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Roman Catholic Diocese of Langres

The Diocese of Langres (Latin: Dioecesis Lingonensis; French: Diocèse de Langres) is a Latin Church diocese of the Catholic Church comprising the département of Haute-Marne in France.

Diocese of Langres

Dioecesis Lingonensis

Diocèse de Langres
Location
Country France
Ecclesiastical provinceReims
MetropolitanArchdiocese of Reims
Statistics
Area6,250 km2 (2,410 sq mi)
Population
- Total
- Catholics
(as of 2004)
193,768
140,000 (72.3%)
Information
DenominationCatholic
Sui iuris churchLatin Church
RiteRoman Rite
Established3rd Century
CathedralCathedral of St. Mammes in Langres
Patron saintSt. Mammes of Caesarea
Current leadership
PopeFrancis
BishopJoseph de Metz-Noblat
Metropolitan ArchbishopÉric de Moulins-Beaufort
Map
Website
52.catholique.fr

The diocese is now a suffragan in ecclesiastical province of the Archdiocese of Reims, having been a suffragan of Lyon until 2002. The current bishop is Joseph Marie Edouard de Metz-Noblat, who succeeded Bishop Philippe Jean Marie Joseph Gueneley on 21 January 2014. The diocese covers a territory of 6,250 km2 and its estimated catholic population is 140,000.

History edit

Louis Duchesne considers Senator, Justus and Didier de Langres [fr], who was martyred during the invasion of the Vandals (about 407), the first three bishops of Langres. The See, therefore, must have been founded about the middle of the fourth century.

In 1179, Hugh III, Duke of Burgundy gave the city of Langres to his uncle, Gautier of Burgundy, then bishop, making him a prince-bishop. Later, Langres was made a duchy, which gave the Duke-Bishop of Langres the right of secular precedence over his Metropolitan, the Archbishop of Lyon, at the consecration of the kings of France.

The chief patron saint of the diocese is the martyr Mammes of Caesarea (third century), to whom the cathedral, a monument of the late twelfth century, is dedicated. The diocese of Langres honors as saints some martyrs who, according to legend, died in the persecution of Roman Emperor Marcus Aurelius. They are the triplets Speusippus, Eleusippus, and Melapsippus; Neo, the author of their Acts; Leonilla, their grandmother; and Junilla, their mother. Other saints honored there include:

  • Valerius (Valier), a disciple of Desiderius, who was martyred by the Vandals in the fifth century
  • the hermit Godo (or Gou), nephew of Vandrillus in the seventh century
  • Gengulphus, martyr in the eighth century
  • Gerard Voinchet (1640–95), canon regular of the Congregation of St. Geneviève in Paris
  • Jeanne Mance (1606–73)
  • Mariet, a priest who died in 1704
  • Joseph Urban Hanipaux, a Jesuit.

The latter three were natives of the diocese and celebrated for their apostolic labors in Canada.

The diocese was also the birthplace of the theologian Nicolas de Clémenges (fourteenth or fifteenth century), who was canon and treasurer of the Church of Langres; of the Gallican canonist Edmond Richer (1560–1631); of the Jesuit Pierre Lemoine [fr], author of an epic poem on St. Louis and of the work La dévotion aisée (1602–71); and of the philosopher Diderot (1713–84). The historian Raoul Glaber, monk of Cluny Abbey who died in 1050, was at the priory of St. Léger in this diocese when he experienced an apparition.

The Benedictine Poulangy Abbey was founded in the eleventh century. Morimond Abbey, the fourth foundation of Cîteaux, was established in 1125 by Odolric, lord of Aigremont, and Simon, Count of Bassigny. The Augustinian priory of the Val des Ecoliers was founded in 1212 at Luzy, near Chaumont, by four doctors of the Paris University who were led into solitude by a love of retreat.

Otho, son of Leopold of Austria and Abbot of Morimond, became Bishop of Freising in Bavaria and returned in 1154 to die a simple monk in Morimond.

The "Scourging of the Alleluia," now no longer observed, was quite celebrated in this diocese in the Middle Ages. On the day when, according to tradition, the Alleluia was omitted from the liturgy, a top on which the word "Alleluia" was written was whipped out of the church, to the singing of psalms by the choirboys, who wished it bon voyage till Easter.

