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Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Pisa

The Archdiocese of Pisa (Latin: Archidioecesis Pisana) is a Latin Church metropolitan see of the Catholic Church in Pisa, Italy.[1][2] It was founded in the 4th century and elevated to the dignity of an archdiocese on 21 April 1092 by Pope Urban II. The seat of the bishop is the cathedral of the Assumption in the Piazza del Duomo.

Archdiocese of Pisa

Archidioecesis Pisana
Location
CountryItaly
Ecclesiastical provincePisa
Statistics
Area847 km2 (327 sq mi)
Population
- Total
- Catholics
(as of 2016)
334,345
313,497 (93.8%)
Parishes166
Information
Established4th century
CathedralPisa Cathedral (Cattedrale di S. Maria Assunta)
Secular priests146 (diocesan)
44 (Religious Orders)
24 Permanent Deacons
Current leadership
PopeFrancis
ArchbishopGiovanni Paolo Benotto
Map
Website
www.diocesidipisa.it

The archbishop of Pisa presides over the Ecclesiastical Province of Pisa, which includes the dioceses of Livorno, Massa Carrara-Pontremoli, Pescia, and Volterra.

Since 2008 the archbishop of Pisa has been Giovanni Paolo Benotto.

History Edit

In a letter of 1 September 1077, Pope Gregory VII wrote to the bishops, clergy, civil leaders, and people of Corsica, acknowledging his responsibility for oversight of their well-being as part of the lands of S. Peter, but admitting that he was unable to do so personally and effectively. He had therefore appointed Bishop-elect Landulfus of Pisa to be his legate in Corsica.[3] On 30 November 1078, Pope Gregory confirmed all the privileges that belonged to the Church of Pisa, as well as the legateship of Corsica. He granted the bishop half of all the papal income from the island, as well as all of the judicial income (de placitis).[4] On 28 June 1091, Pope Urban II, at the request of Countess Matilda of Tuscany,[5] Bishop Dagobert, and the nobility of Pisa, returned the legateship of the island of Corsica to Bishop Dagobert, on the condition of an annual payment of 50 pounds (Luccan) to the papal treasury.[6]

On 21 April 1092, Pope Urban issued the bull "Cum Universis", in which he created the metropolitanate of Pisa, promoting the bishop to the rank of archbishop, and assigning the bishoprics of Corsica as his suffragans. This he did at the request of Countess Matilda of Tuscany and in consideration of the considerable merits of Bishop Dagibert in remaining faithful to the Roman church in the face of the schism against Pope Gregory VII.[7] Pope Gelasius II, who was staying in Pisa from 2 September to 2 October 1118, confirmed the arrangements in a bull of 26 September 1118. After the death of Pope Gelasius at Cluny on 29 January 1119, Archbishop Petrus and Cardinal Petrus della Gherardesca dei Conti di Donoratico, a native of Pisa and papal legate, crossed to Corsica to receive to obtain the oaths of fealty of the bishops of Corsica.[8]

Pope Gelasius' bull was an unpleasant shock for Genoa, who coveted the island of Corsica, and a war broke out in 1119 between the two naval powers. The Genoese sent out a fleet of 28 galleys, but in a battle at Porto Venere the Pisans were victorious, as they were at a second battle at the mouth of the Arno River. The war lasted a total of fourteen years.[9] On 16 May 1120, the new pope, Calixtus II, who had been elected at Cluny in France and had just returned to Italy, issued a bull confirming the privileges of Urban II and Gelasius II.[10]

But on 3 January 1121, Pope Calixtus wrote to the bishops of Corsica that the privilege of consecrating bishops for Corsica, which had been granted to the archbishops of Pisa, was withdrawn, and that in the future only the pope would have the right to consecrate bishops for Corsica and to receive their oaths of submission.[11] The Genoese were not mollified by his action. They resorted to bribery to obtain what they had not obtained by military force. A document, written in Rome and dated 16 June 1121, reveals that negotiations had been taking place, with the agreement and authorization of Pope Calixtus, between the Genoese agents, Caffaro and Barisone, and a committee of three cardinals and a bishop on the question of Corsica. The Genoese had agreed to give money to the Pope and other members of the Curia by 10 November. The Pope was to receive 1,600 silver marks; cardinals and bishops 300 marks; priests and clerics 50 ounces of gold; Cardinal Peter of Porto 303 ounces of gold; Petrus Leonis 100 silver marks, and his sons 55 marks; Leo Frangipane 40 marks; and additional payments to other nobles.[12]

The opportune moment to satisfy the Genoans came when Calixtus II convened the First Lateran Council on 27 March 1123, to ratify the Concordat of Worms and end the schism instigated by the Emperor Henry V. The Pope appointed a committee, consisting of 24 bishops and other prelates, led by Archbishop Gualterius of Ravenna (a personal enemy of the Archbishop of Pisa), to examine and render a judgment on the claims of the Church of Pisa over Corsica. On 6 April, the last day of the Council, the claims of Pisa were rejected by the Fathers, after the damning report of Archbishop Gualterius.[13]

The loss was temporary, however, for, on 21 July 1126, the new pope, Honorius II, restored the privilege, and granted the archbishops the right of holding synods not only in Pisa, but also in Corsica.[14] He took the trouble to rebuke Calixtus II and his committee, stating that the Pisans had been despoiled sine praecedente ipsorum Pisanorum culpa et absque iudicio ('without any preceding crime on the part of the Pisans and without a judicial hearing').[15]

In 1127, Archbishop Ruggero, who had leagued himself with Arezzo and Florence, made war against Siena. He was taken prisoner, and spent more than a year in captivity.[16]

On March 1133, Pope Innocent elevated Genoa to the status of an archbishopric, and assigned it metropolitan status over Mariana, Nebbio, and Accia (on Corsica); Bobbio, and Brugnato (newly created), to which was added the diocese of Albenga, formerly in the Metropolitanate of Milan.[17] The Pope also enfeoffed Genoa with the northern half of the island. The archdiocese of Pisa therefore lost ecclesiastical control of the northern half of the island of Corsica, retaining the dioceses of Ajaccio, Aleria, and Salona. Pisa was compensated, to a small degree, by being named Metropolitan of Populonia (Massa Maritima).[18] These grants, which had been made to Archbishop Hubertus, were confirmed in the bull "Tunc Apostolicae" on 22 April 1138, and in addition Innocent II granted Pisa the honorary primacy of the province of Turritana. He also confirmed the legateship over Sardinia which had been granted by Urban II, and the right to consecrate the six bishops in his ecclesiastical province.[19]

From the late 12th to the early 13th century, the Pisan archdiocese was the feudal suzerain of the four giudicati of Sardinia. On 6 March 1131, Gonnario of Torres swore fealty to Archbishop Ruggero of Pisa.[20]

On 22 April 1459, Pope Pius II issued the bull "Triumphans Pastor", in which he raised the diocese of Siena to metropolitan status, and assigned to it as suffragans the dioceses of Soano, Chiusi, Massa Marittima (Populonia), and Grosseto. Massa was taken from the metropolitanate of Pisa.[21]

Council of Pisa of Innocent II Edit

From 30 May 1135 to 6 June 1135, Innocent II held a council in Pisa, having been driven from Rome a second time by the supporters of Pope Anacletus II. In Pisa, with the encouragement of Bernard of Clairvaux, who was travelling with him and supporting his cause, he summoned a council of bishops. The number of attendees is not known, but it is said that bishops from Spain, Gascony, England, France, Burgundy, Germany, Hungary, Lombardy, and Tuscany attended. Innocent II excommunicated his rival, Anacletus II, and all his followers. In the council, it was ordered that all clergy who had married should separate from their wives. It ordered all simoniacs to leave their offices. It ordered that no one should be an archdeacon or a dean who was not ordained a deacon or priest. Such honors should not be granted to adolescents. It granted the right of asylum to churches and cemeteries.[22]

Schism Edit

At the instigation of the German Emperor Frederick Barbarossa, a double election took place in St. Peter's Basilica in Rome on 7 September 1159, a considerable majority of cardinals supporting Pope Alexander III (Orlando Bandinelli), and a small minority supporting Ottaviano of Monticelli, who took the name Victor IV. The archbishop of Pisa, Villano Villani, supported Pope Alexander. In 1164, after the death of Victor, Barbarossa promoted Cardinal Guido of Crema as Paschal III. In 1167 Barbarossa began a fourth war in Italy, and he and his pope Paschal ordered the leaders of Pisa to elect an archbishop to replace the loyal Villano,[23] who had already been sent into exile in 1163 and 1164, and was again in flight from imperial agents. On 8 April 1167, the leaders of Pisa, who were loyal to the Emperor, chose a Canon of the cathedral, Benencasa, and he and the Pisans travelled to Viterbo, where the antipope ordained him a priest on Holy Saturday and consecrated him a bishop on Easter Monday. They returned to Pisa on 23 May 1167.[24]

General Council of Pisa Edit

In the spring of 1408, Pisa became directly involved in the struggles of the Western Schism, which had been tormenting Christendom for thirty years. Gregory XII, who had been driven from Rome on 9 August 1407, was staying in Lucca, where, in May 1408, he created several new cardinals. He did this in violation of two solemn oaths he had taken, and without consulting the cardinals. When they objected and refused to attend the installation ceremonies, Gregory ordered them arrested. One by one the cardinals fled from Lucca, and sought refuge in Pisa.[25] On 29 June 1408, thirteen cardinals (who held the proxies of two more cardinals) met at Livorno, in the diocese of Pisa, and issued a statement calling for a general council of the Church to address and end the schism. Their document was later subscribed by four additional cardinals. The Council of Pisa held its first session in the cathedral in Pisa on 25 March 1409.[26] Archbishop Alamanno Adimari (1406–1411) was present.[27] Both Gregory and Benedict XIII were deposed and excommunicated on 5 June 1409, having failed to answer repeated summonses from the Council to answer the charges against them.[28]

Papal conclave Edit

Due to the deposition of both popes, a new pope was required. In examining the possibility of intervention or participation in the selection, the Council decided to leave the cardinals to their canonical duty in order to avoid any possible complaint. The cardinals in Pisa decided to wait the canonical ten days after the decease of a pope to begin their conclave, even though no pope had died. Twenty-three cardinals entered conclave, which was held in the archbishop's palace in the cathedral close, on 15 June 1411; they were joined by a twenty-fourth on 16 June. On 26 June, they elected unanimously the Cardinal of Milan, Pietro Filargi, OFM, who took the name Alexander V. He was crowned on 7 July 1411, on a platform erected in the square before the cathedral of Pisa.[29]

Conciliabulum of Pisa Edit

In 1511, at the instigation of King Louis XII of France, a meeting was held in Pisa, summoned by four cardinals led by Bernardino Carvajal, which called itself a general council. Others called it the conciliabulum Pisanum.[30] Only two archbishops, fourteen bishops, and a number of French abbots attended. The "little council" held its first session on 5 November 1511. It attempted to take measures to depose Pope Julius II. The people of Pisa attempted to close the doors of the cathedral against the meeting, and their hostility, after three sessions, drove the bishops to adjourn their sessions to Milan, where they met on 13 December.[31]

Chapter and cathedral Edit

The cathedral of Pisa, begun in 1063 and consecrated by Pope Gelasius II in 1118,[32] was dedicated originally to the Virgin as S. Maria (Maggiore), and then more specifically to the taking of the body of the Virgin Mary up into heaven (Assumption).

The cathedral was staffed and administered by a corporate body called the Chapter (Capitulum), which was originally composed of five dignities and (at one point) twenty-eight Canons. The dignities were: the Archpriest, the Archdeacon, the Dean, the Primicerius, and the Vicedominus.[33] In 1702, there were only three dignities and twenty-five Canons.[34]

Diocesan synods Edit

Archbishop Matteo Rinuccini (1577–1582) presided over a diocesan synod in 1582.[35] Archbishop Francesco Bonciani, (1613-1620) held a diocesan synod in Pisa in 1615 (1616, Pisan style).[36]

Synods were also held by: Archbishop Giuliano de' Medici (1620-1635) in 1624 [1625, Pisan]; Archbishop Scipione Pannocchieschi (1636–1663) on 20–21 June 1639 and again in 1649 [1650, Pisan], and another in 1659; and Archbishop Francesco Pannocchieschi (1663–1702) on 11–12 May 1666, and again in 1677 [1678, Pisan].[37]

Archbishop Francesco Frosini (1702-1733) held three diocesan synods: on 6–8 July 1707 [1708, Pisan); on 30–31 July 1716 [1717, Pisan]; and on 31 July 1725 [1726, Pisan].[38]

A special assembly (conventus) was held in Pisa from 5–12 May 1850, summoned by Archbishop Giovanni Battista Parretti (1839-1851), and including his suffragan bishops (Pontremoli, Massa Maritima, Livorno), and, at his invitation, the archbishop of Lucca, the bishop of Pescia, and the vicar capitular of Volterra (which were immediately subject to the pope). Delegates of the various cathedral chapters were also invited. The meeting was occasioned by the revolution in Rome, which had deposed Pope Pius IX from his position as head of the Papal States and seen him flee from the city in disguise to a refuge in Neapolitan territory. The meeting was, in fact, sanctioned by Pope Pius.[39]

New dioceses and suffragans Edit

In a bull of 17 March 1726, Pescia was established as a diocese by Pope Benedict XIII, and was for a long time immediately subject to the Holy See (Papacy).[40] On 1 August 1856, Pope Pius IX, in the bull "Ubi Primum", made Pescia a suffragan of (subordinate to) the archbishop of Pisa.

