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Roman Catholic Diocese of Mende

The Diocese of Mende (Latin: Dioecoesis Mimatensis; French: Diocèse de Mende) is a Latin diocese of the Catholic Church in France. The diocese covers the department of Lozère.

Diocese of Mende

Dioecesis Mimatensis

Diocèse de Mende
Location
CountryFrance
Ecclesiastical provinceMontpellier
MetropolitanArchdiocese of Montpellier
Statistics
Area5,180 km2 (2,000 sq mi)
Population
- Total
- Catholics
(as of 2013)
78,400 (est.)
60,800 (est.) (77.6%)
Information
DenominationRoman Catholic
Sui iuris churchLatin Church
RiteRoman Rite
Established3rd Century
CathedralCathedral Basilica of Notre Dame and St. Privat in Mende
Patron saintSaint Privat
Secular priests75 (diocesan)
1 (Religious Orders)
5 Permanent Deacons
Current leadership
PopeFrancis
BishopBenoît Bertrand
Metropolitan ArchbishopNorbert Turini
Website
Website of the Diocese

The diocese was already in existence in 314, since Genialis, a deacon of the Church of Gabalum (Gévaudan), was present at the Council of Arles in that year.[1] Louis Duchesne chooses to place the earliest known bishop, Privatus, before 314, though he points out that his date depends on a synchronicity with an invasion of Aquitaine by a band of German marauders under the leadership of King Chrocus; Chrocus' date is variously placed between the third and fifth century.[2] The notion that a Saint Severianus was the first apostle of the Gevaudan, or that Privatus held the same honor, and that the whole country was converted to Christianity in one stroke, has long been exploded, by a demonstration that the legends are based on representations made to Pope Urban V in the 14th century to obtain indulgences.[3]

The diocese of Mende was a suffragan of Bourges under the Ancien Régime. When it was re-established by the Concordat of 1801 it became a suffragan of the Archdiocese of Lyon and united with the department of Ardèche, which however it lost again in 1822 by the creation of the Diocese of Viviers, at which point Mende became suffragan to Albi. On December 16, 2002, Mende was made a suffragan to Montpellier.

The Bishop has his seat at the Cathedral Basilica of Notre Dame and St. Privat in Mende. Funds to begin the cathedral were supplied by Pope Urban V (1362–1370).[4] Before the French Revolution, the Cathedral Chapter consisted of a Praepositus (Provost), the Archdeacon and the Precentor (the dignities, dignités) and fifteen canons. There were approximately 200 parishes, and one abbey.[5]

In 2019, the diocese, which is mostly rural, had a total population of 76,300, of whom 72.1% were claimed as Roman Catholics. They are served by 59 priests, and there were 135 parishes.[6]

St Privatus, patron of the diocese

History edit

According to late legends belonging to the Limousin cycle relating to St. Martial, he passed through the territory of the Gabali (Gévaudan) of which Mende is the capital, and appointed as its first bishop, St. Severian his disciple, about the beginning of the first century. The first bishop known to history is Saint Privatus, who according to Gregory of Tours, died in a grotto of Mount Mimmat, a victim of the ill treatment he suffered at the time of the invasion of the Alamanni under their King Chrocus. Gregory of Tours places this event about 260 (though Fredegarius puts the invasion of Chrocus at 407). Louis Duchesne, however, places the invasion of Chrocus and the death of St. Privatus at the beginning of the reign of Constantine, c. 312, perhaps before the Council of Arles. It is certain that there was an organized church in the country of the Gabali from about 314, since in that year it was represented at the Council of Arles.[7] Other bishops of the Gabali, who doubtless resided at Javoulx, near Mende, were: Hilarius, present at the Council of Auvergne (Clermont) in 535,[8] and founder of the monastery of Sainte-Enimie, and whose personality has been wrongly described in certain traditions concerning Saint Illier[clarification needed]; and St. Frézal of Canourgue (ninth century), assassinated, it is said, under Louis le Débonnaire.

Towards the year 1000 Mende became the seat of the bishopric. Under Bishop Aldebert de Tournel (1151–1186), Pope Alexander III passed some days at Mende in the last two weeks of July 1162.[9] Bishop Aldebert wrote two works, on the passion and on the miracles of St. Privatus whose relics were discovered at Mende in 1170.[10] Bishop Adalbert's most noteworthy achievement, however, was his negotiation of an act of fealty with King Louis VII of France, sometimes called the 'golden bull' or act of paréage of 1166.[11] King Louis noted that it was the first time that a bishop of Gévaudan had ever made his submission to a king of France. He also recognized the powers of the bishop, not only in the spiritual sphere, but also ad iudicandum in gladio (judging with the sword), and stated that the agreement in no way was to be taken to diminish the privileges already enjoyed by the bishops. The King surrendered to the bishop and his successors all the regalian rights with reference to his crown.[12]

In 1278, under Bishop Stephanus (III), the Dominicans established a convent in Maruéjols, in the diocese of Mende.[13]

The city of Mende was not important enough to become the capital of the Gévaudan until the act of paréage of King Philip IV of 3 February 1307,[14] which granted the bishops the title of Count and the high Seigneurie of Gévaudan. This act increased their temporal authority and brought the submission of all of the seigneurs of the region.[15]

Estates of Gévaudan edit

The territory of Lodève had its own Estates from an early period, and it retained it even after it became part of the Estates of Languedoc in the fourteenth century. The Bishop of Mende was the President of the Estates of Gévaudan; the First Estate (clergy) were represented by a Canon of the Cathedral (representing the Chapter), the Dom d'Aubrac, the Prior of Saint-Enemie, the Prior of Langogne, the Abbot of Chambons, the Commander of Palhers, and the Commander of Saint-Jean. The Second Estate (nobility) were represented by the eight Barons who were Peers of Gévaudon (d'Apchier, de Peyre, de Cenaret, du Tournel, de Randon, de Florac, de Mercoeur, de Canilhac), twelve gentlemen (the Seigneurs d'Allene, de Montauroux, de Saint-Alban, de Montrodat, de Mirandol, de Séverac, de Barre, de Gabriac, de Portes, de Servières, d'Arpajon, and the Consuls of la Garde-Guérin); the Third Estate were represented by the three Consuls of Mende, the three Consuls of Marvejols (when the meeting took place at Marvejols), and a Consul (or deputy) from each of sixteen communities. The Estates met annually, alternately at Mende and at Marvejols. The Estates opened with a procession from the Episcopal Palace to the Cathedral for a Mass of the Holy Spirit, and closed with a Te Deum and episcopal blessing.[16]

Some individual bishops edit

Mende had later as bishops, Guillaume Durand (1285–1296), a Doctor of Laws (Bologna) and teacher of law at Modena, author of "Speculum juris", and of the "Rationale divinorum officiorum";[17] he was secretary of the Second Council of Lyon in 1274. His nephew, Durand le Jeune (1296–1328) who negotiated the "Paréage" with King Philip, definitively settled the respective rights of king and bishop in the Gévaudan; he left a work on the general councils and on the reform of abuses. Guillaume de Grimoard, born about 1310 at the castle of Grisac near Mende, the fief of his father Guillaume de Grimoard, Seigneur de Grisac, Bellegarde, and Montbel. He was sickly and deformed, but was restored at the prayer of his godfather, Elzéar de Sabran, who had come to baptise him.[18] Elected pope in 1362 under the name of Urban V, he administered the Diocese of Mende himself from 1368 to 1370, since it had been left vacant by the transfer of his nephew to the See of Avignon.

Among the bishops of Mende were: Pietro Riario (1473–1474), nephew of Sixtus IV and a cardinal; Giuliano della Rovere (1478–1483) later pope under the name of Julius II; and his nephews, Cardinal Clement della Rovere (1483–1504) and Francesco della Rovere (1504–1524).

Urban II is said to have visited the Diocese of Mende in 1095, and to have had consecrated in his presence the church of the monastery of Saint Sauveur de Chirac or of Monastier, which had been founded in 1062 and was a dependency of the Abbey of Saint Victor in Marseille.[19] There is no actual evidence for this story, which is retailed by local historians, and which is rejected by Jean-Baptiste-Étienne Pascal.[20]

Plague and Protestants edit

In 1374 Mende was stricken by the plague, and of the 160 clerics attached to the cathedral in one capacity or another, eighty were killed. The epidemic returned in 1399 and again in 1435, and in 1460 the suffering lasted from June through mid-August. It returned in 1482, and in 1490 the Cathedral Chapter left the city of Mende for Marvejols, some seventeen miles to the west. On 21 April 1504 the Canons held a chapter meeting in an open field along the Lot River in order to avoid the plague. The plague returned in 1523 and 1532. In 1533 the Grand Archdeacon of Mende donated a considerable sum of money to build a small hospital for victims of the peste, outside the walls of the city, a project which was immediately carried out by the Consuls of the city. The Bishop of Mende cooperated by contributing a sum of money. In 1578, during the wars with the Huguenots, Mende suffered from another 'peste' which carried off 2,000 inhabitants.[21]

Mende was captured for the first time by the Huguenots in 1562. The adventurer Mathieu Merle,[22] a native of Uzès and leader of the Huguenots in Gévaudan from 1573 to 1581, led into the region bands of Protestants raised from among vagabonds in Périgord, Querci, and the Haut-Rouergue. They were masters of Mende for eighteen months in 1580 and 1581. They destroyed a great part of the cathedral that Urban V had caused to be rebuilt.[23] In the village and Chateau de Serverette he and his band massacred twenty-four priests.[24]

The Diocese of Mende was one of the regions where the insurrection of the Huguenot Camisards, peasants and rural craftsmen of the Cévennes, broke out at the beginning of the eighteenth century and continued c. 1702 to 1710.[25]

In 1720 and 1721 the last of the great epidemics hit the Gévaudan. At Mende 1061 died; at Marvejols 1800 persons died, out of a total population of 3500; in the parish of Canourgne 945 died.[26]

Cardinal Dominique de la Rochefoucauld, Archbishop of Rouen, who presided in 1789 over the last assembly of the clergy of France, was born in 1712 at Saint Chély d'Apcher, in the diocese. The chemist Jean-Antoine Chaptal (1756–1832), who attended the Collège de Mende and then Riez, was one of the last of those who profited by the scholarships founded by Urban V for twelve young students at Montpellier.[27]

Revolution and Church of the Concordat (1789–1905) edit

In 1790 the National Constituent Assembly decided to bring the French church under the control of the State. Civil government of the provinces was to be reorganized into new units called 'départements', originally intended to be 83 or 84 in number. The dioceses of the Roman Catholic Church were to be reduced in number, to coincide as much as possible with the new departments.[28] The Diocese of Mende found itself swept into the Constitutional Diocese of Lozère.

Clergy would need to take an oath of allegiance to the State and its Constitution, specified by the Civil Constitution of the Clergy, and they would become salaried officials of the State. Both bishops and priests would be elected by special 'electors' in each department. This meant schism, since bishops would no longer need to be approved (preconised) by the Papacy; the transfer of bishops, likewise, which had formerly been the exclusive prerogative of the pope in canon law, would be the privilege of the State; the election of bishops no longer lay with the Cathedral Chapters (which were all abolished), or other responsible clergy, or the Pope, but with electors who did not even have to be Catholics or Christians.[29] All monasteries, convents and religious orders in France were dissolved, and their members were released from their vows by order of the National Constituent Assembly (which was uncanonical); their property was confiscated "for the public good", and sold to pay the bills of the French government.[30] Cathedral Chapters were also dissolved.[31]

Since Bishop de Castellane refused to take the required oath, his throne was declared vacant by the French government. An election was therefore ordered, and the Electors of Lozère therefore assembled, or rather 157 of the 229 approved electors assembled on 20 March 1791. Next day there were only 148 electors, and in the evening only 124. 52 of the electors demanded changes in the oath that they would have to take which would protect the power of the Church in spiritual matters; when they were refused, they departed, leaving only 77 electors. On the third ballot on 22 March, Étienne Nogaret, the sixty-five year old curé of the church of Canourgue, was elected. His election was certified by the Constitutional Metropolitan of the Côtes-de-la-Méditerranée Charles-Benoît Roux of Aix on 29 April, and he was consecrated in Paris on 8 May 1791 by Constitutional Bishop Jean-Baptiste Gobel.[32] The consecration was valid, but it was also uncanonical, schismatic, and blasphemous.