The "Pardon of Chaumont" is very celebrated. In 1475, Jean de Montmirail, a native of Chaumont and a particular friend of Pope Sixtus IV, obtained from him that each time the feast of St. John the Baptist fell on a Sunday, the faithful, who confessed their sins and visited the church of Chaumont, should enjoy the jubilee indulgence. Such was the origin of the great "Pardon" of Chaumont, celebrated sixty-one times between 1476 and 1905. At the end of the Middle Ages, this "Pardon" gave rise to certain festivities. Fifteen mysteries of the life of St. John the Baptist were represented on stages erected throughout the town on the Sunday preceding the "Pardon." The display drew multitudes to the festivities, which were finally called the "deviltries" of Chaumont.[by whom?] In the eighteenth century, the "Pardon" became a purely religious ceremony.

In the Diocese of Langres is Vassy, where, in 1562, riots took place between Catholics and Protestants that gave rise to the wars of religion (see Huguenots).

Numerous diocesan synods were held at Langres. The most important were those of 1404, 1421, 1621, 1628, 1679, 1725, 1733, 1741, 1783 and six successive annual synods held by Pierre Louis Parisis, from 1841 to 1846. These held a view to the re-establishment of the synodal organization, and also to impose on the clergy the use of the Roman Breviary (see Prosper Guéranger).

Principal pilgrimages are Our Lady of Montrol near Arc-en-Barrois (dating from the seventeenth century); Our Lady of the Hermits at Cuves; Our Lady of Victories at Bourmont; and St. Joseph, Protector of the Souls in Purgatory, at Maranville.

Suppressed by the Napoleonic Concordat of 1801, Langres was later united to the Diocese of Dijon. The bishop bore the title of Dijon and Langres, but the union was never quite complete. There was a pro-vicar-general for the Haute-Marne and two seminaries at Langres, the petit séminaire from 1809 and the grand séminaire from 1817. The See of Langres was re-established in 1817 by Pope Pius VII and King Louis XVIII. César Guillaume de La Luzerne, its pre-Revolution bishop, was to be re-appointed, but the parliament did not ratify this agreement and the bishops of Dijon remained administrators of the Diocese of Langres until 6 October 1822, when the Papal Bull "Paternae charitatis" definitely re-established the See. The new Bishop of Langres governed 360 parishes of the old Diocese of Langres, 70 of the old Diocese of Châlons, 13 of the old Diocese of Besançon, 13 of the old Diocese of Troyes and 94 of the old Diocese of Toul. For the legends concerning the Apostolic origin of the See of Langres and the mission of St. Benignus see Dijon.

Bishops edit

The bishops, until 1016, resided at Dijon and until 1731, exercised spiritual jurisdiction over the territory of the present-day Diocese of Dijon. Following is a list of bishops of Langres.

To 1000 edit

  • c. 200 Senator
  • c. 240 Justus
  • c. 264 Desiderius (Didier, Dizier)
  • Vacant
  • 284–301 Martin
  • 301–327 Honoratius
  • 327–375 Urban of Langres
  • 375–422 Paulinus I
  • St. Martin (411–420)?
  • 422–448 Fraterne I
  • 448–455 Fraterne II
  • 456–484 Aprunculus, St. Aprunculus, the friend of St Sidonius Apollinaris and his successor as Bishop of Clermont
  • 485–490 Armentaire
  • 490–493 Venantius
  • 493–498 Paulinus II (Paul)
  • 498–501 Patiens
  • 501–506 Albiso
  • 506–539 Gregory of Langres, St. Gregory (509–539), great-grandfather of St. Gregory of Tours, who transferred the relics of St. Benignus
  • 539–572 Tetricus of Langres, St. Tetricus, son of St. Gregory (539–572), whose coadjutor was St. Monderic, brother of Arnoul of Metz
  • 572–583 Papoul
  • 583–595 Mummole le Bon
  • 595–618 Miget (Migetius)
  • 618–628 Modoald
  • 628–650 Berthoald
  • 650–660 Sigoald
  • 660–670 Wulfrand
  • 670–680 Godin
  • 680–682 Adoin
  • 682–690 Garibald
  • 690–713 Héron
  • 713–742 Eustorge
  • Died c. 759 Vaudier
  • 752–772 Erlolf[1]
  • 772–778 Herulphe, Herulphus or Ariolf (759–774), founder of Ellwangen Abbey
  • 778–790 Baldric
  • 790–820 Belto, Betto (790–820), who helped to draw up the capitularies of Charlemagne
  • 820–838 Albéric
  • 838–856 Thibaut I
  • 859–880 Isaac, author of a collection of canons
  • 880–888 Gilon de Tournus
  • 888–890 Argrin, first time
  • 890–894 Thibaut II
  • 894–910 Argrin, second time
  • 910–922 Garnier I
  • 922–931 Gotzelin
  • 932 Lethéric
  • 932–948 Héric or Héry
  • 948–969 Achard
  • 969–980 Vidric
  • 980–1015 Bruno of Roucy who brought in the monks of Cluny to reform the abbeys of the diocese

