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Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Vienne

The Archbishopric of Vienne, named after its episcopal seat in Vienne in the Isère département of southern France, was a metropolitan Roman Catholic archdiocese. It is now part of the Archdiocese of Lyon.

History edit

 
Vienne Cathedral

The legend according to which Crescens, the first Bishop of Vienne, is identical with the Crescens of Saint Paul's Second Letter to Timothy, iv, 20 certainly postdates the letter of Pope Zosimus to the Church of Arles (417) and the letter of the bishops of Gaul in 451; because, although both these documents allude to the claims to glory which Arles owes to St. Trophimus, neither of them mentions Crescens. Archbishop Ado of Vienne (860–875) set afoot this legend of the Apostolic origin of the See of Vienne and put down St. Zachary, St. Martin and St. Verus, later successors of Crescens, as belonging to the Apostolic period. This legend was confirmed by the Recueil des privilèges de l'Eglise de Viene, which, however, was not compiled under the supervision of the future Pope Callistus II, as M. Gundlach maintained, but a little earlier, about 1060, as Louis Duchesne proved. This collection contains the pretended letters of a series of popes, from Pius I to Paschal II, and sustains the claims of the Church of Vienne. Le Livre épiscopal de l'archevêque Léger (1030–1070) included both the inventions of Ado and the forged letters of the Recueil.[1]

It is historically certain that Verus, present at the Council of Arles (314), was the fourth Bishop of Vienne. In the beginning the twelve cities of the two Roman Vienne provinces were under the ecclesiastical jurisdiction of the Archbishop of Vienne, but when Arles was made an archbishopric, at the end of the fourth century, the see of Vienne grew less important. The disputes that later arose between it and the metropolitan of Arles concerning their respective antiquity are well known in ecclesiastical history.[1]

In 450 Pope Leo I gave the Archbishop of Vienne the right to ordain the Bishops of Tarantaise, Valence, Geneva and Grenoble. Many vicissitudes followed, and the territorial limit of the powers of Metropolitan of Vienne followed the wavering frontier of the Kingdom of Burgundy and in 779, was considerably restricted by the organization of a new ecclesiastical province comprising Tarantaise, Aosta (in Italy) and Sitten (or Sion in French; in Switzerland).[1]

In 1120 Calixtus II, who had been Bishop of Vienne, decided that the Archbishop of Vienne should have for suffragans the Bishop of Grenoble, Bishop of Valence, Bishop of Die, Bishop of Viviers, Bishop of Geneva, and Bishop of Maurienne; that the Archbishop of Tarantaise should obey him, notwithstanding the fact that this archbishop himself had suffragans, that he should exercise the primacy over the province of Bourges, province of Narbonne, province of Bordeaux, province of Aix, province of Auch and province of Embrun, and that, as the metropolitans of both provinces already bore the title of primate, the Archbishop of Vienne should be known as the "Primate of Primates".[1]

In 1023 the Archbishops of Vienne became secular lords paramount. They had the title of Count, making them prince-archbishops, and when in 1033 the Kingdom of Burgundy-Arles was reunited to the Holy Roman Empire, they retained their independence. They obtained from the empire the title of Archchancellors of the Kingdom of Arles (1157).[1]

Besides the four Bishops of Vienne heretofore mentioned, others are honoured as saints. According to the chronology created by M. Duchesne, they are: St. Justus, St. Dionysius, St. Paracodes, St. Florentius (about 374), St. Lupicinus, St. Simplicius (about 400), St. Paschasius, St. Nectarius, St. Nicetas (about 449), St. Mamertus (died 475 or 476), who instituted the rogation days, whose brother Claudianus Mamertus was known as a theologian and poet, and during whose episcopate St. Leonianus held for forty years the post of grand penitentiary at Vienne; St. Avitus (494 – 5 February, 518), St. Julianus (about 520–533), Pantagathus (about 538), Namatius (died 559), St. Evantius (died 584–586), St. Verus (586), St. Desiderius (Didier) 596–611, St. Domnolus (about 614), St. Ætherius, St. Hecdicus, St. Chaoaldus (about 654–664), St. Bobolinus, St. Georgius, St. Deodatus, St. Blidrannus (about 680), St. Eoldus, St. Eobolinus, St. Barnardus (810–841), noted for his conspiracies in favour of the sons of Louis the Pious, St. Ado (860–875), author of a universal history and two martyrologies, St. Thibaud (end of the tenth century).

