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Roman Catholic Diocese of Soissons

The Diocese of Soissons, Laon, and Saint-Quentin (Latin: Dioecesis Suessionensis, Laudunensis et Sanquintinensis; French: Diocèse de Soissons, Laon et Saint-Quentin) is a Latin Church diocese of the Catholic Church in France. The diocese is suffragan to the Archdiocese of Reims and corresponds, with the exception of two hamlets, to the entire Department of Aisne. The current bishop is Renauld Marie François Dupont de Dinechin, appointed on 30 October 2015. In the Diocese of Soissons there is one priest for every 4,648 Catholics.

Diocese of Soissons, Laon, and Saint-Quentin

Dioecesis Suessionensis, Laudunensis et Sanquintinensis

Diocèse de Soissons, Laon et Saint-Quentin
Location
CountryFrance
Ecclesiastical provinceReims
MetropolitanArchdiocese of Reims
Statistics
Area7,378 km2 (2,849 sq mi)
Population
- Total
- Catholics
(as of 2020)
534,490 (est.)
384,500 (est.)
Parishes47
Information
DenominationRoman Catholic
Sui iuris churchLatin Church
RiteRoman Rite
EstablishedName Changed: 11 June 1901
CathedralCathedral Basilica of St. Gervase and St. Protais in Soissons
Patron saintSt. Gervasius and St. Protasius
Secular priests53 (diocesan)
20 (Religious Orders)
25 Permanent Deacons
Current leadership
PopeFrancis
BishopRenauld de Dinechin
Metropolitan ArchbishopÉric de Moulins-Beaufort
Website
Website of the Diocese

History edit

Traditions make St. Sixtus and St. Sinicius the earliest apostles of Soissons as envoys of St. Peter.[1] In the 280's the Caesar Maximian, the subordinate of the Emperor Diocletian, and his Praetorian Prefect Riccius Varus[2] campaigned in northeast Gaul and subdued the Bagaudae, an event accompanied by much slaughter. There were also executions of Christians from Trier to Reims.[3] St. Crepinus and St. Crepinianus, martyrs (c. 288), are patrons of the diocese. According to Louis Duchesne, the establishment of a see at Soissons dates from about 300.

Soissons played an important political role in the early history of the Merovingians. It was the capital of the Kingdom of Soissons, a remnant of the Roman Empire in northern Gaul, and remained one of the chief cities under King Clovis I. Subsequently, Soissons twice became the capital of one of the four kingdoms into which the Frankish kingdom was divided in 511 (under Chlothar I) and 561 (und Chilperic I, respectively.

The Bishop of Soissons was a senior suffragan of Reims with the privilege of replacing the archbishop at the ceremony of anointing a King of France, should the see of Reims be vacant. The Bishop of Laon ranked as Duke and peer from the twelfth century. As second ecclesiastical peer, he had the privilege of holding the ampulla during the anointing of the king.

The diocese if Soisson was re-established by the Concordat of 1802 as suffragan of Paris, but in 1821 it became suffragan of Reims. After an attempts to re-establish the See of Laon failed with the unexecuted Concordat of 11 June 1817, the bishop of Soissons was authorized by Pope Leo XII (13 June 1828) to join the title of Laon to that of his own see. Pope Leo XIII (11 June 1901) further authorized it to use the title of St-Quentin, which was formerly the residence of the bishop of Noyon.

The diocese consists of

See of Laon edit

The "See of Laon" refers to the diocese of Laon, which was established by St. Remigius and made a "uterine sister" of Reims through an endowment from its lands 1 . The term "see" refers to the jurisdictional area of a bishop, and the "See of Laon" would have been the area over which the bishop of Laon had authority.

The diocese of Laon in the present-day département of Aisne, was a Catholic diocese for around 1300 years, up to the French Revolution. Its seat was in Laon, France, with the Laon Cathedral. From early in the 13th century, the bishop of Laon was a Pair de France, among the elite.[4][5]

Bishops of Soissons edit

To 1000 edit

  • Sixtus of Reims[6]
  • St Sinicus (ca. 300 – 310)[7]
  • St. Divitianus (ca. 310 – 320)[8]
  • Rufinus
  • Filienus
  • Mercurius (ca. 347)[9]
  • Onesimus (c. 350–361)
  • Vincent
  • Luberan
  • Onesimus II.
  • Edibius (c. 431-62); St Edibus (c. 451)
  • Principius (462–505), brother of St. Remy of Reims.
  • Lupus (505–35);[10]
  • Baldarinus (Baudry) (535 – 545)[11]
  • Anectarius († 573)
  • Thibaut I.
  • Droctigisilus († c. 589)[12]
  • Tondulphus
  • Landulphus
  • St. Ansericus or Anscher (623–52); St Ansery († c. 652)
  • Bettolenus
  • St. Drausinus (657–676),[13]
  • Warembert
  • St. Adolbertus (677–85); St Adalbert
  • S. Gaudinus (685–707),[14]
  • Macarius
  • Galcoin
  • Gobald
  • Hubert (Gerarbert)
  • Maldabert
  • Deodatus I.
  • Hildegodus (Hildegondus (c. 765)[15]
  • Rothadus (814–831)[16]
  • Rothadus (832–869)[17]
  • [Engelmond (863-864)][18]
  • Hildebold (Hildebaud) (870–884)[19]
  • Riculfus (Riculf) (884–902)
  • Rodoin († c. 909)
  • Abbo (Chancellor of France 922–931, † 937)
  • Guido of Anjou († 973)
  • Guido of Amiens († 995)

1000–1500 edit

  • Fulco († 6 August 1019)[20]
  • Deodatus II (1019 – 1020)[21]
  • Beroldus († 1052)[22]
  • Heddo († 1064)
  • Adelard († 1072)
  • Thibaut de Pierrefonds († 1080)
  • Ursion (1080, deposed)
  • St. Arnuel de Paméle (1081–1082)
  • Ingelram
  • Hilgot (c. 1084 – 1087)
  • Henry (1088–1090)[23]
  • Hugues de Pierrefonds (1091 – 30 January 1103)[24]
  • Manasses of Soissons (1103 – 1 March 1108)[25]
  • Liziard de Crépy (1108-† c.1126)[26]
  • Jocelyn de Vierzy (1126 – 24 October 1152)[27]
  • Ansculfe de Pierrefonds (1152–1158)[28]
  • Hugues de Champfleury (1159–75), chancellor of Louis VII of France; [(1158–1175) (Chancellor of France 1150–1172)
  • Nivelon de Chérizy (1175–1207)[29]
  • Aymard de Provins (July 1208 – 20 May 1219)[30]
  • Jacques de Bazoches (July 1219 – 8 July 1242)[31]
  • Raoul de Couduno (by 1244 – 6 December 1245)[32]
  • Gui de Château Porcein (1245 – 1250)[33]
  • Nivelon de Bazoches (1252 – 10 February 1262)[34]
  • Milon de Bazoches (1262 – 24 September 1290)[35]
  • Gérard de Montcornet (23 March 1292 – 1 September 1296)[36]
  • Guy de La Charité (30 July 1296 – 8 July 1313)[37]
  • Gérard de Courtonne (27 August 1313 – 27 October 1331)[38]
  • Pierre de Chappes (13 November 1331 – September 1349)[39]
  • Guillaume Bertrand de Colombier (31 October 1349 – 15 May 1362)[40]
  • Simon de Bucy (10 June 1362 – 14 October 1404)[41]
  • Victor de Camerin (20 October 1404 – 13 January 1414)[42]
  • Nicolas Graibert (11 February 1414 – November 1442)[43]
  • Renaud de Fontaines (8 January 1423 – 1442)[44]
  • Jean Milet (15 February 1443 – 1 April 1503)[45]

1500–1790 edit

  • Claude de Louvain (24 April 1503 – 18 August 1514)[46]
  • Foucault de Bonneval (1514–1519)[47]
  • Symphorien de Bullioud (1519–1532)
  • Mathieu de Longuejoue (1533–1557)[48]
  • Charles de Roucy (1557 – 1585)[49]
  • Jérôme Hennequin (1585 – 1619)[50]
  • Charles de Hacqueville (1619 – 1623)[51]
  • Simon Legras (1623 – 1656)[52]
  • Charles de Bourlon (28 October 1656 – 26 October 1685)[53]
  • Pierre Daniel Huet (1685–1689) (not installed)[54]
  • Fabio Brûlart de Sillery (21 January 1692 – 20 November 1714)[55]
  • Jean-Joseph Languet de Gergy (1715 – 1731)[56]
  • Charles-François Lefévre de Laubrière (17 December 1731 – 25 December 1738)[57]
  • François de Fitz-James (1739 – 1764)[58]
  • Henri Joseph Claude de Bourdeille (17 December 1764 – 1801)[59]