1000–1300 edit

1300–1500 edit

1500–1700 edit

1700–1900 edit

From 1900 edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Odden Per Einar. "Den salige Herulf av Ellwangen (~730-~815)", Den katolske kirke, December 28, 2015
  2. ^ Viton de Saint-Allais, Nicolas (1876). "Nobiliaire Universel de France, ou Recueil général des généalogies historiques des maisons nobles de ce royaume". Bibliothèque nationale de France (in French). Paris: Librairie Ancienne et Moderne Bachelin-Deflorenne. p. 449. Retrieved 25 May 2021.
  3. ^ Richard Vaughan, Philip the Bold, (The Boydell Press, 2009), 164.
  4. ^ . Archived from the original on 2014-02-03. Retrieved 2022-07-16.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)

Sources and external links edit

  • (in French) Centre national des Archives de l'Église de France, L'Épiscopat francais depuis 1919, retrieved: 2016-12-24.

47°51′35″N 5°20′05″E / 47.8598°N 5.33469°E / 47.8598; 5.33469

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

roman, catholic, diocese, langres, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar,. 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 Diocese of Langres news newspapers books scholar JSTOR May 2008 Learn how and when to remove this message The Diocese of Langres Latin Dioecesis Lingonensis French Diocese de Langres is a Latin Church diocese of the Catholic Church comprising the departement of Haute Marne in France Diocese of LangresDioecesis LingonensisDiocese de LangresLangres CathedralLocationCountry FranceEcclesiastical provinceReimsMetropolitanArchdiocese of ReimsStatisticsArea6 250 km2 2 410 sq mi Population Total Catholics as of 2004 193 768140 000 72 3 InformationDenominationCatholicSui iuris churchLatin ChurchRiteRoman RiteEstablished3rd CenturyCathedralCathedral of St Mammes in LangresPatron saintSt Mammes of CaesareaCurrent leadershipPopeFrancisBishopJoseph de Metz NoblatMetropolitan ArchbishopEric de Moulins BeaufortMapWebsite52 catholique fr The diocese is now a suffragan in ecclesiastical province of the Archdiocese of Reims having been a suffragan of Lyon until 2002 The current bishop is Joseph Marie Edouard de Metz Noblat who succeeded Bishop Philippe Jean Marie Joseph Gueneley on 21 January 2014 The diocese covers a territory of 6 250 km2 and its estimated catholic population is 140 000 Contents 1 History 2 Bishops 2 1 To 1000 2 2 1000 1300 2 3 1300 1500 2 4 1500 1700 2 5 1700 1900 2 6 From 1900 3 See also 4 References 5 Sources and external linksHistory editLouis Duchesne considers Senator Justus and Didier de Langres fr who was martyred during the invasion of the Vandals about 407 the first three bishops of Langres The See therefore must have been founded about the middle of the fourth century In 1179 Hugh III Duke of Burgundy gave the city of Langres to his uncle Gautier of Burgundy then bishop making him a prince bishop Later Langres was made a duchy which gave the Duke Bishop of Langres the right of secular precedence over his Metropolitan the Archbishop of Lyon at the consecration of the kings of France The chief patron saint of the diocese is the martyr Mammes of Caesarea third century to whom the cathedral a monument of the late twelfth century is dedicated The diocese of Langres honors as saints some martyrs who according to legend died in the persecution of Roman Emperor Marcus Aurelius They are the triplets Speusippus Eleusippus and Melapsippus Neo the author of their Acts Leonilla their grandmother and Junilla their mother Other saints honored there include Valerius Valier a disciple of Desiderius who was martyred by the Vandals in the fifth century the hermit Godo or Gou