When Bishop de Castellane declined to leave the diocese or to vacate the Château de Chanac, Nogaret denounced him to the Minister of the Interior and the President of the Assembly. De Castellane was arrested and executed on 2 September 1792 at Versailles. Nogaret resigned his episcopal and priestly functions, due to age (he said), on 11 January 1794, during the Reign of Reason, and retired to a house in Canourgue. In 1800 he made an attempt to enter the cathedral, but was rebuffed by crowds of inhabitants of Mende. He was dismissed in 1801 and lived with his sister in Canourge until his death on 30 March 1804. He was unrepentant.[33]

Napoleon, Pius VII, and the Concordat edit

After the signing of the Concordat of 1801 with First Consul Napoleon Bonaparte, Pope Pius VII demanded the resignation of all bishops in France, in order to leave no doubt as to who was a legitimate bishop and who was a Constitutional imposter.[34] He then immediately abolished all of the dioceses in France, for the same reason. Then he began to restore the old Ancien Régime dioceses, or most of them, though not with the same boundaries as before the Revolution. The diocese of Mende was revived by Pope Pius VII in his bull Qui Christi Domini of 29 November 1801.[35]

On 11 April 1802, First Consul Napoleon Bonaparte named Jean-Baptiste de Chabot as the new Bishop of Mende under the Concordat. Pius VII gave his consent on 1 May 1802.[36] Chabot had previously been Bishop of Saint-Claude, but he had been forced to flee France on 10 February 1791. He spent some time at Lugano, but then reentered his diocese toward the end of the Directory, in 1799, and attempted to reorganize diocesan operations. On 16 September 1801 he gave his resignation, as requested, and on 17 March 1802 his name was removed from the list of émigrés, and he was appointed Bishop of Mende. He immediately set to work to bring peace and order to the diocese of Mende, but, when the Constitutional Bishop Nogaret died on 30 March 1804 without having made a retraction or submission to the authority of Rome, Chabot's Vicar General advised against allowing the priests of the diocese to participate in Nogaret's funeral. An uproar from Nogaret's friends arose, and the Minister of Cults in Paris, Chaptal, demanded the resignation of the Vicar General. Rather than consent, Bishop Chabot resigned.[37]

Bishop Jean-Antoine-Marie Foulquier (1849–1873) held three diocesan synods, in 1853–1855, to prepare the diocese of Mende to adopt the Roman rite in its liturgy. He participated in the First Vatican Council as a convinced supporter of papal infallibility. He obtained the canonical recognition of the cult of Blessed Urban V, a native son of the Gévaudan.[38]

The end of the 19th century concordats between France and the Papacy came in 1905, with the Law on the Separation of the Churches and the State. This meant, among other things, the end of financial support on the part of the French government and all of its subdivisions of any religious group. An inventory was ordered of all places of worship that had received subsidies from the State, and all property not legally subject to a pious foundation was to be confiscated to the State. That was a violation of the Concordat of 1801. In addition the State demanded repayment of all loans and subsidies given the Churches during the term of the Concordat. On 11 February 1906, Pope Pius X responded with the encyclical Vehementer Nos, which condemned the Law of 1905 as a unilateral abrogation of the Concordat. He wrote, "That the State must be separated from the Church is a thesis absolutely false, a most pernicious error."[39] Diplomatic relations were broken, and did not resume until 1921.[40]

Religious orders in the 19th century edit

In the period between the signing of the Concordat of 1801 and the implementation of the Law of the Separation of the State and the Churches, there operated in the diocese of Mende five congregations of men. The Jesuits directed the Collège de Mende[41] and the diocesan seminary (They were expelled in 1880[42]). There were also the Fathers of the Sacred-Hearts (or of the Adoration), an order based in Paris; the Marists at Langogne; the Brothers of the Christian Schools at Mende, Meyrueis, Langogne, Malzieu, Canourge and Saint-Germain-du-Teil; and the Brothers of the Sacred Heart, at Maruéjols, Saint-Chely-d'Apcher, Chanac, Ispagnac, Saint-Alban, Florac, Nasbinals and Serverette.[43]

There were fourteen congregations of women. The Sisters of the Sacred Hearts of Jesus and Mary had a convent at Mende. The Sisters of the Visitation were located at Maruéjols. The Sisters of Notre-Dame were established at Langogne. The Ursulines had convents at Chirac, Ispagnac, Quézac, and Serverette. The Trinitarian Sisters had a hospital at Mende and a hospice at Langogne. The Daughters of Charity operated at Maruéjols. The Sisters of Saint Vincent de Paul had a hospital asylum at Saint-Alban. The Dames de Saint Maur were established at Canourge. The Sisters of the Presentation had establishments in twelve locations, The Sisters of Saint Joseph had a house at Villefort. The Soeurs-Uniés had establishments at Mende, Maruéjols, Chirac, Chanac, and Badaroux.[44]

Nuns of a local origin included: the Sisters of Christian Unity (L'Union chrétienne), founded in 1696 (mother-house at Mende, school at Saint-Etienne-de-Vallée Française); the United Sisters of the Holy Family, founded at Palhers in 1750, transferred to Mende in 1824; the Sisters of Christian Doctrine (mother-house at Meyrueis) founded in 1837.

The religious congregations in 1900 directed in the diocese fifteen infant schools, one orphan asylum for boys, four orphan asylums for girls, nine hospitals and almshouses, twelve religious houses for the care of those ill at home, and one psychiatric hospital. In 1905 at the end of the régime of the Concordat, the diocese had 128,866 inhabitants, 26 parishes, 191 succursal[clarification needed] churches,[45] and 135 vicarages, supported by the state.

Saints of the diocese edit

The following saints are specially venerated in the diocese: St. Ilpide, martyr (third century); the preacher St. Veran, Bishop of Cavaillon, a native of Gévaudan (sixth century); St. Lupentius, abbot of the basilica of St. Privatus, beheaded by order of Brunehaut whom he reproached for the irregularities of her life (sixth century); the nun St. Enimie, daughter of Clotaire II and sister of Dagobert (seventh century), foundress of a monastery of Benedictine nuns in the present St. Enimie.

Pilgrimages of the diocese edit

The principal pilgrimages of the diocese are: at Mende itself, Notre Dame de Mende where the statue of the Black Virgin was brought, perhaps in 1213, by the Crusaders of Gévaudan, and the hermitage of Saint Privatus; Notre Dame de la Carce, the origin of the city of Marvéjols; Notre Dame de Quézac, a pilgrimage dating from 1052 and where Urban V founded a chapter-house of eight canons, and Our Lady All-powerful, at Langogne.

List of bishops edit

to 1200 edit

  • Privatus[46]
  • Leoninus[47] (attested 506)
  • Hilarius[48] (attested 535)
  • Evantius[49] (attested in 541)
  • Parthenius[50]
  • Agricola[51] (attested 614, 627)
  • Fredalius[52]
  • Agenulfus[53] (attested in 876)
[Guilelmus][54]
  • Stephanus[55] (attested 951)
  • Matefredus[56] (attested 998)
  • Ragemundus (Raimund)[57] (attested c. 1029–1036)
  • Hildebertus (Adelbert) de Peire (attested 1060)[58] (c. 1052–c. 1062)
  • Guillaume[59] (attested 1095)
  • Robert[60]
  • Adelbert de Peire[61] (attested 1109–1123)
  • Guillaume[62] (1123–c. 1150)
  • Adelbert de Tournel[63] (1151–1187)
  • Guillaume de Peyre[64] (1187–1221)

13th to 15th centuries edit

  • Étienne de Brioude[65] (1222–1246)
  • Odilon de Mercoeur[66] (1247–1273)
  • Stephanus (III)[67] (1274–1278)
Sede vacante[68] (1278–1286)
Pope Urban V (Administrator)[74] (1368–1370)
Sede vacante ?
  • Jean d'Armagnac 1387–1390 (Avignon Obedience) [78]
  • Robert de Bosc[79] 1390–1407 (Avignon Obedience)
  • Guillaume de Boisratier
  • Pierre de Saluzzo[80] 1409–1412 (Avignon-Pisan-Roman Obedience)
  • Gerard de Miremont[81] 1413
  • Jean de Corbeya 1413–1426 (transferred to Auxerre)
  • Ranulf de Peyrusse d'Escars 1426–1441
  • Adelbert de Peira 1441–1443
  • Guy de Panouse 1443–1444 (transferred to Castres)[82]
  • Cardinal Regnault de Chartres (Administrator) 1444
  • Antoine de La Panouse 1467–1473
  • Pietro Riario, O.F.M. Conv. 1473–1474
  • Giuliano della Rovere 1478–1479 (appointed Bishop of Sabina)
  • Clemente Grosso della Rovere, O.F.M. Conv.[83] (1483–1504)

16th to 18th centuries edit

  • Francesco Grosso della Rovere 1504–1524
  • Renaud de Beaune 1568–1581 (Appointed, Archbishop of Bourges)
  • Charles de Rousseau 1608–1623
  • Daniel de La Mothe-Houdancourt[84] 1624–1628
  • Silvestre de Crusy de Marcillac 1628–1660
  • Hyacinthe Serroni, O.P. 1661–1677
  • François-Placide de Baudry de Piancourt, O.S.B.[85] 1677–1707
  • Pierre de Baglion de la Salle de Saillant 1708–1723
  • Gabriel-Florent de Choiseul-Beaupré 1723–1767
  • Jean-Arnaud de Castellane[86] 1767–1792 (massacred 9 September 1792 at Versailles)[87]
    • Étienne Nogaret (Constitutional bishop) 1791–1801[88]

Post-Revolutionary edit

  • Jean-Baptiste de Chabot[89] 1802–1804
  • Etienne-Parfait-Martin Maurel de Mons[90] 1805–1821 (appointed Bishop of Avignon)
  • Claude-Jean-Joseph Brulley de La Brunière 1821–1848
  • Jean-Antoine-Marie Foulquier 1849–1873
 