Among its later bishops were Guy of Burgundy (1084–1119), who became Pope Callixtus II; Christophe de Beaumont, who occupied the see of Vienne for seven months of the year 1745 and afterwards became Archbishop of Paris; Jean Georges Le Franc de Pompignan (1774–1790), brother of the poet and a great enemy of the "philosophers", and also d'Aviau (1790–1801), illustrious because of his strong opposition to the civil constitution of the clergy and the first of the émigré bishops to re-enter France (May, 1797), returning under an assumed name and at the peril of his life.[1]

Michael Servetus was living in Vienne, whither he had been attracted by Archbishop Pierre Palmier, when Calvin denounced him to the Inquisition for his books. During the proceedings ordered by ecclesiastical authority of Vienne, Servetus fled to Switzerland (1553).[1]

In 1605 the Jesuits founded a college at Vienne, and here Massillon taught at the close of the 17th century. The churches of Saint-Pierre and Saint-André le Haut are ancient Benedictine foundations. The famous council of Vienne was held at Vienne in 1311 (see also Templars).[1]

After the Napoleonic Concordat of 1801, the archiepiscopal title of Vienne passed to the see of Lyon, whose Metropolitan was henceforth called "Archbishop of Lyons and Vienne", although Vienne belongs to the Diocese of Grenoble.[1]

Ordinaries edit

Bishops edit

Archbishops edit

  • Wilichar (742–752)
  • Proculus
  • Bertericus (767–790)
  • Ursio (c. 790–796)
  • Wulfar (797–810)
  • Bernard (810–842)
  • Agilmar (841–859)
  • Ado (859–875)
  • Otramnus (878–885)
  • Bernoinus (886–899)
  • Raginfred (899–907)
  • Alexander I (908–926)
  • Sobon (927–c. 950)
  • Theobald (957–1001)
  • Blessed Burchard (c. 1010–c. 1030)
  • Léger (1030–1070)
  • Armand (1070–1076)
  • Warmond (1077–1081)
  • Gontard (1082–1084)
  • Guido of Burgundy (1088–1119)
  • Peter I (1121–1125)
  • Stephen I (c. 1125–c. 1145)
  • Humbert I (1146–1147)
  • Hugo (c. 1148–1153)
  • Stephen II (c. 1155–1163)
  • Guillaume de Clermont (1163–1166?)
  • Robert de La Tour du Pin (c. 1170–1195)
  • Aynard de Moirans (1195–c. 1205)
  • Humbert II (1206–1215)
  • Bournon (1216–1218)
  • Jean de Bernin (1218–1266)
  • Guy d'Auvergne de Clermont (c. 1268–1278) (House of Auvergne)
  • Guillaume de Livron (or de Valence) (1283–c. 1305)
  • Briand de Lavieu (Lagnieu) (1306–1317)
  • Simon d'Archiac (1319–1320), Cardinal
  • Guillaume de Laudun (1321–1327) (then Archbishop of Toulouse)
  • Bertrand de La Chapelle (1327–1352)
  • Pierre Bertrand (1352–1362)
  • Pierre de Gratia (1362–1363) (also Archbishop of Naples)
  • Louis de Villars (1363–1377)
  • Humbert de Montchal (1377–1395)
  • Thibaud de Rougemont 1395–1405 (also Archbishop of Besançon)
  • Jean de Nant 1405–1423 (also Bishop of Paris)
  • Jean de Norry 1423–1438 (also Archbishop of Besançon)
  • Geoffroy Vassal 1440–1444 (then Archbishop of Lyon)
  • Jean Gérard de Poitiers 1448–c. 1452 (also Bishop of Valence)
  • Jean du Chastel 1452–1453 (also Bishop of Nîmes)
  • Antoine de Poisieu (Poisieux) 1453–1473, died 1495
  • Guy de Poisieu (Poisieux) 1473–1480
  • Astorge Aimery 1480–1482
  • Ângelo Catho de Supino 1482–1495
  • Antoine de Clermont 1496–1506, died 1509
  • Federico di Sanseverino 1506–1515, Cardinal
  • Alessandro di Sanseverino 1515–1527
  • Scaramuccia Trivulzio March to August 1527
  • Pierre Palmier (Paumier) 1528–1554
  • Charles de Marillac 1557–1560 (also Bishop of Vannes)
  • Jean de La Brosse 1561–1567 oder 1569
  • Vespasien Gribaldi 1569–1575
  • Pierre de Villars I 1576–1587
  • Pierre de Villars II 1587–1598
  • Jérôme de Villars 1598–1626
  • Pierre de Villars III 1626–1662
  • Henri de Villars 1662–1693
  • Armand de Montmorin de Saint-Hérem 1694–1713
  • François de Bertons de Crillon 1714–1720
  • Henri Oswald de La Tour D'Auvergne 1721–1745
  • Christophe de Beaumont du Repaire 1745–1746 (also Archbishop of Paris)
  • Jean d'Yse de Saléon 1747–1751 (also Bishop of Rodez)
  • Guillaume d'Hugues 1751–1774
  • Jacques de Condorcet ? 1754–
  • Jean Georges Lefranc de Pompignan 1774–1789
  • Charles François d'Aviau du Bois-de-Sanzay 1790–1801