From 1800 edit

  • Jean-Claude Le Blanc de Beaulieu (1802 – 1820)[60]
  • Guillaume Aubin de Villèle (28 August 1820 – 1824)[61]
  • Jules François de Simony[62] (1824–1847, † 1849)
  • Paul-Armand de Cardon de Garsignies (1847–1860)
  • Jean-Joseph Christophe (1860–1863)[63]
  • Jean Dours (1863–1876, † 1877)[64]
  • Odon Thibaudier (1876–1889) (later Bishop of Cambrai 1889, † 1892)
  • Jean-Baptiste Théodore Duval (1889–1897)
  • Augustin Victor Deramecourt (1898–1906)
  • Pierre Louis Péchenard (1906–1920)
  • Charles-Henri-Joseph Binet (1920–1927) (later Archbishop of Besançon 1927, † 1936)
  • Ernest Victor Mennechet, 1928–1946
  • Pierre Auguste Marie Joseph Douillard (1946–1963)
  • Alphonse Gérard Bannwarth (1963–1984)
  • Daniel Labille (1984–1998) (later Bishop of Créteil)
  • Marcel Paul Herriot (1999–2008)
  • Hervé Jean Robert Giraud (2008–2015)
  • Renauld de Dinechin (2015– )

Abbeys edit

 
Diocese of Soissons

The Abbey of St-Médard at Soissons, founded in 557 by Clotaire I to receive the body of St. Médard, was looked upon as the chief Benedictine abbey in France; it held more than two hundred and twenty fiefs. Hilduin, abbot (822–30), in 826 obtained from Pope Eugene II relics of St. Sebastian and St. Gregory the Great; he caused the relics of St. Godard and St. Remi to be transferred to the abbey; he rebuilt the church which was consecrated 27 August 841, in the presence of Charles the Bald and seventy-two prelates. The king bore the body of St. Médard into the new basilica. In 853 Charles the Bald presided over the Council of Soissons at Saint-Medard, in the company of fifty-one bishops. Bishop Rothadus of Soissons was deposed, due to the malevolence of Archbishop Hincmar of Reims, but restored on orders of Pope Nicholas I.[65]

The church was pulled down but rebuilt and reconsecrated in 1131 by Pope Innocent II, who granted those visiting the church indulgences known as "St. Médard's pardons". In this abbey Louis the Pious was imprisoned in 833, and there he underwent a public penance. Among the abbots of St. Médard's are: St. Arnoul, who in 1081 became Bishop of Soissons; St. Gerard (close of the eleventh century); Cardinal de Bernis, made commendatory abbot of St. Médard in 1756.

The Benedictine Abbey of Note Dame de Soissons was founded in 660 by Ebroin and his wife Leutrude. The Cistercian abbey of Longpont, founded in 1131, counted among its monks the theologian Pierre Cantor, who died in 1197, and Blessed John de Montmirail (1167–1217), who abandoned the court of Phillipe-Auguste in order to become a monk.

The abbey of St. Vincent at Laon was founded in 580 by Queen Brunehaut. Among its earlier monks were: St. Gobain, who, through love of solitude, retired to a desert place near Oise and was slain there; St. Chagnoaldus, afterward Bishop of Laon, who wished to die in his monastery; St. Humbert, first abbot of Maroilles in Hainaut. The abbey adopted the rule of St. Benedict. It was reformed in 961 by Blessed Malcaleine, a Scotchman, abbot of St. Michael at Thierache, and in 1643 by the Benedictines of St. Maur. Among the abbots of St. Vincent were: St. Gerard (close of the eleventh century), who wrote the history of St. Adelard, abbot of Corde; Jean de Nouelles (d. 1396), who wrote a history of the world, and began the cartulary of his monastery. The Abbey of St. John at Laon was founded in 650 by St. Salaberga, who built seven churches there; she was its first abbess; St. Austruda (d. 688) succeeded her. In 1128 the abbey became a Benedictine monastery. The Abbey of Nogent sous Coucy was founded in 1076 by Albéric, Lord of Coucy. Among its abbots were St. Geoffroy (end of the eleventh century) and the historian Guibert de Nogent, who died in 1112 and whose autobiography, "De Vita Sua" is one of the most interesting documents of the century. Under the title "Gesta Dei per Francos" he wrote an account of the First Crusade.

The Abbey of Cuissy in the Diocese of Laon was founded in 1116 by Blessed Lucas de Roucy, dean of Laon, and followed the rule of Premonstratensians. In the Diocese of Soissons, the Premonstratensians had the abbeys: Chartreuve, Valsery, Saint-Yved de Braine, Villers Cotterets, Val Secret, Vauchrétien, Lieurestauré.

The portion of the ancient Diocese of Noyon within the jurisdiction of the present Diocese of Soissons includes the town, St-Quentin (Augusta Vermanduorum) where St-Quentin was martyred under Diocletian. It was the chief town of a diocese until 532, when St. Médard, the titular, removed the see to Noyon. Abbott Fulrade built the Church of St-Quentin in the eighth century and Pope Stephan II blessed it (816). From the time of Charles Martel until 771, and again from 844 the abbots of St-Quentin were laymen and counts of Vermandois. The abbey church became the Saint-Quentin Basilica, built from the 12th to 15th centuries. During the Middle Ages a distinct type of religious architecture sprang up in Soissons; Eugéne Lefèvre Pontalis has recently brought out a work dealing with its artistic affiliations. After investigation Canon Bauxin concludes that the cathedral of Laon, as it exists, is not the one consecrated in 1114 and visited by Innocent II in 1132; that was the restored ancient Romanesque building; the present one was built 1150–1225. Louyis d'Outremer (936), Robert the Pious (996), and Philip I (1059) were anointed in Notre Dame de Laon; in the twelfth century Hermann, Abbot of St. Martin's of Tournai, wrote a volume on the miracles of Notre Dame of Laon. The Hôtel-Dieu of Laon, once known as Hôtellerie Notre Dame, was founded in 1019 by the Laon chapter. The Hôtel-Dieu of Château Thierry was founded in 1304 by Jeanne, wife of Philip the Fair.

Saints edit

The following are honoured as connected with the religious history of the diocese: St. Marculfus, Abbot of Nanteuil (sixth century) in the Diocese of Coutances, whose relics, transferred to Corbeny in the Diocese of Laon, were visited by the kings of France who, after their anointing at Reims, were wont to go to the tomb of St. Marculfus to cure the king's evil.

Among the natives of the diocese may be mentioned: Petrus Ramus (1515–72), Jean Racine (1639–99), La Fontaine (1621–95), Luc d'Achery (1609–1685), Charlevoix (1683–1761), Camille Desmoulins (1760–1794).[citation needed]