The diocese of Livorno was created by Pope Pius VII in the bull "Militantis Ecclesiae" of 25 September 1806, at the urging of Queen Maria Luisa, Regent of Tuscany.[41] The erection was opposed both by the Archdiocese of Pisa and the Canons of San Miniato, who would lose territory, power, and income from the change.[42] The new diocese was made a suffragan of the archbishop of Pisa.[43]

Bishops and archbishops Edit

to 1200 Edit

  • Gaudentius (attested 313, 323)[44]
...
Senior (or Senator) ? (410 ?)[45]
...
  • Joannes (attested 493)[46]
...
...
[Alexius (648)][48]
...
  • Opportunus (attested 649)[49]
  • Maurianus (attested 680)[50]
...
  • Maximus ? (attested 715 ?)[51]
...
  • Andreas (attested 754–768)[52]
  • Domnucianus ? (774)[53]
...
  • Raichnardus (attested 796–813)[54]
...
  • Joannes (attested 826–858)[55]
  • Plato (attested 865–876)[56]
  • Joannes (attested 877–902)[57]
  • Theodericus (attested 909–910)[58]
...
  • Wolfgherius (attested 927)[59]
...
  • Zenobius (attested 934–954)[60]
  • Grimaldus (attested 958–965)[61]
  • Albericus (attested 968–985)[62]
  • Raimbertus (attested 987–996)[63]
...
  • Wido (Guido) (attested 1005–1014)[64]
  • Azzo (1015–1031)[65]
  • Oppizo or Opizio (1039–1059) [66]
  • Guido (attested 1061–1076)[67]
  • Landulfus (attested 1077–1079)[68]
  • Gerardus (1080–1085)[69]
Sede vacante (1085–1088)[70]
Archbishops of Pisa (from 28 June 1091)

1200 to 1500 Edit

1500 to 1800 Edit

Cardinal Rafaele Riario (1518) Administrator[96]
Cardinal Giovanni de' Medici (1560–1562) Administrator[99]

since 1800 Edit

  • Rainieri Alliata (1806-1836 Died)[113]
  • Giovanni Battista Parretti (1839-1851 Died)[114]
  • Cardinal Cosimo Corsi (1853–1870)[115]
  • Paolo Micallef (1871–1883)
  • Ferdinando Capponi (1883–1903)
  • Pietro Maffi (1903–1931)
  • Gabriele Vettori (1932–1947)
  • Ugo Camozzo (1948–1970)
  • Benvenuto Matteucci (1971–1986)
  • Alessandro Plotti (1986–2008)
  • Giovanni Paolo Benotto (6 April 2008 – )[116]

