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Roman Catholic Diocese of Viseu

The Portuguese Catholic diocese of Viseu (Latin: Dioecesis Visensis) is a suffragan of the archdiocese of Braga.[1] Its see at Viseu is in the Centro Region. The current bishop is António Luciano dos Santos Costa.

Diocese of Viseu

Dioecesis Visensis

Diocese de Viseu
Location
CountryPortugal
Ecclesiastical provinceBraga
MetropolitanArchdiocese of Braga
Statistics
Area3,400 km2 (1,300 sq mi)
Population
- Total
- Catholics (including non-members)
(as of 2010)
270,000
261,700 (96.9%)
Information
DenominationRoman Catholic
Sui iuris churchLatin Church
RiteRoman Rite
Established572
CathedralViseu Cathedral
Patron saintSt Theotonius
Current leadership
PopeFrancis
BishopAntónio Luciano dos Santos Costa
Metropolitan ArchbishopJorge IV
Map

The Ecclesiastical Province of Braga (orange and yellow) includes the Diocese of Viseu.
Website
Website of the Diocese

History

The see at Viseu dates from the sixth century and including the doubtful prelates, and those elected but not confirmed, it has had eighty- three bishops. The list begins with Remissol (572-585) who attended the Second Council of Braga, but was exiled by the Arian King Leovigild. Tunila succeeded him and abjured Arianism at the Third Council of Toledo; bishops of Viseu were present at the fourth, sixth, eighth, twelfth, and thirteenth councils of Toledo.

There was a vacancy of fifteen years from 665 to 680; Theofredo was bishop in 693. Then, following the Muslim conquest, Viseu remained without a bishop for nearly two centuries. Theodomiro assisted at the consecration of the church of Santiago de Compostela in 876, and at the Council of Oviedo in 877 and was followed by Gundemiro in 905. In this century Vizseu was under Islamic rule for 76 years, and at first had no bishop, but afterwards its prelates, Gomes and Sisnando (1020-1064), resided in Oviedo. From 1110 to 1144 the diocese was governed by priors appointed by the bishops of Coimbra, in virtue of a Bull of Pope Paschal II; among them was Saint Theotonius, afterwards patron of the city. The line of bishops began again with Odorio.

Nicolau (1192), a future canon regular, studied in Paris and there met the future Pope Innocent III, who after his election to the papacy received him at Rome and recommended him to the queen for his learning and modesty. Martinho was appointed in 1230; after his death the see remained vacant until 1250, when Pedro Gonçalves was confirmed in it. Matheus I (1254) took part in the long conflicts between Crown and Church, which had begun in the reign of King Afonso II, and in defence of ecclesiastical immunities went with other bishops to Rome, dying at Viterbo. After eight years, during which Portugal was under interdicts, Matheus II filled the see, and he was followed by Egas I (1259), an active reformer, and Martinho II (1313). This prelate carried out important work in the cathedral, which dates at least from 830, when King Ferdinand the Great recaptured the city from the Moors; it was almost reconstructed early in the twelfth century. Gonçalo de Figueiredo (1323), who had been married before entering Church service, is remembered as the founder of many noble families; his successor Miguel Vivas (1330) served as chancellor to Afonso IV.

After João III (1375), "of good memory", came two prelates, Pedro II and João IV, whose rule was brief on account of the Great Schism, the former being deposed by Pope Urban VI. A fifth João followed in the see in 1392 and, being highly esteemed by the king, was chosen godfather of Prince Henry the Navigator, and received from the monarch the gift of a Roman tower for the cathedral bells. Luís do Amaral, the only bishop native of the city, represented Portugal at the Council of Basel, and, embracing the cause of the antipope Felix V, was sent on various embassies; he returned however to the lawful obedience before his death.