Before the application of the Congregations Law (1901), there were in the Diocese of Soissons Jesuits, Trinitarians, and several teaching congregations of brothers. Some congregations of women had their origin in the diocese: the Nursing and Teaching Sisters of the Child Jesus, with mother-house at Soissons, founded in 1714 by the Madame Brulard de Genlis; the Sisters of Notre Dame de Bon Secours, a nursing and teaching order, founded in 1806, with mother-house at Charly; Sisters of Notre Dame, nursing and teaching order, with mother-house at Saint-Erme, founded in 1820 by the Abbé Chrétien; the Franciscan sisters of the Sacred Heart, a nursing order, founded in 1867, with mother-house at St-Quentin; the Servants of the Heart of Jesus, of whom there are two branches, the "Marys" who lead a contemplative life, and the "Marthas" who nurse the sick; they were founded at Strasburg in 1867, and brought to St-Quentin after the war of 1870–1.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ The earliest person known to have made this claim is Flodoard, abbot of S. Remy (Reims) (died 966). A different sentiment was expressed by the famous Hincmar of Reims (died 882), who placed Sixtus and Sinicius in the third century, not the first. Lequeux I, pp. 24-27.
  2. ^ Bon Louis Henri Martin; Paul Lacroix (1837). Histoire de Soissons (in French). Vol. I. Paris: Silvestre. pp. 89–98. Compare: Arnold Hugh Martin Jones; John Robert Martindale; J. Morris (1971). The Prosopography of the Later Roman Empire: V. 1 A.D. 260-395. Vol. I. Cambridge University Press. p. 766. ISBN 978-0-521-07233-5. "He is most probably a fictitious character since there was no persecution of Christians in N. Gaul; this area was subject to the Caesar Constantius."
  3. ^ Laqueur, pp. 27-28. Paul Allard (1890). La Persécution de Dioclétien Et Le Triomphe de L'église (in French). Paris: Librairie Victor Lecoffre. pp. 34–39. Allard reveals the hagiographic nature of the sources.
  4. ^ Ott, John S. (November 5, 2015). "Chapter 4 - Band of brothers: episcopal networks in the archdiocese of Reims". Cambridge University Press. Retrieved October 15, 2023.
  5. ^ "Hincmar". Bibilia. Retrieved October 15, 2023.
  6. ^ Gallia christiana IX, p. 334. Fisquet, p. 7.
  7. ^ Gallia christiana IX, p. 334. Fisquet, p. 7-8. Gams, p. 632.
  8. ^ Divitianus was nephew of Bishop Sinicus, who consecrated him a bishop. Fisquet, p. 8.
  9. ^ Mercurius subscribed to the Canons of the Concilium Agrippinense (Cologne) of 346. He attended the Council of Sardica in 347. Jacques Sirmond (1789). Conciliorum Galliae tam editorum quam ineditorum collectio (in Latin). Vol. Tomus primus. Paris: P. Didot. pp. 112, 124.
  10. ^ St Loup was present at the First Council of Orleans in 511: Sirmond, I, p. 844.
  11. ^ King Chlothar I exiled Bishop Baldarinus (or Bandaridus) to England for seven years, where he served as gardener in a monastery. Gallia christiana IX, pp. 335-336. Fisquet, pp. 10-11.
  12. ^ Bishop Droctigisilus is mentioned by Gregory of Tours, Historia Francorum, Book IX, chapter 37, as having suffered from habitual drunkenness. Gallia christiana IX, p. 336. Fisquet, pp. 11-12.
  13. ^ Drausinus was founder of the monastery of Notre Dame de Soissons and of the Abbey of Rethondes. Fisquet, pp. 14-15. Gams, p. 632
  14. ^ Gaudinus was waylaid by usurers in a street near the episcopal residence and thrown down a well. When the townsfolk heard what had happened and came to see, he was already dead. The only source for the tale is the Martyrologium Gallicanum, quoted in Gallia christiana IX, p. 339. Fisquet, p. 17.
  15. ^ Gallia christiana IX, p. 339-340.
  16. ^ Rothadus was named royal missus dominicus by King Louis the Pious in the diocese of Reims in 824/825 when Archbishop Ebo went to Denmark to reinstall King Harald on the throne. Gallia christiana IX, p. 340. Fisquet, pp. 19-20.
  17. ^ Rothadus famous for his quarrel with Archbishop Hincmar of Reims, who had him deposed. Gallia christiana IX, pp. 340-343. Fisquet, pp. 20-24. On 28 April 363, Pope Nicholas I wrote to Rothadus, telling him to be of good cheer and to continue in his appeals to Rome. In September 363, Nicholas ordered Hincmar to send Bishop Rothadus and his accusors to Rome by 1 April 864. In May 864, Pope Nicholas wrote to Hincmar, complaining that Rothadus had neither been restored nor sent to Rome for judgment, and indeed that he had been detained (Hincmar had ordered Rothadus imprisoned in a monastery). On 20 January 865, Pope Nicholas wrote to Bishop Rothadus, who had been restored to his diocese of Soissons, restoring his possessions. P. Jaffé, Regesta pontificum Romanorum I, editio altera (Leipzig 1885), nos. 2720, 2721, 2727, 2740, 2756 and 2781.
  18. ^ Engelmond was chosen to replace Rothadus when he was deposed, but Pope Nicholas I wrote to Hincmar, forbidding him to consecrate Engelmondus until after the Pope heard Rothadus' appeal against the Council which had deposed him. Rothadus was restored in 865. In a subsequent letter to Charles the Bald, Pope Nicholas calls Engelmond an invasor. Gallia christiana IX, p. 344. Mansi, XV, p. 690. Fisquet, p. 25. Jaffé, no. 2721.
  19. ^ Fisquet, pp. 25-26.
  20. ^ Fulco is attested in 997, 1005, 1008, 1011 and 1017. Gallia christiana IX, p. 347. Gams, p. 633.
  21. ^ Gallia christiana IX, p. 347. Gams, p. 633.
  22. ^ Beroldus was a brother of Count Notker, and a nephew of Bishop Fulco. Gallia christiana IX, p. 347-348. Gams, p. 633.
  23. ^ Bishop Henri: Gams, p. 633.
  24. ^ Pierre de Pierrefonds: Fisquet, pp. 42–44. Gams, p. 633.
  25. ^ Manasses of Soissons (there was also a contemporary Manasses of Châtillon and a Manasses of Reims) had previously been Bishop of Cambrai. He was present as Bishop of Soissons at the Council of Troyes in April 1104. Hardouin, Jean; Rigaud, Claude (1714). Acta conciliorum et epistolae decretales, ac constitutiones summorum pontificum: Ab anno MLXXXVI, ad annum MCCXV (in Latin). Vol. Tomus sextus, pars II. Paris: Typographia Regia. p. 1874. Fisquet, p. 44. Gams, p. 633.
  26. ^ Liziard de Crépy: Fisquet, p. 44-48.
  27. ^ Bishop Jocelyn de Vierzy was previously Archdeacon of Bourges and Archdeacon of Soissons (where he resided from 1115). He wrote an explanation of the Apostles' Creed and the Lord's Prayer, a work of no importance. Fisquet, pp. 48-51.
  28. ^ Gallia christiana IX, pp. 360-361.
  29. ^ Gallia christiana IX, pp. 362-365.
  30. ^ Fisquet, p. 60. Gams, p. 633. Eubel, I, p. 468.
  31. ^ Fisquet, pp. 60-63. Gams, p. 633. Eubel, I, p. 468, with note 1.
  32. ^ Gams, pp. 63-64. Gams, p. 633. Eubel, I, p. 468.
  33. ^ Guy resigned in 1250, accompanied St. Louis on the Crusade, and was killed in Palestine. Fisquet, p. 64.
  34. ^ Fisquet, pp. 64-65. Gams, p. 633. Eubel, I, p. 468.
  35. ^ Fisquet, pp. 65-66. Gams, p. 633. Eubel, I, p. 468.
  36. ^ Gérard de Montcornet was the nephew of Bishop Milon de Bazoches. He died in Bari, while returning from a pilgrimage. Fisquet, pp. 66-67. Gams, p. 633. Eubel, I, p. 468.
  37. ^ Fisquet, pp. 67-68. Eubel, I, p. 468.
  38. ^ Fisquet, pp. 68-69. Eubel, I, p. 468.
  39. ^ Fisquet, pp. 69-70. Eubel, I, p. 468.
  40. ^ Fisquet, p. 70. Eubel, I, p. 468.
  41. ^ Simon was the son of Simon de Bucy, First President of the Parlement de Paris. He held synods in 1381 and 1403. Fisquet, pp. 70-71. Eubel, I, p. 468.
  42. ^ Bishop Victor attended the Council of Pisa. Fisquet, p. 71. Eubel, I, p. 468.
  43. ^ Graibert was born at Vervins, and was a Master of Arts. Around the time of his accession, the diocese was attacked by John the Fearless, Duke of Burgundy; Soissons was taken, and then retaken and sacked by the King's forces. Fisquet, pp. 71-72. Eubel, I, p. 468.
  44. ^ Fisquet, p. 72. Eubel, I, p. 468.
  45. ^ Fisquet, p. 72-74. Eubel, II, p. 243.
  46. ^ Louvain was transferred to the diocese of Sisteron on 18 August 1514. He died in 1520. Eubel, II, p. 243; III, p. 301.
  47. ^ Bonneval was later Bishop of Bazas (1528–1531). Fisquet, pp. 74-76. Eubel, III, p. 301 and 327.
  48. ^ De Longuejoue: Fisquet, pp. 78-79.
  49. ^ Charles de Roucy: Fisquet, pp. 79-81.
  50. ^ Hennequin: Fisquet, pp. 81-82.
  51. ^ Hacqueville: Fisquet, pp. 82-83.
  52. ^ Legras: Fisquet, pp. 83-84.
  53. ^ Charles de Bourlon was the son of Matthew de Bourlon, Master of Requests. He was a Doctor of the Sorbonne, and Abbot of Chartreuve (Soissons). In 1652 he was named Coadjutor of Simon Legras, and with his Archbishop participated in the coronation of King Louis XIV on 7 June 1654. He succeeded to the diocese on 28 October 1656. He died at Chateau-Landon on 26 October 1685 at the age of 74. Jean, pp. 331-332.
  54. ^ The struggle between King Louis XIV and Pope Innocent XI over the 'Gallican Articles' of 1682 prevented the granting of papal bulls for his consecration and installation. Huet therefore enjoyed only the temporal possessions of the diocese of Soissons as Vicar Capitular. Jean, p. 332.
  55. ^ Brulart de Sillery was the sixth son of Louis-Roger Brûlart, Marquis de Sillery, and Marie-Catherine de la Rochefoucauld. He was a Doctor of theology (Paris), and Canon of the Church of Paris. He was nominated Bishop of Soissons by King Louis XIV on 1 November 1689, but was not approved by Pope Innocent XII until 21 January 1692. Fisquet, pp. 88-90. Jean, p. 332. Ritzler, V, p. 365 with note 3.
  56. ^ Born at Dijon, Languet was the sixth child of Denis Languet, Comte de Rochefort and Baron de Gergy. He was Doctor of theology (Paris). He became an Almoner of Marie-Adelaide of Savoy and Abbot Commendatory of Coetmaloen (diocese of Quimper). He served as Vicar General of Autun. On 15 January 1715 he was nominated by the King as Bishop of Soissons; the appointment was confirmed (preconized) by Pope Clement XI on 29 May 1715. He was promoted Archbishop of Sens on 9 April 1731. † 1753. Fisquet, pp. 90-94. Ritzler, V, p. 365 with note 4.
  57. ^ Born in Angers, Lefévre held a Licenciate in Civil and Canon Law (Angers). Fisquet, pp. 94-95. Ritzler, VI, p. 388 with note 2.
  58. ^ Fitz-James was the second son of James Duke of Berwick. He was Doctor in theology (Paris). Fisquet, pp. 96-98. Ritzler, VI, p. 389 with note 3.
  59. ^ De Bourdeille died in Paris on 12 December 1802. Fisquet, pp. 98-101. Ritzler, VI, p. 389 with note 4.
  60. ^ Born in Paris, Le Blanc entered the Canons Regular of Sainte-Geneviève. He studied theology in their house in Soissons, and became Novice master in Paris. He took the constitutional oath in 1791, and was given a parish in Paris by the Constitutional Bishop Gobel. He was imprisoned from June to August 1793. He returned to parish life, and on 14 December 1799 was elected Constitutional Bishop of Seine-Inférieure (Rouen); he was consecrated bishop on 18 January 1800 by Constitutional Bishop Royer. He submitted his resignation to Cardinal Caprara, the Papal Legate, on 15 October 1801. On 9 April 1802 he was appointed by arrêt of First Consul Bonaparte to the diocese of Soissons, but on 16 April, at a meeting of several constitutional bishops with Cardinal Caprara, he refused to sign a statement disavowing his past conduct. On 29 June 1804 he wrote to Pope Pius VII proclaiming his submission and his regrets for the past. On 5 July 1804 he was named to the Legion of Honor. He was later named Bishop of Arles 1820, † 1825. Fisquet, pp. 104-108. Paul Pisani (1907). Répertoire biographique de l'épiscopat constitutionnel (1791-1802) (in French). Paris: A. Picard et fils. pp. 168–169.
  61. ^ De Villèle was consecrated in Paris on 24 September 1820 by the Archbishop of Reims, Jean-Charles de Coucy, assisted by the bishops of Chartres and Amiens. He was later named Bishop of Bourges, on 22 October 1824, and approved by Pope Leo XII on 22 March 1825. He died on 23 November 1841. Fisquet, pp. 108-111.
  62. ^ Joseph Maxence Péronne (1849). Vie de Mgr. de Simony: évêque de Soissons et Laon (in French). Soissons: Voyeux-Solin.
  63. ^ Fisquet, pp. 123-128.
  64. ^ Fisquet, pp. 128-136.
  65. ^ Fisquet, pp. 150-154.