nephew of Vandrillus in the seventh century Gengulphus martyr in the eighth century Gerard Voinchet 1640 95 canon regular of the Congregation of St Genevieve in Paris Jeanne Mance 1606 73 Mariet a priest who died in 1704 Joseph Urban Hanipaux a Jesuit The latter three were natives of the diocese and celebrated for their apostolic labors in Canada The diocese was also the birthplace of the theologian Nicolas de Clemenges fourteenth or fifteenth century who was canon and treasurer of the Church of Langres of the Gallican canonist Edmond Richer 1560 1631 of the Jesuit Pierre Lemoine fr author of an epic poem on St Louis and of the work La devotion aisee 1602 71 and of the philosopher Diderot 1713 84 The historian Raoul Glaber monk of Cluny Abbey who died in 1050 was at the priory of St Leger in this diocese when he experienced an apparition The Benedictine Poulangy Abbey was founded in the eleventh century Morimond Abbey the fourth foundation of Citeaux was established in 1125 by Odolric lord of Aigremont and Simon Count of Bassigny The Augustinian priory of the Val des Ecoliers was founded in 1212 at Luzy near Chaumont by four doctors of the Paris University who were led into solitude by a love of retreat Otho son of Leopold of Austria and Abbot of Morimond became Bishop of Freising in Bavaria and returned in 1154 to die a simple monk in Morimond The Scourging of the Alleluia now no longer observed was quite celebrated in this diocese in the Middle Ages On the day when according to tradition the Alleluia was omitted from the liturgy a top on which the word Alleluia was written was whipped out of the church to the singing of psalms by the choirboys who wished it bon voyage till Easter The Pardon of Chaumont is very celebrated In 1475 Jean de Montmirail a native of Chaumont and a particular friend of Pope Sixtus IV obtained from him that each time the feast of St John the Baptist fell on a Sunday the faithful who confessed their sins and visited the church of Chaumont should enjoy the jubilee indulgence Such was the origin of the great Pardon of Chaumont celebrated sixty one times between 1476 and 1905 At the end of the Middle Ages this Pardon gave rise to certain festivities Fifteen mysteries of the life of St John the Baptist were represented on stages erected throughout the town on the Sunday preceding the Pardon The display drew multitudes to the festivities which were finally called the deviltries of Chaumont by whom In the eighteenth century the Pardon became a purely religious ceremony In the Diocese of Langres is Vassy where in 1562 riots took place between Catholics and Protestants that gave rise to the wars of religion see Huguenots Numerous diocesan synods were held at Langres The most important were those of 1404 1421 1621 1628 1679 1725 1733 1741 1783 and six successive annual synods held by Pierre Louis Parisis from 1841 to 1846 These held a view to the re establishment of the synodal organization and also to impose on the clergy the use of the Roman Breviary see Prosper Gueranger Principal pilgrimages are Our Lady of Montrol near Arc en Barrois dating from the seventeenth century Our Lady of the Hermits at Cuves Our Lady of Victories at Bourmont and St Joseph Protector of the Souls in Purgatory at Maranville Suppressed by the Napoleonic Concordat of 1801 Langres was later united to the Diocese of Dijon The bishop bore the title of Dijon and Langres but the union was never quite complete There was a pro vicar general for the Haute Marne and two seminaries at Langres the petit seminaire from 1809 and the grand seminaire from 1817 The See of Langres was re established in 1817 by Pope