Luís Coutinho II (1438) was promoted to the diocese of Coimbra in 1446, being followed by João Vicente (founder of the Loyos, a congregation of secular canons of St. John), who was known as "the holy bishop". He reformed the Order of Christ and gave it new statutes by order of Prince Henry, Duke of Viseu, the grand-master. Cardinal d'Alpedrinha, the richest and most influential of Portuguese prelates, lived at Rome from 1479 and dying there in 1508 was buried in his splendid chapel in Santa Maria del Popolo.

Diego Ortiz de Villegas (1507), a Castilian, was confessor of three kings and renowned as a theologian, orator, and astrologer. He took part in the Junta called by King Manuel to consider the offer Christopher Columbus had made to discover the sea route to the Indies by sailing west and procured its rejection, which transferred from Portugal to Spain the European discovery of America. He built a new and splendid front to the cathedral and consecrated it in June, 1516.

In 1520, at the age of eleven, Cardinal-Infante Afonso, sixth son of King Manuel I, became Bishop-elect of Viseu,[2] and in his time books began to be kept for the registration of births, deaths, and marriages, a custom afterwards enjoined by the Council of Trent. He was followed, among others, by Cardinal Miguel da Silva (1527), and Cardinal Alessandro Farnese (1547), who never came to the diocese of which he was the Administrator, a function he resigned in 1552.[3] Gonçalo Pinheiro (appointed in Consistory by Pope Julius III on June 27, 1552), classical scholar, ambassador to France, and subsequently bishop, held a synod in 1555, and made notable additions to the cathedral. He died in November, 1557. Jorge de Ataíde (appointed on July 23, 1568) assisted at the Council of Trent and in the reform of the Missal and Breviary and built the cathedral sacristy and part of the bishop's palace; of noble family and a pious prelate, he refused four archbishoprics and left his residuary estate to the poor.

Miguel de Castro (1579), also a noble, was Viceroy of Portugal during the Philippine Dynasty, and renowned for almsdeeds. On his transfer to the archdiocese of Lisbon, Nuno de Noronha, son of the Count of Odemira, became bishop (1585) and built the seminary, doing the same for the diocese of Guarda to which he was promoted. He was a notable reformer of the clergy, and lived like the great fidalgo he was. The Dominican and Greek scholar Antonio de Sousa (1595) ruled only two years, being followed by João de Bragança, a model courtier and prelate, who gave his wealth to the poor. João Manual (1610) son of the Count of Castanheira, after a personal visitation of the diocese in 1611, drew up constitutions which were approved at a synod in 1614 and he subsequently became Archbishop of Lisbon and viceroy. João de Portugal (1626), a Dominican of noble birth and saintly life, made a visitation of the diocese and finding most of his people ignorant of Christian doctrine, wrote and distributed a summary of it. It was remarked that he gave nothing to his relations, saying that the income of the diocese should be spent upon it and its children, the poor. Bernardino de Senna (1629), a Franciscan, had held important posts in his order in different parts of Portugal, where he travelled on foot begging alms, and he had refused two mitres. Becoming general, he lived at Madrid with free entry to the palace, although dressed in rags. Pope Urban VIII named him minister general, and at the age of fifty-eight when he had visited and governed 6000 convents and 280,000 subjects, King Philip presented him to the See of Viseu.

Miguel de Castro IV (1633) never took possession, but Dinis de Melo e Castro (1636) in his two years' rule was diligent in his pastoral office, especially in visitations, and was a great benefactor of the Misericórdias of the diocese. For the next thirty-two years the see remained vacant, owing to the war with Spain following on the restoration of Portuguese independence. Through Spanish pressure, the popes refused to confirm the prelates named by King João IV and during eleven years Portugal and his empire had only one bishop, the others, appointed under the Philips, having died. This energetic man, who lived until one hundred and nine, is said to have ordained 20,000 priests and confirmed a million persons. Finally peace was made with Spain and in 1671 Manuel de Saldanha became bishop but died three months later and in 1673 João de Mello, a noble and man of greatest austerity, succeeded. He rebuilt the chancel of the cathedral, convened a synod in 1681, added to the constitutions of the diocese, and employed the Oratorians in giving missions. Ricardo Russell, an Englishman, chaplain to Queen Catherine of Braganza, wife of Charles II of England, was translated from the diocese of Portalegre in 1685 and established that congregation in Viseu. He left the reputation of being a man of zeal and illustration, and though a severe disciplinarian, of ready wit.