Books edit

Reference works edit

  • Gams, Pius Bonifatius (1873). Series episcoporum Ecclesiae catholicae: quotquot innotuerunt a beato Petro apostolo. Ratisbon: Typis et Sumptibus Georgii Josephi Manz. (Use with caution; obsolete)
  • Eubel, Conradus, ed. (1913). Hierarchia catholica, Tomus 1 (second ed.). Münster: Libreria Regensbergiana. (in Latin)
  • Eubel, Conradus, ed. (1914). Hierarchia catholica, Tomus 2 (second ed.). Münster: Libreria Regensbergiana. (in Latin)
  • Eubel, Conradus; Gulik, Guilelmus, eds. (1923). Hierarchia catholica, Tomus 3 (second ed.). Münster: Libreria Regensbergiana.
  • Gauchat, Patritius (Patrice) (1935). Hierarchia catholica IV (1592-1667). Münster: Libraria Regensbergiana. Retrieved 2016-07-06.
  • Ritzler, Remigius; Sefrin, Pirminus (1952). Hierarchia catholica medii et recentis aevi V (1667-1730). Patavii: Messagero di S. Antonio. Retrieved 2016-07-06.
  • Ritzler, Remigius; Sefrin, Pirminus (1958). Hierarchia catholica medii et recentis aevi VI (1730-1799). Patavii: Messagero di S. Antonio. Retrieved 2016-07-06.
  • Ritzler, Remigius; Sefrin, Pirminus (1968). Hierarchia Catholica medii et recentioris aevi sive summorum pontificum, S. R. E. cardinalium, ecclesiarum antistitum series... A pontificatu Pii PP. VII (1800) usque ad pontificatum Gregorii PP. XVI (1846) (in Latin). Vol. VII. Monasterii: Libr. Regensburgiana.
  • Remigius Ritzler; Pirminus Sefrin (1978). Hierarchia catholica Medii et recentioris aevi... A Pontificatu PII PP. IX (1846) usque ad Pontificatum Leonis PP. XIII (1903) (in Latin). Vol. VIII. Il Messaggero di S. Antonio.
  • Pięta, Zenon (2002). Hierarchia catholica medii et recentioris aevi... A pontificatu Pii PP. X (1903) usque ad pontificatum Benedictii PP. XV (1922) (in Latin). Vol. IX. Padua: Messagero di San Antonio. ISBN 978-88-250-1000-8.
  • Sainte-Marthe, Denis de (1751). Gallia christiana in provincia ecclesiasticas distributa (in Latin). Vol. Tomus nonus (9). Paris: Typographia Regia. pp. 333–88, 506–693, 978–1036, Instrumenta, 95–146, 187–202, 359–94.