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i Herbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). "Diocese of Grenoble" . Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company.
  2. ^ Ökumenisches Heiligenlexikon - Acta Sanctorum 14. Oktober
  3. ^ this Verus, found only in unreliable sources, may be identical to the 4th-century Verus I below.
  4. ^ considered a saint of the Catholic Church since the 13th century with a feast day celebrated on July 17, previously May 9: U. Chevalier, Notice chronologico-historique sur les archevêques de Vienne: d'après des documents paléographiques inédits, Vienne, 1879, p. 18; Regeste dauphinois, p. 3, Tome 1, Fascicules 1-3, Acte no 8; L. Duchesne, Fastes épiscopaux de l'ancienne Gaule. Provinces du Sud-Est (tome premier), vol. 3, Paris, Thorin et fils, 1894, p. 147
  5. ^ Paracodes has been considered a saint by the Roman Catholic Church since the 13th century with a feast day celebrated on January 2
  6. ^ Considered a saint of the Orthodox and Catholic Church.
  7. ^ since the 13th century he has been celebrated locally on August 1
  8. ^ since the 13th century he has been celebrated locally on January 3
  9. ^ not the same as Deodatus of Nevers

Bibliography edit

Reference Sources edit

  • Gams, Pius Bonifatius (1873). Series episcoporum Ecclesiae catholicae: quotquot innotuerunt a beato Petro apostolo. Ratisbon: Typis et Sumptibus Georgii Josephi Manz. pp. 548–549. (Use with caution; obsolete)
  • Eubel, Conradus, ed. (1913). Hierarchia catholica, Tomus 1 (second ed.). Münster: Libreria Regensbergiana. p. 301. (in Latin)
  • Eubel, Conradus, ed. (1914). Hierarchia catholica, Tomus 2 (second ed.). Münster: Libreria Regensbergiana. p. 175.
  • Eubel, Conradus, ed. (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. p. 219.
  • Ritzler, Remigius; Sefrin, Pirminus (1952). Hierarchia catholica medii et recentis aevi V (1667-1730). Patavii: Messagero di S. Antonio. Retrieved 2016-07-06.

Studies edit

  • Jean, Armand (1891). Les évêques et les archevêques de France depuis 1682 jusqu'à 1801 (in French). Paris: A. Picard.
  • Pisani, Paul (1907). Répertoire biographique de l'épiscopat constitutionnel (1791-1802) (in French). Paris: A. Picard et fils.
  • Eubel, Conradus, ed. (1913). Hierarchia catholica, Tomus 1 (second ed.). Munster: Libreria Regensbergiana. p. 527. (in Latin)
  • André Pelletier (2001). "Chapitre XII: Vienne chretienne". Vienna, Vienne (in French). Presses Universitaires Lyon. pp. 163–. ISBN 978-2-7297-0677-7.