Jerónimo Soares (1694), a benefactor of the Misericórdia, convoked a synod in 1699 and reformed the diocesan constitutions and those of many brotherhoods and confraternities. After his death the see remained vacant twenty years owing to differences between King João V and Rome. In 1740 Júlio Francisco de Oliveira was appointed. José do Menino Jesus (1783), a Carmelite, was a lover of art, as he showed by the statues he presented to the cathedral. He made two visitations of the diocese and was succeeded by Francisco de Azevedo (1792), a prelate of great modesty and charity, who instituted five suburban parishes annexed to the cathedral and subsidized the rectors out of his own funds. He gave a new organ costing 20,000 crusados to the cathedral and laid the foundation-stone of the new hospital of the Misericórdia. This rule was troubled by the Peninsular War and in 1810 British troops occupied his palace and other ecclesiastical buildings.

Francisco Alexandre Lobo (1810), was minister under King Miguel and, when the Liberals triumphed in 1834, had to emigrate to France where he remained ten years. The new Government refused to recognize the vicar-general to whom he had confided the diocese, naming another, which gave rise to a schism. José Xavier de Cerveira e Sousa (1859) abandoned the diocese through his inability to secure obedience from his priests in the matter of clerical dress and was followed by António Alves Martins (1862), a Franciscan who espoused the Liberal cause and fought in the civil war against King Miguel. He dedicated his life to politics and was journalist, deputy, peer, and prime minister. He was a strong opponent of the Papal infallibility at the First Vatican Council and his independence gained him the admiration of the Portuguese Liberals, who erected a statue of him in Viseu.

He was followed by José Dias Correia de Carvalho (1883), translated from the see of Cabo Verde, where he was the first bishop to visit all the churches of the archipelago. António Alves Ferreira dos Santos was his immediate successor.[4]

Notes

  1. ^ Catholic Hierarchy page
  2. ^ He had a papal dispensation to hold the diocese while below the canonical age for consecration, but it is not known when he was consecrated, or by whom. He did consecrate his brother, Henrique, on April 13, 1539. See Henrique, Cardinal de Portugal (Catholic-Hierarchy)
  3. ^ Compare G. Gulik and C. Eubel, Hierarchia catholica III editio altera (curavit J. Schmitz-Kallenberg) (Monasterii 1935), p. 335, which quotes the Acta Consistorialia, that Farnese was only Administrator of the Diocese, not the Bishop. See also: Luis de Salazar y Castro, Indice de las glorias de la Casa Farnese (Madrid 1716), p. 240, who already makes it clear that the post was that of Administrator, not Bishop. Farnese collected the income, but, not being consecrated, could not perform episcopal functions. Cardinal Alessandro wrote a letter to the King of Portugal, Manuel I, upon his appointment, informing him that he would not be able to visit the diocese personally: Annibal Caro, Delle Lettere del Commendatore Annibal Caro scritte a nome del Cardinale Alessandro Farnese I (Milano 1807), p. 8. In the summer of 1549, he wrote to the Papal Nuncio in Portugal on the subject of the "frutti di Viseo", to ensure that the pension was safe and that it was paid in Rome as usual: Caro, I, pp. 105-106. His income from Viseu was continued after his resignation as a pension: Gulik and Eubel, p. 335 notes 6 and 8.
  4. ^ Catholic Encyclopedia article (article by Edgar Prestage)

