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Roman Catholic Diocese of Saint-Jean-de-Maurienne

The French Roman Catholic diocese of Saint-Jean-de-Maurienne (San Giovanni di Moriana in Italian) has since 1966 been effectively suppressed, formally united with the archdiocese of Chambéry.[1] While it has not been suppressed, and is supposed to be on a par with Chambéry and the diocese of Tarentaise, it no longer has a separate bishop or existence.

Cathedral in Saint-Jean-de-Maurienne

History edit

Gregory of Tours's De Gloria Martyrum[2] relates how the church of Maurienne, belonging then to the Diocese of Turin, became a place of pilgrimage, after the holy woman Thigris or Thecla,[3] a native of Valloires, had brought to it as sacred relic from the East a finger[4] of John the Baptist,[5] the same figure which touched Jesus Christ during his baptism.[6] Jacob of Voragine, who is using the work of Gregory, says that the finger of John the Baptist suddenly appeared on the altar of the church at Maurienne, after a Gallic matron earnestly prayed God to give her a relic of the Baptist.[7] Bishop Étienne de Morel (1483–1499) procured for the cathedral a finger of the right hand of Saint Peter.[8] Guntram, King of Burgundy, took from the Lombards in 574 the valleys of Maurienne and Suse, and in 576 founded near the shrine a bishopric, detached from the then Diocese of Turin (in Piedmont, northern Italy), as suffragan of the Archdiocese of Vienne, also comprising the Briançonnais.[9]

Its first bishop was Felmasius, known from a document on the Baptist relic's first miracle.[10] In 599, Gregory the Great failed to make the Merovingian Queen Brunehaut oblige the protests of the Bishop of Turin against this foundation.

Leo III (795-816) made Darantasia (Tarantaise, Loire) a Metropolitan archbishopric with three suffragans, Aosta, Sitten, and Maurienne, but maintained the Ancient primatial status of Vienne.

A letter written by John VIII in 878 acknowledged the claim of Archbishop Teutrannus of Tarantaise that the Bishop of Maurienne was suffragan of Tarentaise, but ordered the archbishop to settle his claim with the Archbishop of Vienne.[11] For four centuries this supremacy was the cause of conflicts between the archbishops of Tarentaise and the Metropolitans of Vienne, who continued to claim Maurienne as a suffragan see.

In 904 or 908, Pope Sergius III purportedly wrote to Archbishop Alexander of Vienne, according to Cardinal Billiet, confirming that the diocese of Maurienne was a suffragan of the archbishop of Vienne.[12] The document, however, is one of the notorious "Vienne Forgeries."[13]

In an apostolic brief of 26 April 1123, addressed to Bishop Amedeus, Pope Callistus II affirmed that Maurienne was a suffragan of the metropolis of Vienne, as it had been when he himself was archbishop of Vienne (1088–1119); he also ruled that the city of Susa belonged to the diocese of Maurienne.[14]

As its first see, a cathedral of John the Baptist was built in the 6th century, destroyed by invading Saracens in 943 and rebuilt in the 11th century.[15]

S. Jean-de-Maurienne was twice sacked by the Saracens, in 732 and 906.[16] After the Saracens had been driven out, the temporal sovereignty of the Bishop of Maurienne appears to have been very extensive. By the beginning of the 11th century, according to Cardinal Billiet, the bishop was temporal ruler of 19 parishes on the left bank of the River Arc, the parish of S. Jean at Valmeinier, and two or three on the right bank.[17] But there is no proof that such sovereignty had been recognized since Gontran's time.

Imperial and royal influence edit

At the death in 1032 of Rudolph III of Burgundy, the last ruler of the independent Kingdom of Burgundy, Bishop Thibaut was powerful enough to join a league against Holy Roman Emperor Conrad II of Franconia.[18] In 1033 the city of Maurienne was destroyed by imperial troops.[19] The bishopric lost part of its territory (the Susa valley) to the diocese of Turin, which was promised all.

In 1038, it is claimed, the Emperor Conrad suppressed the see of Maurienne altogether, giving over its title and possessions to the Bishops of Turin.[20] This imperial decree was never executed though, due probably to the death of Conrad on 4 June 1039. At the death of Bishop Guido of Turin in 1044, it is stated, Bishop Thibaud was fully reinstated at Maurienne. The imperial diploma concerning the handing over of Maurienne to Turin, however, has been shown to be a forgery, and thus the entire story is called into question.[21]

Maurienne in the 15th century edit

Arvan In February 1440, a major flood from the Bonrieu river to the west, overran the entire city of Maurienne. In a 1447 report of Canon Hugo de Fabrica, the vicar-general, to Bishop Louis de La Palud, the Cardinal de Varambone, a great part of the houses of the city as well as the cathedral were ruined. The cathedral was so badly damaged that the upper church had to be completely rebuilt, and the lower church was filled with debris and unusable. A bridge over the flooding Arvan river was washed away, as well as another bridge over the Arc river, which was also in flood.[22]

During much of the fifteenth century, the administration of the diocese was neglected. Saturnin Truchet notes that from 1441 to 1483 the bishops were non-residential, with the exception of the last five years of the life of Cardinal Louis de La Palud (1441–1451), the Cardinal de Varambon. The decima tax of the bishops was frequently not paid or was irregularly collected, due to the inattention and lack of supervision of the collectors.[23] Cardinal Guillaume d'Estouteville (1453–1483) was particularly remiss.[24]

The next bishop, Étienne de Morel (1483–1499) was also an absent pastor. He was papal datary of Pope Sixtus IV when he was appointed to the diocese of Maurienne on 31 January 1483.[25] He was still in Rome, and still functioning as datary at the pope's death on 12 August 1484; he was an official custodian at the main gate of the conclave that followed.[26] He participated in the papal consistory of 20 December 1484 on the subject of the canonization of Duke Leopold of Austria.[27] On 11 February 1485, he was present at the papal consistory in which Pope Innocent VIII received Cardinal Jean Balue on his return from his embassy to the French court; Bishop Morel had the honor of reading aloud in French the letter from King Charles VIII to the pope.[28] Morel was a Referendary of Pope Innocent VIII, who, on 17 November 1487, ratified an agreement between the bishop and the commune of Maurienne with regard to the wine decima.[29]

On 2 March 1506, Bishop Louis de Gorrevod de Challand (1499–1532) issued a set of Constitutions for the diocese of Maurienne. They were particularly concerned with taxation and the regulation of tax officials.[30]

In 1512, Bishop Louis de Gorrevod ordered the publication of an official liturgical book for the diocese of Maurienne, the Breviarium ad usum Maurianensis ecclesiae, based on that used by the cathedral Chapter. During his administration two collegiate churches were founded, Ste. Anne de Chamoux and S. Marcel de la Chambre. The house of the Celestines at Villard-Sallet and the convent of the Carmelites of la Rochette were also founded.[31]

The diocese of Bourg-en-Bresse and Francis I edit

As early as 1451, the dukes of Savoy had been interested in raising the profile of their ecclesiastical establishment. Louis, Duke of Savoy, sent an embassy to Pope Nicholas V, indicating his wish that Turin be made a metropolitan archdiocese, and that new dioceses be created at Bourg en Bresse and Chambéry.[32] In July 1515, at the urging of Charles III, Duke of Savoy, and over the objections of Francis I of France, the archbishop of Vienne, and the bishop of Grenoble, Pope Leo X established a new diocese, Bourg in Bresse, out of territory belonging to the diocese of Maurienne, and a new diocese at Chambéry. The church of S. Maria de Burgo in Bressia was elevated to the status of a cathedral.[33] The first bishop of Bourg was Bishop Louis de Gorrevod of Maurienne, who was allowed to hold both dioceses at the same time. He was also assigned an auxiliary bishop, Jean de Joly, O.P., titular bishop of Hebron, in 1524;[34] in 1544 the auxiliary bishop was Pierre Meynard, also titular bishop of Hebron.[35] In November 1515, Bishop de Gorrevod convened a synod of all the ecclesiastics in the new diocese of Bourg, and drew up a set of statutes, which were published in 1516.[36] Gorrevod was named a cardinal by Pope Clement VII on 9 March 1530,[37] and on the same day his nephew, Jean Philibert de Challant, was appointed bishop of Bourg-en-Bresse.[38]

In 1531, Cardinal de Gorrevod was appointed papal legate in all the territories possessed by the dukes of Savoy, and his powers were confirmed on 2 April 1531 by a letter of Duke Charles III .[39] He resigned the diocese of Maurienne on 10 April 1532, in favor of his nephew, Jean Philibert de Challant, thereby once again bringing the two dioceses together under the leadership of one bishop.[40] Challant was only bishop-elect of Bresse, however, since he did not receive episcopal consecration until 22 May 1541.[41]

In the struggle between France (King Francis I) and Spain (Emperor Charles V) over the duchy of Milan, the duke of Savoy found himself drawn, especially after the defeat and capture of Francis at the Battle of Pavia in 1525, into the orbit of Charles V.[42] By 1535, Francis I believed himself strong enough to confront Charles III of Savoy. He confronted Charles and the exiled bishop of Geneva who were besieging Protestant Geneva, raising the siege, capturing the Vaud, and expelling the bishop of Lausanne.[43] On 11 February 1536, the king gave the order to invade Bugey and Bresse, and on 24 February his troops entered Savoy. He immediately ordered the suppression of the diocese of Bourg-en-Bresse, whose establishment he had protested, and also refused the bishop-elect of Chambéry, Urbain de Miolans,[44] to take possession of his diocese.[45]