See also Edit

Notes Edit

  1. ^ "Archdiocese of Pisa" Catholic-Hierarchy.org. David M. Cheney. Retrieved November 19, 2017.[self-published source]
  2. ^ "Metropolitan Archdiocese of Pisa" GCatholic.org. Gabriel Chow. Retrieved November 19, 2017.[self-published source]
  3. ^ J.P. Migne, Patrologiae Latinae Tomus CXLVIII (Paris 1848), p. 487, no. 2. Kehr, p. 319, nos. 2-3. Xavier Poli (1907). La Corse dans l'antiquité et dans le haut moyen age (in French). Paris: A. Fontemoing. p. 178.
  4. ^ Kehr III, pp. 319-320, nos. 2-5.
  5. ^ The countess died on 24 July 1115, and her patronage of the Church of Pisa lapsed.
  6. ^ Poli, p. 181. Kehr III, p. 320, no. 7.
  7. ^ "Corsicanae insulae Episcopatus regendos, ac disponendos Sanctae Romanae Ecclesiae, cui auctore Deo, carissime Frater Daiberte, praesides praesentis decreti auctoritate committimus, atque subjicimus, teque Frater venerabilis in Archiepiscopum eiusdem insulae promovemus." Poli, p. 181. Cappelletti, pp. 75-79. Kehr, p. 321, no. 9.
  8. ^ Kehr III, pp. 321-322, no. 12; X, pp. 472-473.
  9. ^ Heywood, A History of Pisa, pp. 71-74.
  10. ^ Kehr III, p. 322, no. 13.
  11. ^ Cappelletti XIII, pl. 310-311; XVI, p. 90. Kehr III, p. 322, no. 15.
  12. ^ Caffaro (1890). Luigi T. Belgrano (ed.). Annali genovesi di Caffaro e de' suoi continuatori: dal MXCIX al MCCXCIII (in Latin). Roma: Tip. del R. Instituto Storico Italiano, Sordo-Muti. pp. 20–21. Heywood, A History of Pisa, pp. 74-75.
  13. ^ J. D. Mansi, Sacrorum Conciliorum nova et amplissima collectio, editio novissima, Tomus XXI (Venice: A. Zatta 1776), p. 279. Pierre Paul Raoul Colonna de Cesari-Rocca (1901). Recherches sur la Corse au Moyen-âge: origine de la rivalité des Pisans et des Génois en Corse, 1014-1174. Genoa: Tipografia R. istituto Sordomuti. pp. 80–81. Heywood, pp. 75-76.
  14. ^ Kehr III, p. 323-324, no. 22.
  15. ^ Paolo Tronci (1682). Memorie istoriche della citta di Pisa (in Latin and Italian). Livorno: G. V. Bonfigli. pp. 62–65. Heywood, A History of Pisa, p. 78.
  16. ^ Heywood, A History of Pisa, p. 77.
  17. ^ Cappelletti XVI, pp. 22-23.
  18. ^ Kehr III, p. 324, no. 23; VI, part 2, p. 266. Heywood, pp. 79-80.
  19. ^ Kehr III, p. 325, no. 26.
  20. ^ The four giudicati were: Arborea, Cagliari, Gallura, and Torres. Mauro G. Sanna (2013), Onorio III e la Sardegna, ed. critica e commento delle fonti storiche a cura di M.G. Sanna,(in Italian) Cagliari: Centro di studi filologici sardi, pp. xx-xxiv; 198-199.
  21. ^ Bullarum diplomatum et privilegiorum sanctorum romanorum pontificum (in Latin). Vol. Tomus V. Turin: Seb. Franco, H. Fori et H. Dalmazzo. 1860. pp. 150–152 §3. Kehr III, p. 317.
  22. ^ J. D. Mansi, Sacrorum Conciliorum nova et amplissima collectio, editio novissima, Tomus XXI (Venice: A. Zatta 1776), pp. 485-492. Philippus Jaffé (ed. S. Lowenfeld), pp. 865-866.
  23. ^ Ughelli III, pp. 401-404.
  24. ^ Monumenta Germaniae Historica, Scriptores, Vol. XIX: Annales Aevi Suevici, p. 256 (Annales Pisani). Heywood, pp. 165, 169, 188. Kehr III, p. 327, no. 39.
  25. ^ Carl Joseph Hefele, Histoire des Conciles (ed. H. Leclercq) Tome VI, deuxième partie (Paris: Letouzey 1915), pp. 1339-1343.
  26. ^ Carl Joseph Hefele, Histoire des Conciles (ed. H. Leclercq) Tome VII, première partie (Paris: Letouzey 1916), pp. 1-11.
  27. ^ Lenfant I, p. 352.
  28. ^ Hefele VII.1, pp. 43-48.
  29. ^ Jacques Lenfant (1724). Histoire du concile de Pise (in French). Vol. Tome second. Amsterdam: Pierre Humbert. pp. 1–12. J. P. Adams, California State University Northridge, Sede vacante 1409; retrieved: 16 March 2020.
  30. ^ J. D. Mansi, Sacrorum Conciliorum nova et amplissima collectio, editio novissima, Tomus XXXV (Paris: Hubert Welter 1902), pp. 155-172.
  31. ^ Ferdinand Gregorovius, History of Rome in the Middle Ages Vol. V, part 1 (London: Bell 1902), pp. 87-90. Ludwig von Pastor, The History of the Popes, from the close of the Middle Ages Vol. VI, second edition (St. Louis: B. Herder 1902), pp. 359-365; 374-376; 388-394.
  32. ^ The date was 26 September 1118. Ughelli III, p. 337. Tronci, pp. 58-59. Kehr III, p. 335, no. 21.
  33. ^ Ughelli III, p. 347. Cappelletti XVI, p. 221.
  34. ^ Ritzler-Sefrin, Hierarchia catholica V, p. 315, note 1.
  35. ^ Mansi (ed. L. Petit & J. B. Martin), Sacrorum Conciliorum nova et amplissima collectio, editio novissima, Tomus XXXVIbis (Paris: Hubert Welter 1913), p. 1001.
  36. ^ Synodus dioecesana Pisana, quam Franciscus Boncianus archiepiscopus Pisanus, insularum Corsicæ, & Sardiniæ primas, &in eis legatus natus habuit anno a Christi incarnatione 1616. (in Latin) Pisa: Ioannes Fontanus 1616.
  37. ^ Mansi (ed. L. Petit & J. B. Martin), Sacrorum Conciliorum nova et amplissima collectio, editio novissima, Tomus XXXVIter (Arnhem-Leipzig: Hubert Welter 1924), p. 51, 109, 229, 363, 397.
  38. ^ Mansi-Petit-Martin, Tomus XXXVIter, p. 52; Tomus XXVIII, p. 647. Tertia synodus dioecesana ab illustriss. ac reverendiss. domino d. Francisco Frosoni, Pistoriense, s. R. i. comite, archiepiscopo Pisano, insularum Corsicae ac Sardiniae primate et in eis legato nato, habita in ecclesia primatiali Pisana, diebus XXXI. mensis julii et I. augusti, anno salutis M. DCC.XXVI. Pisis, M. DCC. XXVIII., ex typographia Francisci Bindi.
  39. ^ Mansi-Petit-Martin, Tomus XLIII, pp. 845-882.
  40. ^ Cappelletti XVIII, p. 358. Ritzler-Sefrin, Hierarchia catholica V, p. 315, note 1; VI, p. 339, note 1. A. Labardi, La comunità ecclesiastica pesciatina nel corso dei secoli. Percorsi storici di una Chiesa locale, in: A. Spicciani (ed.), Pescia. La storia, l'arte e il costume, Pisa 2001, p. 87.
  41. ^ Cappelletti XVI, pp. 259-267.
  42. ^ Cappelletti, p. 267.
  43. ^ Bullarii Romani continuatio (in Latin). Vol. Tomus decimus tertius (13). Roma: ex typographia Reverendae Camerae Apostolicae. 1847. p. 66 § 6.
  44. ^ Bishop Gaudentius was present at the synod of Rome of Pope Miltiades, held in the house of Fausta at the Lateran, on 5 October 313. He may also be the Bishop Gaudentius who was present at the council in Rome of Pope Sylvester I J. D. Mansi, Sacrorum Conciliorum nova et amplissima collectio, editio novissima, Tomus II (Florence: A. Zatta 1759), pp. 437, 619. Cappelletti XVI, p. 37. Lanzoni, p. 585.
  45. ^ Senior, or Senator, is said by his biographer Probus to have consecrated St. Patrick. it is a conjecture of the Bollandists that this Senior was a bishop of Pisa, whence he is taken up by Gams, p. 761, column 1. Lanzoni, p. 585, rejects the conjecture: "Ma io non oso seguirli, perchè quell'ipotesi dei Bollandisti mal si regge."
  46. ^ Bishop Joannes received a letter from Pope Gelasius I, ordering him to recover a chalice which had been taken by his predecessor. Kehr III, p. 319, no. 1. Lanzoni, p. 585, no. 3.
  47. ^ J. P. Migne (ed.), Patrologiae Latinae Tomus LXIX (Paris 1848), p. 397. Cappelletti XVI, p. 38.
  48. ^ Ughelli III, p. 351, calls him "Alexander". "Archbishop Alexius" is known only from the "Legend of S. Peregrinus", a confection of the 14th or 15th century. Lanzoni, p. 585-586: "Ma da fonte così tarda e fantastica non è dato raccogliere dati sicuri."
  49. ^ Bishop Opportunus was present at the Roman synod of Pope Martin I on 5 October 649. J. D. Mansi, Sacrorum Conciliorum nova et amplissima collectio, editio novissima, Tomus X (Florence: A. Zatta 1764), p. 867.
  50. ^ Bishop Maurianus was present at the synod of Pope Agatho in 680, and subscribed to the synodical letter sent by Pope Agatho to the Second Council of Constantinople. J. D. Mansi, Sacrorum Conciliorum nova et amplissima collectio, editio novissima, Tomus XI (Florence: A. Zatta 1765), pp. 185-188; 307.
  51. ^ A document indicates that a group of Tuscan bishops met at the village of Vico Walari in the diocese of Siena, apparently in 715, among whom was Maximus of Pisa. Ughelli, p. 351. J. D. Mansi, Sacrorum Conciliorum nova et amplissima collectio, editio novissima, Tomus XII (Florence: A. Zatta 1766), p. 253. The authenticity of the document, however, has been questioned: Ughelli I, p. 416. Ludovico Antonio Muratori, Antiquitates Italicae Medii Aevi Tomus VI (Milan: Societas Palatina 1742), pp. 367-386. Matthaeius (Mattei) (1768), pp. 121-122.
  52. ^ Bishop Andrea's latest document is dated 1 August 768. S. Sodi; M. L. Ceccarelli Lemut (1996), "Per una riconsiderazione dell'evangelizzazione Tuscia: la Chiesa pisana dalle origini all'età carolingia," Rivista di Storia della Chiesa 50 (1996), pp. 9-56, at 34-39. (in Italian)
  53. ^ The bishop was taken prisoner by Charlemagne at the siege of Pavia (774). Ceccarelli Lemut & Sodi (2004), p. 3.
  54. ^ Raichnardus is first attested presiding over a grant to the Church of Pisa, on 5 June 796; he is bishop-elect in the document. In July 803, he was present at judicial proceedings, still as bishop-elect. He is mentioned in a legal document of April 813. Ceccarelli Lemut, M.; Sodi, S. (2004), p. 3-4.
  55. ^ Bishop Joannes was present on 24 November 826 at the Roman synod of Pope Eugenius II. He also took part in the Roman synods of 844 and 850. His latest documentary appearance is on 23 March 858. J. D. Mansi, Sacrorum Conciliorum nova et amplissima collectio, editio novissima, Tomus XIV (Venice: A. Zatta 1769), p. 1000. Picotti (1946), p. 69, nos. 3-7. Ceccarelli Lemut & Sodi (2004), pp. 4-5.
  56. ^ Plato was the chancellor of the Emperor Louis II from May 1856 to March 858. He first appears as bishop in May 865. His latest document is of 30 April 876. Picotti (1946), pp. 69-70, nos. 9-12. Ceccarelli Lemut & Sodi (2004), p. 5.
  57. ^ Joannes was dead before 28 August 909, when his successor is in place. Picotti (1946), p. 70, nos. 13-19. Ceccarelli Lemut & Sodi (2004), p. 5.
  58. ^ Theodericus: Picotti (1946), p. 71, no. 22 (28 August 909). Ceccarelli Lemut & Sodi (2004), p. 5.
  59. ^ Wolfgherius: Lodovico Antonio Muratori (1740). Antiquitates italicae medii aevi (in Latin). Vol. Tomus tertius (3). Milan: ex typographia Societatis palatinae. p. 1045. Ceccarelli Lemut & Sodi (2004), p. 6.
  60. ^ Zenobius: Schwartz, p. 216.
  61. ^ Grimaldus: Ughelli III, pp. 352-354. Schwartz, p. 216.
  62. ^ Albericus: Ughelli III, p. 354. Schwartz, p. 216.
  63. ^ Raimbertus: Ughelli III, p. 354. Schwartz, p. 216.
  64. ^ Wido: Ughelli III, p. 354. Schwartz, p. 216.
  65. ^ Azzo: Cappelletti XVI, pp. 51-54 (dismissing the report of a "Bishop Lambertus", as reported by Ughelli, p. 354). Schwartz, p. 216.
  66. ^ Opizo was already bishop by 4 March 1039. He provided permission and funds for the founding of the Camaldolite convent of S. Michele by Abbot Bonus. Cappelletti, pp. 58-59. Schwartz, p. 217.
  67. ^ Bishop Guido is first attested on 15 August 1061. According to the Annales Pisani, Bishop Guido died on 8 April 1076. Cappelletti, p. 62. Schwartz, p. 217.
  68. ^ Landulf was a native of Milan, and a supporter of the papacy against the emperor. His earliest known reference as bishop is from 27 August 1077; his election, however, was canonically irregular. Pope Gregory VII calls him bishop-elect on 1 September 1077. In the bull "Supernae Miserationis" of 30 November 1078, Pope Gregory repaired the defects. Landulf died on 25 October 1079. Cappelletti XVI, pp. 62-68. Kehr III, pp. 319-320, nos. 2-5. Schwartz, p. 217.
  69. ^ Gerardus is first recorded in a document of 29 July 1080. According to the Annales Pisani, he died on 8 May 1085. Schwartz, p. 217. Skinner, Patricia (2009). "From Pisa to the Patriarchate: Some Chapters in the Life of (Arch)bishop Daibert of Pisa". In Skinner, Patrica (ed.). Challenging the Boundaries of Medieval History: The Legacy of Timothy Reuter. Brepols. p. 159. ISBN 978-2503523590.
  70. ^ Cappelletti, p. 86. Skinner, p. 159.
  71. ^ Dagobert was consecrated a bishop by Pope Urban II personally (Kehr III, p. 320, no. 6). Dagobert was the first archbishop. He was invested with the island of Corsica on 28 June 1191 by Pope Urban II, and named an archbishop (Kehr III, p. 321, no. 9). He accompanied Pope Urban to France in 1194. He joined the first Crusade, and was elected Latin Patriarch of Jerusalem on 15 July 1099; he was suspended by the papal Legate, Cardinal Robert, in 1104, and returned to Rome to vindicate himself. He died at Messana on 15 June 1105. Cappelletti, pp. 70-82 (who puts his death in 1107). Gams, p. 452, column 2. Schwartz, pp. 217-218. Skinner, p. 159.
  72. ^ Petrus had previously been Abbot of S. Michele (Camaldolese) in Pisa, as late as 14 December 1104. By 19 March 1106, he was already Archbishop of Pisa. In 1113, he acted as papal legate in recruiting personnel for the crusade. In 1116, he was in Rome, attending the Lateran Council of Pope Paschal II. He died on 10 September 1119. Cappelletti, pp. 85-91. Schwartz, p. 218.
  73. ^ Atto had been a Canon of the cathedral of Piacenza. Atto's earliest dated reference is on 30 January 1120. He was present at the consecration of the cathedral of Volterra by Pope Calixtus II on 20 May 1120, as was his successor Bishop Rogerius of Volterra. It is claimed that he was a cardinal, but his name does not appear in the record of Petrus Pisanus. The latest reference to him is on 29 August 1121. Tronci, Memorie, pp. 59-60. Ughelli I, p. 1437. Cappelletti, p. 91. Lorenzo Cardella, Memorie storiche de' cardinali della Santa Romana Chiesa (Rome: Pagliarini 17920, Tomo I, parte 1, p. 271. Schwartz, p. 219.
  74. ^ Rogerius participated in the First Lateran Council of 18–28 March 1123. He died in 1131. Schwartz, p. 219. Maria Luisa Ceccarelli Lemut (2009), "Ruggero vescovo di Volterra e arcivescovo di Pisa all'inizio del XII secolo," in: Studi di storia offerti a Michele Luzzati Scalfati, (ed. Silio, Pietro Paolo; Veronese, Alessandra Maria) Pisa: Ospedaletto 2009, pp. 53-72.
