarchia catholica 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 in Latin Ritzler Remigius Sefrin Pirminus 1958 Hierarchia catholica medii et recentis aevi 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 Ritzler Remigius 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 Cappelletti Giuseppe 1870 Le chiese d Italia dalla loro origine sino ai nostri giorni in Italian Vol vigesimoprimo 21 Venezia Antonelli pp 572 579 Lanzoni Francesco 1927 Le diocesi d Italia dalle origini al principio del secolo VII an 604 in Italian Rome Biblioteca Apostolica Vaticana pp 644 650 Backman Clifford R 2002 The Decline and Fall of Medieval Sicily Politics Religion and Economy in the Reign of Frederick III 1296 1337 Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 52181 9 D Angelo Franco ed 2002 La citta di Palermo nel Medioevo in Italian Palermo Officina di Studi Medievali ISBN 978 88 88615 39 4 Kamp Norbert 1975 Kirche und Monarchie im staufischen Konigreich Sizilien I Prosopographische Grundlegung Bistumer und Bischofe des Konigreichs 1194 1266 3 Sizilien Munchen Wilhelm Fink 1975 pp 1109 1145 Loud G A 2007 The Latin Church in Norman Italy Cambridge Cambridge University Press Mongitore Antonino Lo Piccolo Francesco 2009 Storia delle chiese di Palermo i conventi in Italian Palermo CRICD ISBN 978 88 903321 5 9 Piccolus Albertus 1623 De antiquo iure Ecclesiae Siculae dissertatio Alberti Piccoli ex congregatione oratorij Messanensis in Latin Messina Giovanni Martinelli pp 18 20 23 28 141 147 Pirro Rocco 1733 Mongitore Antonino ed Sicilia sacra disquisitionibus et notitiis illustrata Vol Tomus primus third ed Palermo haeredes P coppulae pp 1 312 External links EditOfficial site Coordinates 38 06 56 N 13 25 41 E 38 1156 N 13 4281 E 38 1156 13 4281 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Palermo amp oldid 1130371147, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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