Maurienne in the 16th century edit

When Bishop de Challant died in 1544, the cathedral Chapter of Maurienne, in accordance with tradition, assembled on 20 July 1544 to elect a new bishop. They chose François de Luxembourg, vicomte de Martigues, who was not in holy orders. Their choice was rejected by King Francis, and he himself attempted to install Dominique de Saint-Séverin as bishop of Maurienne. The Chapter, however, rejected Saint-Severin, and therefore the diocese depended on an auxiliary bishop for several years.[46] Pope Paul III transferred bishop-elect Girolamo Recanati Capodiferro from Nice to Maurienne on 30 July 1544, but there is no evidence that he was in Holy Orders or ever consecrated a bishop; he was named a cardinal on 19 December 1444, and appointed papal legate in the Romandiola on 26 August 1545, where he continued to serve under Pope Julius III, and Marcellus II, and Paul IV.[47]

By the time of the Reformation, the cathedral Chapter posessed eleven parishes and were patrons of twenty-two others, as well as the hôpital de la Rochette and the priories of La Corbière, Aiton, and Saint-Julien.[48]

On 23 August 1489, Bishop Etienne de Morel (1483–1499) solemnly invested Charles I, Duke of Savoy (1482–1490) as a canon of the cathedral of Maurienne. All subsequent dukes, with papal permission, were granted the same privilege, as though it were a hereditary possession.[49] Emmanuel Philibert, Duke of Savoy, took solemn possession of a canonry in the cathedral of Maurienne in 1564.

Diocese of Maurienne in the mid-17th century edit

A major plague struck the diocese of Maurienne in 1630.[50]

Before the appointment of Hercule Berzetti as bishop of Maurienne in 1658, Pope Alexander VII ordered Cardinal Antonio Barberini to provide a report on the state of the diocese and the suitability of the candidate. The report stated that in civil affairs the diocese was subject to the Dukes of Savoy, and in ecclesiastical matters to the metropolitan of Vienne. The cathedral, which was in need of extensive repairs, was administered by a Chapter of 18 canons, though it had no dignities, and there was no special provision for a theologus or penitentiarius. The canons were responsible for the spiritual care of the cathedral parish. The episcopal palace, which was near the cathedral, was in good repair. Besides the cathedral, there were two parishes in the city, a convent of men and one of women, and a hospice for pilgrims. There were around 100 parishes in the diocese, most of them so poor that the incumbent priest relied to an extent on alms.[51]

Revolution, Repression edit

In 1792, Savoy was invaded and occupied by forces of the French National Assembly. Bishops and priests were ordered to swear a prescribed oath to the Civil Constitution of the Clergy, or to lose their offices; on 23 April 1792, Pope Pius VI ordered that any clergy who did swear the oaths were automatically suspended.[52] Four of the five bishops then in office went into exile, including the bishop of Maurienne; the fifth was too aged to flee. Commissioners sent from Paris imposed a revolutionary government, and on 8 March 1793 issued an ecclesiastical decree which followed metropolitan French policy by reducing the number of dioceses from 5 to 1, to be centered in Annecy and called the diocese of Mont-Blanc.[53] A new bishop for each diocese was to be elected by an assembly of electors chosen for loyalty to the French constitution. Electors did not have to be Catholic or even Christian. Papal participation in any form was forbidden. These arrangements were uncanonical and schismatic,[54] as were the consecrations of any of the "Constitutional bishops."[55]

On 29 November 1801, in the concordat of 1801 between the French Consulate, headed by First Consul Napoleon Bonaparte, and Pope Pius VII, the bishopric was suppressed, its territory being merged into the Diocese of Chambéry.[56]

There was already a charity hospital in Maurienne by the 13th century, established and subsidized by the bishops. It had fallen into decay in the 15th century, and was revived in the 16th by the Confraternity of the Bienheureuse Vierge Marie de la Miséricorde. The agents of the French Revolution abolished both the confraternity and the diocese of Maurienne in 1801. The operation of the hospital was placed in the hands of nine administrators, including a lawyer, a physician, a surgeon, and a pharmacist; there was a staff of 14, for 28 sick and 9 orphans. In 1805, the administrators petitioned the Emperor Napoleon for assistance with their dilapidated building; he assigned them the former Major Seminary in Maurienne, which had been used as a military hospital by the French, and was in a bad sanitary condition. In 1821, the priest of the city wrote about the state of the hospice to his friend, who was the spiritual director of the Soeurs de Saint-Joseph-de-Chambéry, who were not able to respond immediately. In May 1822, the administrators made an official request of the sisters. In the first week of June, Mother St.-Jean of Chambéry and three other sisters took charge of the hospital. In November 1822, another sister was requested from Chambéry to organize a school for poor girls; the school opened in January 1824, and in January 1825 was authorized to accept paying students.[57]

The papacy was already interested in stabilizing the establishment at Maurienne, and, in May 1824, Cardinal Giulio-Maria della Somaglia was engaged in negotiations with the bishop of Chambéry and with the archbishop of Lyon to make the sisters in Maurienne an independent congregation.[58]

The Sisters of St. Joseph, a nursing and teaching order, with mother-house at St-Jean-de-Maurienne, are a branch of the Congregation of St. Joseph at Lyon. At the end of the nineteenth century, they were in charge of 8 day nurseries and 2 hospitals. In Algeria, the East Indies[59] and Argentina houses were founded, controlled by the motherhouse at Maurienne.[60]

Restoration edit

In the Treaty of Paris, signed on 30 May 1814, Chambéry became part of France.[61] In the General Treaty of the Congress of Vienna, signed on 9 June 1815, the ancient boundaries of the Kingdom of Sardinia were restored. This act returned Maurienne to the control of King Charles Felix.[62]

At the request of King Charles Felix of Sardinia and his ambassador at the Vatican, Giovanni Nicolao Ludovico Crosa, on 5 August 1825, with the papal bull "Ecclesias quae antiquitate", Pope Leo XII restored the Diocese of Saint-Jean-de-Maurienne with territory consisting of 80 parishes removed from the diocese of Chambéry. The parish church of S. John the Baptist was restored to cathedral status, and it was assigned a cathedral chapter consisting of three dignities (Provost, Archdeacon, and Cantor) and ten canons, two of whom would be the Theologus and the Penitentiarius. The right of the king to nominate a candidate for an episcopal vacancy, as well as a vacancy in the office of archdeacon and cantor, as well as the vacancy in a canonry (except for the theologus and penitentiarius) was confirmed or granted. The pope retained the right to nominate the provost. The restored diocese of Maurienne was made a suffragan of the archbishop of Chambéry.[63]

Bishop Alexis Billiet was installed on 18 April 1826, and he immediately set to work to recover the diocese's rights and property, as well as to unify a clergy and people who had been thrown into confusion by the French occupation. He began the process of canonically separating the house of the Sisters of S.-Joseph from their mother-house in Chambéry, which was approved by King Charles Felix on 18 April 1827. In 1828, the Sisters signed a contract to purchase the château of the comtes d'Arves as a new mother-house.[64]

Modern changes edit

In 1947, the diocese of Maurienne gained territory from the Metropolitan Archdiocese of Torino.

On 26 April 1966, Maurienne was suppressed as an independent diocese, its title and territory being merged into the renamed Metropolitan Archdiocese of Chambéry–Saint-Jean-de-Maurienne–Tarentaise.[65]

Devotion edit

Among the saints specially honoured in, or connected with, the diocese are:

  • Aprus of Sens, a priest who founded a refuge for pilgrims and the poor in the Village of St. Avre (seventh century)
  • Thomas of Maurienne, b. at Maurienne, d. in 720, famous for rebuilding the Abbey of Farfa, of which the third abbot, Lucerius, was also a native of Maurienne
  • Marinus, monk of Chandor (monasterium candorense) in Maurienne, martyred by the Saracens (eighth century)
  • Landry of Paris, pastor of Lanslevillard (eleventh century), drowned in the Arc during one of his apostolic journeys
  • Bénézet (Benedict) (1165–84), born at Hermillon, a northern suburb of St.-Jean-de-Maurienne in the diocese, and founder of the guild of Fratres Pontifices of Avignon
  • Cabert or Gabert, disciple of St. Dominic, who preached the Gospel for twenty years in the vicinity of AiguebelIe (thirteenth century)

The chief shrines of the diocese were:

  • Notre Dame de Bonne Nouvelle, near St-Jean-de-Maurienne, which dates from the sixteenth century
  • Notre Dame de Charmaix, in a mountain pass south of Modane
  • Notre Dame de Beaurevers at Montaimon, dating from the seventeenth century.