  75. ^ Hubertus was a Canon of the cathedral of Pisa. He was appointed a cardinal by Pope Honorius II at some point between March 1125 and March 1126. He was with the Pope in Benevento in May 1128. At the end of 1129 he was sent on a legation to Spain. In the schism of 1130, he supported Innocent II against Anacletus II., and fled with him to Cluny, where he took part in the synod of Cluny in November. In spring 1132, he returned to Italy along with Pope Innocent. In January 1133, Innocent arrived in Pisa, where Hubertus was named archbishop. In May 1133, Hubertus was with Innocent in Rome. They were driven out of Rome again, and in September 1133 they were in Siena and then in Pisa. Hubertus participated in Innocent's synod of Pisa in May 1135, and then held his own synod in Sardinia. He was dead by 22 April 1138, when Archbishop Baldwin is found in office as Archbishop of Pisa. Klaus Ganzer, Die Entwicklung des auswärtigen Kardinalats im Hohen Mittelalter (Tübingen: Max Niemeyer 1963), pp. 86-89.
  76. ^ Baldoino was a Cistercian. Archbishop Baldwin died on 25 May 1145. Tronci, pp. 72-79.
  77. ^ Archbishop Baldwin died on 25 May 1145. His seat was still vacant on 15 October. Villano, who had been named a cardinal by Pope Lucius III on 23 December 1144, was confirmed as archbishop by Pope Eugenius III on 29 May 1146. Bishop Villano was compelled to flee from the city on account of his support for Pope Alexander III (1167), returned in 1172. Matthaeius (Mattei) (1768), pp. 224-237. Maria Luisa Ceccarelli Lemut (2010), "Un presule tra política comunale e fedeltà pontificia. Villano, arcivescovo di Pisa (1146-1175)," (in Italian) Päpste, Privilegien, Provinzen: Beiträge zur Kirchen-, Rechts- und Landesgeschichte ; Festschrift für Werner Maleczek zum 65. Geburtstag(ed. Gießauf, Johannes (Wien 2010), pp. 61-76.
  78. ^ Ubaldo led the Pisan fleet on crusade to the Holy Land (1188–1196). He died in Pisa on 19 June 1207. Matthaeius (Mattei) (1768), pp. 237-246. Ceccarelli Lemut & Sodi (2004), "I vescovi...," pp. 26-28.
  79. ^ Lotharius was a citizen of Cremona, and was Bishop of Vercelli (1205–1208). He was transferred to the archdiocese of Pisa by Pope Innocent III in 1208, by April. In 1216, Lotharius was appointed Latin Patriarch of Jerusalem; Jerusalem had been captured by the Saracens in 1187. Ughelli, pp. Eubel I, pp. 275, 399, 520.
  80. ^ Archbishop Vitalis was already consecrated, and had been granted the use of the pallium by 5 February 1218, as indicated by a letter of Pope Honorius III to the Chapter, clergy, and people of Pisa. He died after 10 November 1252. Ughelli III, pp. 424-425. Eubel, Hierarchia catholica I, p. 399 with note 2; 400.
  81. ^ Fredericus was appointed by Pope Innocent IV on 6 August 1254. Bishop Federico held provincial synods in 1258, 1260, and 1262. He died on 1 October 1277. Eubel I, p. 400 with note 3.
  82. ^ Ranieri was born in Orvieto, the son of Joannes Raynerius. He was appointed archbishop of Pisa on 20 September 1295. On 4 December 1298, when he was named a cardinal by Pope Boniface VIII, Ranieri was still archbishop-elect of Pisa and papal chamberlain. His successor was appointed on 10 February 1299. On 13 June 1299, he was named Suburbicarian Bishop of Palestrina. He died on 7 December 1306. Matthaeius (Mattei) II (1772), pp. 50-52. Cappelletti XVI, p. 146. Eubel I, p. 12, no. 8,
  83. ^ Di Polo: Matthaeius (Mattei) II (1772), pp. 52-56.
  84. ^ Bishop Oddone had litigation with the republic, and later became Latin Patriarch of Alexandria.
  85. ^ Saltorelli was a Florentine, the sole son and heir of the rich nobleman Guido Saltorelli. To continue the family line, he was married (Ughelli says despondisset; Mattei says nupsit), but at the age of twenty, he became a Dominican at S. Maria Novella. He became Prior of the monastery, then Prior of the Roman Province of the Dominicans, and then Procurator of the Order at the papal court. Pope John XXII named him Bishop of Parma on 15 January 1317, and on 6 June 1323 appointed him Archbishop of Pisa. The Antipope Nicholas V (1328–1330) presumed to remove him from his post. He died on 24 September 1342, at the age of approximately eighty. Ughelli III, pp. 450-457. Matthaeius (Mattei) II (1772), pp. 67-82. Eubel, Hierarchia catholica I, pp. 392, 400 with note 5.
  86. ^ On the death of Bishop Simon, the authorities of Pisa petitioned Pope Clement VI to appoint Fra Marco Roncioni, O.P. as their archbishop. This was refused, and he was appointed Bishop of Urbino instead. Dino di Radicofani was appointed Archbishop of Pisa, during whose administration the University of Pisa was chartered. Matthaeius (Mattei) II (1772), pp. 82-87. Cappelletti XVI, p. 159. Eubel I, p. 400.
  87. ^ Scarlatti had been legate to Armenia and to the emperor at Constantinople
  88. ^ Pucci had been a Canon of Pisa. Eubel I, p. 400.
  89. ^ Barnaba had been Bishop of Penne e Adria. He was transferred to Pisa in March 1380, and died on 7 November 1380. Eubel I, p. 400.
  90. ^ Bishop Lotto was compelled to flee after the death of his brother Pietro, tyrant of Pisa (1392). He was transferred to the diocese of Treviso in 1394.
  91. ^ A native of Pontremolo, Joannes held the degree of Doctor in utroque iure and was a Canon of Corone (Greece). He had been Bishop of Massa Maritima from 1390 to 1394, and was papal Nuncio to Poland, Lithuania, Prussia, and Livonia in 1392. He was provided to the diocese of Pisa by Boniface IX on 9 September 1394. He died on 25 June 1400. Eubel I, pp. 329 with note 6; 400.
  92. ^ Adimari held the degree of Doctor of Canon Law, and was a papal notary. He had been archbishop of Florence (1400–1401), and then Archbishop of Taranto (1401–1406). He was transferred to Pisa on 3 November 1406 by Pope Innocent VII of the Roman Obedience. He took part in the Council of Pisa (1409). He served as papal nuncio in France from 9 June 1410 to 20 November 1412. He was appointed a cardinal by Pope John XXIII on 6 June 1411, which brought about his resignation from the archbishopric. Eubel I, pp. 32, no. 3, with note 9; 250, with note 9; 400; 473.
  93. ^ Pietro Ricci was a native of Florence, and had been named a Canon of the cathedral of Florence in 1384, and in 1388 he became parish priest of S. Andrea Empulensis. He was Vicar Capitular of Florence three times during episcopal vacancies, in 1389, 1395, and 1401. He had been Bishop of Arezzo (1403–1411), in which capacity he was present at the Council of Pisa in 1409 (Lenfant I, p. 355, no. 40). He was transferred to the diocese of Pisa by John XXIII on 9 October 1411. He died on 30 November 1417. Matthaeius (Mattei) II (1772), pp. 129-132. Eubel I, p. 400.
  94. ^ Medici, a protonotary apostolic, had been Bishop of Arezzo from 1457 to 1461. He was appointed Archbishop of Pisa on 14 January 1461. He died in October 1474. Eubel II, pp. 94, 216.
  95. ^ Salviati was hanged at Florence in connexion with the conspiracy of the Pazzi; succeeded by his nephew. Eubel II, p. 216.
  96. ^ Riario was Administrator of the diocese of Pisa for a total of one week, from 3 September to 10 September 1518. Eubel, Hierarchia catholica III, p. 274.
  97. ^ The Cardinals of the Holy Roman Church - Biographical Dictionary - Consistory of November 20, 1551
  98. ^ On 16 March 1541, Rebiba, who was Archpriest of Chieti, was named titular bishop of Amyclae (near Sparta in Greece) so that he could serve as auxiliary bishop of Chieti (whose archbishop became Pope Paul IV). Rebiba was presented to the bishopric of Motula by the Emperor Charles V, and confirmed by Pope Paul IV on 12 October 1551. He served as Governor of Rome in 1555. He was named a cardinal on 20 December 1555, and on 13 April 1556 appointed Archbishop of Pisa. On 11 May 1556, he was named papal legate to the Emperor; and on 20 July 1558 he was appointed legate to Ferdinand, King of the Romans, and to the king of Poland. He governed the diocese of Pisa through his suffragan, Jacopo Lomellini, who was named bishop of Guardialfiera for that purpose; Rebiba resigned the diocese of Pisa in 1560, and on 19 June 1560 was appointed Bishop of Troja, a diocese immediately subject to the papacy, which he held for only 2½ months, to be succeeded by his nephew Prosper Rebiba. He died on 23 July 1577. Matthaeius (Mattei) II (1772), pp. 173-175. Eubel, Hierarchia catholica III, pp. 35 no. 5 with notes 3 and 4; 251 with note 3; 274 with notes 6 and 7.
  99. ^ Giovanni was the second son of Cosimo I de' Medici, Grand Duke of Tuscany, and Eleanor of Toledo. He was named a cardinal by Pope Pius IV on 31 January 1560. He was not in holy orders, only tonsured. He died at the age of 18, on 12 December 1562. Ughelli III, pp. 483-484. Lorenzo Cardella, Memorie storiche de' cardinali della Santa Romana Chiesa Tomo V (Rome: Pagliarini 1793), pp. 2-4. Eubel III, p. 37.
  100. ^ Salvador Miranda, The Cardinals of the Holy Roman Church - Biographical Dictionary - Consistory of March 12, 1565
  101. ^ Eubel, Hierarchia catholica III, p. 274 with note 10
  102. ^ Pietro: Eubel III, p. 274 with note 11.
  103. ^ Antinori had been Bishop of Pistoia. Eubel, Hierarchia catholica III, p. 274 with note 12.
  104. ^ Giugni had been Provost of the cathedral of Florence. Eubel, Hierarchia catholica III, p. 274 with note 13.
  105. ^ Rinucci had been a Canon of Florence. He held the degree of Doctor in utroque iure. Eubel, Hierarchia catholica III, p. 274 with note 14.
  106. ^ Dal Pozzo was a founder of the Collegio Puteano, and author of works on canon and on civil law. Gauchat, p. 280.
  107. ^ a b c Gauchat, Patritius (Patrice) (1935). Hierarchia catholica medii et recentioris aevi. Vol. IV. Münster: Libraria Regensbergiana. p. 280. (in Latin)
  108. ^ Bonciani was a native of Florence, and a Canon of the cathedral, rising to the dignity of Archdeacon of the cathedral. He was named Archbishop of Pisa on 6 November 1613, and in 1614 he began a pastoral Visitation of the institutions of his diocese. On 11–12 November 1614, he held a diocesan synod. In 1617 he was ambassador to the Court of France of Grand Duke Cosimo II of Florence. His Vicar General in Pisa was the antiquarian Paolo Tronci. Galileo's opponent. He died on 28 November 1619 [1620, in the Pisan reckoning], and left his large library to the Dominican convent of Santa Maria Novella in Florence. Cappelletti XVI, pp. 207-208. Gauchat, p. 280.
  109. ^ Medici was appointed archbishop on 15 June 1620. He served on missions for Duke Cosimo II, to the Emperor Rudolf, to Matthias of Hungary, Sigismund of Poland, and Philip of Spain. He founded the seminary in 1627. He died on 6 January 1635 [1636, Pisan]. Cappelletti, pp. 208-213. Gauchat, p. 280.
  110. ^ Born in Pistoia in 1654, Frosini held the degree of Doctor in utroque iure from the University of Pisa (1675). He became a Canon of Pistoia in 1688, and was Vicar General and Vicar Capitular. He had previously been Bishop of Pistoia e Prato (1701–1702), and was named Archbishop of Pisa on 2 October 1702 by Pope Clement XI. He died on 20 November 1733. Ritzler-Sefrin, Hierarchia catholica V, p. 315 (Pisa) with note 2, and (under Pistoia e Prato) note 4.
  111. ^ Born in Volterra in 1694, Guidi held the degree of Doctor in utroque iure, and had been a Canon of the cathedral of Florence, and then Bishop of Arezzo (1733–1734). On 15 February 1734, he was transferred to the archdiocese of Pisa by Pope Clement XII. He died in Pisa in July 1778. Ritzler-Sefrin, Hierarchia catholica VI, pp. 98 with note 2; 339 with note 2.
  112. ^ Franceschi was born in Pisa in 1735, and held the degree of Doctor in utroque iure from the University of Pisa (1758). He was Dean of the Collegiate Church of Livorno, and then Canon and Vicar General of Pisa. He had previously been Bishop of Arezzo (1775–1778). He was transferred to the archdiocese of Pisa on 28 September 1778 by Pope Pius VI. He died on 13 March 1806. Ritzler-Sefrin, Hierarchia catholica VI, pp. 99 with note 5; 339 with note 3.
  113. ^ Born in Pisa in 1752, the son of Count Francesco Alliata and Countess Maria Galeotti, Rainieri studies at the Jesuit college in Bologna and then at the University of Pisa. He was Bishop of Volterra from 1791 to 1806. On 6 October 1806, he was transferred to the archdiocese of Pisa by Pope Pius VII. He died on 8 August 1836 (not 11 August). Luigi della Fanteria (1836). Elogio funebre di monsignor Ranieri Alliata arcivescovo di Pisa (in Italian). presso R. Prosperi. pp. 5–6, 25. Ritzler-Sefrin, Hierarchia catholica VII, p. 307.
  114. ^ Parretti: Ritzler-Sefrin, Hierarchia catholica VII, pp. 194, 307. Giuseppe Raspini (1996). Giovanni Battista Parretti (1778-1851): vescovo di Fiesole (1827-1839), arcivescovo di Pisa (1839-1851) (in Italian). Firenze: F. & F. Parretti.
  115. ^ Corsi was born in Florence in 1798, the son of Marquis Corsi. He obtained the degree of Doctor in utroque iure from the Sapienza in Rome (1818) at the age of twenty. He entered the papal Curia as a relator, and then Referendary of the Congregation on Good Government, which administered the Papal States. In 1819, on the recommendation of Grand Duke Ferdinando III of Tuscany, he was named Auditor of the Roman Rota (judge) for Tuscany. He eventually, in 1835, became Dean of the Rota. He was named a cardinal by Pope Gregory XVI on 24 January 1842. On 20 January 1845, he was appointed Bishop of Jesi, and on 19 December 1853 he was named Archbishop of Pisa, on the nomination of Duke Leopoldo II. He died at the villa of Agnano on 7 October 1870. Relazione autentica dell'arresto del card. Cosimo Corsi arcivescovo di Pisa (in Italian). Genoa: Gio. Fassi-Como. 1860. Mauro Del Corso (1988), Un vescovo nella storia : Cosimo Corsi, cardinale di Pisa : la storia di un vescovo (in Italian) (Pisa : Pacini, 1988).
  116. ^ CV of archbishop: Arcidiocesi di Pisa, Biografia: Sua Eccellenza Reverendissima Mons. Giovanni Paolo Benotto; retrieved: 10 March 2020.