Bishop François Joseph Marie Jacolin

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ de civitate Gabalum provincia Aquitania. C. Munier, Concilia Galliae A. 314 – A. 506 (Turnhout: Brepols 1963), p. 15 line 47; p. 16 line 39; p. 18 line 34; p. 21 line 34. Duchesne, p. 54.
  2. ^ Duchesne, p. 54, no. 1.
  3. ^ Gaydou, Études critiques, pp. 3-16.
  4. ^ The actual construction took place much later. Work began in 1364 and stopped in 1386; construction resumed in 1452, and the altar was consecrated on 2 August 1467. The works were completed under Bishop Clemente Grosso della Rovere (1483–1504). Pascal, pp. 114-120; 375-376.
  5. ^ Gallia christiana I, pp. 85-86.
  6. ^ David M. Cheney, Catholic-Hierarchy: Diocese of Mende. Retrieved: 2019-07-17.
  7. ^ Carolus Munier, Concilia Galliae, A. 314 – A. 506 (Turnholt: Brepols 1963), p. 15 line 47: Genialis diaconus de civitate Gabalum provincia Aquitanica.
  8. ^ Carolus De Clercq, Concilia Galliae, A. 511 – A. 695 (Turnholt: Brepols 1963), p. 111 line 7: Helarius...episcopus ecclesiae Gaualetanae.
  9. ^ P. Jaffe and G. Wattenbach, Regesta pontificum Romanorum Tomus II (Leipzig 1888), p. 160.
  10. ^ Léopold Delisle has noted the historical interest of these two works for the early history of the Third Estate in the Gévaudan. Léopold Delisle, "Un manuscrit de la cathédrale de Mende, perdu et retrouvé," in Journal des Savants (Octobre 1908), pp. 505-512.
  11. ^ G. de Burdin, I, p. 7 note 1, points out that the original bull does not survive, and there is no proof that a golden bull was ever attached.
  12. ^ G. de Burdin, I, p. 8.
  13. ^ Gallia christiana I, p. 93. Pascal, p. 205.
  14. ^ Lettres de Philippe-le-Bel relatives au pays de Gévaudan (in French and Latin). Imprimerie A. Privat. 1896. pp. 50–53, 174–195.
  15. ^ A. Martin, p. 4. Gallia christiana I, p. 96.
  16. ^ G. de Burdin, I, pp. 37-43.
  17. ^ Pascal, pp. 425–439, includes an analysis of the works.
  18. ^ Jean Baptiste Magnan (1862). Histoire d'Urban V. et de son siècle (in French). Paris: Ambroise Bray. pp. 81–91. Magnan (p. 83) questions the miraculous story, pointing out that it does not appear in the extensive documentation for the canonization of Urban V.
  19. ^ Jean-Baptiste Prouzet (1846). Histoire du Gevaudan, ou suite aux annales de cette province (in French). Vol. Tome premier. Mende-Montauban: Pécout. pp. 207–208.
  20. ^ Pascal, Gabalum christianum, p. 76.
  21. ^ Martin, p. 9-11.
  22. ^ Georges Amiaud-Bellavaud (1952). Un chef huguenot, le capitaine Merle, et les guerres de religion: notamment en Auvergne, Gévaudan et Vivarais (in French) (2nd ed.). Uzès: Ateliers H. Peladan.
  23. ^ L'Ouvreleul, Jean-Baptiste (1825). Mémoires historiques sur le pays de Gévaudan et sur la ville de Mende (in French) (nouvelle ed.). Mende: J. J. M. Mignon. pp. 41–45.
  24. ^ L'Ouvreleul, p. 43.
  25. ^ Eugène Bonnemère (1882). Les dragonnades: Histoire des Camisards (in French). Paris: E. Dentu. pp. 118, 186–187.
  26. ^ A. Martin, p. 12. In 1677 the city of Mende had around 5,000 inhabitants: Ritzler-Sefrin, V, p. 268 note 1. In 1767, the city of Mende claimed to have only around 2,000 inhabitants. Ritzler-Sefrin, VI, p. 289 note 1.
  27. ^ Biographie universelle et portative des contemporains; ou, Dictionnaire historique des hommes vivants et des hommes morts depuis 1788 jusqu'à nos jours: qui se sont fait remarquer par leurs écrits, leurs actions, leurs talents, leurs vertus ou leurs crimes (in French). Vol. Tome premier. Paris: Chez l'Éditeur. 1836. pp. 893–894.
  28. ^ Louis Marie Prudhomme (1793). La République française en quatre-vingt-quatre départements, dictionnaire géographique et méthodique (in French). Paris: Chez l'éditeur, rue des Marais. pp. 7–11.
  29. ^ Ludovic Sciout (1872). Historie de la constitution civile du clergé (1790-1801) ... (in French). Vol. Tome I. Paris: Firmin Didot frères, fils et cie. pp. 204–208.
  30. ^ Pierre Brizon (1904). L'église et la révolution française des Cahiers de 1789 au Concordat (in French). Paris: Pages libres. pp. 27–30.
  31. ^ Philippe Bourdin, "Collégiales et chapitres cathédraux au crible de l'opinion et de la Révolution," Annales historiques de la Révolution française no. 331 (janvier/mars 2003), 29-55, at 29-30, 52-53.
  32. ^ Paul Pisani (1907). Répertoire biographique de l'épiscopat constitutionnel (1791-1802) (in French). Paris: A. Picard et fils. pp. 345–349.
  33. ^ Pisani, pp. 348-349.
  34. ^ Em Sevestre; Émile Sévestre (1905). L'histoire, le texte et la destinée du Concordat de 1801 (in French). Paris: Lethielleux. pp. 238–249, 488, 496.
  35. ^ Pius VI; Pius VII (1821). Collectio (per epitomen facta,) Bullarum, Brevium, Allocutionum, Epistolarumque, ... Pii VI., contra constitutionem civilem Cleri Gallicani, ejusque authores et fautores; item, Concordatorum inter ... Pium VII. et Gubernium Rei publicae, in Galliis, atque alia varia regimina, post modum in hac regione, sibi succedentia; tum expostulationum ... apud ... Pium Papam VII., Contra varia Acta, ad Ecclesiam Gallicanam, spectantia, a triginta et octo Episcopis, Archiepiscop. et Cardinal. antiquae Ecclesiae Gallicanae, subscriptarum, etc. 6 Avril, 1803 (in Latin). London: Cox & Baylis. pp. 111–121.
  36. ^ Ritzler-Sefrin, VI, p. 169 with note 3.
  37. ^ S., in: L'episcopat français..., p. 351.
  38. ^ S., in: L'episcopat français..., pp. 353-354.
  39. ^ Ceslas B. Bourdin, "Church and State" in: Craig Steven Titus, ed. (2009). Philosophical Psychology: Psychology, Emotions, and Freedom. Washington DC USA: CUA Press. pp. 140–147. ISBN 978-0-9773103-6-4.
  40. ^ J. de Fabregues (1967). "The Re-Establishment of Relations between France and the Vatican in 1921". Journal of Contemporary History. 2 (4): 163–182. doi:10.1177/002200946700200412. JSTOR 259828. S2CID 220874600.
  41. ^ John W. Padberg (1969). Colleges in Controversy: The Jesuit Schools in France from Revival to Suppression, 1815-1880. Cambridge MA USA: Harvard University Press. pp. 97–98. ISBN 978-0-674-14160-5.
  42. ^ Félix Remize (1919). La Providence de Mende: communauté et orphelinat (in French). Toulouse: Privat. pp. 129, 187.
  43. ^ Pascal, pp. 102-103.
  44. ^ Pascal, pp. 103-104.
  45. ^ "succursus dicitur ecclesia quae alteri potiori auxilio est in administrandis plebei Christianae sacramentis." C. du Fresne Du Cange, Glossarium Mediae et Infimae Latinitatis, editio nova, Tomus septimus R-S (Niort: L. Favre 1886) p. 645 column 3, succursus (2).
  46. ^ Privatus: Gallia christiana I, pp. 85–86. Duchesne, p. 54 no 1. Clovis Brunel, Les miracles de Saint Privat, suivis des Opuscules d'Aldebert III, évèque de Mende (Paris: A. Picard 1912). Pascal (pp. 294–295) points out that the sources for the legend of Privat go back only to the eleventh century, though he believes that there is earlier material in the liturgical material for his feast day.
  47. ^ Leoninus was represented at the Council of Agde in 506 by his Deacon Optimus. C. Munier, Concilia Galliae, A. 314 – A. 506 (Turnhout: Brepols 1963), p. 214, p. 219. Gallia christiana I, p. 86. Duchesne, p. 54 no 2.
  48. ^ Hilarius was present at the Council of Auvergne (Clermont) in 535. C. De Clercq, Concilia Galliae, A. 511 – A. 695 (Turnholt: Brepols 1963), pp. 110, 111: Helarius episcopus ecclesia Gaualetanae. Gallia christiana I, pp. 86–87. Duchesne, p. 54 no 3. Hilarius has been confused with a Saint Ilerius, who was not a bishop but became one through confusion. Hilarius is also confused with Hilary of Poitiers. Pascal, pp. 173–175.
  49. ^ Euantius was present at the Council of Orange in 541. De Clercq, pp. 143, 146 (Euantius episcopus ecclesiae Gaualetane). Gallia christiana I, p. 87. Duchesne, p. 55 no 4.
  50. ^ Parthenius is known only from a story told by Gregory of Tours in his History of the Franks, Book IV, chapter 40. Gallia christiana I, p. 87. Duchesne, p. 55 no 5.
  51. ^ Agricola was present at the Council of Paris in 614 and the Council of Clichy in 627. De Clercq, pp. 282 (ex civitate Gaballetano Agricula episcopus) and 297 (ex civitate Gabalus Agricula episcopus). Gallia christiana I, p. 87. Duchesne, p. 55 no 6.
  52. ^ Fredalius: Gallia christiana I, p. 88. Duchesne, p. 55 no 7.
  53. ^ Agenulfus was present at the Council of Ponthion in 876. He was the recipient of a letter of Pope John VIII written in 878. P. Jaffé, Regesta pontificum Romanorum I, editio altera (Leipzig 1885), p. 406 no. 3220. Gallia christiana I, p. 88. Duchesne, p. 55 no 8.
  54. ^ Guillelmus is known only from the foundation charter of the monastery of St. Peter in Puy, ca. 908, if it is to be credited. Other sources place the foundation of the monastery on 13 April 993, and the subscriptions of that foundation charter are corroborated. Gallia christiana I, p. 88. Pascal, pp. 185–186.
  55. ^ Stephanus reestablished the monastery of Sainte-Enimie, whose refoundation document was signed by Pope Agapitus II (946–955) on 5 May 951. Jean Mabillon (1681). De re diplomatica libri vi (in Latin). Paris: sumtibus L. Billaine. pp. 369–370. Pascal, pp. 184–186.
  56. ^ Matefredus is known only from a charter issued by Vicomte Stephanus for the foundation of the monastery of Langogne. Mabillon, pp. 579-580, no. 148. At one point it is said that the foundation is done consilio episcoporum Matifredi ecclesiae Mimatensis clericorum ejus..., and at another Gregorio papa hoc auctoritate apostolica confirmante, necnon Matfredo Mimatensis ecclesiae Episcopo et Canonicorum ejus. Pope Gregory is Gregory V (996–999). This appears to be the earliest reference to a bishop of Mimatensis and the earliest reference to Canons of the cathedral. Gallia christiana I, pp. 88–89. Pascal, p. 186.
  57. ^ Bishop Ragemundus participated in the Council of Bourges on 1 November 1031. J.-D. Mansi (ed.) Sacrorum Conciliorum nova et amplissima collectio, editio novissima, Tomus XIX (Venice: A. Zatta 1774), p. 502. In 1036 he presided over the transfer of the remains of Saint Privatus to Le Puy (Anicium), according to the Office of the Saints of Mende. Gallia christiana I, p. 89. De Lisle, p. 508. Pascal (p. 187) states that he died in 1050.
  58. ^ Bishop Hildebertus 'Gabalitensis' was present at the consecration of Bishop Iterius of Limoges on 4 January 1252/3: Gallia christiana II, p. 516. In 1060 he granted the monastery of Canourge to the Abbey of Saint-Victor in Marseille. On 16 March 1062 he founded the monastery of Chirac (Monstier). Gallia christiana I, p. 89. Pascal, pp. 187–188.
  59. ^ Bishop Guillaume is known from one document, reported in Gallia christiana on the authority of Dom J. Boyer, which states that, on 7 December 1095, when Pope Urban II consecrated the high altar in the monastery church of Saint-Flour, Bishop Guillaume of Mende consecrated the two side altars. Gallia christiana I, p. 89. Pascal, p. 188.
  60. ^ Bishop Robert is known from a single document, from Chanteuge, dated 1098. Gallia christiana I, p. 89.Pascal, p. 189. Gams, p. 577 column 1.
  61. ^ Adelbertus de Peire was the nephew of Bishop Hildebertus (Adelbert) de Peire. In 1109 he established a commemoration service in the cathedral for his father and uncle, to be held every 1 May. He died in 1123. Gallia christiana I, p. 89. Pascal, pp. 191–192. Gams, p. 577 column 1.
  62. ^ Guillaume persuaded the Canons of his cathedral to adopt the Rule of Saint Augustine by granting them the income of seventeen churches in the diocese. The arrangement was approved by Pope Calixtus II in a bull of 18 March 1123; the Canons were secularized in 1222. Bishop Guillaume participated in a council in Albi in 1133. P. Jaffé & S. Loewenfeld, Regesta pontificum Romanorum Tomus I, editio altera (Leipzig 1885), p. 809 no. 7025. Gallia christiana I, p. 89. Pascal, pp. 192–193. Gams, p. 577 column 1.
  63. ^ Adelbert had previously been Provost of Mende. A document of 1155 was signed in his fifth year, making 1151 the date of his election. He named Adelbert as a judge in a suit between the Vicomte de Polignac and the Bishop of Le Puy by Pope Eugenius III. In July 1162 Pope Alexander III visited Mende. He died in 1187. Gallia christiana I, p. 190. Pascal, pp. 193–195.
  64. ^ Guillaume was elected in 1187, since a document of 1207 speaks of his twentieth year as bishop. His early years were spent outside of Mende, having been excluded by the town because of a dispute; he did not return until 1194. He resigned his diocese, which Pope Honorius III accepted on 22 September 1221. His successor had already been elected by 2 March 1223. Guillaume set off on pilgrimage to the Holy Land in 1223. He was still alive on 11 March 1224, when Pope Honorius granted him the usus pontificalis. Gallia christiana I, pp. 90–91. Pascal, pp. 195–198. Eubel, I, p. 341 note 1.
  65. ^ Bishop Stephanus had to travel to Rome to seek a dispensation because of illegitimacy. His election, which had been approved by the Archbishop of Bourges, was approved by Pope Honorius III on 7 March 1224, and he was consecrated in Rome by Bishop Gualtier of Chartres, Hugh of Langres, and Gervaise of Séez. The Dean of Bourges was appointed Administrator of the vacant diocese by Pope Innocent IV on 23 December 1246, indicating that Bishop Stephanus had died some weeks before that date. Gallia christiana I, p. 91-92; Instrumenta, p. 25 no IV. Pascal, pp. 199–201. Eubel, Hierarchia catholica I, p. 341.
  66. ^ After the death of Bishop Étienne there were two elections, one of Armandus (Arnaldus) the Provost of Mende, and the other of Bernardus de Apcherio, Dean of Le Puy and Canon of Mende. The matter was referred to Pope Innocent IV who provided Odilon, the Provost and Dean of the Collegiate Church of Brivatensis (Brivadois, Clermont). When this happened is uncertain: Odilon is called 'Bishop-elect' in a document of 21 May 1250, but he was still not consecrated a bishop by 11 December 1255, when Pope Alexander IV gave a mandate to the Archbishop of Bourges to ordain him and consecrate him a bishop. Odilon was living in Paris. Bishop Odilon died on 28 January 1273. Gallia christiana I, pp. 92–93. Eubel, I, p. 341.
  67. ^ Bishop Étienne was present at the provincial Council of Aurillac on 23 August 1278. Gallia christiana I, p. 93. J.-D. Mansi (ed.), Sacrorum Conciliorum nova et amplissima collectio, editio novissima, Tomus XXIV (Venice: A. Zatta 1780), p. 211. Pascal, p. 204.
  68. ^ In April 1285, Archbishop Simon of Bourges wrote to the Chapter of the Cathedral of Mende, complaining of the long delay in their electing a bishop. Gallia christiana I, p. 93, and Instrumenta p. 25.
  69. ^ Guillaume Durand was elected by the Chapter of the Cathedral on the Feast of Saint Mark, 25 April 1285: Gallia christiana I, Instrumenta p. 25. In June 1296 he was serving as Rector of the Marches of Ancona and Romandiola, of the City of Bologna, and the County of Spoleto: Fantuzzi, Marco (1802). Monumenti ravennati de' secoli di mezzo per la maggior parte inediti (in Italian and Latin). Vol. Tomo III. Venezia. pp. 170–171. He died in Rome on 1 November 1296, and was buried in S. Maria sopra Minerva: F.-Z. Collombet (1843). L'Eglise et le Couvent des Dominicains de Lyon (in French). Lyon: Boitel. p. 14. His tombstone: Vincenzo Forcella (1869). Iscrizioni delle Chiese e d'Altri Edificii (in Italian and Latin). Roma. pp. 411, no. 1555.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  70. ^ D'Arcy had been Treasurer in the Cathedral Chapter of Reims. He was appointed Bishop of Mende by Pope John XXII on 14 December 1330. He was transferred to Autun on 21 December 1331, on the creation of Pierre Bertrand of Autun as a Cardinal. A. Coulon & S. Clémencet, Lettres secrètes et curiales du Pape Jean XXII, Tome VI (Paris 1967), p. 111, no. 4745. Eubel, I, pp. 73, 342.
  71. ^ Albertus had been Archdeacon of Flavigny in the Church of Autun, and a papal chaplain. He was appointed bishop of Mende on 21 December 1331, and was entered in the Liber Obligationum on 23 December. He died in 1361. Gallia christiana I, pp. 97–98. Pascal, p. 220. Eubel, I, p. 342.
  72. ^ Guillaume had been Provost of the Cathedral Chapter of Mende. He was appointed by Pope Innocent VI on 16 March 1362. Gallia christiana I, p. 98. Pascal, p. 223. Eubel, I, p. 342.
  73. ^ Pierre Gerardi, a nephew of Urban V, was appointed by Pope Urban V on 11 August 1366. He was transferred to the diocese of Avignon on 11 October 1368. Gallia christiana I, p. 98. Pascal, p. 223-224. Eubel, I, pp. 124, 342.
  74. ^ Pope Urban V retained the bishopric so that he could devote the episcopal income entirely to the beginning of the new cathedral. The diocese was governed by a Vicar-General. Pascal, pp. 110, 226.
  75. ^ Guillaume de Chanac was appointed Bishop of Mende by Pope Gregory XI on 8 January 1371, and was named a Cardinal on 30 May 1371. He died in Avignon on 30 December 1383. Gallia christiana I, pp. 99–100. Pascal, pp. 226–229. Eubel, I, pp. 22 no. 6; 342.
  76. ^ A native of Mende, Bonuspar had been Archpriest of Javols, and then Prebendary of the Cathedral of Mende, and then Provost of the Cathedral Chapter. He was Auditor of Cardinal Raimundus de Canhiliac. He was appointed bishop by Gregory XI on 16 June 1371. He took possession of the diocese on 3 August. He died on 31 July 1375 (not 1361, as in Eubel). Gallia christiana I, p. 100. Pascal, p. 230. Gams, p. 577. Eubel, I, p. 342.
  77. ^ Gallia christiana I, p. 100. Eubel, I, p. 342.
  78. ^ Jean d'Armagnac was transferred to the diocese of Auch on 17 October 1390 by Pope Clement VII. He was created a cardinal at Perpignan by Pope Benedict XIII on 22 September 1408. He died on 8 October 1408. Eubel, I, pp. 30, 121, 342.
  79. ^ Bishop Robert, who had been Bishop-Elect of Alet, was appointed to the diocese of Conserans (St.-Lizier) on 27 May 1390, and then was appointed Bishop of Mende on 7 October 1390 by Pope Clement VII. Eubel, I, pp. 203, 342.
  80. ^ Pietro di Saluzzo was appointed by Pope Alexander V on 24 July 1409, less than a month after Alexander's election to the papacy. Pietro died in 1412. Eubel, I, p. 342.
  81. ^ Gerard de Miremont, Bishop of Saint-Flour, was transferred to Mende by John XXIII on 4 January 1413. He was transferred to the diocese of Carcassonne on 19 April 1413. He died on 4 September 1420. Eubel, I, pp. 166, 342.
  82. ^ Eubel, II, p. 192 and n. 1.
  83. ^ Clemente Grosso, a grand-nephew of Pope Sixtus IV. He was appointed Bishop of Mende on 27 October 1483, in succession to his uncle. He took his oath for his temporalities on 28 June 1485. He served as Vice-Legate of Avignon under his uncle Giuliano della Rovere (Legate from 1476), from 1496. He was Rector of the Comtat Venaissin from 1496 to 1502. He was aggregated Doctor of the University of Avignon in 1496. He was named a cardinal by his uncle, Pope Julius II in his first Consistory for the creation of cardinals, on 29 November 1503, and he died on 18 August 1504. Eubel, II, pp. 192; III, pp. 10; 244 note 1.
  84. ^ La Mothe held the Licenciate in Civil and Canon Law, and was a Master of Theology, and had been Councilor and Almoner of Henrietta Marie, daughter of Henri IV and Queen of England. His brother Philippe was a Marshal of France. He was nominated by King Louis XIII on 18 November 1623, and preconised (approved) by Pope Urban VIII on 9 October 1624. He was consecrated in Paris on 19 February 1625 by Jean-François de Gondi, Archbishop of Paris. He died at the siege of Rupella (La Rochelle) on 5 March 1628. Gallia christiana I, pp. 107–108. Gauchat, Hierarchia catholica IV, p. 242 with note 3.
  85. ^ Baudry was born in the diocese of Evreux, and was a Doctor of Theology (Paris). He was nominated bishop of Mende by King Louis XIV on 4 July 1677, and preconized (approved) on 11 October 1677 by Pope Innocent XI. He was consecrated on 16 January 1678 at Saint-Germain des Près in Paris by the Archbishop of Paris, François de Harlay de Champvallon. He died on 17 November 1707. Ritzler, Hierarchia catholica V, p. 268 with note 3.
  86. ^ Michel Perronet (1990), "Jean Arnaud de Castellane, évêque-comte du Gévaudan, in: Bardy-Chabrol-Duthu, pp. 76–90.
  87. ^ Laurent, Gustave (1904). "L'arrestation et la mort de Jean-Arnaud de Castellane". La Révolution Française. 46: 29–56, at p. 50.
  88. ^ Paul Pisani (1907). Répertoire biographique de l'épiscopat constitutionnel (1791–1802) (in French). Paris: A. Picard et fils. pp. 345–349.
  89. ^ Société bibliographique (France) (1907). L'épiscopat français depuis le Concordat jusqu'à la Séparation (1802–1905) (in French). Paris: Librairie des Saints-Pères. pp. 351–352.
  90. ^ Nephew of the Bishop of Viviers. Dominique Javel (2000). Transmettre la foi au diocèse d'Avignon: XIXe-XXe siècle (in French). Avignon: Barthélemy. pp. 19–20. ISBN 9782879231242.
  91. ^ Société bibliographique (France) (1907). L'épiscopat français depuis le Concordat jusqu'à la Séparation (1802–1905) (in French). Paris: Librairie des Saints-Pères. pp. 355–356.
  92. ^ David M. Cheney, Catholic-Hierarchy: Archbishop Robert Jean Louis Le Gall, O.S.B. Retrieved: 2016-07-17.
  93. ^ Diocèse de Mende, Biographie de Mgr Jacolin, retrieved: 2017-01-10. (in French)
  94. ^ M.D.P. = Missionnaires de la Plaine et de Sainte-Thérèse