45°31′N 4°52′E / 45.52°N 4.87°E / 45.52; 4.87

roman, catholic, archdiocese, vienne, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, schol. This 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 Archdiocese of Vienne news newspapers books scholar JSTOR July 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message Diocese of Vienne redirects here For the diocese of the Roman Empire see Diocese of Viennensis The Archbishopric of Vienne named after its episcopal seat in Vienne in the Isere departement of southern France was a metropolitan Roman Catholic archdiocese It is now part of the Archdiocese of Lyon Contents 1 History 2 Ordinaries 2 1 Bishops 2 2 Archbishops 3 See also 4 References 5 Bibliography 5 1 Reference Sources 5 2 StudiesHistory edit nbsp Vienne CathedralThe legend according to which Crescens the first Bishop of Vienne is identical with the Crescens of Saint Paul s Second Letter to Timothy iv 20 certainly postdates the letter of Pope Zosimus to the Church of Arles 417 and the letter of the bishops of Gaul in 451 because although both these documents allude to the claims to glory which Arles owes to St Trophimus neither of them mentions Crescens Archbishop Ado of Vienne 860 875 set afoot this legend of the Apostolic origin of the See of Vienne and put down St Zachary St Martin and St Verus later successors of Crescens as belonging to the Apostolic period This legend was confirmed by the Recueil des privileges de l Eglise de Viene which however was not compiled under the supervision of the future Pope Callistus II as M Gundlach maintained but a little earlier about 1060 as Louis Duchesne proved This collection contains the pretended letters of a series of popes from Pius I to Paschal II and sustains the claims of the Church of Vienne Le Livre episcopal de l archeveque Leger 1030 1070 included both the inventions of Ado and the forged letters of the Recueil 1 It is historically certain that Verus present at the Council of Arles 314 was the fourth Bishop of Vienne In the beginning the twelve cities of the two Roman Vienne provinces were under the ecclesiastical jurisdiction of the Archbishop of Vienne but when Arles was made an archbishopric at the end of the fourth century the see of Vienne grew less important The disputes that later arose between it and the metropolitan of Arles concerning their respective antiquity are well known in ecclesiastical history 1 In 450 Pope Leo I gave the Archbishop of Vienne the right to ordain the Bishops of Tarantaise Valence Geneva and Grenoble Many vicissitudes followed and the territorial limit of the powers of Metropolitan of Vienne followed the wavering frontier of the Kingdom of Burgundy and in 779 was considerably restricted by the organization of a new ecclesiastical province comprising Tarantaise Aosta in Italy and Sitten or Sion in French in Switzerland 1 In 1120 Calixtus II who had been Bishop of Vienne decided that the Archbishop of Vienne should have for suffragans the Bishop of Grenoble Bishop of Valence Bishop of Die Bishop of Viviers Bishop of Geneva and Bishop of Maurienne that the Archbishop of Tarantaise should obey him notwithstanding the fact that this archbishop himself had suffragans that he should exercise the primacy over the province of Bourges province of Narbonne province of Bordeaux province of Aix province of Auch and province of Embrun and that as the metropolitans of both provinces already bore the title of primate the Archbishop of Vienne should be known as the Primate of Primates 1 In 1023 the Archbishops of Vienne became secular lords paramount They had the title of Count making them prince archbishops and when in 1033 the Kingdom of Burgundy Arles was reunited to the Holy Roman Empire they retained their independence They obtained from the empire the title of Archchancellors of the Kingdom of Arles 1157 1 Besides the four Bishops of Vienne heretofore mentioned others are honoured as saints According to the chronology created by M Duchesne they are St Justus St Dionysius St Paracodes St Florentius about 374 St