External links

  • GCatholic.org page
  • (in Portuguese) Official page

  This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainHerbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company. {{cite encyclopedia}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)

roman, catholic, diocese, viseu, portuguese, catholic, diocese, viseu, latin, dioecesis, visensis, suffragan, archdiocese, braga, viseu, centro, region, current, bishop, antónio, luciano, santos, costa, diocese, viseudioecesis, visensisdiocese, viseuviseu, cat. The Portuguese Catholic diocese of Viseu Latin Dioecesis Visensis is a suffragan of the archdiocese of Braga 1 Its see at Viseu is in the Centro Region The current bishop is Antonio Luciano dos Santos Costa Diocese of ViseuDioecesis VisensisDiocese de ViseuViseu CathedralLocationCountryPortugalEcclesiastical provinceBragaMetropolitanArchdiocese of BragaStatisticsArea3 400 km2 1 300 sq mi Population Total Catholics including non members as of 2010 270 000261 700 96 9 InformationDenominationRoman CatholicSui iuris churchLatin ChurchRiteRoman RiteEstablished572CathedralViseu CathedralPatron saintSt TheotoniusCurrent leadershipPopeFrancisBishopAntonio Luciano dos Santos CostaMetropolitan ArchbishopJorge IVMapThe Ecclesiastical Province of Braga orange and yellow includes the Diocese of Viseu WebsiteWebsite of the DioceseHistory EditThis section may require cleanup to meet Wikipedia s quality standards The specific problem is missing multiple citations Please help improve this section if you can August 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message The see at Viseu dates from the sixth century and including the doubtful prelates and those elected but not confirmed it has had eighty three bishops The list begins with Remissol 572 585 who attended the Second Council of Braga but was exiled by the Arian King Leovigild Tunila succeeded him and abjured Arianism at the Third Council of Toledo bishops of Viseu were present at the fourth sixth eighth twelfth and thirteenth councils of Toledo There was a vacancy of fifteen years from 665 to 680 Theofredo was bishop in 693 Then following the Muslim conquest Viseu remained without a bishop for nearly two centuries Theodomiro assisted at the consecration of the church of Santiago de Compostela in 876 and at the Council of Oviedo in 877 and was followed by Gundemiro in 905 In this century Vizseu was under Islamic rule for 76 years and at first had no bishop but afterwards its prelates Gomes and Sisnando 1020 1064 resided in Oviedo From 1110 to 1144 the diocese was governed by priors appointed by the bishops of Coimbra in virtue of a Bull of Pope Paschal II among them was Saint Theotonius afterwards patron of the city The line of bishops began again with Odorio Nicolau 1192 a future canon regular studied in Paris and there met the future Pope Innocent III who after his election to the papacy received him at Rome and recommended him to the queen for his learning and modesty Martinho was appointed in 1230 after his death the see remained vacant until 1250 when Pedro Goncalves was confirmed in it Matheus I 1254 took part in the long conflicts between Crown and Church which had begun in the reign of King Afonso II and in defence of ecclesiastical immunities went with other bishops to Rome dying at Viterbo After eight years during which Portugal was under interdicts Matheus II filled the see and he was followed by Egas I 1259 an active reformer and Martinho II 1313 This prelate carried out important work in the cathedral which dates at least from 830 when King Ferdinand the Great recaptured the city from the Moors it was almost reconstructed early in the twelfth century Goncalo de Figueiredo 1323 who had been married before entering Church service is remembered as the founder of many noble families his successor Miguel Vivas 1330 served as chancellor to Afonso IV After Joao III 1375 of good memory came two prelates Pedro II and Joao IV whose rule was brief on account of the Great Schism the former being deposed by Pope Urban VI A fifth Joao followed in the see in 1392 and being highly esteemed by the king was chosen godfather of Prince Henry the Navigator and received from the monarch the gift of a Roman tower for the cathedral bells Luis do Amaral the only bishop native of the city represented Portugal at the Council of Basel and embracing the cause of the antipope Felix V was sent on various