Books Edit

  • Gams, Pius Bonifatius (1873). Series episcoporum Ecclesiae catholicae: quotquot innotuerunt a beato Petro apostolo. Ratisbon: Typis et Sumptibus Georgii Josephi Manz. p. 761-762.
  • Eubel, Conradus, ed. (1913). Hierarchia catholica (in Latin). Vol. Tomus I (second ed.). Münster: Libreria Regensbergiana.
  • Eubel, Conradus, ed. (1914). Hierarchia catholica (in Latin). Vol. Tomus II (second ed.). Münster: Libreria Regensbergiana.
  • Eubel, Conradus; Gulik, Guilelmus (1923). Hierarchia catholica (in Latin). Vol. Tomus III (second ed.). Münster: Libreria Regensbergiana.
  • Gauchat, Patritius (Patrice) (1935). Hierarchia catholica (in Latin). Vol. Tomus IV (1592-1667). Münster: Libraria Regensbergiana.
  • Ritzler, Remigius; Sefrin, Pirminus (1952). Hierarchia catholica medii et recentis aevi (in Latin). Vol. Tomus V (1667-1730). Patavii: Messagero di S. Antonio.
  • Ritzler, Remigius; Sefrin, Pirminus (1958). Hierarchia catholica medii et recentis aevi. Vol. Tomus VI (1730-1799). Patavii: Messagero di S. Antonio.
  • Ritzler, Remigius; Sefrin, Pirminus (1968). Hierarchia Catholica medii et recentioris aevi (in Latin). Vol. VII (1800–1846). Monasterii: Libreria 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 (1903–1922). Padua: Messagero di San Antonio. ISBN 978-88-250-1000-8.

Studies Edit

  • Cappelletti, Giuseppe (1861). Le chiese d'Italia (in Italian). Vol. Tomo decimosesto (16). Venezia: G. Antonelli. pp. 1–230.
  • Caturegli, N. (1950). "Le condizioni della chiesa di Pisa nella seconda metà del secolo XV," Bollettino Storico Pisano 19 (1950). (in Italian)
  • Ceccarelli Lemut, Maria Luisa; Sodi, Stefano (2004). "I vescovi di Pisa dall'età carolingia all' inizio del XIII secolo." In: Rivista di storia della Chiesa in Italia Vol. 58, No. 1 (2004), pp. 3–28. (in Italian)
  • Ceccarelli Lemut, Maria Luisa. (2011). "Le canoniche della diocesi di Pisa nell'età della riforma della Chiesa." In: Studi Waldo Dolfi, pp. 95–122. (in Italian)
  • Ceccarelli Lemut, Maria Luisa. Sodi Stefano (2017). La chiesa di Pisa dalle origini alla fine del Duecento. Edizioni ETS. (in Italian)
  • Ceccarelli Lemut M Luisa. Sodi Stefano (2018). I Canonici della Cattedrale Pisana. Genesi e Sviluppo Dell'Istituzione Canonicale Sino alla Fine del Duecento Pisa: Edizioni ETS. (in Italian)
  • Heywood, William (1921). A History of Pisa, Eleventh and Twelfth Centuries. Cambridge: The University Press. p. 13.
  • Kehr, Paul Fridolin (1908). Italia pontificia. vol. III. Berlin 1908. pp. 316–384. (in Latin)
  • Lanzoni, Francesco (1927), Le diocesi d'Italia dalle origini al principio del secolo VII (an. 604), Faenza 1927, pp. 584–586. (in Italian)
  • Matthaeius (Mattei), Antonius (1768). Ecclesiae Pisanae historia (in Latin). Vol. Tomus I. Lucca: Venturini.
  • Matthaeius (Mattei), Antonius (1772). Ecclesiae Pisanae historia (in Latin). Vol. Tomus II. Venturini.
  • Picotti, Giovanni Battista (1946), "I vescovi pisani del secolo IX," Miscellanea Giovanni Mercati. Studi e testi (Biblioteca apostolica vaticana), 125 (in Italian). Vol. V. Citta del Vaticano. 1946. pp. 206–217.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Picotti,, Giovanni Battista (1966), "Osservazione sulla datazione dei documenti privati pisani dell'alto medioevo, con uno studio sulla cronologia dei vescovi pisani del secolo IX," Bollettino Storico Pisano 33-35 (1964-1966), pp. 3–80. (in Italian)
  • Schwartz, Gerhard (1913), Die Besetzung der Bistümer Reichsitaliens unter den sächsischen und salischen Kaisern : mit den Listen der Bischöfe, 951-1122, Leipzig-Berlin 1913, pp. . (in German)
  • Ughelli, Ferdinando (1718). Italia sacra sive De Episcopis Italiae, et insularum adjacentium (in Latin). Vol. Tomus Tertius (III) (Secunda ed.). Venice: apud Sebastianum Coleti. pp. 341–493.
  • Violante, Cinzio (1970). “Cronotassi dei vescovi e degli arcivescovi di Pisa dalle origini all'inizio del secolo XIII. Primo contributo ad una nuova “Italia Sacra.” In: Miscellanea Gilles Gérard Meersseman. Padova, 1970. (in Italian)
  • Violante, C. “Le concessioni ponteficie alla Chiesa di Pisa riguardanti la Corsica alla fine del secolo XI,” Bullettino dell'Istituto Storico Italiano per il Medio Evo 75 (1963), pp. 43–56. (in Italian)
  • Zucchelli, N. (1906). Appunti e documenti per la storia del Seminario arcivescovile di Pisa. Pisa 1906. (in Italian)
  • Zucchelli, Niccola (1907). Cronotassi dei vescovi e arcivescovi di Pisa (in Italian). Pisa: Tipografia Arcivescovile Orsolini-Prosperi.