Studies edit

  • Bouxin, Auguste (1902). La cathédrale Notre-Dame de Laon (in French) (deuxième ed.). Laon: Impr. du Journal d'Aisne.
  • Broche, Lucien (1901). "Les rapports des évêques avec la commune de Laon", in: Nouvelle revue historique de droit français et étranger (in French). Vol. 25. Paris: L. Larose. 1901. pp. 729–743.
  • Fisquet, Honoré (1864). La France pontificale (Gallia Christiana). Metropole de Reims. Soissons et Laon (in French). Paris: Etienne Repos.
  • Houllier, Pierre (1783). État ecclesiastique et civil du diocese de Soissons (in French). Compiegne: Bertrand. p. 23.
  • Jean, Armand (1891). Les évêques et les archevêques de France depuis 1682 jusqu'à 1801 (in French). Paris: A. Picard. pp. 331–335.
  • Lecocq, Georges (1875). Histoire de la ville de Saint Quentin (in French). Saint-Quentin: C. Poette.
  • Ledouble, Joseph (1880). État religieux ancien & moderne des pays qui forment aujourd'hui le diocèse de Soissons (in French) (self-published ed.). Soissons: Chez l'auteur. p. 568.
  • Lefèvre-Pontalis, Eugène Amédée (1897). L'architecture religieuse dans l'ancien diocèse de Soissons au XIe et au XIIe siècle (in French). Paris: Plon, Nourrit.
  • Lequeux, J. F. M. (1859). Antiquités religieuses du diocèse de Soissons et Laon (in French). Vol. Tome I. Parmentier. Tome II. Paris. 1859.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Martin, Henry and Lacroix, Paul. Histoire de Soissons (2 vols, Soissons, 1880)
  • Melleville, Maximilien (1846). Histoire de la ville de Laon et de ses institutions civiles judiciares, etc (in French). Vol. Tome I. Laon: à l'impr. du Journal de l'Aisne. Melleville, Maximilien (1846). Tome II (in French). Laon.
  • Pécheur, Louis-Victor (1863). Annales du diocèse de Soissons (in French). Vol. Tome premier. Soissons: Morel. Pécheur, Louis Victor (1868). Tome deuxième (2). (10 vols.)
  • Poquet, Alexandre Eusèbe (1855). Notre-Dame de Soissons, son histoire, ses églises, ses tombeaux, ses abbesses, ses reliques (in French) (deuxième ed.). Paris: V. Didron.
  • Sandron, Dany (1998). La Cathédrale de Soissons: architecture du pouvoir (in French). Paris: Editions A&J Picard. ISBN 978-2-7084-0534-9.

External links edit

  • (in French) Centre national des Archives de l'Église de France, L’Épiscopat francais depuis 1919, retrieved: 2016-12-24.
  • Goyon, Georges, "Soissons," Catholic Encyclopedia. Vol. XIV. New York: Appleton. 1912. pp. 130–132.