embassies he returned however to the lawful obedience before his death Luis Coutinho II 1438 was promoted to the diocese of Coimbra in 1446 being followed by Joao Vicente founder of the Loyos a congregation of secular canons of St John who was known as the holy bishop He reformed the Order of Christ and gave it new statutes by order of Prince Henry Duke of Viseu the grand master Cardinal d Alpedrinha the richest and most influential of Portuguese prelates lived at Rome from 1479 and dying there in 1508 was buried in his splendid chapel in Santa Maria del Popolo Diego Ortiz de Villegas 1507 a Castilian was confessor of three kings and renowned as a theologian orator and astrologer He took part in the Junta called by King Manuel to consider the offer Christopher Columbus had made to discover the sea route to the Indies by sailing west and procured its rejection which transferred from Portugal to Spain the European discovery of America He built a new and splendid front to the cathedral and consecrated it in June 1516 In 1520 at the age of eleven Cardinal Infante Afonso sixth son of King Manuel I became Bishop elect of Viseu 2 and in his time books began to be kept for the registration of births deaths and marriages a custom afterwards enjoined by the Council of Trent He was followed among others by Cardinal Miguel da Silva 1527 and Cardinal Alessandro Farnese 1547 who never came to the diocese of which he was the Administrator a function he resigned in 1552 3 Goncalo Pinheiro appointed in Consistory by Pope Julius III on June 27 1552 classical scholar ambassador to France and subsequently bishop held a synod in 1555 and made notable additions to the cathedral He died in November 1557 Jorge de Ataide appointed on July 23 1568 assisted at the Council of Trent and in the reform of the Missal and Breviary and built the cathedral sacristy and part of the bishop s palace of noble family and a pious prelate he refused four archbishoprics and left his residuary estate to the poor Miguel de Castro 1579 also a noble was Viceroy of Portugal during the Philippine Dynasty and renowned for almsdeeds On his transfer to the archdiocese of Lisbon Nuno de Noronha son of the Count of Odemira became bishop 1585 and built the seminary doing the same for the diocese of Guarda to which he was promoted He was a notable reformer of the clergy and lived like the great fidalgo he was The Dominican and Greek scholar Antonio de Sousa 1595 ruled only two years being followed by Joao de Braganca a model courtier and prelate who gave his wealth to the poor Joao Manual 1610 son of the Count of Castanheira after a personal visitation of the diocese in 1611 drew up constitutions which were approved at a synod in 1614 and he subsequently became Archbishop of Lisbon and viceroy Joao de Portugal 1626 a Dominican of noble birth and saintly life made a visitation of the diocese and finding most of his people ignorant of Christian doctrine wrote and distributed a summary of it It was remarked that he gave nothing to his relations saying that the income of the diocese should be spent upon it and its children the poor Bernardino de Senna 1629 a Franciscan had held important posts in his order in different parts of Portugal where he travelled on foot begging alms and he had refused two mitres Becoming general he lived at Madrid with free entry to the palace although dressed in rags Pope Urban VIII named him minister general and at the age of fifty eight when he had visited and governed 6000 convents and 280 000 subjects King Philip presented him to the See of Viseu Miguel de Castro IV 1633 never took possession but Dinis de Melo e Castro 1636 in his two years rule was diligent in his pastoral office especially in visitations and was a great benefactor of the Misericordias of the diocese For the next thirty two years the see remained vacant owing to the war with Spain following on the restoration of Portuguese independence Through Spanish pressure the popes refused to confirm the prelates named by King Joao IV and during eleven years Portugal and his empire had only one bishop the others appointed under the Philips having died This energetic man who lived until one hundred and nine is said to have ordained 20 000 priests and confirmed a million persons Finally peace was made with Spain and in 1671 Manuel de Saldanha became bishop but died three months later and in 1673 Joao de Mello a noble and man of greatest austerity