External links Edit

  • Archdiocese of Pisa website
  • Benigni, Umberto (1911). "Pisa." The Catholic Encyclopedia. Vol. 12. New York: Robert Appleton Company, 1911. Retrieved: 21 March 2020.
  • Catholic Hierarchy page

43°43′24″N 10°23′43″E / 43.7233°N 10.3954°E / 43.7233; 10.3954

roman, catholic, archdiocese, pisa, archdiocese, pisa, latin, archidioecesis, pisana, latin, church, metropolitan, catholic, church, pisa, italy, founded, century, elevated, dignity, archdiocese, april, 1092, pope, urban, seat, bishop, cathedral, assumption, p. The Archdiocese of Pisa Latin Archidioecesis Pisana is a Latin Church metropolitan see of the Catholic Church in Pisa Italy 1 2 It was founded in the 4th century and elevated to the dignity of an archdiocese on 21 April 1092 by Pope Urban II The seat of the bishop is the cathedral of the Assumption in the Piazza del Duomo Archdiocese of PisaArchidioecesis PisanaPisa CathedralLocationCountryItalyEcclesiastical provincePisaStatisticsArea847 km2 327 sq mi Population Total Catholics as of 2016 334 345313 497 93 8 Parishes166InformationEstablished4th centuryCathedralPisa Cathedral Cattedrale di S Maria Assunta Secular priests146 diocesan 44 Religious Orders 24 Permanent DeaconsCurrent leadershipPopeFrancisArchbishopGiovanni Paolo BenottoMapWebsitewww diocesidipisa itThe archbishop of Pisa presides over the Ecclesiastical Province of Pisa which includes the dioceses of Livorno Massa Carrara Pontremoli Pescia and Volterra Since 2008 the archbishop of Pisa has been Giovanni Paolo Benotto Contents 1 History 1 1 Council of Pisa of Innocent II 1 2 Schism 1 3 General Council of Pisa 1 3 1 Papal conclave 1 4 Conciliabulum of Pisa 1 5 Chapter and cathedral 1 6 Diocesan synods 1 7 New dioceses and suffragans 2 Bishops and archbishops 2 1 to 1200 2 2 1200 to 1500 2 3 1500 to 1800 2 4 since 1800 3 See also 4 Notes 5 Books 5 1 Studies 6 External linksHistory EditThis section needs expansion You can help by adding to it October 2016 In a letter of 1 September 1077 Pope Gregory VII wrote to the bishops clergy civil leaders and people of Corsica acknowledging his responsibility for oversight of their well being as part of the lands of S Peter but admitting that he was unable to do so personally and effectively He had therefore appointed Bishop elect Landulfus of Pisa to be his legate in Corsica 3 On 30 November 1078 Pope Gregory confirmed all the privileges that belonged to the Church of Pisa as well as the legateship of Corsica He granted the bishop half of all the papal income from the island as well as all of the judicial income de placitis 4 On 28 June 1091 Pope Urban II at the request of Countess Matilda of Tuscany 5 Bishop Dagobert and the nobility of Pisa returned the legateship of the island of Corsica to Bishop Dagobert on the condition of an annual payment of 50 pounds Luccan to the papal treasury 6 On 21 April 1092 Pope Urban issued the bull Cum Universis in which he created the metropolitanate of Pisa promoting the bishop to the rank of archbishop and assigning the bishoprics of Corsica as his suffragans This he did at the request of Countess Matilda of Tuscany and in consideration of the considerable merits of Bishop Dagibert in remaining faithful to the Roman church in the face of the schism against Pope Gregory VII 7 Pope Gelasius II who was staying in Pisa from 2 September to 2 October 1118 confirmed the arrangements in a bull of 26 September 1118 After the death of Pope Gelasius at Cluny on 29 January 1119 Archbishop Petrus and Cardinal Petrus della Gherardesca dei Conti di Donoratico a native of Pisa and papal legate crossed to Corsica to receive to obtain the oaths of fealty of the bishops of Corsica 8 Pope Gelasius bull was an unpleasant shock for Genoa who coveted the island of Corsica and a war broke out in 1119 between the two naval powers The Genoese sent out a fleet of 28 galleys but in a battle at Porto Venere the Pisans were victorious as they were at a second battle at the mouth of the Arno River The war lasted a total of fourteen years 9 On 16 May 1120 the new pope Calixtus II who had been elected at Cluny in France and had just returned to Italy issued a bull confirming the privileges of Urban II and Gelasius II 10 But on 3 January 1121 Pope Calixtus wrote to the bishops of Corsica that the privilege of consecrating bishops for Corsica which had been granted to the archbishops of Pisa was withdrawn and that in the future only the pope would have the right to consecrate bishops for Corsica and to receive their oaths of submission 11 The Genoese were not mollified by his action They resorted to bribery to obtain what they had not obtained by military force A document written in Rome and dated 16 June 1121 reveals that negotiations had been taking place with the agreement and authorization of Pope Calixtus between the Genoese agents Caffaro and Barisone and a committee of three cardinals and a bishop on the question of Corsica The Genoese had agreed to give money to the Pope and other members of the Curia by 10 November The Pope was to receive 1 600 silver marks cardinals and bishops 300 marks priests and clerics 50 ounces of gold Cardinal Peter of Porto 303 ounces of gold Petrus Leonis 100 silver marks and his sons 55 marks Leo Frangipane 40 marks and additional payments to other nobles 12 The opportune moment to satisfy the Genoans came when Calixtus II convened the First Lateran Council on 27 March 1123 to ratify the Concordat of Worms and end the schism instigated by the Emperor Henry V The Pope appointed a committee consisting of 24 bishops and other prelates led by Archbishop Gualterius of Ravenna a personal enemy of the Archbishop of Pisa to examine and render a judgment on the claims of the Church of Pisa over Corsica On 6 April the last day of the Council the claims of Pisa were rejected by the Fathers after the damning report of Archbishop Gualterius 13 The loss was temporary however for on 21 July 1126 the new pope Honorius II restored the privilege and granted the archbishops the right of holding synods not only in Pisa but also in Corsica 14 He took the trouble to rebuke Calixtus II and his committee stating that the Pisans had been despoiled sine praecedente ipsorum Pisanorum culpa et absque iudicio without any preceding crime on the part of the Pisans and without a judicial hearing 15 In 1127 Archbishop Ruggero who had leagued himself with Arezzo and Florence made war against Siena He was taken prisoner and spent more than a year in captivity 16 On March 1133 Pope Innocent elevated Genoa to the status of an archbishopric and assigned it metropolitan status over Mariana Nebbio and Accia on Corsica Bobbio and Brugnato newly created to which was added the diocese of Albenga formerly in the Metropolitanate of Milan 17 The Pope also enfeoffed Genoa with the northern half of the island The archdiocese of Pisa therefore lost ecclesiastical control of the northern half of the island of Corsica retaining the dioceses of Ajaccio Aleria and Salona Pisa was compensated to a small degree by being named Metropolitan of Populonia Massa Maritima 18 These grants which had been made to Archbishop Hubertus were confirmed in the bull Tunc Apostolicae on 22 April 1138 and in addition Innocent II granted Pisa the honorary primacy of the province of Turritana He also confirmed the legateship over Sardinia which had been granted by Urban II and the right to consecrate the six bishops in his ecclesiastical province 19 From the late 12th to the early 13th century the Pisan archdiocese was the feudal suzerain of the four giudicati of Sardinia On 6 March 1131 Gonnario of Torres swore fealty to Archbishop Ruggero of Pisa 20 On 22 April 1459 Pope Pius II issued the bull Triumphans Pastor in which he raised the diocese of Siena to metropolitan status and assigned to it as suffragans the dioceses of Soano Chiusi Massa Marittima Populonia and Grosseto Massa was taken from the metropolitanate of Pisa 21 Council of Pisa of Innocent II Edit Main article Council of Pisa 1135 From 30 May 1135 to 6 June 1135 Innocent II held a council in Pisa having been driven from Rome a second time by the supporters of Pope Anacletus II In Pisa with the encouragement of Bernard of Clairvaux who was travelling with him and supporting his cause he summoned a council of bishops The number of attendees is not known but it is said that bishops from Spain Gascony England France Burgundy Germany Hungary Lombardy and Tuscany attended Innocent II excommunicated his rival Anacletus II and all his followers In the council it was ordered that all clergy who had married should separate from their wives It ordered all simoniacs to leave their offices It ordered that no one should be an archdeacon or a dean who was not ordained a deacon or priest Such honors should not be granted to adolescents It granted the right of asylum to churches and cemeteries 22 Schism Edit At the instigation of the German Emperor Frederick Barbarossa a double election took place in St Peter s Basilica in Rome on 7 September 1159 a considerable majority of cardinals supporting Pope Alexander III Orlando Bandinelli and a small minority supporting Ottaviano of Monticelli who took the name Victor IV The archbishop of Pisa Villano Villani supported Pope Alexander In 1164 after the death of Victor Barbarossa promoted Cardinal Guido of Crema as Paschal III In 1167 Barbarossa began a fourth war in Italy and he and his pope Paschal ordered the leaders of Pisa to elect an archbishop to replace the loyal Villano 23 who had already been sent into exile in 1163 and 1164 and was again in flight from imperial agents On 8 April 1167 the leaders of Pisa who were loyal to the Emperor chose a Canon of the cathedral Benencasa and he and the Pisans travelled to Viterbo where the antipope ordained him a priest on Holy Saturday and consecrated him a bishop on Easter Monday They returned to Pisa on 23 May 1167 24 General Council of Pisa Edit Main article Council of Pisa In the spring of 1408 Pisa became directly involved in the struggles of the Western Schism which had been tormenting Christendom for thirty years Gregory XII who had been driven from Rome on 9 August 1407 was staying in Lucca where in May 1408 he created several new cardinals He did this in violation of two solemn oaths he had taken and without consulting the cardinals When they objected and refused to attend the installation ceremonies Gregory ordered them arrested One by one the cardinals fled from Lucca and sought refuge in Pisa 25 On 29 June 1408 thirteen cardinals who held the proxies of two more cardinals met at Livorno in the diocese of Pisa and issued a statement calling for a general council of the Church to address and end the schism Their document was later subscribed by four additional cardinals The Council of Pisa held its first session in the cathedral in Pisa on 25 March 1409 26 Archbishop Alamanno Adimari 1406 1411 was present 27 Both Gregory and Benedict XIII were deposed and excommunicated on 5 June 1409 having failed to answer repeated summonses from the Council to answer the charges against them 28 Papal conclave Edit Due to the deposition of both popes a new pope was required In examining the possibility of intervention or participation in the selection the Council decided to leave the cardinals to their canonical duty in order to avoid any possible complaint The cardinals in Pisa decided to wait the canonical ten days after the decease of a pope to begin their conclave even though no pope had died Twenty three cardinals entered conclave which was held in the archbishop s palace in the cathedral close on 15 June 1411 they were joined by a twenty fourth on 16 June On 26 June they elected unanimously the Cardinal of Milan Pietro Filargi OFM who took the name Alexander V He was crowned on 7 July 1411 on a platform erected in the square before the cathedral of Pisa 29 Conciliabulum of Pisa Edit In 1511 at the instigation of King Louis XII of France a meeting was held in Pisa summoned by four cardinals led by Bernardino Carvajal which called itself a general council Others called it the conciliabulum Pisanum 30 Only two archbishops fourteen bishops and a number of French abbots attended The little council held its first session on 5 November 1511 It attempted to take measures to depose Pope Julius II The people of Pisa attempted to close the doors of the cathedral against the meeting and their hostility after three sessions drove the bishops to adjourn their sessions to Milan where they met on 13 December 31 Chapter and cathedral Edit The cathedral of Pisa begun in 1063 and consecrated by Pope Gelasius II in 1118 32 was dedicated originally to the Virgin as S Maria Maggiore and then more specifically to the taking of the body of the Virgin Mary up into heaven Assumption The cathedral was staffed and administered by a corporate body called the Chapter Capitulum which was originally composed of five dignities and at one point twenty eight Canons The dignities were the Archpriest the Archdeacon the Dean the Primicerius and the Vicedominus 33 In 1702 there were only three dignities and twenty five Canons 34 Diocesan synods Edit Archbishop Matteo Rinuccini 1577 1582 presided over a diocesan synod in 1582 35 Archbishop Francesco Bonciani 1613 1620 held a diocesan synod in Pisa in 1615 1616 Pisan style 36 Synods were also held by Archbishop Giuliano de Medici 1620 1635 in 1624 1625 Pisan Archbishop Scipione Pannocchieschi 1636 1663 on 20 21 June 1639 and again in 1649 1650 Pisan and another in 1659 and Archbishop Francesco Pannocchieschi 1663 1702 on 11 12 May 1666 and again in 1677 1678 Pisan 37 Archbishop Francesco Frosini 1702 1733 held three diocesan synods on 6 8 July 1707 1708 Pisan on 30 31 July 1716 1717 Pisan and on 31 July 1725 1726 Pisan 38 A special assembly conventus was held in Pisa from 5 12 May 1850 summoned by Archbishop Giovanni Battista Parretti 1839 1851 and including his suffragan bishops Pontremoli Massa Maritima Livorno and at his invitation the archbishop of Lucca the bishop of Pescia and the vicar capitular of Volterra which were immediately subject to the pope Delegates of the various cathedral chapters were also invited The meeting was occasioned by the revolution in Rome which had deposed Pope Pius IX from his position as head of the Papal States and seen him flee from the city in disguise to a refuge in Neapolitan territory The meeting was in fact sanctioned by Pope Pius 39 New dioceses and suffragans Edit In a bull of 17 March 1726 Pescia was established as a diocese by Pope Benedict XIII and was for a long time immediately subject to the Holy See Papacy 40 On 1 August 1856 Pope Pius IX in the bull Ubi Primum made Pescia a suffragan of subordinate to the archbishop of Pisa The diocese of Livorno was created by Pope Pius VII in the bull Militantis Ecclesiae of 25 September 1806 at the urging of Queen Maria Luisa Regent of Tuscany 41 The erection was opposed both by the Archdiocese of Pisa and the Canons of San Miniato who would lose territory power and income from the change 42 The new diocese was made a suffragan of the archbishop of Pisa 43 Bishops and archbishops EditThis list is incomplete you can help by adding missing items November 2016 to 1200 Edit Gaudentius attested 313 323 44 Senior or Senator 410 45 Joannes attested 493 46 A bishop name unknown who took part in the schism of the Three Chapters 556 47 Alexius 648 48 Opportunus attested 649 49 Maurianus attested 680 50 Maximus attested 715 51 Andreas attested 754 768 52 Domnucianus 774 53 Raichnardus attested 796 813 54 Joannes attested 826 858 55 Plato attested 865 876 56 Joannes attested 877 902 57 Theodericus attested 909 910 58 Wolfgherius attested 927 59 Zenobius attested 934 954 60 Grimaldus attested 958 965 61 Albericus attested 968 985 62 Raimbertus attested 987 996 63 Wido Guido attested 1005 1014 64 Azzo 1015 1031 65 Oppizo or Opizio 