acknowledgment edit

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

49°23′N 3°19′E / 49.38°N 3.32°E / 49.38; 3.32

roman, catholic, diocese, soissons, diocese, soissons, laon, saint, quentin, latin, dioecesis, suessionensis, laudunensis, sanquintinensis, french, diocèse, soissons, laon, saint, quentin, latin, church, diocese, catholic, church, france, diocese, suffragan, a. The Diocese of Soissons Laon and Saint Quentin Latin Dioecesis Suessionensis Laudunensis et Sanquintinensis French Diocese de Soissons Laon et Saint Quentin is a Latin Church diocese of the Catholic Church in France The diocese is suffragan to the Archdiocese of Reims and corresponds with the exception of two hamlets to the entire Department of Aisne The current bishop is Renauld Marie Francois Dupont de Dinechin appointed on 30 October 2015 In the Diocese of Soissons there is one priest for every 4 648 Catholics Diocese of Soissons Laon and Saint QuentinDioecesis Suessionensis Laudunensis et SanquintinensisDiocese de Soissons Laon et Saint QuentinSoissons CathedralLocationCountryFranceEcclesiastical provinceReimsMetropolitanArchdiocese of ReimsStatisticsArea7 378 km2 2 849 sq mi Population Total Catholics as of 2020 534 490 est 384 500 est Parishes47InformationDenominationRoman CatholicSui iuris churchLatin ChurchRiteRoman RiteEstablishedName Changed 11 June 1901CathedralCathedral Basilica of St Gervase and St Protais in SoissonsPatron saintSt Gervasius and St ProtasiusSecular priests53 diocesan 20 Religious Orders 25 Permanent DeaconsCurrent leadershipPopeFrancisBishopRenauld de DinechinMetropolitan ArchbishopEric de Moulins BeaufortWebsiteWebsite of the DioceseThis article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Roman Catholic Diocese of Soissons news newspapers books scholar JSTOR February 2024 Learn how and when to remove this template message Contents 1 History 2 See of Laon 3 Bishops of Soissons 3 1 To 1000 3 2 1000 1500 3 3 1500 1790 3 4 From 1800 4 Abbeys 5 Saints 6 See also 7 References 8 Books 8 1 Reference works 8 2 Studies 9 External links 9 1 acknowledgmentHistory editThis section needs expansion You can help by adding to it December 2016 Traditions make St Sixtus and St Sinicius the earliest apostles of Soissons as envoys of St Peter 1 In the 280 s the Caesar Maximian the subordinate of the Emperor Diocletian and his Praetorian Prefect Riccius Varus 2 campaigned in northeast Gaul and subdued the Bagaudae an event accompanied by much slaughter There were also executions of Christians from Trier to Reims 3 St Crepinus and St Crepinianus martyrs c 288 are patrons of the diocese According to Louis Duchesne the establishment of a see at Soissons dates from about 300 Soissons played an important political role in the early history of the Merovingians It was the capital of the Kingdom of Soissons a remnant of the Roman Empire in northern Gaul and remained one of the chief cities under King Clovis I Subsequently Soissons twice became the capital of one of the four kingdoms into which the Frankish kingdom was divided in 511 under Chlothar I and 561 und Chilperic I respectively The Bishop of Soissons was a senior suffragan of Reims with the privilege of replacing the archbishop at the ceremony of anointing a King of France should the see of Reims be vacant The Bishop of Laon ranked as Duke and peer from the twelfth century As second ecclesiastical peer he had the privilege of holding the ampulla during the anointing of the king The diocese if Soisson was re established by the Concordat of 1802 as suffragan of Paris but in 1821 it became suffragan of Reims After an attempts to re establish the See of Laon failed with the unexecuted Concordat of 11 June 1817 the bishop of Soissons was authorized by Pope Leo XII 13 June 1828 to join the title of Laon to that of his own see Pope Leo XIII 11 June 1901 further authorized it to use the title of St Quentin which was formerly the residence of the bishop of Noyon The diocese consists of all the ancient Diocese of Soissons except the civil district of Compiegne which went to the Diocese of Beauvais all of the Diocese of Laon except two parishes which went to Reims that portion of Vermandois which formerly belonged to the Diocese of Noyon a few parishes which formerly belonged to Cambrai Meaux Troyes Reims See of Laon editThis article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Roman Catholic Diocese of Soissons news newspapers books scholar JSTOR October 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message Main article Ancient diocese of Laon The See of Laon refers to the diocese of Laon which was established by St Remigius and made a uterine sister of Reims through an endowment from its lands 1 The term see refers to the jurisdictional area of a bishop and the See of Laon would have been the area over which the bishop of Laon had authority The diocese of Laon in the present day departement of Aisne was a Catholic diocese for around 1300 years up to the French Revolution Its seat was in Laon France with the Laon Cathedral From early in the 13th century the bishop of Laon was a Pair de France among the elite 4 5 Bishops of Soissons editTo 1000 edit Sixtus of Reims 6 St Sinicus ca 300 310 7 St Divitianus ca 310 320 8 Rufinus Filienus Mercurius ca 347 9 Onesimus c 350 361 Vincent Luberan Onesimus II Edibius c 431 62 St Edibus c 451 Principius 462 505 brother of St Remy of Reims Lupus 505 35 10 Baldarinus Baudry 535 545 11 Anectarius 573 Thibaut I Droctigisilus c 589 12 Tondulphus Landulphus St Ansericus or Anscher 623 52 St Ansery c 652 Bettolenus St Drausinus 657 676 13 Warembert St Adolbertus 677 85 St Adalbert S Gaudinus 685 707 14 Macarius Galcoin Gobald Hubert Gerarbert Maldabert Deodatus I Hildegodus Hildegondus c 765 15 Rothadus 814 831 16 Rothadus 832 869 17 Engelmond 863 864 18 Hildebold Hildebaud 870 884 19 Riculfus Riculf 884 902 Rodoin c 909 Abbo Chancellor of France 922 931 937 Guido of Anjou 973 Guido of Amiens 995 1000 1500 edit Fulco 6 August 1019 20 Deodatus II 1019 1020 21 Beroldus 1052 22 Heddo 1064 Adelard 1072 Thibaut de Pierrefonds 1080 Ursion 1080 deposed St Arnuel de Pamele 1081 1082 Ingelram Hilgot c 1084 1087 Henry 1088 1090 23 Hugues de Pierrefonds 1091 30 January 1103 24 Manasses of Soissons 1103 1 March 1108 25 Liziard de Crepy 1108 c 1126 26 Jocelyn de Vierzy 1126 24 October 1152 27 Ansculfe de Pierrefonds 1152 1158 28 Hugues de Champfleury 1159 75 chancellor of Louis VII of France 1158 1175 Chancellor of France 1150 1172 Nivelon de Cherizy 1175 1207 29 Aymard de Provins July 1208 20 May 1219 30 Jacques de Bazoches July 1219 8 July 1242 31 Raoul de Couduno by 1244 6 December 1245 32 Gui de Chateau Porcein 1245 1250 33 Nivelon de Bazoches 1252 10 February 1262 34 Milon de Bazoches 1262 24 September 1290 35 Gerard de Montcornet 23 March 1292 1 September 1296 36 Guy de La Charite 30 July 1296 8 July 1313 37 Gerard de Courtonne 27 August 1313 27 October 1331 38 Pierre de Chappes 13 November 1331 September 1349 39 Guillaume Bertrand de Colombier 31 October 1349 15 May 1362 40 Simon de Bucy 10 June 1362 14 October 1404 41 Victor de Camerin 20 October 1404 13 January 1414 42 Nicolas Graibert 11 February 1414 November 1442 43 Renaud de Fontaines 8 January 1423 1442 44 Jean Milet 15 February 1443 1 April 1503 45 1500 1790 edit Claude de Louvain 24 April 1503 18 August 1514 46 Foucault de Bonneval 1514 1519 47 Symphorien de Bullioud 1519 1532 Mathieu de Longuejoue 1533 1557 48 Charles de Roucy 1557 1585 49 Jerome Hennequin 1585 1619 50 Charles de Hacqueville 1619 1623 51 Simon Legras 1623 1656 52 Charles de Bourlon 28 October 1656 26 October 1685 53 Pierre Daniel Huet 1685 1689 not installed 54 Fabio Brulart de Sillery 21 January 1692 20 November 1714 55 Jean Joseph Languet de Gergy 1715 1731 56 Charles Francois Lefevre de Laubriere 17 December 1731 25 December 1738 57 Francois de Fitz James 1739 1764 58 Henri Joseph Claude de Bourdeille 17 December 1764 1801 59 From 1800 edit Jean Claude Le Blanc de Beaulieu 1802 1820 60 Guillaume Aubin de Villele 28 August 1820 1824 61 Jules Francois de Simony 62 1824 1847 1849 Paul Armand de Cardon de Garsignies 1847 1860 Jean Joseph Christophe 1860 1863 63 Jean Dours 1863 1876 1877 64 Odon Thibaudier 1876 1889 later Bishop of Cambrai 1889 1892 Jean Baptiste Theodore Duval 1889 1897 Augustin Victor Deramecourt 1898 1906 Pierre Louis Pechenard 1906 1920 Charles Henri Joseph Binet 1920 1927 later Archbishop of Besancon 1927 1936 Ernest Victor Mennechet 1928 1946 Pierre Auguste Marie Joseph Douillard 1946 1963 Alphonse Gerard Bannwarth 1963 1984 Daniel Labille 1984 1998 later Bishop of Creteil Marcel Paul Herriot 1999 2008 Herve Jean Robert Giraud 2008 2015 Renauld de Dinechin 2015 Abbeys edit nbsp Diocese of SoissonsThe Abbey of St Medard at Soissons founded in 557 by Clotaire I to receive the body of St Medard was looked upon as the chief Benedictine abbey in France it held more than two hundred and twenty fiefs Hilduin abbot 822 30 in 826 obtained from Pope Eugene II relics of St Sebastian and St Gregory the Great he caused the relics of St Godard and St Remi to be transferred to the abbey he rebuilt the church which was consecrated 27 August 841 in the presence of Charles the Bald and seventy two prelates The king bore the body of St Medard into the new basilica In 853 Charles the Bald presided over the Council of Soissons at Saint Medard in the company of fifty one bishops Bishop Rothadus of Soissons was deposed due to the malevolence of Archbishop Hincmar of Reims but restored on orders of Pope Nicholas I 65 The church was pulled down but rebuilt and reconsecrated in 1131 by Pope Innocent II who granted those visiting the church indulgences known as St Medard s pardons In this abbey Louis the