Bishops of Saint-Jean-de-Maurienne edit

To 1200 edit

  • 579: Felmase I [fr][66]
  • 581–602: Hiconius [fr][67]
  • 650: Leporius [ca][68]
  • 725: Walchinus
  • c. 736 to 738: Emilian of Cogolla[69]
  • 773: Witgarius[70]
  • 837: Mainardus[71]
  • 855: Joseph[72]
  • 858: Abbo[73]
  • 876: Adalbert[74]
  • 887: Asmundus[75]
  • 899: Guillelmus[76]
  • c. 915 Benedict[77]
  • 916–926: Odilard[78]
  • 994–1035: Evrardus[79]
  • c. 1037–1060: Theobaldus[80]
  • 1060–1073: Burchardus[81]
  • 1075–1081: Artaud[82]
  • 1081–1116: Conon[83]
  • 1116–1124: Amédée de Faucigny[84]
  • 1124–1132: Conon II
  • 1132–1146: Ayrald I[85]
  • 1146–1158: Bernard
  • 1158–1162: Ayrald II
  • 1162–1176: Guillaume II
  • 1177: Peter
  • 1177–1198: Lambert
  • 1198–1200: Allevard

From 1200 to 1500 edit

  • 1200–1211: Bernard de Chignin[86]
  • 1215 Amadeus of Geneva[87]
  • 1221–1223?: Joannes[88]
  • 1223?–1236: Aimar de Bernin[89]
  • 1236–1256: Amadeus of Savoy[90]
  • 1256–1261: Pierre de Morestel
  • 1261–1269: Anthelmus de Clermont[91]
  • 1269–1273: Pierre de Guelis[92]
  • 1273–1301: Aymon (I) de Miolans[93]
  • 1302: Ayrald IV
  • 1302–1308: Amblard d’Entremont (de Beaumont)
  • 1308–1334: Aymon (II) de Miolans d’Hurtières
  • 1334–1349: Anselm de Clermont[94]
  • 1349–1376: Amadeus of Savoy-Achaia[95]
  • 1376–1380: Jean Malabaylla
  • 1380–1385: Henry de Severy
  • 1385–1410: Savin de Floran
  • 1410–1422: Amédée de Montmayeur
  • 1422–1432: Aimon Gerbais
  • 1433–1441: Oger Moriset[96]
  • 1441–1451: Cardinal Louis de La Palud[97]
  • 1451–1452: Cardinal Juan de Segovia[98]
  • 1453–1483: Cardinal Guillaume d'Estouteville[99]
  • 1483–1499: Etienne de Morel[100]

From 1500 to 1800 edit

1564–1567: Ippolito d'Este Administrator[105]
  • 1567–1591: Pierre Lambert, O.S.A.[106]
  • 1591–1618: Philibeult François Milliet de Faverges[107]
  • 1618–1636: Charles Bobba[108]
  • 1640–1656: Paul Milliet de Challes[109]
1656–1658: Sede vacante[110]
  • 1658–1686: Hercule Berzetti[111]
  • 1686–1736: François-Hyacinthe Valpergue de Masin, O.P.[112]
1736–1741: Sede vacante[113]
  • 1741–1756: Ignace-Dominique Grisella de Rosignan[114]
  • 1757–1779: Charles Joseph Filippa de Martiniana[115]
  • 1780–1793: Charles-Joseph Compans de Brichanteau[116]
François Molin, Vicar Capitular[117]
Dominique Rogès, Vicar Capitular[118]

Bishops of Chambéry, Geneva and Maurienne, from 1801 to 1825 edit

  • 1802–1805: René des Monstiers de Mérinville[119]
  • 1805–1823: Irénée-Yves Desolle[120]
  • 1825–1840: Alexis Billiet[121]