Lupicinus St Simplicius about 400 St Paschasius St Nectarius St Nicetas about 449 St Mamertus died 475 or 476 who instituted the rogation days whose brother Claudianus Mamertus was known as a theologian and poet and during whose episcopate St Leonianus held for forty years the post of grand penitentiary at Vienne St Avitus 494 5 February 518 St Julianus about 520 533 Pantagathus about 538 Namatius died 559 St Evantius died 584 586 St Verus 586 St Desiderius Didier 596 611 St Domnolus about 614 St AEtherius St Hecdicus St Chaoaldus about 654 664 St Bobolinus St Georgius St Deodatus St Blidrannus about 680 St Eoldus St Eobolinus St Barnardus 810 841 noted for his conspiracies in favour of the sons of Louis the Pious St Ado 860 875 author of a universal history and two martyrologies St Thibaud end of the tenth century Among its later bishops were Guy of Burgundy 1084 1119 who became Pope Callixtus II Christophe de Beaumont who occupied the see of Vienne for seven months of the year 1745 and afterwards became Archbishop of Paris Jean Georges Le Franc de Pompignan 1774 1790 brother of the poet and a great enemy of the philosophers and also d Aviau 1790 1801 illustrious because of his strong opposition to the civil constitution of the clergy and the first of the emigre bishops to re enter France May 1797 returning under an assumed name and at the peril of his life 1 Michael Servetus was living in Vienne whither he had been attracted by Archbishop Pierre Palmier when Calvin denounced him to the Inquisition for his books During the proceedings ordered by ecclesiastical authority of Vienne Servetus fled to Switzerland 1553 1 In 1605 the Jesuits founded a college at Vienne and here Massillon taught at the close of the 17th century The churches of Saint Pierre and Saint Andre le Haut are ancient Benedictine foundations The famous council of Vienne was held at Vienne in 1311 see also Templars 1 After the Napoleonic Concordat of 1801 the archiepiscopal title of Vienne passed to the see of Lyon whose Metropolitan was henceforth called Archbishop of Lyons and Vienne although Vienne belongs to the Diocese of Grenoble 1 Ordinaries editBishops edit Casturus or Castulus legendary bishop celebrated with a feast day on October 14 since the 13th century MS CP 601 2 Zacharias died 106 Crescens or Crescentius c 160 this bishop is often identified with Crescens the supposed disciple of Saint Paul but without evidence Martin Verus 3 Justus Denis Dionysius 4 Paracodes c 235 5 Paschasius died 310 12 Verus I c 314 6 Nectarius c 356 7 Florentius I c 372 8 Lupicinus Simplicius c 400 420 Jerome Hieronymus c 421 Claudius c 440 Nicetius c 449 Florentius II Mamertus died 475 76 Hesychius I c 475 490 Avitus 494 518 Julian c 520 530 Domninus died 536 Pantagathus c 538 Hesychius II c 545 565 Namatius died 559 Philip c 567 580 Evantius c 580 586 Verus II 586 c 590 Desiderius c 590 607 Domnolus c 614 620 Etherius Clarentius fl 624 Sindulf Syndulph Landalenus c 625 650 Edictus Caldeoldus 654 664 Bobolinus I Dodolin Deodatus 9 Blidramnus c 675 680 Agratus Agroecius fl 691 George c 699 Eoaldus or Edaldus c 700 715 Bobolinus II fl 718 Austrebert 719 742 Archbishops edit Wilichar 742 752 Proculus Bertericus 767 790 Ursio c 790 796 Wulfar 797 810 Bernard 810 842 Agilmar 841 859 Ado 859 875 Otramnus 878 885 Bernoinus 886 899 Raginfred 899 907 Alexander I 908 926 Sobon 927 c 950 Theobald 957 1001 Blessed Burchard c 1010 c 1030 Leger 1030 1070 Armand 1070 1076 Warmond 1077 1081 Gontard 1082 1084 Guido of Burgundy 1088 1119 Peter I 1121 1125 Stephen I c 1125 c 1145 Humbert I 1146 1147 Hugo c 1148 1153 Stephen II c 1155 1163 Guillaume de Clermont 1163 1166 Robert de La Tour du Pin c 1170 1195 Aynard de Moirans 1195 c 1205 Humbert II 1206 1215 Bournon 1216 1218 Jean de Bernin 1218 1266 Guy d Auvergne de Clermont c 1268 1278 House of Auvergne Guillaume de Livron or de Valence 1283 c 1305 Briand de Lavieu Lagnieu 1306 1317 Simon d Archiac 1319 1320 Cardinal Guillaume de Laudun 1321 1327 then Archbishop of Toulouse Bertrand de La Chapelle 1327 1352 Pierre Bertrand 