Pius VII and King Louis XVIII Cesar Guillaume de La Luzerne its pre Revolution bishop was to be re appointed but the parliament did not ratify this agreement and the bishops of Dijon remained administrators of the Diocese of Langres until 6 October 1822 when the Papal Bull Paternae charitatis definitely re established the See The new Bishop of Langres governed 360 parishes of the old Diocese of Langres 70 of the old Diocese of Chalons 13 of the old Diocese of Besancon 13 of the old Diocese of Troyes and 94 of the old Diocese of Toul For the legends concerning the Apostolic origin of the See of Langres and the mission of St Benignus see Dijon Bishops editThe bishops until 1016 resided at Dijon and until 1731 exercised spiritual jurisdiction over the territory of the present day Diocese of Dijon Following is a list of bishops of Langres To 1000 edit c 200 Senator c 240 Justus c 264 Desiderius Didier Dizier Vacant 284 301 Martin 301 327 Honoratius 327 375 Urban of Langres 375 422 Paulinus I St Martin 411 420 422 448 Fraterne I 448 455 Fraterne II 456 484 Aprunculus St Aprunculus the friend of St Sidonius Apollinaris and his successor as Bishop of Clermont 485 490 Armentaire 490 493 Venantius 493 498 Paulinus II Paul 498 501 Patiens 501 506 Albiso 506 539 Gregory of Langres St Gregory 509 539 great grandfather of St Gregory of Tours who transferred the relics of St Benignus 539 572 Tetricus of Langres St Tetricus son of St Gregory 539 572 whose coadjutor was St Monderic brother of Arnoul of Metz 572 583 Papoul 583 595 Mummole le Bon 595 618 Miget Migetius 618 628 Modoald 628 650 Berthoald 650 660 Sigoald 660 670 Wulfrand 670 680 Godin 680 682 Adoin 682 690 Garibald 690 713 Heron 713 742 Eustorge Died c 759 Vaudier 752 772 Erlolf 1 772 778 Herulphe Herulphus or Ariolf 759 774 founder of Ellwangen Abbey 778 790 Baldric 790 820 Belto Betto 790 820 who helped to draw up the capitularies of Charlemagne 820 838 Alberic 838 856 Thibaut I 859 880 Isaac author of a collection of canons 880 888 Gilon de Tournus 888 890 Argrin first time 890 894 Thibaut II 894 910 Argrin second time 910 922 Garnier I 922 931 Gotzelin 932 Letheric 932 948 Heric or Hery 948 969 Achard 969 980 Vidric 980 1015 Bruno of Roucy who brought in the monks of Cluny to reform the abbeys of the diocese 1000 1300 edit 1016 1031 Lambert I who ceded to Robert II of France the lordship and countship of Dijon in 1016 1031 Richard 1031 1049 Hugo de Breteuil 1050 1065 Harduin 1065 1085 Raynard of Bar 1085 1111 Robert of Burgundy 1111 1113 Lambert II 1113 1125 Joceran de Brancion 2 1126 1136 Guillenc 1136 1138 Guillaume I de Sabran 1138 1163 Godefroy de la Roche Vanneau 1163 1179 Walter of Burgundy Gauthier of Burgundy 1179 1193 Manasses of Bar 1193 1199 Garnier II de Rochefort 1200 1205 Hutin de Vandeuvre 1205 1210 Robert de Chatillon 1210 1220 Guillaume de Joinville 1226 Archbishop of Reims 1220 1236 Hugues de Montreal 1236 1242 Robert de Torote 1246 Prince Bishop of Liege in 1240 and established the feast of the Blessed Sacrament Elect of Chalon 1226 1242 1250 Hugues de Rochecorbon 1250 1266 Guy de Rochefort 1266 1291 Guy de Geneve 1294 1305 Jean de Rochefort 1300 1500 edit 1305 1306 Bertrand de Got 1313 also Bishop of Agen uncle of Clement V 1306 1318 Guillaume de Durfort de Duras 1330 Archbishop of Rouen 1318 1324 Louis of Poitiers Valentinois 1327 also Bishop of Viviers and Bishop of Metz 1324 1329 Pierre de Rochefort 1329 1335 Jean de Chalon Arlay also Bishop of Basel 1335 1338 Guy Baudet Chancellor of France 1338 1342 Jean des Prez 1349 Bishop of Tournai 1342 1344 Jean d Arcy Bishop of Autun 1344 1345 Hugues de Pomarc 1345 1374 William of