Bishops of Maurienne, from 1825 to 1996 edit

  • 1840–1876: François-Marie Vibet
  • 1876–1906: Michel Rosset
  • 1906–1924: Adrien Alexis Fodéré
  • 1924–1946: Auguste Grumel
  • 1946–1954: Frédéric Duc
  • 1954–1956: Louis Ferrand (also coadjutor archbishop of Tours)
  • 1956–1960: Joël-André-Jean-Marie Bellec (also Bishop of Perpignan-Elne)
  • 1961–1966: André Georges Bontemps[122]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ David M. Cheney, Catholic-hierarchy.org, Saint-Jean-de-Maurienne (Diocese). [self-published source]]
  2. ^ De gloria martyrum Book I, chapter 14, in Patrologiae Latinae Tomus LXXI (Paris: J.P. Migne 1858), p. 719.
  3. ^ Billiet (1861), Mémoires... Maurienne, pp. 290-291; 293-294, places the dramatic date of Thecla c. 545–550. R.L. Poole, p. 4, places the insertion of Thecla into Gregory of Tours' narrative between 907 and 915.
  4. ^ The cathedral of Troyes possessed another finger; another was held at Brienne-le-Château; the entire right hand was at Cîteaux until the French Revolution. Pierre-Marie-Jean-Baptiste Gauthier, La Légende de Saint Jean-Baptiste, (in French) (Plancy: Société de St-Victor, 1850), pp. 177-183. Jacques Albin Simon Collin de Plancy, Grande vie des saints, (in French), Volume 16 (Paris: Louis Vivès 1878), pp. 663-665. There were three heads of the Baptist in Italy, in Rome, Florence, and Reggio: S. I. Mahoney, Six Years in the Monasteries of Italy, and Two Years in the Islands of the Mediterranean and in Asia Minor (Boston: Jordan, Swift and Wiley, 1845), p. 217. There was another at Amiens: Charles Salmon, Histoire du Chef de Saint Jean Baptiste conservé à Amiens depuis 1206, (in French), Amiens: Langlois, 1876.
  5. ^ Duchesne, p. 240.
  6. ^ Billiet & Albrieux, Chartes du diocèse de Maurienne p. 289: "...videlicet proprii manus digiti qui Christum baptizando tetigerunt." The Latin text appears to state that Maurienne possessed more than one finger. The pope owned another.
  7. ^ Jacobus de Voragine, Legenda aurea (the Golden Legend, ed. Th. Graesse, 1890), ch. 125. 2: "Apud Mariennam urbem Galliae matrona quaedam Johanni baptistae valde devota Deum instantius exorabat, ut sibi de reliquiis Johannis aliquando donaretur aliquid. Cum autem orando nihil proficere se videret, sumta de Deo fiducia juramento se adstrinxit, quod hactenus non comederet, donec, quod petebat, acciperet. Cum autem diebus aliquibus jejunasset, pollicem super altare miri candoris vidit et Dei donum laeta suscepit...."
  8. ^ Besson, p. 302.
  9. ^ Duchesne, pp. 239-240.
  10. ^ Jean-Barthélemy Hauréau, Gallia christiana, vol. XVI, Paris 1865, coll. 611-654
  11. ^ J.P. Migne (ed.), Patrologiae Series Latina Tomus 126 (Paris 1855), p. 781-782; Monumenta Germaniae Historica. Epistolarum Tomus VII (Berlin: Weidmann 1928), p. 107, no. 117: "... Innotescimus denique quia venerabilis frater et coepiscopus noster Bernarius, nostram nuper audiens praesentiam, reclamavit se super fratre Adalberlo suffraganeo tuo, de quo jam Romae proclamaverat et libellum suae reclamationis ostenderat. Unde tibi et Viennensi arcbiepiscopo epistolas direximus, ut amborum querimonias ventilantes, quae canonum sunt instituta dijudicaretis...."
  12. ^ Billiet (1861), Mémoires... Maurienne, p. 328, quoting an unpublished document: "Utque largiter admodum Guntramnus ecclesiam maurianensem per concessum apostolicæ sedis cum omnibus pagis suis subjectam jure perenni sanctæ viennensi fecit ecclesiæ, ità unà cum ecclesia Secusina et ecclesiis de eadem valle ad eam pertinentibus cum omnibus pagis integram eam illi subjectam esse firmamus."
  13. ^ R.L. Poole (1916), p. 5. Wilhelm Grundlach, "Der Streit der Bisthümer Arles und Vienne um den Primatus Galliarum. (Zweiter Theil. )," (in German), in: Neues Archiv der Gesellschaft für Ältere deutsche Geschichtskunde 15 (Hannover: Hahn 1890), 9-102, esp. pp. 58, 71-77. ; Monumenta Germaniae Historica. Epistolarum Tomus III. Merowingici et Karolini aevi, I (Berlin: Weidmann 1892), pp. 100-102, no. 23.
  14. ^ Billiet (1861), Mémoires..., pp. 332-333. Billiet & Albrieux (1861) Chartes du diocèse de Maurienne: Documents recueillis, pp. 24-26, no. 14.
  15. ^ Saturnin Truchet, Saint-Jean de Maurienne au XVIe siècle, (in French), pp. 25-42.
  16. ^ Saturnin Truchet, Saint-Jean de Maurienne au XVIe siècle, (in French), p. 25.
  17. ^ Billiet (1861), Mémoires... Maurienne, p. 320.
  18. ^ Billiet (1861), Mémoires... Maurienne, p. 324.
  19. ^ Besson, p. 285.
  20. ^ Besson (1759), pp. 344-345, no. 6: "...sanctae Ecclesiae Taurinensi... donamus, Episcopatum scilicet Maurianensis civitatis, domos cum omnibus ædificiis suis; curtem videlicet... decimas quoque ipsius Episcopatûs, nec non Ecclesias eidem Episcopatui pertinentes, montes verò et valles, aquas, molendina, piscationes, foresta, sylvas, pascua; buscalia omnia in integrum, quidquid videtur esse de appenditiis supradictæ civitatis Moriennæ, donamus, concedimus atque delegamus jam dictæ Ecclesiæ S. Joannis-Baptista Taurinensis sedis...."
  21. ^ H. Bresslau, Monumenta Germaniae Historica. Diplomatum Regum et Imperatorum Germaniae (in Latin and German), Tomus IV: Conradi II Diplomata (Hannover: Hahn 1909), pp. 411-413, no. 291. If the diploma is a forgery, then the transfer of Maurienne to Turin did not take place, which explains why Conrad's decree did not go into effect, and why Maurienne continued independent after 1044. Harry Bresslau, Jahrbücher des deutschen Reichs unter Konrad II, (in German), Volume 2 (Leipzig: Duncker & Humblot, 1884), pp. 475-476. R.L. Poole, p. 1: "The influence of the fabrications of the church of Vienne has not been finally extirpated ; the forged charter of King Boso (887) is still appealed to as an authority; and the spuriousness of the diploma of the Emperor Conrad II (1038) has not yet everywhere been recognized." On the Boso charter being a forgery, see also: Réné Poupardin, Le royaume de Provence sous les Carolingiens (855-933?), (in French), (Paris: É. Bouillon, 1901), p. 111 with note 2: "La donation, faite par Boson à l'église de Maurienne, du château d'Hermillon (Hist. de Fr., t. IX, p. 672) est un faux datant probablement du XIe siècle."
  22. ^ Truchet, Saint-Jean de Maurienne au XVIe siècle pp. 27-28. Billiet & Albrieux, Chartes du diocèse de Maurienne pp. 258-260.
  23. ^ Truchet (1887), Saint-Jean de Maurienne au XVIe siècle, p. 247.
  24. ^ "Guillaume d'Estouteville n'y avait jamais résidé . Les droits de l'évêché avaient été fort mal défendus ; ses revenus avaient même été réduits sous la main de l'Etat pendant la plus grande partie de l'épiscopat de Guillaume d'Estouteville."
  25. ^ Eubel II, p. 188.
  26. ^ John Burchard, Diarium, in: L. Thuasne, Johannis Burchardi Diarium, sive Rerum urbanarum commentarii, (in Latin and French), Vol. 1 (Paris: E. Leroux 1883), p. 73.
  27. ^ Eubel II, p. 48, no. 507.
  28. ^ Burchard, p. 140.
  29. ^ Hauréau, Gallia christiana XVI, p. 644. Billiet & Albrieux, Chartes du diocèse de Maurienne pp. 303-307.
  30. ^ Eugène Burnier, "Les constitutions du cardinal Louis II de Gorrevod, évêque de Maurienne et prince (1506). Étude historique," in: Mémoires et documents publiés par la Société savoisienne d'histoire et d'archéologie, (in French and Latin), Vol. 7 (Chambéry: A. Bottero 1863), pp. 225-271, text at pp. 255-271.
  31. ^ Truchet (1887), Saint-Jean de Maurienne au XVIe siècle, Saint-Jean de Maurienne au XVIe siècle, pp. 345-348.
  32. ^ Charles Buet, Les ducs de Savoie aux XVe et XVIe siècles, (in French), (Tours: A. Mame, 1878), p. 318.
  33. ^ Paulin Piolin (ed.), Gallia christiana in provincias ecclesiasticas distributa, Tomus quartus (in Latin) (Bruxelles: G. Lebrocquy; Paris: V. Palmé 1876), p. 181.
  34. ^ Eubel III, p. 208.
  35. ^ Eugène Burnier, "Le Parlement de Chambéry sous François Ier et Henri II ( 1536-1559 ). Fragment historique," (in French), Mémoires et documents, Société savoisienne d'histoire et d'archéologie, vol. 6 (Chambéry: Bottero 1862), p. 368.
  36. ^ Besson, Mémoires pour l'histoire ecclésiastique des diocèses de Genève, Tarantaise, Aoste et Maurienne, p. 303.
  37. ^ Eubel III, p. 21, no. 21.
  38. ^ Eubel III, p. 238, note 3: "1530 Mart. 9 el. in episc. Burgien. (Bourg) (cfr. AC 3 f. 165), qui ep(iscop)atus de novo e partibus eccl(esiae) Maurianen(sis) erectus et nunc cum eodem iterum conjungitur."
  39. ^ Besson, Mémoires pour l'histoire ecclésiastique des diocèses de Genève, Tarantaise, Aoste et Maurienne, p. 303.
  40. ^ Eubel III, p. 238 with note 3.
  41. ^ Besson, p. 303.
  42. ^ Eugène Burnier, "Le Parlement de Chambéry...," pp. 279-280.
  43. ^ Burnier, pp. 281-282.
  44. ^ The diocese was established and Urbain de Miolans was appointed in 1515 by Pope Leo X at the urging of Duke Charles III, but Pope Leo was compelled by Francis I of France to void the bull. Picolet d'Hermillon, "Note sur la fondation du diocèse de Chambéry", (in French), in: Bulletin mensual de l'Académie delphinale 4e série, Tome 19 (Grenoble: Allier 1904 [1905]), pp. 51-83, at p. 69.
  45. ^ Burnier, p. 368.
  46. ^ Hauréau, Gallia christiana XVI, p. 645. Burnier, "Le Parlement de Chambéry...", p. 368.
  47. ^ Eubel III, p. 29, no. 59 with notes 5-7; p. 238 with note 4.
  48. ^ S. Truchet, Saint-Jean-de-Maurienne..., p. 53.
  49. ^ Hauréau, Gallia christiana XVI, p. 644; "Instrumenta", p. 320, no. 34.
  50. ^ Alexis Billiet, Notice sur la peste qui a affligé le diocèse de Maurienne en 1630, (in French), Chambéry: Puthod, 1836.
  51. ^ Eugène Burnier, "Pièces inédits relatives à la province de Maurienne, et tirées des archives du Sénat de Savoie," in: Travaux de la Société d'histoire et d'archéologie de la Maurienne (Savoie), Vol. 1 (1878), pp. 393-396.
  52. ^ Billiet (1865), p. 23.