Bibliography 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. p. 576-578.
  • Eubel, Conradus, ed. (1913). Hierarchia catholica, Tomus 1 (second ed.). Münster: Libreria Regensbergiana. (in Latin) p. 192.
  • Eubel, Conradus, ed. (1914). Hierarchia catholica, Tomus 2 (second ed.). Münster: Libreria Regensbergiana. (in Latin) p. 244.
  • Eubel, Conradus (ed.); Gulik, Guilelmus (1923). Hierarchia catholica, Tomus 3 (second ed.). Münster: Libreria Regensbergiana. {{cite book}}: |first1= has generic name (help) p. 97.
  • Gauchat, Patritius (Patrice) (1935). Hierarchia catholica IV (1592-1667). Münster: Libraria Regensbergiana. Retrieved 2016-07-06. p. 242.
  • Ritzler, Remigius; Sefrin, Pirminus (1952). Hierarchia catholica medii et recentis aevi V (1667-1730). Patavii: Messagero di S. Antonio. Retrieved 2016-07-06. p. 268.
  • Ritzler, Remigius; Sefrin, Pirminus (1958). Hierarchia catholica medii et recentis aevi VI (1730-1799). Patavii: Messagero di S. Antonio. Retrieved 2016-07-06. p. 289.
  • 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.
  • Ritzler, Remigius; 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 (1715). Gallia christiana, in provincias ecclesiasticas distributa (in Latin). Vol. Tomus primus. Paris: Coignard. pp. 80–116.