succeeded He rebuilt the chancel of the cathedral convened a synod in 1681 added to the constitutions of the diocese and employed the Oratorians in giving missions Ricardo Russell an Englishman chaplain to Queen Catherine of Braganza wife of Charles II of England was translated from the diocese of Portalegre in 1685 and established that congregation in Viseu He left the reputation of being a man of zeal and illustration and though a severe disciplinarian of ready wit Jeronimo Soares 1694 a benefactor of the Misericordia convoked a synod in 1699 and reformed the diocesan constitutions and those of many brotherhoods and confraternities After his death the see remained vacant twenty years owing to differences between King Joao V and Rome In 1740 Julio Francisco de Oliveira was appointed Jose do Menino Jesus 1783 a Carmelite was a lover of art as he showed by the statues he presented to the cathedral He made two visitations of the diocese and was succeeded by Francisco de Azevedo 1792 a prelate of great modesty and charity who instituted five suburban parishes annexed to the cathedral and subsidized the rectors out of his own funds He gave a new organ costing 20 000 crusados to the cathedral and laid the foundation stone of the new hospital of the Misericordia This rule was troubled by the Peninsular War and in 1810 British troops occupied his palace and other ecclesiastical buildings Francisco Alexandre Lobo 1810 was minister under King Miguel and when the Liberals triumphed in 1834 had to emigrate to France where he remained ten years The new Government refused to recognize the vicar general to whom he had confided the diocese naming another which gave rise to a schism Jose Xavier de Cerveira e Sousa 1859 abandoned the diocese through his inability to secure obedience from his priests in the matter of clerical dress and was followed by Antonio Alves Martins 1862 a Franciscan who espoused the Liberal cause and fought in the civil war against King Miguel He dedicated his life to politics and was journalist deputy peer and prime minister He was a strong opponent of the Papal infallibility at the First Vatican Council and his independence gained him the admiration of the Portuguese Liberals who erected a statue of him in Viseu He was followed by Jose Dias Correia de Carvalho 1883 translated from the see of Cabo Verde where he was the first bishop to visit all the churches of the archipelago Antonio Alves Ferreira dos Santos was his immediate successor 4 Notes Edit Catholic Hierarchy page He had a papal dispensation to hold the diocese while below the canonical age for consecration but it is not known when he was consecrated or by whom He did consecrate his brother Henrique on April 13 1539 See Henrique Cardinal de Portugal Catholic Hierarchy Compare G Gulik and C Eubel Hierarchia catholica III editio altera curavit J Schmitz Kallenberg Monasterii 1935 p 335 which quotes the Acta Consistorialia that Farnese was only Administrator of the Diocese not the Bishop See also Luis de Salazar y Castro Indice de las glorias de la Casa Farnese Madrid 1716 p 240 who already makes it clear that the post was that of Administrator not Bishop Farnese collected the income but not being consecrated could not perform episcopal functions Cardinal Alessandro wrote a letter to the King of Portugal Manuel I upon his appointment informing him that he would not be able to visit the diocese personally Annibal Caro Delle Lettere del Commendatore Annibal Caro scritte a nome del Cardinale Alessandro Farnese I Milano 1807 p 8 In the summer of 1549 he wrote to the Papal Nuncio in Portugal on the subject of the frutti di Viseo to ensure that the pension was safe and that it was paid in Rome as usual Caro I pp 105 106 His income from Viseu was continued after his resignation as a pension Gulik and Eubel p 335 notes 6 and 8 Catholic Encyclopedia article article by Edgar Prestage External links EditGCatholic org page in Portuguese Official page This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Herbermann Charles ed 1913 Catholic Encyclopedia New York Robert Appleton Company a href Template Cite encyclopedia html title Template Cite encyclopedia cite encyclopedia a Missing or empty title help Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Roman Catholic Diocese of Viseu amp oldid 1112554836, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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