  53. ^ François Molin, Souvenirs de la persécution soufferte par le clergé du Diocèse de Maurienne pendant la révolutionnaire de 1792 à 1802, (in French), (A. Pouchet et Cie, 1868), pp. 7-9.
  54. ^ Paul Pisani, Répertoire biographique de l'épiscopat constitutionnel (1791-1802), (in French), (Paris: A. Picard 1907), pp. 19-24; 306.
  55. ^ Billiet (1865), pp. 22-23.
  56. ^ J.B. Duvergier (ed.), Collection complète des lois, décrets, ordonnances, réglemens et avis du Conseil d'état, (in French and Latin), Volume 13 (Paris: A. Guyot et Scribe, 1826), pp. 372-373: "L'archevêché de Vienne dans le ci-devant Dauphiné et ses suffragans, les évèchés de Grenoble, Viviers, Valence, Die, Maurienne et Genève;" p. 387.
  57. ^ Leon Bouchage, Chroniques de la Congregation des Soeurs de Saint-Joseph de Chambéry, (in French) (Chambéry: Imprimerie générale Savoisienne 1911) [Mémoires de l'Académie des sciences, belles-lettres et arts de Savoie 4e série, Tome 12], pp. 233-248.
  58. ^ Bouchage, Chroniques de la Congregation des Soeurs de Saint-Joseph de Chambéry, pp. 611-612. (in Italian)
  59. ^ Bouchage, Chroniques de la Congregation des Soeurs de Saint-Joseph de Chambéry, Book VIII, pp. 403-581.
  60. ^ Bouchage, Chroniques de la Congregation des Soeurs de Saint-Joseph de Chambéry, pp. 233-248.
  61. ^ Treaty of Paris (1814), Article III, section 7.
  62. ^ Final Act of the Congress of Vienna/General Treaty: Article 85: "The frontiers of the states of his Majesty the King of Sardinia shall be: On the side of France, such as they were on the 1st of January 1792, with the exception of the changes effected by the Treaty of Paris of 30th May 1814. On the side or the Helvetic Confederation, such as they existed on the 1st of January 1792, with the exception of the change produced by the cession in favour of the canton of Geneva, as specified by the 80th Article of the present Act."
  63. ^ A. Barberi; R. Segreti (edd.), Bullarii Romani continuatio, (in Latin), Tomus decimus sextus, Volume 16 (Rome: 1854), pp. 336-340 (nonis Augusti 1825).
  64. ^ Bouchage, Chroniques de la Congregation des Soeurs de Saint-Joseph de Chambéry, p. 240.
  65. ^ Pope Paul VI, "Animorum bonum," in: Acta Apostolicae Sedis 58 (1966), pp. 625-626: "Maurianensem et Tarantasiensem dioeceses archidioecesi Chamberiensi aeque principaliter unimus, ita scilicet ut unus idemque Antistes tribus praesit Ecclesiis sitqüe simul Archiepiscopus Chamberiensis atque Episcopus Maurianensis et Tarantasiensis."
  66. ^ Billiet (1865), Memoires..., p. 290, quotes an 11th century manuscript that names Felmasius the first bishop of Maurienne, consecrated by Bishop Isicius of Vienne: "{Isicius] ecclesiam maurianensem consecravit, et sanctum Felmasium primum episcopum ordinavit, agente Gumteramno rege propter reliquias sancti Iohannis Baptiste que ibi ab Iherosolimis translate fuerunt; Seusiam que est in Italia mauriannensi ecclesie subditam fecit, ad ius viennensis ecclesie sicut in eiusdem auctoritatis scr .. ... legitur..."
  67. ^ Bishop Hiconius (Aeconius) participated in the church councils of Macon in 581 and 585. In 601 or 602, he presided at the moving of the remains of Saints Ours and Vctor. Fredegarius, "Chronica" IV, 22, in: Monumenta Germaniae Historica. Scriptorum rerum Merovingicarum Tomus II, (in Latin), (Hannover: Hahn 1888), p. 129. Charles De Clercq, Concilia Galliae, A. 511 – A. 695, (in Latin) (Turnholt: Brepols 1963), pp. 230, 249. Duchesne, pp. 240-241.
  68. ^ Bishop Leporius (Leborius) was present at the council of Chalon-sur-Saône in 650. De Clercq, Concilia Galliae, A. 511 – A. 695,, p. 309. Duchesne, p. 241.
  69. ^ , martyred by the Saracens (736 or 738)
  70. ^ Hauréau, Gallia christiana XVI, p. 618. Savio, p. 228.
  71. ^ Mainardus: Duchesne, p. 241. no. 5.
  72. ^ Joseph: c. 853. Savio, p. 229. Duchesne, p. 241. no. 5.
  73. ^ Bishop Abbo was present at the concilium Tullense apud Saponarias in 859, and at the council of Tusiacum (Thusey) in 860. Jacques Sirmond, Concilia antiqua Galliae, (in Latin), Volume 3 (Paris: Sebastiani Cramoisy, 1629), pp. 144, 163. Savio, p. 229.
  74. ^ Bishop Adalbertus was present at the council of Pontigny in June and July 876, and at the assembly of Mantaille in October 879. He was summoned to Rome by Pope John VIII to appear at the synod to be held in September 882, to explain his behavior in seizing Bishop Barnerius of Grenoble. Hauréau, Gallia christiana XVI "Instrumenta", p. 292, no. III. Sirmond, Concilia antiqua Galliae, p. 443. Savio, p. 229. Philippus Jaffé, Regesta pontificum Romanorum, (in Latin), Vol. 1, second edition (Leipzig: Veit 1885), pp. 420-421, nos. 3375-3376.
  75. ^ Boso, King of Burgundy and Provence, granted the castle of Chatel to the bishop of Maurienne. Billiet & Albrieux, Chartes, pp. 5-7, no. 1: "Interfuit quoque noster dilectus Asmundus Secusinæ civitatis vel Maurianorum episcopus, una cum proprio fratre Leotmanno Cremonensis ecclesiæ presule qui ... suadentes ditari regalibus opibus ecclesiam proprii episcopii sancti Johannis Baptistæ in confinio Burgundiæ positam , quæ admodum destituta esse cognoscitur sævitia hostium euntium vel redeuntium."
  76. ^ In 899, Bishop Guillelmus was present at the election of the archbishop of Vienne, Ragenfridus. Savio, p. 229. Duchesne, p. 242.
  77. ^ Savio, p. 2Venice29.
  78. ^ Bishop Odilard took part in the council of Chalons in 915: Savio, p. 229. He also took part in the council at Carilocum in 926: Sirmond, Concilia antiqua Galliae III, p. 579: "Anno Incarnationis dominica DCCCCXXVI. domnus Anchericus sanctæ Lugdunenfis Ecclesiæ Archiepiscopus, domnus quoque Geraldus Matiscensis Ecclesiæ venerabilis Pontifex, necnon Odelardus Maurianensis Episcopus, ad Carilocum monasterium conuenerunt..." The notion that he was slain by the Saracens (916), together with Benedict, Archbishop of Embrun, has been rejected by Hauréau, Gallia christiana XVI, p. 620.
  79. ^ Eberardus (Ebraldus< Urardus). Bishop Urardus was present at the council of Anse in 1025: J.D. Mansi (ed.), Sacrorum Conciliorum nova et amplissima collectio, editio novissima (in Latin) Vol. 19 (Venice: A. Zatta 1774), p. 425. Hauréau, Gallia christiana XVI, pp. 621-622. Savio, p. 230.
  80. ^ Theobaldus (Thibaud). Savio, p. 230, states that Theobaldus was present at a council held at Romans-sur-Isère. Hauréau, Gallia christiana XVI, p. 622. Savio, pp. 230-231.
  81. ^ Burchardus (Brochard, Burchard): Hauréau, Gallia christiana XVI, p. 622.
  82. ^ Artaldus is attested in 1080: Savio, p. 231, no. XIX.
  83. ^ Conon: Pope Urban II announced his election to the bishops of the province of Vienne in a letter of March 1088; the name of the bishop of Maurienne is not specified. In 1093, he witnessed a donation of Count Umberto II of Savoy. He was still governing the diocese in 1108. Savio, p. 231, no. XX.
  84. ^ Amadeus de Faucigny: Savio, p. 231, no. XXI.
  85. ^ Ayrald was once a monk of the Charterhouse of Portes [fr]. Truchet (1867), Histoire hagiologique du diocèse de Maurienne., pp. 223-236. Antoine Mottard, "Documents sur le B. Ayrald, évêque de Maurienne," (in French), in: Travaux de la Société d'histoire et d'archéologie de la Maurienne (Savoie), (in French), Vol. 4 (Chambéry: F. Puthod 1876), pp. 141-154.
  86. ^ Bernard was transferred to the diocese of Tarentaise by Pope Innocent III. He was in office there in 1213. Eubel I, pp. 331, 472.
  87. ^ Amadeus: Eubel I, p. 331.
  88. ^ The election of Joannes, Dean of the cathedral of Maurienne, by the cathedral Chapter, was far from unanimous, and some of the canons appealed to the pope to provide (appoint) a bishop. Pope Honorius III ordered the archbishop of Vienne, in a letter of 24 April 1221, to investigate whether Joannes was suitable and the choice of "the better part" of the canons, in which case he was to confirm him. Gams, p. 830. Savio, p. 236. Eubel I, p. 331. P. Pressutti, Regesta Honorii papae III, (in Latin), vol. 1, p. 535, no. 3281 (giving a misleading summary). César Auguste Horoy, Honorii III romani pontificis opera omnia, (in Latin), Tomus tertius, Volume 3 (Paris: Imprimerie de la Bibliothèque ecclésiastique 1879), pp. 778-779, no. 341.
  89. ^ On 26 January 1223, Bishop Aimarus entered into an agreement with the canons of the cathedral. Savio, p. 236. He was transferred to the diocese of Embrun in 1236 (according to Gams, p. 830). Savio, p. 236. Eubel I, p. 331.
  90. ^ Bishop Amadeus, son of Count Thomas I of Savoy, died in 1268.
  91. ^ Last Will and Testament, dated 28 February 1269: Billiet & Albrieux (1861) Chartes du diocèse de Maurienne: Documents recueillis., pp. 95-103, no. 62.
  92. ^ Last Will and Testament, dated 11 January 1273: Billiet & Albrieux (1861) Chartes du diocèse de Maurienne: Documents recueillis., pp. 103-110, no. 64.
  93. ^ Aymon is attested first on 5 February 1276, and last on 23 April 1299. Billiet and Albrieux, Chartes du diocèse de Maurienne, pp. 152-155, no. 78. Duchesne, p. 237.
  94. ^ Antelmus de Clermont was appointed by Pope John XXII on 10 September 1334. He died on 23 February 1349. Eubel I, p. 331.
  95. ^ Amadeus was the son of Philippe de Savoie, Prince of Piedmont, of Achaia, and of the Morea; and of Isabelle de Villehardouin. He had been a canon of Orléans, and a canon and count of Lyon. He was appointed bishop of Maurienne by Pope Clement VI on 18 March 1349. He died on 13 June 1376. Hauréau, Gallia christiana XVI, p. 639. Eubel I, p. 331.
  96. ^ Ogerius de Confleto: Eubel II, p. 187.
  97. ^ Louis de La Palud de Varembon as Bishop of Lausanne had taken an active part at the Council of Basle in favour of the pope of the Council of Basel, Felix V, who named him Bishop of Maurienne in 1441 and afterwards Cardinal. The cardinal de Varembon was confirmed in both appointments by Pope Nicholas V in 1449.