Pious was imprisoned in 833 and there he underwent a public penance Among the abbots of St Medard s are St Arnoul who in 1081 became Bishop of Soissons St Gerard close of the eleventh century Cardinal de Bernis made commendatory abbot of St Medard in 1756 The Benedictine Abbey of Note Dame de Soissons was founded in 660 by Ebroin and his wife Leutrude The Cistercian abbey of Longpont founded in 1131 counted among its monks the theologian Pierre Cantor who died in 1197 and Blessed John de Montmirail 1167 1217 who abandoned the court of Phillipe Auguste in order to become a monk The abbey of St Vincent at Laon was founded in 580 by Queen Brunehaut Among its earlier monks were St Gobain who through love of solitude retired to a desert place near Oise and was slain there St Chagnoaldus afterward Bishop of Laon who wished to die in his monastery St Humbert first abbot of Maroilles in Hainaut The abbey adopted the rule of St Benedict It was reformed in 961 by Blessed Malcaleine a Scotchman abbot of St Michael at Thierache and in 1643 by the Benedictines of St Maur Among the abbots of St Vincent were St Gerard close of the eleventh century who wrote the history of St Adelard abbot of Corde Jean de Nouelles d 1396 who wrote a history of the world and began the cartulary of his monastery The Abbey of St John at Laon was founded in 650 by St Salaberga who built seven churches there she was its first abbess St Austruda d 688 succeeded her In 1128 the abbey became a Benedictine monastery The Abbey of Nogent sous Coucy was founded in 1076 by Alberic Lord of Coucy Among its abbots were St Geoffroy end of the eleventh century and the historian Guibert de Nogent who died in 1112 and whose autobiography De Vita Sua is one of the most interesting documents of the century Under the title Gesta Dei per Francos he wrote an account of the First Crusade The Abbey of Cuissy in the Diocese of Laon was founded in 1116 by Blessed Lucas de Roucy dean of Laon and followed the rule of Premonstratensians In the Diocese of Soissons the Premonstratensians had the abbeys Chartreuve Valsery Saint Yved de Braine Villers Cotterets Val Secret Vauchretien Lieurestaure The portion of the ancient Diocese of Noyon within the jurisdiction of the present Diocese of Soissons includes the town St Quentin Augusta Vermanduorum where St Quentin was martyred under Diocletian It was the chief town of a diocese until 532 when St Medard the titular removed the see to Noyon Abbott Fulrade built the Church of St Quentin in the eighth century and Pope Stephan II blessed it 816 From the time of Charles Martel until 771 and again from 844 the abbots of St Quentin were laymen and counts of Vermandois The abbey church became the Saint Quentin Basilica built from the 12th to 15th centuries During the Middle Ages a distinct type of religious architecture sprang up in Soissons Eugene Lefevre Pontalis has recently brought out a work dealing with its artistic affiliations After investigation Canon Bauxin concludes that the cathedral of Laon as it exists is not the one consecrated in 1114 and visited by Innocent II in 1132 that was the restored ancient Romanesque building the present one was built 1150 1225 Louyis d Outremer 936 Robert the Pious 996 and Philip I 1059 were anointed in Notre Dame de Laon in the twelfth century Hermann Abbot of St Martin s of Tournai wrote a volume on the miracles of Notre Dame of Laon The Hotel Dieu of Laon once known as Hotellerie Notre Dame was founded in 1019 by the Laon chapter The Hotel Dieu of Chateau Thierry was founded in 1304 by Jeanne wife of Philip the Fair Saints editThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed July 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message The following are honoured as connected with the religious history of the diocese St Marculfus Abbot of Nanteuil sixth century in the Diocese of Coutances whose relics transferred to Corbeny in the Diocese of Laon were visited by the kings of France who after their anointing at Reims were wont to go to the tomb of St Marculfus to cure the king s evil Among the natives of the diocese may be mentioned Petrus Ramus 1515 72 Jean Racine 1639 99 La Fontaine 1621 95 Luc d Achery 1609 1685 Charlevoix 1683 1761 Camille Desmoulins 1760 1794 citation needed Before the application of the Congregations Law 1901 there were in the Diocese of Soissons Jesuits Trinitarians and several teaching congregations of brothers Some congregations of women had their origin in the diocese the Nursing and Teaching Sisters of the Child Jesus with mother house at Soissons founded in 1714 by the Madame Brulard de Genlis the Sisters of Notre Dame de Bon Secours a nursing and teaching order founded in 1806 with mother house at Charly Sisters of Notre Dame nursing and teaching order with mother house at Saint Erme founded in 1820 by the Abbe Chretien the Franciscan sisters of the Sacred Heart a nursing order founded in 1867 with mother house at St Quentin the Servants of the Heart of Jesus of whom there are two branches the Marys who lead a contemplative life and the Marthas who nurse the sick they were founded at Strasburg in 1867 and brought to St Quentin after the war of 1870 1 See also editCouncils of SoissonsReferences edit The earliest person known to have made this claim is Flodoard abbot of S Remy Reims died 966 A different sentiment was expressed by the famous Hincmar of Reims died 882 who placed Sixtus and Sinicius in the third century not the first Lequeux I pp 24 27 Bon Louis Henri Martin Paul Lacroix 1837 Histoire de Soissons in French Vol I Paris Silvestre pp 89 98 Compare Arnold Hugh Martin Jones John Robert Martindale J Morris 1971 The Prosopography of the Later Roman Empire V 1 A D 260 395 Vol I Cambridge University Press p 766 ISBN 978 0 521 07233 5 He is most probably a fictitious character since there was no persecution of Christians in N Gaul this area was subject to the Caesar Constantius Laqueur pp 27 28 Paul Allard 1890 La Persecution de Diocletien Et Le Triomphe de L eglise in French Paris Librairie Victor Lecoffre pp 34 39 Allard reveals the hagiographic nature of the sources Ott John S November 5 2015 Chapter 4 Band of brothers episcopal networks in the archdiocese of Reims Cambridge University Press Retrieved October 15 2023 Hincmar Bibilia Retrieved October 15 2023 Gallia christiana IX p 334 Fisquet p 7 Gallia christiana IX p 334 Fisquet p 7 8 Gams p 632 Divitianus was nephew of Bishop Sinicus who consecrated him a bishop Fisquet p 8 Mercurius subscribed to the Canons of the Concilium Agrippinense Cologne of 346 He attended the Council of Sardica in 347 Jacques Sirmond 1789 Conciliorum Galliae tam editorum quam ineditorum collectio in Latin Vol Tomus primus Paris P Didot pp 112 124 St Loup was present at the First Council of Orleans in 511 Sirmond I p 844 King Chlothar I exiled Bishop Baldarinus or Bandaridus to England for seven years where he served as gardener in a monastery Gallia christiana IX pp 335 336 Fisquet pp 10 11 Bishop Droctigisilus is mentioned by Gregory of Tours Historia Francorum Book IX chapter 37 as having suffered from habitual drunkenness Gallia christiana IX p 336 Fisquet pp 11 12 Drausinus was founder of the monastery of Notre Dame de Soissons and of the Abbey of Rethondes Fisquet pp 14 15 Gams p 632 Gaudinus was waylaid by usurers in a street near the episcopal residence and thrown down a well When the townsfolk heard what had happened and came to see he was already dead The only source for the tale is the Martyrologium Gallicanum quoted in Gallia christiana IX p 339 Fisquet p 17 Gallia christiana IX p 339 340 Rothadus was named royal missus dominicus by King Louis the Pious in the diocese of Reims in 824 825 when Archbishop Ebo went to Denmark to reinstall King Harald on the throne Gallia christiana IX p 340 Fisquet pp 19 20 Rothadus famous for his quarrel with Archbishop Hincmar of Reims who had him deposed Gallia christiana IX pp 340 343 Fisquet pp 20 24 On 28 April 363 Pope Nicholas I wrote to Rothadus telling him to be of good cheer and to continue in his appeals to Rome In September 363 Nicholas ordered Hincmar to send Bishop Rothadus and his accusors to Rome by 1 April 864 In May 864 Pope Nicholas wrote to Hincmar complaining that Rothadus had neither been restored nor sent to Rome for judgment and indeed that he had been detained Hincmar had ordered Rothadus imprisoned in a monastery On 20 January 865 Pope Nicholas wrote to Bishop Rothadus who had been restored to his diocese of Soissons restoring his possessions P Jaffe Regesta pontificum Romanorum I editio altera Leipzig 1885 nos 2720 2721 2727 2740 2756 and 2781 Engelmond was chosen to replace Rothadus when he was deposed but Pope Nicholas I wrote to Hincmar forbidding him to consecrate Engelmondus until after the Pope heard Rothadus appeal against the Council which had deposed him Rothadus was restored in 865 In a subsequent letter to Charles the Bald Pope Nicholas calls Engelmond an invasor Gallia christiana IX p 344 Mansi XV p 690 Fisquet p 25 Jaffe no 2721 Fisquet pp 25 26 Fulco is attested in 997 1005 1008 1011 and 1017 Gallia christiana IX p 347 Gams p 633 Gallia christiana IX p 347 Gams p 633 Beroldus was a brother of Count Notker and a nephew of Bishop Fulco Gallia christiana IX p 347 348 Gams p 633 Bishop Henri Gams p 633 Pierre de Pierrefonds Fisquet pp 42 44 Gams p 633 Manasses of Soissons there was also a contemporary Manasses of Chatillon and a Manasses of Reims had previously been Bishop of Cambrai He was present as Bishop of Soissons at the Council of Troyes in April 1104 Hardouin Jean Rigaud Claude 1714 Acta conciliorum et epistolae decretales ac constitutiones summorum pontificum Ab anno MLXXXVI ad annum MCCXV in Latin Vol Tomus sextus