Studies edit

  • Benjamin Bardy; Jean-Paul Chabrol; Hélène Duthu (1990). Entre adhésion et refus: la révolution en Lozère, 1789-1989 : actes du colloque tenu aux Archives départementales de la Lozère, le 4 août 1989 (in French). Mende: Conseil général.
  • Bulman, Jan K. (2008). The Court Book of Mende and the Secular Lordship of the Bishop: Recollecting the Past in Thirteenth-Century Gévaudan. Toronto CA: University of Toronto Press. ISBN 978-1-4426-9197-1.
  • Burdin, Gustave de (1846). Documents historiques sur la province de Gévaudan (in French). Vol. Tome I. Toulouse: imprimerie de Laurent Chapelle.
  • Duchesne, Louis (1910). Fastes épiscopaux de l'ancienne Gaule: II. L'Aquitaine et les Lyonnaises. Paris: Fontemoing. pp. 54–55. second edition (in French)
  • Gasmand, Marion (2007). Les évêques de la province ecclésiastique de Bourges: milieu Xe-fin XIe siècle (in French). Paris: Connaissances et Savoirs. ISBN 978-2-7539-0022-6.
  • Gaydou, François (1856). Etudes critiques sur l'origine de l'Eglise de Mende et ses premiers évêques (in French). Mende: J.-J.-M. Iguon.
  • Jean, Armand (1891). Les évêques et les archevêques de France depuis 1682 jusqu'à 1801 (in French). Paris: A. Picard. p. 78.
  • Jones, P. M. (2004). Politics in the Rural Society: The Southern Massif Central C.1750-1880. Cambridge UK: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-52258-8.
  • Laurent, Baptiste; Fages, Alfred (2011). Armorial des évêques de Mende: liste chronologique, héraldique, iconographique (in French). Nîmes: Lacour-Ollé. ISBN 978-2-7504-2761-0.
  • Martin, A.; Andre, Ferdinand (1894). Notice historique sur la ville de Mende: d'après les notes et documents recueillis (in French). Marvejols/Mende: Guerrier/Planchon.
  • Maurice, Philippe; Anne-Sabine Delrieu; Hélène Duthu (2004). Diocèse de Mende (in French). Turnhout: Brepols. ISBN 978-2-503-52159-6.
  • Pascal, Jean-Baptiste Étienne (1853). Gabalum Christianum ou recherche historico-critiques sur l'Eglise de Mende (in French). Paris: Dumoulin. [list of bishops at p. 285]
  • Philip IV (King of France) (1896). Jean Roucaute and Marc Saché (ed.). Lettres de Philippe-le-Bel relatives au pays de Gévaudan (in Latin and French). Mende: Imprimerie A. Privat.

External links edit

  • (in French) Centre national des Archives de l'Église de France, L’Épiscopat francais depuis 1919, retrieved: 2016-12-24.
  • Goyau, Georges. "Diocese of Mende." The Catholic Encyclopedia. Vol. 10. New York: Robert Appleton Company, 1911. Retrieved: 2017-08-17.
  • David M. Cheney, Catholic Hierarchy: Diocese of Mende [self-published]