1039 1059 66 Guido attested 1061 1076 67 Landulfus attested 1077 1079 68 Gerardus 1080 1085 69 Sede vacante 1085 1088 70 Archbishops of Pisa from 28 June 1091 dd Dagobert 1088 1105 71 Pietro Moriconi 1105 1119 72 Atto Azzo 1119 1121 73 Rogerio Ghisalbertini 1123 1131 74 Uberto Rossi Lanfranchi 1133 1137 75 Balduino da Pisa 1138 1145 76 Villano Villani Gaetani 1146 1175 77 Ubaldo Lanfranchi 1176 1207 78 1200 to 1500 Edit Lotharius Rosari 1208 1216 79 Vitalis 1218 1252 80 Federico Visconti 1254 1277 81 Ruggieri degli Ubaldini 1278 1295 Teodorico Ranieri 1295 1299 archbishop elect 82 Giovanni di Polo 1299 1312 83 Oddone della Sala 1312 1323 84 Simon Saltorelli O P 1323 1342 85 Dino di Radicofani 1342 1348 86 Giovanni Scarlatti 1348 1362 87 Francesco Pucci 1362 1378 88 Barnaba Malaspina 1380 89 Lotto Gambacorta 1380 1394 90 Joannes Gabrieli 1394 1400 91 Ludovico Bonito 1400 1406 Alamanno Adimari 1406 1411 92 Pietro Ricci 1411 1417 93 Giuliano Ricci 1418 1461 Filippo de Medici 1461 1474 94 Francesco Salviati 1475 1478 95 Rafaele Riario 1479 1499 Administrator Cesare Riario 1499 1518 Administrator 1500 to 1800 Edit Cardinal Rafaele Riario 1518 Administrator 96 Onofrio de Bartolini 1518 1555 Giovanni Ricci 97 Cardinal Scipione Rebiba 1556 1560 98 Cardinal Giovanni de Medici 1560 1562 Administrator 99 Angelo Nicolini 1564 1567 100 Cardinal Giovanni Ricci 3 Sep 1567 3 May 1574 101 Pietro Giacomo Borbone 1574 1575 102 Ludovico Antinori 2 Dec 1575 13 Feb 1576 103 Bartolomeo Giugni 20 Feb 1576 26 June 1577 104 Matteo Rinuccini 14 Aug 1577 8 June 1582 105 Carlo Antonio Dal Pozzo 1582 1607 106 Sallustio Tarugi 1607 1613 107 Francesco Bonciani 1613 1619 108 Giuliano de Medici 1620 1635 109 Scipione Pannocchieschi 1636 1663 107 Francesco Pannocchieschi 1663 1702 107 Francesco Frosini 1702 1733 110 Francesco Guidi 1734 1778 111 Angelo Franceschi 1778 1806 112 since 1800 Edit Rainieri Alliata 1806 1836 Died 113 Giovanni Battista Parretti 1839 1851 Died 114 Cardinal Cosimo Corsi 1853 1870 115 Paolo Micallef 1871 1883 Ferdinando Capponi 1883 1903 Pietro Maffi 1903 1931 Gabriele Vettori 1932 1947 Ugo Camozzo 1948 1970 Benvenuto Matteucci 1971 1986 Alessandro Plotti 1986 2008 Giovanni Paolo Benotto 6 April 2008 116 See also EditTimeline of Pisa List of Catholic dioceses in ItalyNotes Edit Archdiocese of Pisa Catholic Hierarchy org David M Cheney Retrieved November 19 2017 self published source Metropolitan Archdiocese of Pisa GCatholic org Gabriel Chow Retrieved November 19 2017 self published source J P Migne Patrologiae Latinae Tomus CXLVIII Paris 1848 p 487 no 2 Kehr p 319 nos 2 3 Xavier Poli 1907 La Corse dans l antiquite et dans le haut moyen age in French Paris A Fontemoing p 178 Kehr III pp 319 320 nos 2 5 The countess died on 24 July 1115 and her patronage of the Church of Pisa lapsed Poli p 181 Kehr III p 320 no 7 Corsicanae insulae Episcopatus regendos ac disponendos Sanctae Romanae Ecclesiae cui auctore Deo carissime Frater Daiberte praesides praesentis decreti auctoritate committimus atque subjicimus teque Frater venerabilis in Archiepiscopum eiusdem insulae promovemus Poli p 181 Cappelletti pp 75 79 Kehr p 321 no 9 Kehr III pp 321 322 no 12 X pp 472 473 Heywood A History of Pisa pp 71 74 Kehr III p 322 no 13 Cappelletti XIII pl 310 311 XVI p 90 Kehr III p 322 no 15 Caffaro 1890 Luigi T Belgrano ed Annali genovesi di Caffaro e de suoi continuatori dal MXCIX al MCCXCIII in Latin Roma Tip del R Instituto Storico Italiano Sordo Muti pp 20 21 Heywood A History of Pisa pp 74 75 J D Mansi Sacrorum Conciliorum nova et amplissima collectio editio novissima Tomus XXI Venice A Zatta 1776 p 279 Pierre Paul Raoul Colonna de Cesari Rocca 1901 Recherches sur la Corse au Moyen age origine de la rivalite des Pisans et des Genois en Corse 1014 1174 Genoa Tipografia R istituto Sordomuti pp 80 81 Heywood pp 75 76 Kehr III p 323 324 no 22 Paolo Tronci 1682 Memorie istoriche della citta di Pisa in Latin and Italian Livorno G V Bonfigli pp 62 65 Heywood A History of Pisa p 78 Heywood A History of Pisa p 77 Cappelletti XVI pp 22 23 Kehr III p 324 no 23 VI part 2 p 266 Heywood pp 79 80 Kehr III p 325 no 26 The four giudicati were Arborea Cagliari Gallura and Torres Mauro G Sanna 2013 Onorio III e la Sardegna ed critica e commento delle fonti storiche a cura di M G Sanna in Italian Cagliari Centro di studi filologici sardi pp xx xxiv 198 199 Bullarum diplomatum et privilegiorum sanctorum romanorum pontificum in Latin Vol Tomus V Turin Seb Franco H Fori et H Dalmazzo 1860 pp 150 152 3 Kehr III p 317 J D Mansi Sacrorum Conciliorum nova et amplissima collectio editio novissima Tomus XXI Venice A Zatta 1776 pp 485 492 Philippus Jaffe ed S Lowenfeld pp 865 866 Ughelli III pp 401 404 Monumenta Germaniae Historica Scriptores Vol XIX Annales Aevi Suevici p 256 Annales Pisani Heywood pp 165 169 188 Kehr III p 327 no 39 Carl Joseph Hefele Histoire des Conciles ed H Leclercq Tome VI deuxieme partie Paris Letouzey 1915 pp 1339 1343 Carl Joseph Hefele Histoire des Conciles ed H Leclercq Tome VII premiere partie Paris Letouzey 1916 pp 1 11 Lenfant I p 352 Hefele VII 1 pp 43 48 Jacques Lenfant 1724 Histoire du concile de Pise in French Vol Tome second Amsterdam Pierre Humbert pp 1 12 J P Adams California State University Northridge Sede vacante 1409 retrieved 16 March 2020 J D Mansi Sacrorum Conciliorum nova et amplissima collectio editio novissima Tomus XXXV Paris Hubert Welter 1902 pp 155 172 Ferdinand Gregorovius History of Rome in the Middle Ages Vol V part 1 London Bell 1902 pp 87 90 Ludwig von Pastor The History of the Popes from the close of the Middle Ages Vol VI second edition St Louis B Herder 1902 pp 359 365 374 376 388 394 The date was 26 September 1118 Ughelli III p 337 Tronci pp 58 59 Kehr III p 335 no 21 Ughelli III p 347 Cappelletti XVI p 221 Ritzler Sefrin Hierarchia catholica V p 315 note 1 Mansi ed L Petit amp J B Martin Sacrorum Conciliorum nova et amplissima collectio editio novissima Tomus XXXVIbis Paris Hubert Welter 1913 p 1001 Synodus dioecesana Pisana quam Franciscus Boncianus archiepiscopus Pisanus insularum Corsicae amp Sardiniae primas amp in eis legatus natus habuit anno a Christi incarnatione 1616 in Latin Pisa Ioannes Fontanus 1616 Mansi ed L Petit amp J B Martin Sacrorum Conciliorum nova et amplissima collectio editio novissima Tomus XXXVIter Arnhem Leipzig Hubert Welter 1924 p 51 109 229 363 397 Mansi Petit Martin Tomus XXXVIter p 52 Tomus XXVIII p 647 Tertia synodus dioecesana ab illustriss ac reverendiss domino d Francisco Frosoni Pistoriense s R i comite archiepiscopo Pisano insularum Corsicae ac Sardiniae primate et in eis legato nato habita in ecclesia primatiali Pisana diebus XXXI mensis julii et I augusti anno salutis M DCC XXVI Pisis M DCC XXVIII ex typographia Francisci Bindi Mansi Petit Martin Tomus XLIII pp 845 882 Cappelletti XVIII p 358 Ritzler Sefrin Hierarchia catholica V p 315 note 1 VI p 339 note 1 A Labardi La comunita ecclesiastica pesciatina nel corso dei secoli Percorsi storici di una Chiesa locale in A Spicciani ed Pescia La storia l arte e il costume Pisa 2001 p 87 Cappelletti XVI pp 259 267 Cappelletti p 267 Bullarii Romani continuatio in Latin Vol Tomus decimus tertius 13 Roma ex typographia Reverendae Camerae Apostolicae 1847 p 66 6 Bishop Gaudentius was present at the synod of Rome of Pope Miltiades held in the house of Fausta at the Lateran on 5 October 313 He may also be the Bishop Gaudentius who was present at the council in Rome of Pope Sylvester I J D Mansi Sacrorum Conciliorum nova et amplissima collectio editio novissima Tomus II Florence A Zatta 1759 pp 437 619 Cappelletti XVI p 37 Lanzoni p 585 Senior or Senator is said by his biographer Probus to have consecrated St Patrick it is a conjecture of the Bollandists that this Senior was a bishop of Pisa whence he is taken up by Gams p 761 column 1 Lanzoni p 585 rejects the conjecture Ma io non oso seguirli perche quell ipotesi dei Bollandisti mal si regge Bishop Joannes received a letter from Pope Gelasius I ordering him to recover a chalice which had been taken by his predecessor Kehr III p 319 no 1 Lanzoni p 585 no 3 J P Migne ed Patrologiae Latinae Tomus LXIX Paris 1848 p 397 Cappelletti XVI p 38 Ughelli III p 351 calls him Alexander Archbishop Alexius is known only from the Legend of S Peregrinus a confection of the 14th or 15th century Lanzoni p 585 586 Ma da fonte cosi tarda e fantastica non e dato raccogliere dati sicuri Bishop Opportunus was present at the Roman synod of Pope Martin I on 5 October 649 J D Mansi Sacrorum Conciliorum nova et amplissima collectio editio novissima Tomus X Florence A Zatta 1764 p 867 Bishop Maurianus was present at the synod of Pope Agatho in 680 and subscribed to the synodical letter sent by Pope Agatho to the Second Council of Constantinople J D Mansi Sacrorum Conciliorum nova et amplissima collectio editio novissima Tomus XI Florence A Zatta 1765 pp 185 188 307 A document indicates that a group of Tuscan bishops met at the village of Vico Walari in the diocese of Siena apparently in 715 among whom was Maximus of Pisa Ughelli p 351 J D Mansi Sacrorum Conciliorum nova et amplissima collectio editio novissima Tomus XII Florence A Zatta 1766 p 253 The authenticity of the document however has been questioned Ughelli I p 416 Ludovico Antonio Muratori Antiquitates Italicae Medii Aevi Tomus VI Milan Societas Palatina 1742 pp 367 386 Matthaeius Mattei 1768 pp 121 122 Bishop Andrea s latest document is dated 1 August 768 S Sodi M L Ceccarelli Lemut 1996 Per una riconsiderazione dell evangelizzazione Tuscia la Chiesa pisana dalle origini all eta carolingia Rivista di Storia della Chiesa 50 1996 pp 9 56 at 34 39 in Italian The bishop was taken prisoner by Charlemagne at the siege of Pavia 774 Ceccarelli Lemut amp Sodi 2004 p 3 Raichnardus is first attested presiding over a grant to the Church of Pisa on 5 June 796 he is bishop elect in the document In July 803 he was present at judicial proceedings still as bishop elect He is mentioned in a legal document of April 813 Ceccarelli Lemut M Sodi S 2004 p 3 4 Bishop Joannes was present on 24 November 826 at the Roman synod of Pope Eugenius II He also took part in the Roman synods of 844 and 850 His latest documentary appearance is on 23 March 858 J D Mansi Sacrorum Conciliorum nova et amplissima collectio editio novissima Tomus XIV Venice A Zatta 1769 p 1000 Picotti 1946 p 69 nos 3 7 Ceccarelli Lemut amp Sodi 2004 pp 4 5 Plato was the chancellor of the Emperor Louis II from May 1856 to March 858 He first appears as bishop in May 865 His latest document is of 30 April 876 Picotti 1946 pp 69 70 nos 9 12 Ceccarelli Lemut amp Sodi 2004 p 5 Joannes was dead before 28 August 909 when his successor is in place Picotti 1946 p 70 nos 13 19 Ceccarelli Lemut amp Sodi 2004 p 5 Theodericus Picotti 1946 p 71 no 22 28 August 909 Ceccarelli Lemut amp Sodi 2004 p 5 Wolfgherius Lodovico Antonio Muratori 1740 Antiquitates italicae medii aevi in Latin Vol Tomus tertius 3 Milan ex typographia Societatis palatinae p 1045 Ceccarelli Lemut amp Sodi 2004 p 6 Zenobius Schwartz p 216 Grimaldus Ughelli III pp 352 354 Schwartz p 216 Albericus Ughelli III p 354 Schwartz p 216 Raimbertus Ughelli III p 354 Schwartz p 216 Wido Ughelli III p 354 Schwartz p 216 Azzo Cappelletti XVI pp 51 54 dismissing the report of a Bishop Lambertus as reported by Ughelli p 354 Schwartz p 216 Opizo was already bishop by 4 March 1039 He provided permission and funds for the founding of the Camaldolite convent of S Michele by Abbot Bonus Cappelletti pp 58 59 Schwartz p 217 Bishop Guido is first attested on 15 August 1061 According to the Annales Pisani Bishop Guido died on 8 April 1076 Cappelletti p 62 Schwartz p 217 Landulf was a native of Milan and a supporter of the papacy against the emperor His earliest known reference as bishop is from 27 August 1077 his election however was canonically irregular Pope Gregory VII calls him bishop elect on 1 September 1077 In the bull Supernae Miserationis of 30 November 1078 Pope Gregory repaired the defects Landulf died on 25 October 1079 Cappelletti XVI pp 62 68 Kehr III pp 319 320 nos 2 5 Schwartz p 217 Gerardus is first recorded in a document of 29 July 1080 According to the Annales Pisani he died on 8 May 1085 Schwartz p 217 Skinner Patricia 2009 From Pisa to the Patriarchate Some Chapters in the Life of Arch bishop Daibert of Pisa In Skinner Patrica ed Challenging the Boundaries of Medieval History The Legacy of Timothy Reuter Brepols p 159 ISBN 978 2503523590 Cappelletti p 86 Skinner p 159 Dagobert was consecrated a bishop by Pope Urban II personally Kehr III p 320 no 6 Dagobert was the first archbishop He was invested with the island of Corsica on 28 June 1191 by Pope Urban II and named an archbishop Kehr III p 321 no 9 He accompanied Pope Urban to France in 1194 He joined the first Crusade and was elected Latin Patriarch of Jerusalem on 15 July 1099 he was suspended by the papal Legate Cardinal Robert in 1104 and returned to Rome to vindicate himself He died at Messana on 15 June 1105 Cappelletti pp 70 82 who puts his death in 1107 Gams p 452 column 2 Schwartz pp 217 218 Skinner p 159 Petrus had previously been Abbot of S Michele Camaldolese in Pisa as late as 14 December 1104 By 19 March 1106 he was already Archbishop of Pisa In 1113 he acted as papal legate in recruiting personnel for the crusade In 1116 he was in Rome attending the Lateran Council of Pope Paschal II He died on 10 September 1119 Cappelletti pp 85 91 Schwartz p 218 Atto had been a Canon of the cathedral of Piacenza Atto s earliest dated reference is on 30 January 1120 He was present at the consecration of the cathedral of Volterra by Pope Calixtus II on 20 May 1120 as was his successor Bishop Rogerius of Volterra It is claimed that he was a cardinal but his name does not appear in the record of Petrus Pisanus The latest reference to him is on 29 August 1121 Tronci Memorie pp 59 60 Ughelli I p 1437 Cappelletti p 91 Lorenzo Cardella Memorie storiche de cardinali della Santa Romana Chiesa Rome Pagliarini 17920 Tomo I parte 1 p 271 Schwartz p 219 Rogerius participated in the First Lateran Council of 18 28 March 1123 He died in 1131 Schwartz p 219 Maria Luisa Ceccarelli Lemut 2009 Ruggero vescovo di Volterra e arcivescovo di Pisa all inizio del XII secolo in Studi di storia offerti a Michele Luzzati Scalfati ed Silio Pietro Paolo Veronese Alessandra Maria Pisa Ospedaletto 2009 pp 53 72 Hubertus was a Canon of the cathedral of Pisa He was appointed a cardinal by Pope Honorius II at some point between March 1125 and March 1126 He was with the Pope in Benevento in May 1128 At the end of 1129 he was sent on a legation to Spain In the schism of 1130 he supported Innocent II against Anacletus II and fled with him to Cluny where he took part in the synod of Cluny in November In spring 1132 he returned to Italy along with Pope Innocent In January 1133 Innocent arrived in Pisa where Hubertus was named archbishop In May 1133 Hubertus was with Innocent in Rome They were driven out of Rome again and in September 1133 they were in Siena and then in Pisa Hubertus participated in Innocent s synod of Pisa in May 1135 and then held his own synod in Sardinia He was dead by 22 April 1138 when Archbishop Baldwin is found in office as Archbishop of Pisa Klaus Ganzer Die Entwicklung des auswartigen Kardinalats im Hohen Mittelalter Tubingen Max Niemeyer 1963 pp 86 89 Baldoino was a Cistercian Archbishop Baldwin died on 25 May 1145 Tronci pp 72 79 Archbishop Baldwin died on 25 May 1145 His seat was still vacant on 15 October Villano who had been named a cardinal by Pope Lucius III on 23 December 1144 was confirmed as archbishop by Pope Eugenius III on 29 May 1146 Bishop Villano was compelled to flee from the city on account of his support for Pope Alexander III 1167 returned in 1172 Matthaeius Mattei 1768 pp 224 237 Maria Luisa Ceccarelli Lemut 2010 Un presule tra politica