  98. ^ John of Segovia, at the Council of Basle, was representative of the King of Aragon; he also worked for Pope Felix V, who appointed him Cardinal in 1441, and whom pope Nicholas V ten years later gave the see of Maurienne. He is the author of "Gesta Concilii Basileensis," on the council.
  99. ^ D'Estouteville was made cardinal in 1439, and had been bishop of Angers (1439–1447) and of Digne (1439–1445). He was appointed bishop of Maurienne by Pope Nicholas V, and his bulls were issued on 26 January 1453; on 20 April 1453, he took possession of the diocese by proxy. He was appointed Archbishop of Rouen on 20 April 1453, and allowed to keep Maurienne as its Administrator. He stopped in Maurienne on his way to Rouen on 12 June 1454. He granted the cathedral Chapter all the revenues of the bishopric during his lifetime, which amounted to more than 16,000 florins, for the completion of the cloister. Saturnin Truchet, Saint-Jean de Maurienne au XVIe siècle, pp. 29-30. Eubel II, pp. 179, 188.
  100. ^ Morel (Moriel, Morelli) was a protonotary apostolic and the papal datary of Pope Sixtus IV; he was also Abbot commendatory of Ambronay (Bresse), of S. Pierre de Berne, and Prior commendatory of La Boisse (Bresse). He was appointed bishop of Maurienne on 31 January 1483. He died on 24 July 1499. He is credited with building the choir of the cathedral and stalls for the canons. Besson, Mémoires pour l'histoire ecclésiastique des diocèses de Genève, Tarantaise, Aoste et Maurienne. p. 302. Eubel II, p. 188.
  101. ^ Gorrevod was the brother of Laurent de Gorrevod, a councillor of Marguerite of Austria. Louis' certificate of election, dated 29 July 1499, is printed by Billiet & Albrieux, Chartes du diocèse de Maurienne: Documents recueillis., pp. 314-318. He was made cardinal on 9 March 1530 by Pope Clement VII. He resigned the diocese in 1532; his successor and nephew was appointed on 10 April 1532. He died on 22 April 1535. André Chagny, Correspondance politique et administrative de Laurent de Gorrevod ...: 1509-1520 ..., Volume 1 (Macon: Protat, 1913, pp. lxix-lxxi. Truchet (1887), Saint-Jean de Maurienne au XVIe siècle, pp. 333-350. Eubel II, pp. 188 with note 5; III, p. 21, no. 21; 238 note 2.
  102. ^ Nephew of Louis de Gorrevod. Challant did not receive episcopal consecration until 22 May 1541. Besson, p. 303. Hauréau, Gallia christiana XVI, p. 645. Eubel III, p. 238 with note 3.
  103. ^ Recanati was a member of the official family of Cardinal Alessandro Farnese, seniore, who became Pope Paul III in 1534. In 1541 Recanati was sent as papal nuncio to Portugal and France to promote the Council of Trent. On his return, he was appointed papal datary (1541–1544). On 6 February he was named bishop of Nice, but he was still bishop-elect when he was transferred to Maurienne on 30 July 1544. Recanati was named a cardinal by Paul III on 19 December 1544, and on 26 August 1545 was named papal legate of the Romandiola, which appointment was renewed by Pope Julius III. In 1547, he was twice sent to the king of France, to encourage attendance at the Council and to attempt to arrange a marriage for the pope's son Orazio. He attended the conclaves of 1549–1550, 1555, and 1559 (5 September to 25 December), but he died on 1 December 1559. Eubel III, pp. 29, no. 59; 238 with note 4; 257.
  104. ^ Brandelisio Trotti was a cleric of Ferrara, and served as a conclavist of Cardinal Ippolito d'Este in the conclave of 1550. He was provost of the cathedral of Ferrara. Pope Paul IV named him bishop of Maurienne in the consistory of 27 March 1560. He delayed entering his diocese for three years, dying in 1563 while he was on his way to Savoy. Hauréau, Gallia Christiana XVI, p. 646. Eubel III, p. 238 with note 5. S. Merkle, Concilii tridentini Diariorum Pars Secunda: Massarelli Diaria V–VII, (in Latin), (Friburg im Breisgau: Herder 1911), p. 125.
  105. ^ There is no evidence that Cardinal d'Este was ever consecrated a bishop. Eubel III, p. 238.
  106. ^ Lambert, the son of Philibert de Lambert and Philippa Lotier of Cambrai, was the brother of Bishop Francçois Lambert of Nice and Bishop Pietro Lambert of Caserta. Pierre was a canon of Geneva in 1535 and compelled to flee by Protestant activists. He returned to Cambrai, where he became Dean of S. Sindonis (the Holy Shroud). He was appointed bishop of Maurienne in the consistory of 21 November 1567 by Pope Pius V. In Maurienne he established the Schola Lambertina, restored the episcopal palace, and embellished the cathedral. He died on 6 May 1591. Hauréau, Gallia Christiana XVI, p. 646. Eubel III, p. 238 with note 7.
  107. ^ Saturnin Truchet, "Notes sur Philibert Milliet, Paul Milliet et Charles Bobba, évêques de Maurienne, extraites de titres inédits," in: Travaux de la Société d'histoire et d'archéologie de la Maurienne (Savoie), (in French), Vol. 2 (Chambéry: F. Puthod 1867), pp. 41-47.
  108. ^ Charles Bobba: Gauchat, Hierarchia catholica IV, p. 235.
  109. ^ Bishop Paul died on 30 October 1656. Hauréau, Gallia Christiana XVI, p. 648.
  110. ^ Hauréau, Gallia Christiana XVI, p. 648.
  111. ^ Berzetti belonged to the family of the counts of Burontium, Balloci and Bastia, and was related to important families of Savoy and Piedmont. He was a priest of the diocese of Vercelli and a master of theology; he held the degree of Doctor in utroque iure. He was a domestic prelate in the papal household and an assistant at the papal throne, as well as a Roman patrician and senator-for-life. He was appointed, around the age of 42, by Pope Alexander VII in the consistory of 6 May 1658. He died on 4 March 1686. E. Burnier, "Pièces inédits relatives à la province de Maurienne, et tirées des archives du Sénat de Savoie," in: Travaux de la Société d'histoire et d'archéologie de la Maurienne (Savoie), Vol. 1 (1878), pp. 393-396. Gauchat, Hierarchia catholica IV, p. 235. Ritzler & Sefrin V, p. 261, note 2.
  112. ^ Valpergue died on 7 September 1736. Ritzler & Sefrin, Hierarchia catholica V, p. 261 with note 3. His Last Will and Testament, 4 September 1736, is given in: Bailleux and Antoine Mottard, "Testament de Révérendissime et Illustrissime Seigneur Évêque de Maurienne..., Comte de Masin et de Valperga," in: Travaux de la Société d'histoire et d'archéologie de la Maurienne (Savoie), pp. 394-396.
  113. ^ Hauréau, Gallia Christiana XVI, p. 648.
  114. ^ Grisella held the degree of Doctor in utroque iure (Bologna 1716). He was nominated bishop of Maurienne by King Charles Emmanuel III of Sardinia on 15 February 1741, and confirmed by Pope Benedict XIV on 6 March 1741. He died on 21 or 22 September 1756. Ritzler & Sefrin, Hierarchia catholica VI, p 281 with note 2.
  115. ^ Filippa was the son of Carlo Baldassare Filippa, count della Martiniana. He held a doctorate in theology from the University of Turin (1757). He was rector of the charity hospital in Turin, and held the priorship of S. Nicholas de Gerry. He was nominated bishop of Maurienne by King Charles Emmanuel III of Sardinia on 25 May 1757, and confirmed by Pope Benedict XIV on 18 July 1757. He was made a cardinal by Pope Pius VI on 1 June 1778. He was nominated bishop of Vercelli on 21 April 1779, and confirmed by Pope Pius VI on 12 July 1779. He was the first to whom Napoleon I Bonaparte, after the battle of Marengo, confided his intention of concluding a concordat with Rome. He died on 7 December 1802. Ritzler & Sefrin, Hierarchia catholica VI, pp. 281, 438; VII, p. 40.
  116. ^ Brichtanteau was born in Turin in 1737, and earned the degree of Doctor in utroque iure from the University of Turin in 1760. He was eleemosynary to the King of Sardinia, who nominated him to the diocese of Maurienne on 26 January 1780; he was confirmed by Pope Pius VI on 20 March 1780. He was nominated bishop of Acqui on 20 July 1796, but was not confirmed. He wrote his Last Will and Testament on 18 August 1796: Adolph Gros (1916), L'instruction publique en Maurienne avant la Révolution, (in French), parts 2-3 (Saint-Jean-de-Maurienne: J. Salomon, 1916), p. 149. He died in Biella in the Piedmont on 27 August 1796: François Molin, Souvenirs de la persécution soufferte par le clergé du Diocèse de Maurienne pendant la révolutionnaire de 1792 à 1802, (in French), (A. Pouchet et Cie, 1868), pp. 83-84. Ritzler & Sefrin VI, p. 281 with note 4.
  117. ^ He and Rogès were elected vicars-capitular on 7 November 1796, by the Chapter of Maurienne, meeting in a parish church in Susa. Molin, Souvenirs..., p. 84.
  118. ^ Rogès had been Vicar General of the diocese. Billiet (1865), pp. 325, 371.
  119. ^ Mérinville was nominated bishop of Dijon by King Louis XVI on 25 February 1787, and confirmed by Pope Pius VI on 23 April 1787. He was nominated bishop of Chambéry on 12 April 1802 by First Consul Napoleon Bonaparte, and approved by Pope Pius VII on 4 May 1802. He resigned in January 1805. Ritzler and Sefrin, Hierarchia catholica VII, p. 147.
  120. ^ Desolle was nominated bishop of Digne by Napoleon on 29 April 1802, and confirmed by Pope Pius VII on 10 July 1802. He was nominated bishop of Chambéry on 30 January 1805, and confirmed on 22 March 1805. He was promoted Archbishop of Chambéry on 7 December 1817. He resigned on 11 November 1823, at the age of 79. He died on 31 December 1824. Ritzler & Sefrin VII, pp. 147, 176.
  121. ^ Archbishop of Chambéry, made cardinal in 1861. Bräuer, Martin (2014). Handbuch der Kardinäle: 1846-2012 (in German). Berlin: De Gruyter. p. 61. ISBN 978-3-11-026947-5.
  122. ^ On the resignation of Archbishop Louis-Marie-Fernand de Bazelaire de Ruppierre of Chambéry on 26 Apr 1966, the diocese of Maurienne was suppressed, and Bishop Bontemps of Maurienne was transferred by Pope Paul VI to the archdiocese of Chambéry. He retired/resigned on 14 May 1985.