44°31′19″N 3°29′50″E / 44.52194°N 3.49722°E / 44.52194; 3.49722

roman, catholic, diocese, mende, diocese, mende, latin, dioecoesis, mimatensis, french, diocèse, mende, latin, diocese, catholic, church, france, diocese, covers, department, lozère, diocese, mendedioecesis, mimatensisdiocèse, mendemende, cathedrallocationcoun. The Diocese of Mende Latin Dioecoesis Mimatensis French Diocese de Mende is a Latin diocese of the Catholic Church in France The diocese covers the department of Lozere Diocese of MendeDioecesis MimatensisDiocese de MendeMende CathedralLocationCountryFranceEcclesiastical provinceMontpellierMetropolitanArchdiocese of MontpellierStatisticsArea5 180 km2 2 000 sq mi Population Total Catholics as of 2013 78 400 est 60 800 est 77 6 InformationDenominationRoman CatholicSui iuris churchLatin ChurchRiteRoman RiteEstablished3rd CenturyCathedralCathedral Basilica of Notre Dame and St Privat in MendePatron saintSaint PrivatSecular priests75 diocesan 1 Religious Orders 5 Permanent DeaconsCurrent leadershipPopeFrancisBishopBenoit BertrandMetropolitan ArchbishopNorbert TuriniWebsiteWebsite of the DioceseThe diocese was already in existence in 314 since Genialis a deacon of the Church of Gabalum Gevaudan was present at the Council of Arles in that year 1 Louis Duchesne chooses to place the earliest known bishop Privatus before 314 though he points out that his date depends on a synchronicity with an invasion of Aquitaine by a band of German marauders under the leadership of King Chrocus Chrocus date is variously placed between the third and fifth century 2 The notion that a Saint Severianus was the first apostle of the Gevaudan or that Privatus held the same honor and that the whole country was converted to Christianity in one stroke has long been exploded by a demonstration that the legends are based on representations made to Pope Urban V in the 14th century to obtain indulgences 3 The diocese of Mende was a suffragan of Bourges under the Ancien Regime When it was re established by the Concordat of 1801 it became a suffragan of the Archdiocese of Lyon and united with the department of Ardeche which however it lost again in 1822 by the creation of the Diocese of Viviers at which point Mende became suffragan to Albi On December 16 2002 Mende was made a suffragan to Montpellier The Bishop has his seat at the Cathedral Basilica of Notre Dame and St Privat in Mende Funds to begin the cathedral were supplied by Pope Urban V 1362 1370 4 Before the French Revolution the Cathedral Chapter consisted of a Praepositus Provost the Archdeacon and the Precentor the dignities dignites and fifteen canons There were approximately 200 parishes and one abbey 5 In 2019 the diocese which is mostly rural had a total population of 76 300 of whom 72 1 were claimed as Roman Catholics They are served by 59 priests and there were 135 parishes 6 St Privatus patron of the dioceseContents 1 History 1 1 Estates of Gevaudan 1 2 Some individual bishops 1 3 Plague and Protestants 1 4 Revolution and Church of the Concordat 1789 1905 1 4 1 Napoleon Pius VII and the Concordat 1 4 2 Religious orders in the 19th century 1 5 Saints of the diocese 1 6 Pilgrimages of the diocese 2 List of bishops 2 1 to 1200 2 2 13th to 15th centuries 2 3 16th to 18th centuries 2 4 Post Revolutionary 3 See also 4 References 5 Bibliography 5 1 Reference works 5 2 Studies 6 External linksHistory editAccording to late legends belonging to the Limousin cycle relating to St Martial he passed through the territory of the Gabali Gevaudan of which Mende is the capital and appointed as its first bishop St Severian his disciple about the beginning of the first century The first bishop known to history is Saint Privatus who according to Gregory of Tours died in a grotto of Mount Mimmat a victim of the ill treatment he suffered at the time of the invasion of the Alamanni under their King Chrocus Gregory of Tours places this event about 260 though Fredegarius puts the invasion of Chrocus at 407 Louis Duchesne however places the invasion of Chrocus and the death of St Privatus at the beginning of the reign of Constantine c 312 perhaps before the Council of Arles It is certain that there was an organized church in the country of the Gabali from about 314 since in that year it was represented at the Council of Arles 7 Other bishops of the Gabali who doubtless resided at Javoulx near Mende were Hilarius present at the Council of Auvergne Clermont in 535 8 and founder of the monastery of Sainte Enimie and whose personality has been wrongly described in certain traditions concerning Saint Illier clarification needed and St Frezal of Canourgue ninth century assassinated it is said under Louis le Debonnaire Towards the year 1000 Mende became the seat of the bishopric Under Bishop Aldebert de Tournel 1151 1186 Pope Alexander III passed some days at Mende in the last two weeks of July 1162 9 Bishop Aldebert wrote two works on the passion and on the miracles of St Privatus whose relics were discovered at Mende in 1170 10 Bishop Adalbert s most noteworthy achievement however was his negotiation of an act of fealty with King Louis VII of France sometimes called the golden bull or act of pareage of 1166 11 King Louis noted that it was the first time that a bishop of Gevaudan had ever made his submission to a king of France He also recognized the powers of the bishop not only in the spiritual sphere but also ad iudicandum in gladio judging with the sword and stated that the agreement in no way was to be taken to diminish the privileges already enjoyed by the bishops The King surrendered to the bishop and his successors all the regalian rights with reference to his crown 12 In 1278 under Bishop Stephanus III the Dominicans established a convent in Maruejols in the diocese of Mende 13 The city of Mende was not important enough to become the capital of the Gevaudan until the act of pareage of King Philip IV of 3 February 1307 14 which granted the bishops the title of Count and the high Seigneurie of Gevaudan This act increased their temporal authority and brought the submission of all of the seigneurs of the region 15 Estates of Gevaudan edit The territory of Lodeve had its own Estates from an early period and it retained it even after it became part of the Estates of Languedoc in the fourteenth century The Bishop of Mende was the President of the Estates of Gevaudan the First Estate clergy were represented by a Canon of the Cathedral representing the Chapter the Dom d Aubrac the Prior of Saint Enemie the Prior of Langogne the Abbot of Chambons the Commander of Palhers and the Commander of Saint Jean The Second Estate nobility were represented by the eight Barons who were Peers of Gevaudon d Apchier de Peyre de Cenaret du Tournel de Randon de Florac de Mercoeur de Canilhac twelve gentlemen the Seigneurs d Allene de Montauroux de Saint Alban de Montrodat de Mirandol de Severac de Barre de Gabriac de Portes de Servieres d Arpajon and the Consuls of la Garde Guerin the Third Estate were represented by the three Consuls of Mende the three Consuls of Marvejols when the meeting took place at Marvejols and a Consul or deputy from each of sixteen communities The Estates met annually alternately at Mende and at Marvejols The Estates opened with a procession from the Episcopal Palace to the Cathedral for a Mass of the Holy Spirit and closed with a Te Deum and episcopal blessing 16 Some individual bishops edit Mende had later as bishops Guillaume Durand 1285 1296 a Doctor of Laws Bologna and teacher of law at Modena author of Speculum juris and of the Rationale divinorum officiorum 17 he was secretary of the Second Council of Lyon in 1274 His nephew Durand le Jeune 1296 1328 who negotiated the Pareage with King Philip definitively settled the respective rights of king and bishop in the Gevaudan he left a work on the general councils and on the reform of abuses Guillaume de Grimoard born about 1310 at the castle of Grisac near Mende the fief of his father Guillaume de Grimoard Seigneur de Grisac Bellegarde and Montbel He was sickly and deformed but was restored at the prayer of his godfather Elzear de Sabran who had come to baptise him 18 Elected pope in 1362 under the name of Urban V he administered the Diocese of Mende himself from 1368 to 1370 since it had been left vacant by the transfer of his nephew to the See of Avignon Among the bishops of Mende were Pietro Riario 1473 1474 nephew of Sixtus IV and a cardinal Giuliano della Rovere 1478 1483 later pope under the name of Julius II and his nephews Cardinal Clement della Rovere 1483 1504 and Francesco della Rovere 1504 1524 Urban II is said to have visited the Diocese of Mende in 1095 and to have had consecrated in his presence the church of the monastery of Saint Sauveur de Chirac or of Monastier which had been founded in 1062 and was a dependency of the Abbey of Saint Victor in Marseille 19 There is no actual evidence for this story which is retailed by local historians and which is rejected by Jean Baptiste Etienne Pascal 20 Plague and Protestants edit In 1374 Mende was stricken by the plague and of the 160 clerics attached to the cathedral in one capacity or another eighty were killed The epidemic returned in 1399 and again in 1435 and in 1460 the suffering lasted from June through mid August It returned in 1482 and in 1490 the Cathedral Chapter left the city of Mende for Marvejols some seventeen miles to the west On 21 April 1504 the Canons held a chapter meeting in an open field along the Lot River in order to avoid the plague The plague returned in 1523 and 1532 In 1533 the Grand Archdeacon of Mende donated a considerable sum of money to build a small hospital for victims of the peste outside the walls of the city a project which was immediately carried out by the Consuls of the city The Bishop of Mende cooperated by contributing a sum of money In 1578 during the wars with the Huguenots Mende suffered from another peste which carried off 2 000 inhabitants 21 Mende was captured for the first time by the Huguenots in 1562 The adventurer Mathieu Merle 22 a native of Uzes and leader of the Huguenots in Gevaudan from 1573 to 1581 led into the region bands of Protestants raised from among vagabonds in Perigord Querci and the Haut Rouergue They were masters of Mende for eighteen months in 1580 and 1581 They destroyed a great part of the cathedral that Urban V had caused to be rebuilt 23 In the village and Chateau de Serverette he and his band massacred twenty four priests 24 The Diocese of Mende was one of the regions where the insurrection of the Huguenot Camisards peasants and rural craftsmen of the Cevennes broke out at the beginning of the eighteenth century and continued c 1702 to 1710 25 In 1720 and 1721 the last of the great epidemics hit the Gevaudan At Mende 1061 died at Marvejols 1800 persons died out of a total population of 3500 in the parish of Canourgne 945 died 26 Cardinal Dominique de la Rochefoucauld Archbishop of Rouen who presided in 1789 over the last assembly of the clergy of France was born in 1712 at Saint Chely d Apcher in the diocese The chemist Jean Antoine Chaptal 1756 1832 who attended the College de Mende and then Riez was one of the last of those who profited by the scholarships founded by Urban V for twelve young students at Montpellier 27 Revolution and Church of the Concordat 1789 1905 edit This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it August 2017 In 1790 the National Constituent Assembly decided to bring the French church under the control of the State Civil government of the provinces was to be reorganized into new units called departements originally intended to be 83 or 84 in number The dioceses of the Roman Catholic Church were to be reduced in number to coincide as much as possible with the new departments 28 The Diocese of Mende found itself swept into the Constitutional Diocese of Lozere Clergy would need to take an oath of allegiance to the State and its Constitution specified by the Civil Constitution of the Clergy and they would become salaried officials of the State Both bishops and priests would be elected by special electors in each department This meant schism since bishops would no longer need to be approved preconised by the Papacy the transfer of bishops likewise which had formerly been the exclusive prerogative of the pope in canon law would be the privilege of the State the election of bishops no longer lay with the Cathedral Chapters which were all abolished or other responsible clergy or the Pope but with electors who did not even have to be Catholics or Christians 29 All monasteries convents and religious orders in France were dissolved and their members were released from their vows by order of the National Constituent Assembly which was uncanonical their property was confiscated for the public good and sold to pay the bills of the French government 30 Cathedral Chapters were also dissolved 31 Since Bishop de Castellane refused to take the required oath his throne was declared vacant by the French government An election was therefore ordered and the Electors of Lozere therefore assembled or rather 157 of the 229 approved electors assembled on 20 March 1791 Next day there were only 148 electors and in the evening only 124 52 of the electors demanded changes in the oath that they would have to take which would protect the power of the Church in spiritual matters when they were refused they departed leaving only 77 electors On the third ballot on 22 March Etienne Nogaret the sixty five year old cure of the church of Canourgue was elected His election was certified by the Constitutional Metropolitan of the Cotes de la Mediterranee Charles Benoit Roux of Aix on 29 April and he was consecrated in Paris on 8 May 1791 by Constitutional Bishop Jean Baptiste Gobel 32 The consecration was valid but it was also uncanonical schismatic and blasphemous When Bishop de Castellane declined to leave the diocese or to vacate the Chateau de Chanac Nogaret denounced him to the Minister of the Interior and the President of the Assembly De Castellane was arrested and executed on 2 September 1792 at Versailles Nogaret resigned his episcopal and priestly functions due to age he said on 11 January 1794 during the Reign of Reason and retired to a house in Canourgue In 1800 he made an attempt to enter the cathedral but was rebuffed by crowds of inhabitants of Mende He was dismissed in 1801 and lived with his sister in Canourge until his death on 30 March 1804 He was unrepentant 33 Napoleon Pius VII and the Concordat edit After the signing of the Concordat of 1801 with First Consul Napoleon Bonaparte Pope Pius VII demanded the resignation of all bishops in France in order to leave no doubt as to who was a legitimate bishop and who was a Constitutional imposter 34 He then immediately abolished all of the dioceses in France for the same reason Then he began to restore the old Ancien Regime dioceses or most of them though not with the same boundaries as before the Revolution The diocese of Mende was revived by Pope Pius VII in his bull Qui Christi Domini of 29 November 1801 35 On 11 April 1802 First Consul Napoleon Bonaparte named Jean Baptiste de Chabot as the new Bishop of Mende under the Concordat Pius VII gave his consent on 1 May 1802 36 Chabot had previously been Bishop of Saint Claude but he had been forced to flee France on 10 February 1791 He spent some time at Lugano but then reentered his diocese toward the end of the Directory in 1799 and attempted to reorganize diocesan operations On 16 September 1801 he gave his resignation as requested and on 17 March 1802 his name was removed from the list of emigres and he was appointed Bishop of Mende He immediately set to work to bring peace and order