comunale e fedelta pontificia Villano arcivescovo di Pisa 1146 1175 in Italian Papste Privilegien Provinzen Beitrage zur Kirchen Rechts und Landesgeschichte Festschrift fur Werner Maleczek zum 65 Geburtstag ed Giessauf Johannes Wien 2010 pp 61 76 Ubaldo led the Pisan fleet on crusade to the Holy Land 1188 1196 He died in Pisa on 19 June 1207 Matthaeius Mattei 1768 pp 237 246 Ceccarelli Lemut amp Sodi 2004 I vescovi pp 26 28 Lotharius was a citizen of Cremona and was Bishop of Vercelli 1205 1208 He was transferred to the archdiocese of Pisa by Pope Innocent III in 1208 by April In 1216 Lotharius was appointed Latin Patriarch of Jerusalem Jerusalem had been captured by the Saracens in 1187 Ughelli pp Eubel I pp 275 399 520 Archbishop Vitalis was already consecrated and had been granted the use of the pallium by 5 February 1218 as indicated by a letter of Pope Honorius III to the Chapter clergy and people of Pisa He died after 10 November 1252 Ughelli III pp 424 425 Eubel Hierarchia catholica I p 399 with note 2 400 Fredericus was appointed by Pope Innocent IV on 6 August 1254 Bishop Federico held provincial synods in 1258 1260 and 1262 He died on 1 October 1277 Eubel I p 400 with note 3 Ranieri was born in Orvieto the son of Joannes Raynerius He was appointed archbishop of Pisa on 20 September 1295 On 4 December 1298 when he was named a cardinal by Pope Boniface VIII Ranieri was still archbishop elect of Pisa and papal chamberlain His successor was appointed on 10 February 1299 On 13 June 1299 he was named Suburbicarian Bishop of Palestrina He died on 7 December 1306 Matthaeius Mattei II 1772 pp 50 52 Cappelletti XVI p 146 Eubel I p 12 no 8 Di Polo Matthaeius Mattei II 1772 pp 52 56 Bishop Oddone had litigation with the republic and later became Latin Patriarch of Alexandria Saltorelli was a Florentine the sole son and heir of the rich nobleman Guido Saltorelli To continue the family line he was married Ughelli says despondisset Mattei says nupsit but at the age of twenty he became a Dominican at S Maria Novella He became Prior of the monastery then Prior of the Roman Province of the Dominicans and then Procurator of the Order at the papal court Pope John XXII named him Bishop of Parma on 15 January 1317 and on 6 June 1323 appointed him Archbishop of Pisa The Antipope Nicholas V 1328 1330 presumed to remove him from his post He died on 24 September 1342 at the age of approximately eighty Ughelli III pp 450 457 Matthaeius Mattei II 1772 pp 67 82 Eubel Hierarchia catholica I pp 392 400 with note 5 On the death of Bishop Simon the authorities of Pisa petitioned Pope Clement VI to appoint Fra Marco Roncioni O P as their archbishop This was refused and he was appointed Bishop of Urbino instead Dino di Radicofani was appointed Archbishop of Pisa during whose administration the University of Pisa was chartered Matthaeius Mattei II 1772 pp 82 87 Cappelletti XVI p 159 Eubel I p 400 Scarlatti had been legate to Armenia and to the emperor at Constantinople Pucci had been a Canon of Pisa Eubel I p 400 Barnaba had been Bishop of Penne e Adria He was transferred to Pisa in March 1380 and died on 7 November 1380 Eubel I p 400 Bishop Lotto was compelled to flee after the death of his brother Pietro tyrant of Pisa 1392 He was transferred to the diocese of Treviso in 1394 A native of Pontremolo Joannes held the degree of Doctor in utroque iure and was a Canon of Corone Greece He had been Bishop of Massa Maritima from 1390 to 1394 and was papal Nuncio to Poland Lithuania Prussia and Livonia in 1392 He was provided to the diocese of Pisa by Boniface IX on 9 September 1394 He died on 25 June 1400 Eubel I pp 329 with note 6 400 Adimari held the degree of Doctor of Canon Law and was a papal notary He had been archbishop of Florence 1400 1401 and then Archbishop of Taranto 1401 1406 He was transferred to Pisa on 3 November 1406 by Pope Innocent VII of the Roman Obedience He took part in the Council of Pisa 1409 He served as papal nuncio in France from 9 June 1410 to 20 November 1412 He was appointed a cardinal by Pope John XXIII on 6 June 1411 which brought about his resignation from the archbishopric Eubel I pp 32 no 3 with note 9 250 with note 9 400 473 Pietro Ricci was a native of Florence and had been named a Canon of the cathedral of Florence in 1384 and in 1388 he became parish priest of S Andrea Empulensis He was Vicar Capitular of Florence three times during episcopal vacancies in 1389 1395 and 1401 He had been Bishop of Arezzo 1403 1411 in which capacity he was present at the Council of Pisa in 1409 Lenfant I p 355 no 40 He was transferred to the diocese of Pisa by John XXIII on 9 October 1411 He died on 30 November 1417 Matthaeius Mattei II 1772 pp 129 132 Eubel I p 400 Medici a protonotary apostolic had been Bishop of Arezzo from 1457 to 1461 He was appointed Archbishop of Pisa on 14 January 1461 He died in October 1474 Eubel II pp 94 216 Salviati was hanged at Florence in connexion with the conspiracy of the Pazzi succeeded by his nephew Eubel II p 216 Riario was Administrator of the diocese of Pisa for a total of one week from 3 September to 10 September 1518 Eubel Hierarchia catholica III p 274 The Cardinals of the Holy Roman Church Biographical Dictionary Consistory of November 20 1551 On 16 March 1541 Rebiba who was Archpriest of Chieti was named titular bishop of Amyclae near Sparta in Greece so that he could serve as auxiliary bishop of Chieti whose archbishop became Pope Paul IV Rebiba was presented to the bishopric of Motula by the Emperor Charles V and confirmed by Pope Paul IV on 12 October 1551 He served as Governor of Rome in 1555 He was named a cardinal on 20 December 1555 and on 13 April 1556 appointed Archbishop of Pisa On 11 May 1556 he was named papal legate to the Emperor and on 20 July 1558 he was appointed legate to Ferdinand King of the Romans and to the king of Poland He governed the diocese of Pisa through his suffragan Jacopo Lomellini who was named bishop of Guardialfiera for that purpose Rebiba resigned the diocese of Pisa in 1560 and on 19 June 1560 was appointed Bishop of Troja a diocese immediately subject to the papacy which he held for only 2 months to be succeeded by his nephew Prosper Rebiba He died on 23 July 1577 Matthaeius Mattei II 1772 pp 173 175 Eubel Hierarchia catholica III pp 35 no 5 with notes 3 and 4 251 with note 3 274 with notes 6 and 7 Giovanni was the second son of Cosimo I de Medici Grand Duke of Tuscany and Eleanor of Toledo He was named a cardinal by Pope Pius IV on 31 January 1560 He was not in holy orders only tonsured He died at the age of 18 on 12 December 1562 Ughelli III pp 483 484 Lorenzo Cardella Memorie storiche de cardinali della Santa Romana Chiesa Tomo V Rome Pagliarini 1793 pp 2 4 Eubel III p 37 Salvador Miranda The Cardinals of the Holy Roman Church Biographical Dictionary Consistory of March 12 1565 Eubel Hierarchia catholica III p 274 with note 10 Pietro Eubel III p 274 with note 11 Antinori had been Bishop of Pistoia Eubel Hierarchia catholica III p 274 with note 12 Giugni had been Provost of the cathedral of Florence Eubel Hierarchia catholica III p 274 with note 13 Rinucci had been a Canon of Florence He held the degree of Doctor in utroque iure Eubel Hierarchia catholica III p 274 with note 14 Dal Pozzo was a founder of the Collegio Puteano and author of works on canon and on civil law Gauchat p 280 a b c Gauchat Patritius Patrice 1935 Hierarchia catholica medii et recentioris aevi Vol IV Munster Libraria Regensbergiana p 280 in Latin Bonciani was a native of Florence and a Canon of the cathedral rising to the dignity of Archdeacon of the cathedral He was named Archbishop of Pisa on 6 November 1613 and in 1614 he began a pastoral Visitation of the institutions of his diocese On 11 12 November 1614 he held a diocesan synod In 1617 he was ambassador to the Court of France of Grand Duke Cosimo II of Florence His Vicar General in Pisa was the antiquarian Paolo Tronci Galileo s opponent He died on 28 November 1619 1620 in the Pisan reckoning and left his large library to the Dominican convent of Santa Maria Novella in Florence Cappelletti XVI pp 207 208 Gauchat p 280 Medici was appointed archbishop on 15 June 1620 He served on missions for Duke Cosimo II to the Emperor Rudolf to Matthias of Hungary Sigismund of Poland and Philip of Spain He founded the seminary in 1627 He died on 6 January 1635 1636 Pisan Cappelletti pp 208 213 Gauchat p 280 Born in Pistoia in 1654 Frosini held the degree of Doctor in utroque iure from the University of Pisa 1675 He became a Canon of Pistoia in 1688 and was Vicar General and Vicar Capitular He had previously been Bishop of Pistoia e Prato 1701 1702 and was named Archbishop of Pisa on 2 October 1702 by Pope Clement XI He died on 20 November 1733 Ritzler Sefrin Hierarchia catholica V p 315 Pisa with note 2 and under Pistoia e Prato note 4 Born in Volterra in 1694 Guidi held the degree of Doctor in utroque iure and had been a Canon of the cathedral of Florence and then Bishop of Arezzo 1733 1734 On 15 February 1734 he was transferred to the archdiocese of Pisa by Pope Clement XII He died in Pisa in July 1778 Ritzler Sefrin Hierarchia catholica VI pp 98 with note 2 339 with note 2 Franceschi was born in Pisa in 1735 and held the degree of Doctor in utroque iure from the University of Pisa 1758 He was Dean of the Collegiate Church of Livorno and then Canon and Vicar General of Pisa He had previously been Bishop of Arezzo 1775 1778 He was transferred to the archdiocese of Pisa on 28 September 1778 by Pope Pius VI He died on 13 March 1806 Ritzler Sefrin Hierarchia catholica VI pp 99 with note 5 339 with note 3 Born in Pisa in 1752 the son of Count Francesco Alliata and Countess Maria Galeotti Rainieri studies at the Jesuit college in Bologna and then at the University of Pisa He was Bishop of Volterra from 1791 to 1806 On 6 October 1806 he was transferred to the archdiocese of Pisa by Pope Pius VII He died on 8 August 1836 not 11 August Luigi della Fanteria 1836 Elogio funebre di monsignor Ranieri Alliata arcivescovo di Pisa in Italian presso R Prosperi pp 5 6 25 Ritzler Sefrin Hierarchia catholica VII p 307 Parretti Ritzler Sefrin Hierarchia catholica VII pp 194 307 Giuseppe Raspini 1996 Giovanni Battista Parretti 1778 1851 vescovo di Fiesole 1827 1839 arcivescovo di Pisa 1839 1851 in Italian Firenze F amp F Parretti Corsi was born in Florence in 1798 the son of Marquis Corsi He obtained the degree of Doctor in utroque iure from the Sapienza in Rome 1818 at the age of twenty He entered the papal Curia as a relator and then Referendary of the Congregation on Good Government which administered the Papal States In 1819 on the recommendation of Grand Duke Ferdinando III of Tuscany he was named Auditor of the Roman Rota judge for Tuscany He eventually in 1835 became Dean of the Rota He was named a cardinal by Pope Gregory XVI on 24 January 1842 On 20 January 1845 he was appointed Bishop of Jesi and on 19 December 1853 he was named Archbishop of Pisa on the nomination of Duke Leopoldo II He died at the villa of Agnano on 7 October 1870 Relazione autentica dell arresto del card Cosimo Corsi arcivescovo di Pisa in Italian Genoa Gio Fassi Como 1860 Mauro Del Corso 1988 Un vescovo nella storia Cosimo Corsi cardinale di Pisa la storia di un vescovo in Italian Pisa Pacini 1988 CV of archbishop Arcidiocesi di Pisa Biografia Sua Eccellenza Reverendissima Mons Giovanni Paolo Benotto retrieved 10 March 2020 Books EditGams Pius Bonifatius 1873 Series episcoporum Ecclesiae catholicae quotquot innotuerunt a beato Petro apostolo Ratisbon Typis et Sumptibus Georgii Josephi Manz p 761 762 Eubel Conradus ed 1913 Hierarchia catholica in Latin Vol Tomus I second ed Munster Libreria Regensbergiana Eubel Conradus ed 1914 Hierarchia catholica in Latin Vol Tomus II second ed Munster Libreria Regensbergiana Eubel Conradus Gulik Guilelmus 1923 Hierarchia catholica in Latin Vol Tomus III second ed Munster Libreria Regensbergiana Gauchat Patritius Patrice 1935 Hierarchia catholica in Latin Vol Tomus IV 1592 1667 Munster Libraria Regensbergiana Ritzler Remigius Sefrin Pirminus 1952 Hierarchia catholica medii et recentis aevi in Latin Vol Tomus V 1667 1730 Patavii Messagero di S Antonio Ritzler Remigius Sefrin Pirminus 1958 Hierarchia catholica medii et recentis aevi Vol Tomus VI 1730 1799 Patavii Messagero di S Antonio Ritzler Remigius Sefrin Pirminus 1968 Hierarchia Catholica medii et recentioris aevi in Latin Vol VII 1800 1846 Monasterii Libreria 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 1903 1922 Padua Messagero di San Antonio ISBN 978 88 250 1000 8 Studies Edit Cappelletti Giuseppe 1861 Le chiese d Italia in Italian Vol Tomo decimosesto 16 Venezia G Antonelli pp 1 230 Caturegli N 1950 Le condizioni della chiesa di Pisa nella seconda meta del secolo XV Bollettino Storico Pisano 19 1950 in Italian Ceccarelli Lemut Maria Luisa Sodi Stefano 2004 I vescovi di Pisa dall eta carolingia all inizio del XIII secolo In Rivista di storia della Chiesa in Italia Vol 58 No 1 2004 pp 3 28 in Italian Ceccarelli Lemut Maria Luisa 2011 Le canoniche della diocesi di Pisa nell eta della riforma della Chiesa In Studi Waldo Dolfi pp 95 122 in Italian Ceccarelli Lemut Maria Luisa Sodi Stefano 2017 La chiesa di Pisa dalle origini alla fine del Duecento Edizioni ETS in Italian Ceccarelli Lemut M Luisa Sodi Stefano 2018 I Canonici della Cattedrale Pisana Genesi e Sviluppo Dell Istituzione Canonicale Sino alla Fine del Duecento Pisa Edizioni ETS in Italian Heywood William 1921 A History of Pisa Eleventh and Twelfth Centuries Cambridge The University Press p 13 Kehr Paul Fridolin 1908 Italia pontificia vol III Berlin 1908 pp 316 384 in Latin Lanzoni Francesco 1927 Le diocesi d Italia dalle origini al principio del secolo VII an 604 Faenza 1927 pp 584 586 in Italian Matthaeius Mattei Antonius 1768 Ecclesiae Pisanae historia in Latin Vol Tomus I Lucca Venturini Matthaeius Mattei Antonius 1772 Ecclesiae Pisanae historia in Latin Vol Tomus II Venturini Picotti Giovanni Battista 1946 I vescovi pisani del secolo IX Miscellanea Giovanni Mercati Studi e testi Biblioteca apostolica vaticana 125 in Italian Vol V Citta del Vaticano 1946 pp 206 217 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Picotti Giovanni Battista 1966 Osservazione sulla datazione dei documenti privati pisani dell alto medioevo con uno studio sulla cronologia dei vescovi pisani del secolo IX Bollettino Storico Pisano 33 35 1964 1966 pp 3 80 in Italian Schwartz Gerhard 1913 Die Besetzung der Bistumer Reichsitaliens unter den sachsischen und salischen Kaisern mit den Listen der Bischofe 951 1122 Leipzig Berlin 1913 pp in German Ughelli Ferdinando 1718 Italia sacra sive De Episcopis Italiae et insularum adjacentium in Latin Vol Tomus Tertius III Secunda ed Venice apud Sebastianum Coleti pp 341 493 Violante Cinzio 1970 Cronotassi dei vescovi e degli arcivescovi di Pisa dalle origini all inizio del secolo XIII Primo contributo ad una nuova Italia Sacra In Miscellanea Gilles Gerard Meersseman Padova 1970 in Italian Violante C Le concessioni ponteficie alla Chiesa di Pisa riguardanti la Corsica alla fine del secolo XI Bullettino dell Istituto Storico Italiano per il Medio Evo 75 1963 pp 43 56 in Italian Zucchelli N 1906 Appunti e documenti per la storia del Seminario arcivescovile di Pisa Pisa 1906 in Italian Zucchelli Niccola 1907 Cronotassi dei vescovi e arcivescovi di Pisa in Italian Pisa Tipografia Arcivescovile Orsolini Prosperi External links EditArchdiocese of Pisa website Benigni Umberto 1911 Pisa The Catholic Encyclopedia Vol 12 New York Robert Appleton Company 1911 Retrieved 21 March 2020 Catholic Hierarchy page 43 43 24 N 10 23 43 E 43 7233 N 10 3954 E 43 7233 10 3954 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Pisa amp oldid 1180311917, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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