Sources and external links edit

Episcopal lists edit

  • Gams, Pius Bonifatius (1873). Series episcoporum Ecclesiae catholicae: quotquot innotuerunt a beato Petro apostolo. Ratisbon: Typis et Sumptibus Georgii Josephi Manz. pp. 548–549. (Use with caution; obsolete)
  • Eubel, Conradus, ed. (1913). Hierarchia catholica (in Latin). Vol. 1 (Tomus I) (second ed.). Münster: Libreria Regensbergiana. (in Latin)
  • Eubel, Conradus, ed. (1914). Hierarchia catholica (in Latin). Vol. 2 (Tomus II) (second ed.). Münster: Libreria Regensbergiana. archived
  • Eubel, Conradus; Gulik, Guilelmus, eds. (1923). Hierarchia catholica (in Latin). Vol. 3 (Tomus III) (second ed.). Münster: Libreria Regensbergiana.
  • Gauchat, Patritius (Patrice) (1935). Hierarchia catholica. Vol. 4 (Tomus IV) (1592–1667). Münster: Libraria Regensbergiana. Retrieved 2016-07-06.
  • Ritzler, Remigius; Sefrin, Pirminus (1952). Hierarchia catholica medii et recentis aevi. Vol. 5 (Tomus V) (1667–1730). Patavii: Messagero di S. Antonio. Retrieved 2016-07-06.
  • Ritzler, Remigius; Sefrin, Pirminus (1958). Hierarchia catholica medii et recentis aevi. Vol. 6 (Tomus VI) (1730–1799). Patavii: Messagero di S. Antonio. Retrieved 2016-07-06.
  • Ritzler, Remigius; Sefrin, Pirminus (1968). Hierarchia Catholica medii et recentioris aevi (in Latin). Vol. VII (1800–1846). Monasterii: Libreria Regensburgiana.
  • Remigius Ritzler; Pirminus Sefrin (1978). Hierarchia catholica Medii et recentioris aevi (in Latin). Vol. VIII (1846–1903). Il Messaggero di S. Antonio.
  • Pięta, Zenon (2002). Hierarchia catholica medii et recentioris aevi (in Latin). Vol. IX (1903–1922). Padua: Messagero di San Antonio. ISBN 978-88-250-1000-8.

Studies edit

  • Besson, Joseph A. (1759). Mémoires pour l'histoire ecclésiastique des diocèses de Genève, Tarantaise, Aoste et Maurienne. (in French). Nancy: Sebastien Hénault, 1759. (pp. 282–309)
  • Billiet, Alexis (1861) Mémoires sur les premiers évêques du diocèse de Maurienne Chambéry: Puthod (fils), 1861.
  • Billiet, Alexis; Albrieux, Canon (edd.) (1861). Chartes du diocèse de Maurienne: Documents recueillis. (in Latin and French). Chambéry: Puthod fils, 1861.
  • Billiet, Alexis (1865). Mémoires pour servir à l'histoire ecclésiastique du diocèse de Chambéry. (in French). Chambéry: F. Puthod, 1865.
  • Buet, Charles *1867). "Étude sur les droits seigneuriaux des évêques de Maurienne," (in French), in: Travaux de la Société d'histoire et d'archéologie de la Maurienne (Savoie), Vol. 2 (Chambéry: F. Puthod 1867), pp. 71–97.
  • Duchesne, Louis (1907). Fastes épiscopaux de l'ancienne Gaule. (in French). Vol. I., second edition. Paris 1907. (pp. 239–242)
  • Hauréau, Jean-Barthélemy (1865). Gallia christiana. (in Latin). vol. XVI, Paris 1865. (coll. 611-654)
  • Pisani, Paul (1907). Répertoire biographique de l'épiscopat constitutionnel (1791-1802) (in French). Paris: A. Picard et fils.
  • Poole, Reginald L. (1916). "The See of Maurienne and the Valley of Susa," in: English Historical Review 31 (1916), pp. 1–19.
  • Savio, Fedele (1899). Gli antichi vescovi d'Italia. Il Piemonte. (in Italian). Torino: Fratelli Bocca 1899. (pp. 221–237)
  • Truchet, Saturnin (1867). Histoire hagiologique du diocèse de Maurienne. (in French). Chambéry: F. Puthod, 1867.
  • Truchet, Saturnin (1887). Saint-Jean de Maurienne au XVIe siècle. (in French). Chambéry: Impr. Savoisienne, 1887.

External links edit

  • Chow, Gabriel GCatholic, with Google satellite photo [self-published source]
  • Goyau, Georges. "Saint Jean de Maurienne." The Catholic Encyclopedia Volume XIII (New York: Robert Appleton 1913), pp. 353-354.