Poitiers 1374 1395 Bernard de la Tour d Auvergne 1395 1413 Louis I of Bar 3 Administrator from 1397 also Bishop of Poitiers 1391 1392 1423 1424 Bishop of Beauvais 1395 1397 Cardinal Deacon of S Agatha dei Goti 1409 Cardinal Priest of SS Dodici Apostoli 1412 Cardinal Bishop of Porto and S Rufina and Administrator of the Bishopric of Verdun 1413 1420 1424 1430 1413 1433 Charles de Poitiers 1433 Jean Gobillon c 1435 1433 1452 Philippe de Vienne 1452 1453 Jean d Aussy 1453 1481 Guy Bernard 1481 1497 Jean I d Amboise 1497 1512 Jean II d Amboise 1500 1700 edit 1512 1529 Michel Boudet 1530 1561 Claude de Longwy 1562 1565 Louis de Bourbon 1566 1568 Pierre de Gondi also Bishop of Paris 1573 1588 Abbot of Saint Aubin d Angers La Chaume Sainte Croix de Quimperle and Buzay 1569 1614 Charles de Perusse des Cars 1615 1655 Sebastien Zamet whose vicar general Charles de Condren became later Superior General of the Oratorians and gave the college of Langres to the Society of Jesus in 1630 1655 1670 Louis Barbier de La Riviere 1671 1695 Louis Armand de Simiane de Gordes 1696 1724 Francois Louis de Clermont Tonnerre 1700 1900 edit 1724 1733 Pierre de Pardaillan de Gondrin 1741 1770 Gilbert Gaspard de Montmorin de Saint Herem 1770 1802 Cesar Guillaume de La Luzerne 1791 1802 Hubert Wandilincourt vacancy 1817 1821 Cesar Guillaume de La Luzerne Gilbert Paul Aragones d Orcet 1823 1832 Jacques Marie Adrien Cesaire Mathieu 1832 1834 Archbishop of Besancon Pierre Louis Parisis 1834 1851 Bishop of Arras celebrated for the part he took in the Assembly of 1848 in the discussions on the liberty of teaching liberte d enseignement and for founding the ecclesiastical college of St Dizier even before the Loi Falloux see Falloux du Coudray was definitely passed Jean Jacques Marie Antoine Guerrin 1851 1877 Guillaume Marie Frederic Bouange 1877 1884 Alphonse Martin Larue 1884 1899 Sebastien Herscher 1899 1911 From 1900 edit Marie Augustin Olivier de Durfort de Civbac de Lorge 1911 1918 also Bishop of Poitiers Theophile Marie Louvard 1919 1924 Bishop of Coutances Jean Baptiste Thomas 1925 1929 Louis Joseph Fillon 1929 1934 Archbishop of Bourges Georges Eugene Emile Choquet 1935 1938 Bishop of Tarbes and Lourdes Firmin Lamy 1938 1939 Louis Chiron 1939 1964 Alfred Joseph Atton 1964 1975 Lucien Daloz 1975 1980 Archbishop of Besancon Leon Aime Taverdet F M C 1981 1999 Philippe Jean Marie Joseph Gueneley 1999 2014 Joseph de Metz Noblat since 2014 4 See also editCatholic Church in FranceReferences edit Odden Per Einar Den salige Herulf av Ellwangen 730 815 Den katolske kirke December 28 2015 Viton de Saint Allais Nicolas 1876 Nobiliaire Universel de France ou Recueil general des genealogies historiques des maisons nobles de ce royaume Bibliotheque nationale de France in French Paris Librairie Ancienne et Moderne Bachelin Deflorenne p 449 Retrieved 25 May 2021 Richard Vaughan Philip the Bold The Boydell Press 2009 164 Archived copy Archived from the original on 2014 02 03 Retrieved 2022 07 16 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Sources and external links edit in French Centre national des Archives de l Eglise de France L Episcopat francais depuis 1919 retrieved 2016 12 24 47 51 35 N 5 20 05 E 47 8598 N 5 33469 E 47 8598 5 33469 nbsp This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Herbermann Charles ed 1913 Langres Catholic Encyclopedia New York Robert Appleton Company Portals nbsp Catholicism nbsp France Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Roman Catholic Diocese of Langres amp oldid 1191767306, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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