to the diocese of Mende but when the Constitutional Bishop Nogaret died on 30 March 1804 without having made a retraction or submission to the authority of Rome Chabot s Vicar General advised against allowing the priests of the diocese to participate in Nogaret s funeral An uproar from Nogaret s friends arose and the Minister of Cults in Paris Chaptal demanded the resignation of the Vicar General Rather than consent Bishop Chabot resigned 37 Bishop Jean Antoine Marie Foulquier 1849 1873 held three diocesan synods in 1853 1855 to prepare the diocese of Mende to adopt the Roman rite in its liturgy He participated in the First Vatican Council as a convinced supporter of papal infallibility He obtained the canonical recognition of the cult of Blessed Urban V a native son of the Gevaudan 38 The end of the 19th century concordats between France and the Papacy came in 1905 with the Law on the Separation of the Churches and the State This meant among other things the end of financial support on the part of the French government and all of its subdivisions of any religious group An inventory was ordered of all places of worship that had received subsidies from the State and all property not legally subject to a pious foundation was to be confiscated to the State That was a violation of the Concordat of 1801 In addition the State demanded repayment of all loans and subsidies given the Churches during the term of the Concordat On 11 February 1906 Pope Pius X responded with the encyclical Vehementer Nos which condemned the Law of 1905 as a unilateral abrogation of the Concordat He wrote That the State must be separated from the Church is a thesis absolutely false a most pernicious error 39 Diplomatic relations were broken and did not resume until 1921 40 Religious orders in the 19th century edit In the period between the signing of the Concordat of 1801 and the implementation of the Law of the Separation of the State and the Churches there operated in the diocese of Mende five congregations of men The Jesuits directed the College de Mende 41 and the diocesan seminary They were expelled in 1880 42 There were also the Fathers of the Sacred Hearts or of the Adoration an order based in Paris the Marists at Langogne the Brothers of the Christian Schools at Mende Meyrueis Langogne Malzieu Canourge and Saint Germain du Teil and the Brothers of the Sacred Heart at Maruejols Saint Chely d Apcher Chanac Ispagnac Saint Alban Florac Nasbinals and Serverette 43 There were fourteen congregations of women The Sisters of the Sacred Hearts of Jesus and Mary had a convent at Mende The Sisters of the Visitation were located at Maruejols The Sisters of Notre Dame were established at Langogne The Ursulines had convents at Chirac Ispagnac Quezac and Serverette The Trinitarian Sisters had a hospital at Mende and a hospice at Langogne The Daughters of Charity operated at Maruejols The Sisters of Saint Vincent de Paul had a hospital asylum at Saint Alban The Dames de Saint Maur were established at Canourge The Sisters of the Presentation had establishments in twelve locations The Sisters of Saint Joseph had a house at Villefort The Soeurs Unies had establishments at Mende Maruejols Chirac Chanac and Badaroux 44 Nuns of a local origin included the Sisters of Christian Unity L Union chretienne founded in 1696 mother house at Mende school at Saint Etienne de Vallee Francaise the United Sisters of the Holy Family founded at Palhers in 1750 transferred to Mende in 1824 the Sisters of Christian Doctrine mother house at Meyrueis founded in 1837 The religious congregations in 1900 directed in the diocese fifteen infant schools one orphan asylum for boys four orphan asylums for girls nine hospitals and almshouses twelve religious houses for the care of those ill at home and one psychiatric hospital In 1905 at the end of the regime of the Concordat the diocese had 128 866 inhabitants 26 parishes 191 succursal clarification needed churches 45 and 135 vicarages supported by the state Saints of the diocese edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed August 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message The following saints are specially venerated in the diocese St Ilpide martyr third century the preacher St Veran Bishop of Cavaillon a native of Gevaudan sixth century St Lupentius abbot of the basilica of St Privatus beheaded by order of Brunehaut whom he reproached for the irregularities of her life sixth century the nun St Enimie daughter of Clotaire II and sister of Dagobert seventh century foundress of a monastery of Benedictine nuns in the present St Enimie Pilgrimages of the diocese edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed August 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message The principal pilgrimages of the diocese are at Mende itself Notre Dame de Mende where the statue of the Black Virgin was brought perhaps in 1213 by the Crusaders of Gevaudan and the hermitage of Saint Privatus Notre Dame de la Carce the origin of the city of Marvejols Notre Dame de Quezac a pilgrimage dating from 1052 and where Urban V founded a chapter house of eight canons and Our Lady All powerful at Langogne List of bishops editto 1200 edit Privatus 46 Leoninus 47 attested 506 Hilarius 48 attested 535 Evantius 49 attested in 541 Parthenius 50 Agricola 51 attested 614 627 Fredalius 52 Agenulfus 53 attested in 876 Guilelmus 54 Stephanus 55 attested 951 Matefredus 56 attested 998 Ragemundus Raimund 57 attested c 1029 1036 Hildebertus Adelbert de Peire attested 1060 58 c 1052 c 1062 Guillaume 59 attested 1095 Robert 60 Adelbert de Peire 61 attested 1109 1123 Guillaume 62 1123 c 1150 Adelbert de Tournel 63 1151 1187 Guillaume de Peyre 64 1187 1221 13th to 15th centuries edit Etienne de Brioude 65 1222 1246 Odilon de Mercoeur 66 1247 1273 Stephanus III 67 1274 1278 Sede vacante 68 1278 1286 Guillaume Durand 69 1285 1296 Guillaume Durand the Younger 1296 1330 nephew of his predecessor Jean d Arcy 70 1330 1331 Albertus Lordeti 71 1331 1361 Guilelmus 72 1362 1366 Pierre Gerardi de Roure 73 1366 1368 Pope Urban V Administrator 74 1368 1370 Guillaume de Chanac O S B 75 1371 Bonuspar Virgili 76 1371 1375 Ponce de la Garde 77 1375 after 1383 Sede vacante Jean d Armagnac 1387 1390 Avignon Obedience 78 Robert de Bosc 79 1390 1407 Avignon Obedience Guillaume de Boisratier Pierre de Saluzzo 80 1409 1412 Avignon Pisan Roman Obedience Gerard de Miremont 81 1413 Jean de Corbeya 1413 1426 transferred to Auxerre Ranulf de Peyrusse d Escars 1426 1441 Adelbert de Peira 1441 1443 Guy de Panouse 1443 1444 transferred to Castres 82 Cardinal Regnault de Chartres Administrator 1444 Antoine de La Panouse 1467 1473 Pietro Riario O F M Conv 1473 1474 Giuliano della Rovere 1478 1479 appointed Bishop of Sabina Clemente Grosso della Rovere O F M Conv 83 1483 1504 16th to 18th centuries edit Francesco Grosso della Rovere 1504 1524 Renaud de Beaune 1568 1581 Appointed Archbishop of Bourges Charles de Rousseau 1608 1623 Daniel de La Mothe Houdancourt 84 1624 1628 Silvestre de Crusy de Marcillac 1628 1660 Hyacinthe Serroni O P 1661 1677 Francois Placide de Baudry de Piancourt O S B 85 1677 1707 Pierre de Baglion de la Salle de Saillant 1708 1723 Gabriel Florent de Choiseul Beaupre 1723 1767 Jean Arnaud de Castellane 86 1767 1792 massacred 9 September 1792 at Versailles 87 Etienne Nogaret Constitutional bishop 1791 1801 88 Post Revolutionary edit Jean Baptiste de Chabot 89 1802 1804 Etienne Parfait Martin Maurel de Mons 90 1805 1821 appointed Bishop of Avignon Claude Jean Joseph Brulley de La Bruniere 1821 1848 Jean Antoine Marie Foulquier 1849 1873 nbsp Bishop Francois Joseph Marie JacolinJoseph Frederic Saivet 1872 1876 appointed Bishop of Perpignan Elne Julien Costes 1876 1889 Francois Narcisse Baptifolier 91 1889 1900 Henri Louis Alfred Bouquet 1901 1906 appointed Bishop of Chartres Jacques Jean Gely 1906 1929 Jules Alexandre Cusin 1929 1937 Francois Louis Auvity 1937 1945 Maurice Paul Jules Rousseau 1945 1950 appointed Bishop of Laval Emile Charles Raymond Pirolley 1951 1957 appointed Bishop of Nancy Rene Jean Prosper Bruno Boudon 1957 1983 Roger Lucien Meindre 1983 1989 appointed Archbishop of Albi Paul Emile Joseph Bertrand 1989 2001 Robert Jean Louis Le Gall O S B 2001 2006 appointed Archbishop of Toulouse 92 Francois Joseph Marie Jacolin 93 M D P 94 2007 2018 appointed Bishop of Lucon Benoit Bertrand since 2019 See also editCatholic Church in FranceReferences edit de civitate Gabalum provincia Aquitania C Munier Concilia Galliae A 314 A 506 Turnhout Brepols 1963 p 15 line 47 p 16 line 39 p 18 line 34 p 21 line 34 Duchesne p 54 Duchesne p 54 no 1 Gaydou Etudes critiques pp 3 16 The actual construction took place much later Work began in 1364 and stopped in 1386 construction resumed in 1452 and the altar was consecrated on 2 August 1467 The works were completed under Bishop Clemente Grosso della Rovere 1483 1504 Pascal pp 114 120 375 376 Gallia christiana I pp 85 86 David M Cheney Catholic Hierarchy Diocese of Mende Retrieved 2019 07 17 Carolus Munier Concilia Galliae A 314 A 506 Turnholt Brepols 1963 p 15 line 47 Genialis diaconus de civitate Gabalum provincia Aquitanica Carolus De Clercq Concilia Galliae A 511 A 695 Turnholt Brepols 1963 p 111 line 7 Helarius episcopus ecclesiae Gaualetanae P Jaffe and G Wattenbach Regesta pontificum Romanorum Tomus II Leipzig 1888 p 160 Leopold Delisle has noted the historical interest of these two works for the early history of the Third Estate in the Gevaudan Leopold Delisle Un manuscrit de la cathedrale de Mende perdu et retrouve in Journal des Savants Octobre 1908 pp 505 512 G de Burdin I p 7 note 1 points out that the original bull does not survive and there is no proof that a golden bull was ever attached G de Burdin I p 8 Gallia christiana I p 93 Pascal p 205 Lettres de Philippe le Bel relatives au pays de Gevaudan in French and Latin Imprimerie A Privat 1896 pp 50 53 174 195 A Martin p 4 Gallia christiana I p 96 G de Burdin I pp 37 43 Pascal pp 425 439 includes an analysis of the works Jean Baptiste Magnan 1862 Histoire d Urban V et de son siecle in French Paris Ambroise Bray pp 81 91 Magnan p 83 questions the miraculous story pointing out that it does not appear in the extensive documentation for the canonization of Urban V Jean Baptiste Prouzet 1846 Histoire du Gevaudan ou suite aux annales de cette province in French Vol Tome premier Mende Montauban Pecout pp 207 208 Pascal Gabalum christianum p 76 Martin p 9 11 Georges Amiaud Bellavaud 1952 Un chef huguenot le capitaine Merle et les guerres de religion notamment en Auvergne Gevaudan et Vivarais in French 2nd ed Uzes Ateliers H Peladan L Ouvreleul Jean Baptiste 1825 Memoires historiques sur le pays de Gevaudan et sur la ville de Mende in French nouvelle ed Mende J J M Mignon pp 41 45 L Ouvreleul p 43 Eugene Bonnemere 1882 Les dragonnades Histoire des Camisards in French Paris E Dentu pp 118 186 187 A Martin p 12 In 1677 the city of Mende had around 5 000 inhabitants Ritzler Sefrin V p 268 note 1 In 1767 the city of Mende claimed to have only around 2 000 inhabitants Ritzler Sefrin VI p 289 note 1 Biographie universelle et portative des contemporains ou Dictionnaire historique des hommes vivants et des hommes morts depuis 1788 jusqu a nos jours qui se sont fait remarquer par leurs ecrits leurs actions leurs talents leurs vertus ou leurs crimes in French Vol Tome premier Paris Chez l Editeur 1836 pp 893 894 Louis Marie Prudhomme 1793 La Republique francaise en quatre vingt quatre departements dictionnaire geographique et methodique in French Paris Chez l editeur rue des Marais pp 7 11 Ludovic Sciout 1872 Historie de la constitution civile du clerge 1790 1801 in French Vol Tome I Paris Firmin Didot freres fils et cie pp 204 208 Pierre Brizon 1904 L eglise et la revolution francaise des Cahiers de 1789 au Concordat in French Paris Pages libres pp 27 30 Philippe Bourdin Collegiales et chapitres cathedraux au crible de l opinion et de la Revolution Annales historiques de la Revolution francaise no 331 janvier mars 2003 29 55 at 29 30 52 53 Paul Pisani 1907 Repertoire biographique de l episcopat constitutionnel 1791 1802 in French Paris A Picard et fils pp 345 349 Pisani pp 348 349 Em Sevestre Emile Sevestre 1905 L histoire le texte et la destinee du Concordat de 1801 in French Paris Lethielleux pp 238 249 488 496 Pius VI Pius VII 1821 Collectio per epitomen facta Bullarum Brevium Allocutionum Epistolarumque Pii VI contra constitutionem civilem Cleri Gallicani ejusque authores et fautores item Concordatorum inter Pium VII et Gubernium Rei publicae in Galliis atque alia varia regimina post modum in hac regione sibi succedentia tum expostulationum apud Pium Papam VII Contra varia Acta ad Ecclesiam Gallicanam spectantia a triginta et octo Episcopis Archiepiscop et Cardinal antiquae Ecclesiae Gallicanae subscriptarum etc 6 Avril 1803 in Latin London Cox amp Baylis pp 111 121 Ritzler Sefrin VI p 169 with note 3 S in L episcopat francais p 351 S in L episcopat francais pp 353 354 Ceslas B Bourdin Church and State in Craig Steven Titus ed 2009 Philosophical Psychology Psychology Emotions and Freedom Washington DC USA CUA Press pp 140 147 ISBN 978 0 9773103 6 4 J de Fabregues 1967 The Re Establishment of Relations between France and the Vatican in 1921 Journal of Contemporary History 2 4 163 182 doi 10 1177 002200946700200412 JSTOR 259828 S2CID 220874600 John W Padberg 1969 Colleges in Controversy The Jesuit Schools in France from Revival to Suppression 1815 1880 Cambridge MA USA Harvard University Press pp 97 98 ISBN 978 0 674 14160 5 Felix Remize 1919 La Providence de Mende communaute et orphelinat in French Toulouse Privat pp 129 187 Pascal pp 102 103 Pascal pp 103 104 succursus dicitur ecclesia quae alteri potiori auxilio est in administrandis plebei Christianae sacramentis C du Fresne Du Cange Glossarium Mediae et Infimae Latinitatis editio nova Tomus septimus R S Niort L Favre 1886 p 645 column 3 succursus 2 Privatus Gallia christiana I pp 85 86 Duchesne p 54 no 1 Clovis Brunel Les miracles de Saint Privat suivis des Opuscules d Aldebert III eveque de Mende Paris A Picard 1912 Pascal pp 294 295 points out that the sources for the legend of Privat go back only to the eleventh century though he believes that there is earlier material in the liturgical material for his feast day Leoninus was represented at the Council of Agde in 506 by his Deacon Optimus C Munier Concilia Galliae A 314 A 506 Turnhout Brepols 1963 p 214 p 219 Gallia christiana I p 86 Duchesne p 54 no 2 Hilarius was present at the Council of Auvergne Clermont in 535 C De Clercq Concilia Galliae A 511 A 695 Turnholt Brepols 1963 pp 110 111 Helarius episcopus ecclesia Gaualetanae Gallia christiana I pp 86 87 Duchesne p 54 no 3 Hilarius has been confused with a Saint Ilerius who was not a bishop but became one through confusion Hilarius is also confused with Hilary of Poitiers Pascal pp 173 175 Euantius was present at the Council of Orange in 541 De Clercq pp 143 146 Euantius episcopus ecclesiae Gaualetane Gallia christiana I p 87 Duchesne p 55 no 4 Parthenius is known only from a story told by Gregory of Tours in his History of the Franks Book IV chapter 40 Gallia christiana I p 87 Duchesne p 55 no 5 Agricola was present at the Council of Paris in 614 and the Council of Clichy in 627 De Clercq pp 282 ex civitate Gaballetano Agricula episcopus and 297 ex civitate Gabalus Agricula episcopus Gallia christiana I p 87 Duchesne p 55 no 6 Fredalius Gallia christiana I p 88 Duchesne p 55 no 7 Agenulfus was present at the Council of Ponthion in 876 He was the recipient of a letter of Pope John VIII written in 878 P Jaffe Regesta pontificum Romanorum I editio altera Leipzig 1885 p 406 no 3220 Gallia