1352 1362 Pierre de Gratia 1362 1363 also Archbishop of Naples Louis de Villars 1363 1377 Humbert de Montchal 1377 1395 Thibaud de Rougemont 1395 1405 also Archbishop of Besancon Jean de Nant 1405 1423 also Bishop of Paris Jean de Norry 1423 1438 also Archbishop of Besancon Geoffroy Vassal 1440 1444 then Archbishop of Lyon Jean Gerard de Poitiers 1448 c 1452 also Bishop of Valence Jean du Chastel 1452 1453 also Bishop of Nimes Antoine de Poisieu Poisieux 1453 1473 died 1495 Guy de Poisieu Poisieux 1473 1480 Astorge Aimery 1480 1482 Angelo Catho de Supino 1482 1495 Antoine de Clermont 1496 1506 died 1509 Federico di Sanseverino 1506 1515 Cardinal Alessandro di Sanseverino 1515 1527 Scaramuccia Trivulzio March to August 1527 Pierre Palmier Paumier 1528 1554 Charles de Marillac 1557 1560 also Bishop of Vannes Jean de La Brosse 1561 1567 oder 1569 Vespasien Gribaldi 1569 1575 Pierre de Villars I 1576 1587 Pierre de Villars II 1587 1598 Jerome de Villars 1598 1626 Pierre de Villars III 1626 1662 Henri de Villars 1662 1693 Armand de Montmorin de Saint Herem 1694 1713 Francois de Bertons de Crillon 1714 1720 Henri Oswald de La Tour D Auvergne 1721 1745 Christophe de Beaumont du Repaire 1745 1746 also Archbishop of Paris Jean d Yse de Saleon 1747 1751 also Bishop of Rodez Guillaume d Hugues 1751 1774 Jacques de Condorcet 1754 Jean Georges Lefranc de Pompignan 1774 1789 Charles Francois d Aviau du Bois de Sanzay 1790 1801See also editCatholic Church in France Council of Vienne List of Catholic dioceses in France Philippe du Contant de la Molette Severus of VienneReferences edit a b c d e f g h i Herbermann Charles ed 1913 Diocese of Grenoble Catholic Encyclopedia New York Robert Appleton Company Okumenisches Heiligenlexikon Acta Sanctorum 14 Oktober this Verus found only in unreliable sources may be identical to the 4th century Verus I below considered a saint of the Catholic Church since the 13th century with a feast day celebrated on July 17 previously May 9 U Chevalier Notice chronologico historique sur les archeveques de Vienne d apres des documents paleographiques inedits Vienne 1879 p 18 Regeste dauphinois p 3 Tome 1 Fascicules 1 3 Acte no 8 L Duchesne Fastes episcopaux de l ancienne Gaule Provinces du Sud Est tome premier vol 3 Paris Thorin et fils 1894 p 147 Paracodes has been considered a saint by the Roman Catholic Church since the 13th century with a feast day celebrated on January 2 Considered a saint of the Orthodox and Catholic Church since the 13th century he has been celebrated locally on August 1 since the 13th century he has been celebrated locally on January 3 not the same as Deodatus of NeversBibliography editReference Sources edit Gams Pius Bonifatius 1873 Series episcoporum Ecclesiae catholicae quotquot innotuerunt a beato Petro apostolo Ratisbon Typis et Sumptibus Georgii Josephi Manz pp 548 549 Use with caution obsolete Eubel Conradus ed 1913 Hierarchia catholica Tomus 1 second ed Munster Libreria Regensbergiana p 301 in Latin Eubel Conradus ed 1914 Hierarchia catholica Tomus 2 second ed Munster Libreria Regensbergiana p 175 Eubel Conradus ed 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 p 219 Ritzler Remigius Sefrin Pirminus 1952 Hierarchia catholica medii et recentis aevi V 1667 1730 Patavii Messagero di S Antonio Retrieved 2016 07 06 Studies edit Jean Armand 1891 Les eveques et les archeveques de France depuis 1682 jusqu a 1801 in French Paris A Picard Pisani Paul 1907 Repertoire biographique de l episcopat constitutionnel 1791 1802 in French Paris A Picard et fils Eubel Conradus ed 1913 Hierarchia catholica Tomus 1 second ed Munster Libreria Regensbergiana p 527 in Latin Andre Pelletier 2001 Chapitre XII Vienne chretienne Vienna Vienne in French Presses Universitaires Lyon pp 163 ISBN 978 2 7297 0677 7 45 31 N 4 52 E 45 52 N 4 87 E 45 52 4 87 Portals nbsp Catholicism nbsp France Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Vienne amp oldid 1176443621 Archbishops, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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