pars II Paris Typographia Regia p 1874 Fisquet p 44 Gams p 633 Liziard de Crepy Fisquet p 44 48 Bishop Jocelyn de Vierzy was previously Archdeacon of Bourges and Archdeacon of Soissons where he resided from 1115 He wrote an explanation of the Apostles Creed and the Lord s Prayer a work of no importance Fisquet pp 48 51 Gallia christiana IX pp 360 361 Gallia christiana IX pp 362 365 Fisquet p 60 Gams p 633 Eubel I p 468 Fisquet pp 60 63 Gams p 633 Eubel I p 468 with note 1 Gams pp 63 64 Gams p 633 Eubel I p 468 Guy resigned in 1250 accompanied St Louis on the Crusade and was killed in Palestine Fisquet p 64 Fisquet pp 64 65 Gams p 633 Eubel I p 468 Fisquet pp 65 66 Gams p 633 Eubel I p 468 Gerard de Montcornet was the nephew of Bishop Milon de Bazoches He died in Bari while returning from a pilgrimage Fisquet pp 66 67 Gams p 633 Eubel I p 468 Fisquet pp 67 68 Eubel I p 468 Fisquet pp 68 69 Eubel I p 468 Fisquet pp 69 70 Eubel I p 468 Fisquet p 70 Eubel I p 468 Simon was the son of Simon de Bucy First President of the Parlement de Paris He held synods in 1381 and 1403 Fisquet pp 70 71 Eubel I p 468 Bishop Victor attended the Council of Pisa Fisquet p 71 Eubel I p 468 Graibert was born at Vervins and was a Master of Arts Around the time of his accession the diocese was attacked by John the Fearless Duke of Burgundy Soissons was taken and then retaken and sacked by the King s forces Fisquet pp 71 72 Eubel I p 468 Fisquet p 72 Eubel I p 468 Fisquet p 72 74 Eubel II p 243 Louvain was transferred to the diocese of Sisteron on 18 August 1514 He died in 1520 Eubel II p 243 III p 301 Bonneval was later Bishop of Bazas 1528 1531 Fisquet pp 74 76 Eubel III p 301 and 327 De Longuejoue Fisquet pp 78 79 Charles de Roucy Fisquet pp 79 81 Hennequin Fisquet pp 81 82 Hacqueville Fisquet pp 82 83 Legras Fisquet pp 83 84 Charles de Bourlon was the son of Matthew de Bourlon Master of Requests He was a Doctor of the Sorbonne and Abbot of Chartreuve Soissons In 1652 he was named Coadjutor of Simon Legras and with his Archbishop participated in the coronation of King Louis XIV on 7 June 1654 He succeeded to the diocese on 28 October 1656 He died at Chateau Landon on 26 October 1685 at the age of 74 Jean pp 331 332 The struggle between King Louis XIV and Pope Innocent XI over the Gallican Articles of 1682 prevented the granting of papal bulls for his consecration and installation Huet therefore enjoyed only the temporal possessions of the diocese of Soissons as Vicar Capitular Jean p 332 Brulart de Sillery was the sixth son of Louis Roger Brulart Marquis de Sillery and Marie Catherine de la Rochefoucauld He was a Doctor of theology Paris and Canon of the Church of Paris He was nominated Bishop of Soissons by King Louis XIV on 1 November 1689 but was not approved by Pope Innocent XII until 21 January 1692 Fisquet pp 88 90 Jean p 332 Ritzler V p 365 with note 3 Born at Dijon Languet was the sixth child of Denis Languet Comte de Rochefort and Baron de Gergy He was Doctor of theology Paris He became an Almoner of Marie Adelaide of Savoy and Abbot Commendatory of Coetmaloen diocese of Quimper He served as Vicar General of Autun On 15 January 1715 he was nominated by the King as Bishop of Soissons the appointment was confirmed preconized by Pope Clement XI on 29 May 1715 He was promoted Archbishop of Sens on 9 April 1731 1753 Fisquet pp 90 94 Ritzler V p 365 with note 4 Born in Angers Lefevre held a Licenciate in Civil and Canon Law Angers Fisquet pp 94 95 Ritzler VI p 388 with note 2 Fitz James was the second son of James Duke of Berwick He was Doctor in theology Paris Fisquet pp 96 98 Ritzler VI p 389 with note 3 De Bourdeille died in Paris on 12 December 1802 Fisquet pp 98 101 Ritzler VI p 389 with note 4 Born in Paris Le Blanc entered the Canons Regular of Sainte Genevieve He studied theology in their house in Soissons and became Novice master in Paris He took the constitutional oath in 1791 and was given a parish in Paris by the Constitutional Bishop Gobel He was imprisoned from June to August 1793 He returned to parish life and on 14 December 1799 was elected Constitutional Bishop of Seine Inferieure Rouen he was consecrated bishop on 18 January 1800 by Constitutional Bishop Royer He submitted his resignation to Cardinal Caprara the Papal Legate on 15 October 1801 On 9 April 1802 he was appointed by arret of First Consul Bonaparte to the diocese of Soissons but on 16 April at a meeting of several constitutional bishops with Cardinal Caprara he refused to sign a statement disavowing his past conduct On 29 June 1804 he wrote to Pope Pius VII proclaiming his submission and his regrets for the past On 5 July 1804 he was named to the Legion of Honor He was later named Bishop of Arles 1820 1825 Fisquet pp 104 108 Paul Pisani 1907 Repertoire biographique de l episcopat constitutionnel 1791 1802 in French Paris A Picard et fils pp 168 169 De Villele was consecrated in Paris on 24 September 1820 by the Archbishop of Reims Jean Charles de Coucy assisted by the bishops of Chartres and Amiens He was later named Bishop of Bourges on 22 October 1824 and approved by Pope Leo XII on 22 March 1825 He died on 23 November 1841 Fisquet pp 108 111 Joseph Maxence Peronne 1849 Vie de Mgr de Simony eveque de Soissons et Laon in French Soissons Voyeux Solin Fisquet pp 123 128 Fisquet pp 128 136 Fisquet pp 150 154 Books editReference works edit Gams Pius Bonifatius 1873 Series episcoporum Ecclesiae catholicae quotquot innotuerunt a beato Petro apostolo Ratisbon Typis et Sumptibus Georgii Josephi Manz Use with caution obsolete Eubel Conradus ed 1913 Hierarchia catholica Tomus 1 second ed Munster Libreria Regensbergiana in Latin Eubel Conradus ed 1914 Hierarchia catholica Tomus 2 second ed Munster Libreria Regensbergiana in Latin Eubel Conradus Gulik Guilelmus eds 1923 Hierarchia catholica Tomus 3 second ed Munster Libreria Regensbergiana Gauchat Patritius Patrice 1935 Hierarchia catholica IV 1592 1667 Munster Libraria Regensbergiana Retrieved 2016 07 06 Ritzler Remigius Sefrin Pirminus 1952 Hierarchia catholica medii et recentis aevi V 1667 1730 Patavii Messagero di S Antonio Retrieved 2016 07 06 Ritzler Remigius Sefrin Pirminus 1958 Hierarchia catholica medii et recentis aevi VI 1730 1799 Patavii Messagero di S Antonio Retrieved 2016 07 06 Ritzler Remigius Sefrin Pirminus 1968 Hierarchia Catholica medii et recentioris aevi sive summorum pontificum S R E cardinalium ecclesiarum antistitum series A pontificatu Pii PP VII 1800 usque ad pontificatum Gregorii PP XVI 1846 in Latin Vol VII Monasterii Libr Regensburgiana Remigius Ritzler Pirminus Sefrin 1978 Hierarchia catholica Medii et recentioris aevi A Pontificatu PII PP IX 1846 usque ad Pontificatum Leonis PP XIII 1903 in Latin Vol VIII Il Messaggero di S Antonio Pieta Zenon 2002 Hierarchia catholica medii et recentioris aevi A pontificatu Pii PP X 1903 usque ad pontificatum Benedictii PP XV 1922 in Latin Vol IX Padua Messagero di San Antonio ISBN 978 88 250 1000 8 Sainte Marthe Denis de 1751 Gallia christiana in provincia ecclesiasticas distributa in Latin Vol Tomus nonus 9 Paris Typographia Regia pp 333 88 506 693 978 1036 Instrumenta 95 146 187 202 359 94 Studies edit Bouxin Auguste 1902 La cathedrale Notre Dame de Laon in French deuxieme ed Laon Impr du Journal d Aisne Broche Lucien 1901 Les rapports des eveques avec la commune de Laon in Nouvelle revue historique de droit francais et etranger in French Vol 25 Paris L Larose 1901 pp 729 743 Fisquet Honore 1864 La France pontificale Gallia Christiana Metropole de Reims Soissons et Laon in French Paris Etienne Repos Houllier Pierre 1783 Etat ecclesiastique et civil du diocese de Soissons in French Compiegne Bertrand p 23 Jean Armand 1891 Les eveques et les archeveques de France depuis 1682 jusqu a 1801 in French Paris A Picard pp 331 335 Lecocq Georges 1875 Histoire de la ville de Saint Quentin in French Saint Quentin C Poette Ledouble Joseph 1880 Etat religieux ancien amp moderne des pays qui forment aujourd hui le diocese de Soissons in French self published ed Soissons Chez l auteur p 568 Lefevre Pontalis Eugene Amedee 1897 L architecture religieuse dans l ancien diocese de Soissons au XIe et au XIIe siecle in French Paris Plon Nourrit Lequeux J F M 1859 Antiquites religieuses du diocese de Soissons et Laon in French Vol Tome I Parmentier Tome II Paris 1859 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Martin Henry and Lacroix Paul Histoire de Soissons 2 vols Soissons 1880 Melleville Maximilien 1846 Histoire de la ville de Laon et de ses institutions civiles judiciares etc in French Vol Tome I Laon a l impr du Journal de l Aisne Melleville Maximilien 1846 Tome II in French Laon Pecheur Louis Victor 1863 Annales du diocese de Soissons in French Vol Tome premier Soissons Morel Pecheur Louis Victor 1868 Tome deuxieme 2 10 vols Poquet Alexandre Eusebe 1855 Notre Dame de Soissons son histoire ses eglises ses tombeaux ses abbesses ses reliques in French deuxieme ed Paris V Didron Sandron Dany 1998 La Cathedrale de Soissons architecture du pouvoir in French Paris Editions A amp J Picard ISBN 978 2 7084 0534 9 External links edit in French Centre national des Archives de l Eglise de France L Episcopat francais depuis 1919 retrieved 2016 12 24 Goyon Georges Soissons Catholic Encyclopedia Vol XIV New York Appleton 1912 pp 130 132 acknowledgment edit nbsp This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Herbermann Charles ed 1913 Soissons Catholic Encyclopedia New York Robert Appleton Company 49 23 N 3 19 E 49 38 N 3 32 E 49 38 3 32 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Roman Catholic Diocese of Soissons amp oldid 1206045634, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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