christiana I p 88 Duchesne p 55 no 8 Guillelmus is known only from the foundation charter of the monastery of St Peter in Puy ca 908 if it is to be credited Other sources place the foundation of the monastery on 13 April 993 and the subscriptions of that foundation charter are corroborated Gallia christiana I p 88 Pascal pp 185 186 Stephanus reestablished the monastery of Sainte Enimie whose refoundation document was signed by Pope Agapitus II 946 955 on 5 May 951 Jean Mabillon 1681 De re diplomatica libri vi in Latin Paris sumtibus L Billaine pp 369 370 Pascal pp 184 186 Matefredus is known only from a charter issued by Vicomte Stephanus for the foundation of the monastery of Langogne Mabillon pp 579 580 no 148 At one point it is said that the foundation is done consilio episcoporum Matifredi ecclesiae Mimatensis clericorum ejus and at another Gregorio papa hoc auctoritate apostolica confirmante necnon Matfredo Mimatensis ecclesiae Episcopo et Canonicorum ejus Pope Gregory is Gregory V 996 999 This appears to be the earliest reference to a bishop of Mimatensis and the earliest reference to Canons of the cathedral Gallia christiana I pp 88 89 Pascal p 186 Bishop Ragemundus participated in the Council of Bourges on 1 November 1031 J D Mansi ed Sacrorum Conciliorum nova et amplissima collectio editio novissima Tomus XIX Venice A Zatta 1774 p 502 In 1036 he presided over the transfer of the remains of Saint Privatus to Le Puy Anicium according to the Office of the Saints of Mende Gallia christiana I p 89 De Lisle p 508 Pascal p 187 states that he died in 1050 Bishop Hildebertus Gabalitensis was present at the consecration of Bishop Iterius of Limoges on 4 January 1252 3 Gallia christiana II p 516 In 1060 he granted the monastery of Canourge to the Abbey of Saint Victor in Marseille On 16 March 1062 he founded the monastery of Chirac Monstier Gallia christiana I p 89 Pascal pp 187 188 Bishop Guillaume is known from one document reported in Gallia christiana on the authority of Dom J Boyer which states that on 7 December 1095 when Pope Urban II consecrated the high altar in the monastery church of Saint Flour Bishop Guillaume of Mende consecrated the two side altars Gallia christiana I p 89 Pascal p 188 Bishop Robert is known from a single document from Chanteuge dated 1098 Gallia christiana I p 89 Pascal p 189 Gams p 577 column 1 Adelbertus de Peire was the nephew of Bishop Hildebertus Adelbert de Peire In 1109 he established a commemoration service in the cathedral for his father and uncle to be held every 1 May He died in 1123 Gallia christiana I p 89 Pascal pp 191 192 Gams p 577 column 1 Guillaume persuaded the Canons of his cathedral to adopt the Rule of Saint Augustine by granting them the income of seventeen churches in the diocese The arrangement was approved by Pope Calixtus II in a bull of 18 March 1123 the Canons were secularized in 1222 Bishop Guillaume participated in a council in Albi in 1133 P Jaffe amp S Loewenfeld Regesta pontificum Romanorum Tomus I editio altera Leipzig 1885 p 809 no 7025 Gallia christiana I p 89 Pascal pp 192 193 Gams p 577 column 1 Adelbert had previously been Provost of Mende A document of 1155 was signed in his fifth year making 1151 the date of his election He named Adelbert as a judge in a suit between the Vicomte de Polignac and the Bishop of Le Puy by Pope Eugenius III In July 1162 Pope Alexander III visited Mende He died in 1187 Gallia christiana I p 190 Pascal pp 193 195 Guillaume was elected in 1187 since a document of 1207 speaks of his twentieth year as bishop His early years were spent outside of Mende having been excluded by the town because of a dispute he did not return until 1194 He resigned his diocese which Pope Honorius III accepted on 22 September 1221 His successor had already been elected by 2 March 1223 Guillaume set off on pilgrimage to the Holy Land in 1223 He was still alive on 11 March 1224 when Pope Honorius granted him the usus pontificalis Gallia christiana I pp 90 91 Pascal pp 195 198 Eubel I p 341 note 1 Bishop Stephanus had to travel to Rome to seek a dispensation because of illegitimacy His election which had been approved by the Archbishop of Bourges was approved by Pope Honorius III on 7 March 1224 and he was consecrated in Rome by Bishop Gualtier of Chartres Hugh of Langres and Gervaise of Seez The Dean of Bourges was appointed Administrator of the vacant diocese by Pope Innocent IV on 23 December 1246 indicating that Bishop Stephanus had died some weeks before that date Gallia christiana I p 91 92 Instrumenta p 25 no IV Pascal pp 199 201 Eubel Hierarchia catholica I p 341 After the death of Bishop Etienne there were two elections one of Armandus Arnaldus the Provost of Mende and the other of Bernardus de Apcherio Dean of Le Puy and Canon of Mende The matter was referred to Pope Innocent IV who provided Odilon the Provost and Dean of the Collegiate Church of Brivatensis Brivadois Clermont When this happened is uncertain Odilon is called Bishop elect in a document of 21 May 1250 but he was still not consecrated a bishop by 11 December 1255 when Pope Alexander IV gave a mandate to the Archbishop of Bourges to ordain him and consecrate him a bishop Odilon was living in Paris Bishop Odilon died on 28 January 1273 Gallia christiana I pp 92 93 Eubel I p 341 Bishop Etienne was present at the provincial Council of Aurillac on 23 August 1278 Gallia christiana I p 93 J D Mansi ed Sacrorum Conciliorum nova et amplissima collectio editio novissima Tomus XXIV Venice A Zatta 1780 p 211 Pascal p 204 In April 1285 Archbishop Simon of Bourges wrote to the Chapter of the Cathedral of Mende complaining of the long delay in their electing a bishop Gallia christiana I p 93 and Instrumenta p 25 Guillaume Durand was elected by the Chapter of the Cathedral on the Feast of Saint Mark 25 April 1285 Gallia christiana I Instrumenta p 25 In June 1296 he was serving as Rector of the Marches of Ancona and Romandiola of the City of Bologna and the County of Spoleto Fantuzzi Marco 1802 Monumenti ravennati de secoli di mezzo per la maggior parte inediti in Italian and Latin Vol Tomo III Venezia pp 170 171 He died in Rome on 1 November 1296 and was buried in S Maria sopra Minerva F Z Collombet 1843 L Eglise et le Couvent des Dominicains de Lyon in French Lyon Boitel p 14 His tombstone Vincenzo Forcella 1869 Iscrizioni delle Chiese e d Altri Edificii in Italian and Latin Roma pp 411 no 1555 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link D Arcy had been Treasurer in the Cathedral Chapter of Reims He was appointed Bishop of Mende by Pope John XXII on 14 December 1330 He was transferred to Autun on 21 December 1331 on the creation of Pierre Bertrand of Autun as a Cardinal A Coulon amp S Clemencet Lettres secretes et curiales du Pape Jean XXII Tome VI Paris 1967 p 111 no 4745 Eubel I pp 73 342 Albertus had been Archdeacon of Flavigny in the Church of Autun and a papal chaplain He was appointed bishop of Mende on 21 December 1331 and was entered in the Liber Obligationum on 23 December He died in 1361 Gallia christiana I pp 97 98 Pascal p 220 Eubel I p 342 Guillaume had been Provost of the Cathedral Chapter of Mende He was appointed by Pope Innocent VI on 16 March 1362 Gallia christiana I p 98 Pascal p 223 Eubel I p 342 Pierre Gerardi a nephew of Urban V was appointed by Pope Urban V on 11 August 1366 He was transferred to the diocese of Avignon on 11 October 1368 Gallia christiana I p 98 Pascal p 223 224 Eubel I pp 124 342 Pope Urban V retained the bishopric so that he could devote the episcopal income entirely to the beginning of the new cathedral The diocese was governed by a Vicar General Pascal pp 110 226 Guillaume de Chanac was appointed Bishop of Mende by Pope Gregory XI on 8 January 1371 and was named a Cardinal on 30 May 1371 He died in Avignon on 30 December 1383 Gallia christiana I pp 99 100 Pascal pp 226 229 Eubel I pp 22 no 6 342 A native of Mende Bonuspar had been Archpriest of Javols and then Prebendary of the Cathedral of Mende and then Provost of the Cathedral Chapter He was Auditor of Cardinal Raimundus de Canhiliac He was appointed bishop by Gregory XI on 16 June 1371 He took possession of the diocese on 3 August He died on 31 July 1375 not 1361 as in Eubel Gallia christiana I p 100 Pascal p 230 Gams p 577 Eubel I p 342 Gallia christiana I p 100 Eubel I p 342 Jean d Armagnac was transferred to the diocese of Auch on 17 October 1390 by Pope Clement VII He was created a cardinal at Perpignan by Pope Benedict XIII on 22 September 1408 He died on 8 October 1408 Eubel I pp 30 121 342 Bishop Robert who had been Bishop Elect of Alet was appointed to the diocese of Conserans St Lizier on 27 May 1390 and then was appointed Bishop of Mende on 7 October 1390 by Pope Clement VII Eubel I pp 203 342 Pietro di Saluzzo was appointed by Pope Alexander V on 24 July 1409 less than a month after Alexander s election to the papacy Pietro died in 1412 Eubel I p 342 Gerard de Miremont Bishop of Saint Flour was transferred to Mende by John XXIII on 4 January 1413 He was transferred to the diocese of Carcassonne on 19 April 1413 He died on 4 September 1420 Eubel I pp 166 342 Eubel II p 192 and n 1 Clemente Grosso a grand nephew of Pope Sixtus IV He was appointed Bishop of Mende on 27 October 1483 in succession to his uncle He took his oath for his temporalities on 28 June 1485 He served as Vice Legate of Avignon under his uncle Giuliano della Rovere Legate from 1476 from 1496 He was Rector of the Comtat Venaissin from 1496 to 1502 He was aggregated Doctor of the University of Avignon in 1496 He was named a cardinal by his uncle Pope Julius II in his first Consistory for the creation of cardinals on 29 November 1503 and he died on 18 August 1504 Eubel II pp 192 III pp 10 244 note 1 La Mothe held the Licenciate in Civil and Canon Law and was a Master of Theology and had been Councilor and Almoner of Henrietta Marie daughter of Henri IV and Queen of England His brother Philippe was a Marshal of France He was nominated by King Louis XIII on 18 November 1623 and preconised approved by Pope Urban VIII on 9 October 1624 He was consecrated in Paris on 19 February 1625 by Jean Francois de Gondi Archbishop of Paris He died at the siege of Rupella La Rochelle on 5 March 1628 Gallia christiana I pp 107 108 Gauchat Hierarchia catholica IV p 242 with note 3 Baudry was born in the diocese of Evreux and was a Doctor of Theology Paris He was nominated bishop of Mende by King Louis XIV on 4 July 1677 and preconized approved on 11 October 1677 by Pope Innocent XI He was consecrated on 16 January 1678 at Saint Germain des Pres in Paris by the Archbishop of Paris Francois de Harlay de Champvallon He died on 17 November 1707 Ritzler Hierarchia catholica V p 268 with note 3 Michel Perronet 1990 Jean Arnaud de Castellane eveque comte du Gevaudan in Bardy Chabrol Duthu pp 76 90 Laurent Gustave 1904 L arrestation et la mort de Jean Arnaud de Castellane La Revolution Francaise 46 29 56 at p 50 Paul Pisani 1907 Repertoire biographique de l episcopat constitutionnel 1791 1802 in French Paris A Picard et fils pp 345 349 Societe bibliographique France 1907 L episcopat francais depuis le Concordat jusqu a la Separation 1802 1905 in French Paris Librairie des Saints Peres pp 351 352 Nephew of the Bishop of Viviers Dominique Javel 2000 Transmettre la foi au diocese d Avignon XIXe XXe siecle in French Avignon Barthelemy pp 19 20 ISBN 9782879231242 Societe bibliographique France 1907 L episcopat francais depuis le Concordat jusqu a la Separation 1802 1905 in French Paris Librairie des Saints Peres pp 355 356 David M Cheney Catholic Hierarchy Archbishop Robert Jean Louis Le Gall O S B Retrieved 2016 07 17 Diocese de Mende Biographie de Mgr Jacolin retrieved 2017 01 10 in French M D P Missionnaires de la Plaine et de Sainte ThereseBibliography editReference works edit Gams Pius Bonifatius 1873 Series episcoporum Ecclesiae catholicae quotquot innotuerunt a beato Petro apostolo Ratisbon Typis et Sumptibus Georgii Josephi Manz p 576 578 Eubel Conradus ed 1913 Hierarchia catholica Tomus 1 second ed Munster Libreria Regensbergiana in Latin p 192 Eubel Conradus ed 1914 Hierarchia catholica Tomus 2 second ed Munster Libreria Regensbergiana in Latin p 244 Eubel Conradus ed Gulik Guilelmus 1923 Hierarchia catholica Tomus 3 second ed Munster Libreria Regensbergiana a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a first1 has generic name help p 97 Gauchat Patritius Patrice 1935 Hierarchia catholica IV 1592 1667 Munster Libraria Regensbergiana Retrieved 2016 07 06 p 242 Ritzler Remigius Sefrin Pirminus 1952 Hierarchia catholica medii et recentis aevi V 1667 1730 Patavii Messagero di S Antonio Retrieved 2016 07 06 p 268 Ritzler Remigius Sefrin Pirminus 1958 Hierarchia catholica medii et recentis aevi VI 1730 1799 Patavii Messagero di S Antonio Retrieved 2016 07 06 p 289 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 Ritzler Remigius 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 1715 Gallia christiana in provincias ecclesiasticas distributa in Latin Vol Tomus primus Paris Coignard pp 80 116 Studies edit Benjamin Bardy Jean Paul Chabrol Helene Duthu 1990 Entre adhesion et refus la revolution en Lozere 1789 1989 actes du colloque tenu aux Archives departementales de la Lozere le 4 aout 1989 in French Mende Conseil general Bulman Jan K 2008 The Court Book of Mende and the Secular Lordship of the Bishop Recollecting the Past in Thirteenth Century Gevaudan Toronto CA University of Toronto Press ISBN 978 1 4426 9197 1 Burdin Gustave de 1846 Documents historiques sur la province de Gevaudan in French Vol Tome I Toulouse imprimerie de Laurent Chapelle Duchesne Louis 1910 Fastes episcopaux de l ancienne Gaule II L Aquitaine et les Lyonnaises Paris Fontemoing pp 54 55 second edition in French Gasmand Marion 2007 Les eveques de la province ecclesiastique de Bourges milieu Xe fin XIe siecle in French Paris Connaissances et Savoirs ISBN 978 2 7539 0022 6 Gaydou Francois 1856 Etudes critiques sur l origine de l Eglise de Mende et ses premiers eveques in French Mende J J M Iguon Jean Armand 1891 Les eveques et les archeveques de France depuis 1682 jusqu a 1801 in French Paris A Picard p 78 Jones P M 2004 Politics in the Rural Society The Southern Massif Central C 1750 1880 Cambridge UK Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 52258 8 Laurent Baptiste Fages Alfred 2011 Armorial des eveques de Mende liste chronologique heraldique iconographique in French Nimes Lacour Olle ISBN 978 2 7504 2761 0 Martin A Andre Ferdinand 1894 Notice historique sur la ville de Mende d apres les notes et documents recueillis in French Marvejols Mende Guerrier Planchon Maurice Philippe Anne Sabine Delrieu Helene Duthu 2004 Diocese de Mende in French Turnhout Brepols ISBN 978 2 503 52159 6 Pascal Jean Baptiste Etienne 1853 Gabalum Christianum ou recherche historico critiques sur l Eglise de Mende in French Paris Dumoulin list of bishops at p 285 Philip IV King of France 1896 Jean Roucaute and Marc Sache ed Lettres de Philippe le Bel relatives au pays de Gevaudan in Latin and French Mende Imprimerie A Privat External links edit in French Centre national des Archives de l Eglise de France L Episcopat francais depuis 1919 retrieved 2016 12 24 Goyau Georges Diocese of Mende The Catholic Encyclopedia Vol 10 New York Robert Appleton Company 1911 Retrieved 2017 08 17 David M Cheney Catholic Hierarchy Diocese of Mende self published 44 31 19 N 3 29 50 E 44 52194 N 3 49722 E 44 52194 3 49722 Portals nbsp Catholicism nbsp France Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Roman Catholic Diocese of Mende amp oldid 1183919300, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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