45°16′22″N 6°20′54″E / 45.2729°N 6.3484°E / 45.2729; 6.3484

roman, catholic, diocese, saint, jean, maurienne, french, roman, catholic, diocese, saint, jean, maurienne, giovanni, moriana, italian, since, 1966, been, effectively, suppressed, formally, united, with, archdiocese, chambéry, while, been, suppressed, supposed. The French Roman Catholic diocese of Saint Jean de Maurienne San Giovanni di Moriana in Italian has since 1966 been effectively suppressed formally united with the archdiocese of Chambery 1 While it has not been suppressed and is supposed to be on a par with Chambery and the diocese of Tarentaise it no longer has a separate bishop or existence Cathedral in Saint Jean de Maurienne Contents 1 History 1 1 Imperial and royal influence 1 1 1 Maurienne in the 15th century 1 1 2 The diocese of Bourg en Bresse and Francis I 1 1 3 Maurienne in the 16th century 1 1 4 Diocese of Maurienne in the mid 17th century 1 2 Revolution Repression 1 3 Restoration 1 4 Modern changes 2 Devotion 3 Bishops of Saint Jean de Maurienne 3 1 To 1200 3 2 From 1200 to 1500 3 3 From 1500 to 1800 3 4 Bishops of Chambery Geneva and Maurienne from 1801 to 1825 3 5 Bishops of Maurienne from 1825 to 1996 4 See also 5 Notes 6 Sources and external links 6 1 Episcopal lists 6 2 Studies 6 3 External linksHistory editGregory of Tours s De Gloria Martyrum 2 relates how the church of Maurienne belonging then to the Diocese of Turin became a place of pilgrimage after the holy woman Thigris or Thecla 3 a native of Valloires had brought to it as sacred relic from the East a finger 4 of John the Baptist 5 the same figure which touched Jesus Christ during his baptism 6 Jacob of Voragine who is using the work of Gregory says that the finger of John the Baptist suddenly appeared on the altar of the church at Maurienne after a Gallic matron earnestly prayed God to give her a relic of the Baptist 7 Bishop Etienne de Morel 1483 1499 procured for the cathedral a finger of the right hand of Saint Peter 8 Guntram King of Burgundy took from the Lombards in 574 the valleys of Maurienne and Suse and in 576 founded near the shrine a bishopric detached from the then Diocese of Turin in Piedmont northern Italy as suffragan of the Archdiocese of Vienne also comprising the Brianconnais 9 Its first bishop was Felmasius known from a document on the Baptist relic s first miracle 10 In 599 Gregory the Great failed to make the Merovingian Queen Brunehaut oblige the protests of the Bishop of Turin against this foundation Leo III 795 816 made Darantasia Tarantaise Loire a Metropolitan archbishopric with three suffragans Aosta Sitten and Maurienne but maintained the Ancient primatial status of Vienne A letter written by John VIII in 878 acknowledged the claim of Archbishop Teutrannus of Tarantaise that the Bishop of Maurienne was suffragan of Tarentaise but ordered the archbishop to settle his claim with the Archbishop of Vienne 11 For four centuries this supremacy was the cause of conflicts between the archbishops of Tarentaise and the Metropolitans of Vienne who continued to claim Maurienne as a suffragan see In 904 or 908 Pope Sergius III purportedly wrote to Archbishop Alexander of Vienne according to Cardinal Billiet confirming that the diocese of Maurienne was a suffragan of the archbishop of Vienne 12 The document however is one of the notorious Vienne Forgeries 13 In an apostolic brief of 26 April 1123 addressed to Bishop Amedeus Pope Callistus II affirmed that Maurienne was a suffragan of the metropolis of Vienne as it had been when he himself was archbishop of Vienne 1088 1119 he also ruled that the city of Susa belonged to the diocese of Maurienne 14 As its first see a cathedral of John the Baptist was built in the 6th century destroyed by invading Saracens in 943 and rebuilt in the 11th century 15 S Jean de Maurienne was twice sacked by the Saracens in 732 and 906 16 After the Saracens had been driven out the temporal sovereignty of the Bishop of Maurienne appears to have been very extensive By the beginning of the 11th century according to Cardinal Billiet the bishop was temporal ruler of 19 parishes on the left bank of the River Arc the parish of S Jean at Valmeinier and two or three on the right bank 17 But there is no proof that such sovereignty had been recognized since Gontran s time Imperial and royal influence edit At the death in 1032 of Rudolph III of Burgundy the last ruler of the independent Kingdom of Burgundy Bishop Thibaut was powerful enough to join a league against Holy Roman Emperor Conrad II of Franconia 18 In 1033 the city of Maurienne was destroyed by imperial troops 19 The bishopric lost part of its territory the Susa valley to the diocese of Turin which was promised all In 1038 it is claimed the Emperor Conrad suppressed the see of Maurienne altogether giving over its title and possessions to the Bishops of Turin 20 This imperial decree was never executed though due probably to the death of Conrad on 4 June 1039 At the death of Bishop Guido of Turin in 1044 it is stated Bishop Thibaud was fully reinstated at Maurienne The imperial diploma concerning the handing over of Maurienne to Turin however has been shown to be a forgery and thus the entire story is called into question 21 Maurienne in the 15th century edit Arvan In February 1440 a major flood from the Bonrieu river to the west overran the entire city of Maurienne In a 1447 report of Canon Hugo de Fabrica the vicar general to Bishop Louis de La Palud the Cardinal de Varambone a great part of the houses of the city as well as the cathedral were ruined The cathedral was so badly damaged that the upper church had to be completely rebuilt and the lower church was filled with debris and unusable A bridge over the flooding Arvan river was washed away as well as another bridge over the Arc river which was also in flood 22 During much of the fifteenth century the administration of the diocese was neglected Saturnin Truchet notes that from 1441 to 1483 the bishops were non residential with the exception of the last five years of the life of Cardinal Louis de La Palud 1441 1451 the Cardinal de Varambon The decima tax of the bishops was frequently not paid or was irregularly collected due to the inattention and lack of supervision of the collectors 23 Cardinal Guillaume d Estouteville 1453 1483 was particularly remiss 24 The next bishop Etienne de Morel 1483 1499 was also an absent pastor He was papal datary of Pope Sixtus IV when he was appointed to the diocese of Maurienne on 31 January 1483 25 He was still in Rome and still functioning as datary at the pope s death on 12 August 1484 he was an official custodian at the main gate of the conclave that followed 26 He participated in the papal consistory of 20 December 1484 on the subject of the canonization of Duke Leopold of Austria 27 On 11 February 1485 he was present at the papal consistory in which Pope Innocent VIII received Cardinal Jean Balue on his return from his embassy to the French court Bishop Morel had the honor of reading aloud in French the letter from King Charles VIII to the pope 28 Morel was a Referendary of Pope Innocent VIII who on 17 November 1487 ratified an agreement between the bishop and the commune of Maurienne with regard to the wine decima 29 On 2 March 1506 Bishop Louis de Gorrevod de Challand 1499 1532 issued a set of Constitutions for the diocese of Maurienne They were particularly concerned with taxation and the regulation of tax officials 30 In 1512 Bishop Louis de Gorrevod ordered the publication of an official liturgical book for the diocese of Maurienne the Breviarium ad usum Maurianensis ecclesiae based on that used by the cathedral Chapter During his administration two collegiate churches were founded Ste Anne de Chamoux and S Marcel de la Chambre The house of the Celestines at Villard Sallet and the convent of the Carmelites of la Rochette were also founded 31 The diocese of Bourg en Bresse and Francis I edit As early as 1451 the dukes of Savoy had been interested in raising the profile of their ecclesiastical establishment Louis Duke of Savoy sent an embassy to Pope Nicholas V indicating his wish that Turin be made a metropolitan archdiocese and that new dioceses be created at Bourg en Bresse and Chambery 32 In July 1515 at the urging of Charles III Duke of Savoy and over the objections of Francis I of France the archbishop of Vienne and the bishop of Grenoble Pope Leo X established a new diocese Bourg in Bresse out of territory belonging to the diocese of Maurienne and a new diocese at Chambery The church of S Maria de Burgo in Bressia was elevated to the status of a cathedral 33 The first bishop of Bourg was Bishop Louis de Gorrevod of Maurienne who was allowed to hold both dioceses at the same time He was also assigned an auxiliary bishop Jean de Joly O P titular bishop of Hebron in 1524 34 in 1544 the auxiliary bishop was Pierre Meynard also titular bishop of Hebron 35 In November 1515 Bishop de Gorrevod convened a synod of all the ecclesiastics in the new diocese of Bourg and drew up a set of statutes which were published in 1516 36 Gorrevod was named a cardinal by Pope Clement VII on 9 March 1530 37 and on the same day his nephew Jean Philibert de Challant was appointed bishop of Bourg en Bresse 38 In 1531 Cardinal de Gorrevod was appointed papal legate in all the territories possessed by the dukes of Savoy and his powers were confirmed on 2 April 1531 by a letter of Duke Charles III 39 He resigned the diocese of Maurienne on 10 April 1532 in favor of his nephew Jean Philibert de Challant thereby once again bringing the two dioceses together under the leadership of one bishop 40 Challant was only bishop elect of Bresse however since he did not receive episcopal consecration until 22 May 1541 41 In the struggle between France King Francis I and Spain Emperor Charles V over the duchy of Milan the duke of Savoy found himself drawn especially after the defeat and capture of Francis at the Battle of Pavia in 1525 into the orbit of Charles V 42 By 1535 Francis I believed himself strong enough to confront Charles III of Savoy He confronted Charles and the exiled bishop of Geneva who were besieging Protestant Geneva raising the siege capturing the Vaud and expelling the bishop of Lausanne 43 On 11 February 1536 the king gave the order to invade Bugey and Bresse and on 24 February his troops entered Savoy He immediately ordered the suppression of the diocese of Bourg en Bresse whose establishment he had protested and also refused the bishop elect of Chambery Urbain de Miolans 44 to take possession of his diocese 45 Maurienne in the 16th century edit When Bishop de Challant died in 1544 the cathedral Chapter of Maurienne in accordance with tradition assembled on 20 July 1544 to elect a new bishop They chose Francois de Luxembourg vicomte de Martigues who was not in holy orders Their choice was rejected by King Francis and he himself attempted to install Dominique de Saint Severin as bishop of Maurienne The Chapter however rejected Saint Severin and therefore the diocese depended on an auxiliary bishop for several years 46 Pope Paul III transferred bishop elect Girolamo Recanati Capodiferro from Nice to Maurienne on 30 July 1544 but there is no evidence that he was in Holy Orders or ever consecrated a bishop he was named a cardinal on 19 December 1444 and appointed papal legate in the Romandiola on 26 August 1545 where he continued to serve under Pope Julius III and Marcellus II and Paul IV 47 By the time of the Reformation the cathedral Chapter posessed eleven parishes and were patrons of twenty two others as well as the hopital de la Rochette and the priories of La Corbiere Aiton and Saint Julien 48 On 23 August 1489 Bishop Etienne de Morel 1483 1499 solemnly invested Charles I Duke of Savoy 1482 1490 as a canon of the cathedral of Maurienne All subsequent dukes with papal permission were granted the same privilege as though it were a hereditary possession 49 Emmanuel Philibert Duke of Savoy took solemn possession of a canonry in the cathedral of Maurienne in 1564 Diocese of Maurienne in the mid 17th century edit A major plague struck the diocese of Maurienne in 1630 50 Before the appointment of Hercule Berzetti as bishop of Maurienne in 1658 Pope Alexander VII ordered Cardinal Antonio Barberini to provide a report on the state of the diocese and the suitability of the candidate The report stated that in civil affairs the diocese was subject to the Dukes of Savoy and in ecclesiastical matters to the metropolitan of Vienne The cathedral which was in need of extensive repairs was administered by a Chapter of 18 canons though it had no dignities and there was no special provision for a theologus or penitentiarius The canons were responsible for the spiritual care of the cathedral parish The episcopal palace which was near the cathedral was in good repair Besides the cathedral there were two parishes in the city a convent of men and one of women and a hospice for pilgrims There were around 100 parishes in the diocese most of them so poor that the incumbent priest relied to an extent on alms 51 Revolution Repression edit In 1792 Savoy was invaded and occupied by forces of the French National Assembly Bishops and priests were ordered to swear a prescribed oath to the Civil Constitution of the Clergy or to lose their offices on 23 April 1792 Pope Pius VI ordered that any clergy who did swear the oaths were automatically suspended 52 Four of the five bishops then in office went into exile including the bishop of Maurienne the fifth was too aged to flee Commissioners sent from Paris imposed a revolutionary government and on 8 March 1793 issued an ecclesiastical decree which followed metropolitan French policy by reducing the number of dioceses from 5 to 1 to be centered in Annecy and called the diocese of Mont Blanc 53 A new bishop for each diocese was to be elected by an assembly of electors chosen for loyalty to the French constitution Electors did not have to be Catholic or even Christian Papal participation in any form was forbidden These arrangements were uncanonical and schismatic 54 as were the consecrations of any of the Constitutional bishops 55 On 29 November 1801 in the concordat of 1801 between the French Consulate headed by First Consul Napoleon Bonaparte and Pope Pius VII the bishopric was suppressed its territory being merged into the Diocese of Chambery 56 There was already a charity hospital in Maurienne by the 13th century established and subsidized by the bishops It had fallen into decay in the 15th century and was revived in the 16th by the Confraternity of the Bienheureuse Vierge Marie de la Misericorde The agents of the French Revolution abolished both the confraternity and the diocese of Maurienne in 1801 The operation of the hospital was placed in the hands of nine administrators including a lawyer a physician a surgeon and a pharmacist there was a staff of 14 for 28 sick and 9 orphans In 1805 the administrators petitioned the Emperor Napoleon for assistance with their dilapidated building he assigned them the former Major Seminary in Maurienne which had been used as a military hospital by the French and was in a bad sanitary condition In 1821 the priest of the city wrote about the state of the hospice to his friend who was the spiritual director of the Soeurs de Saint Joseph de Chambery who were not able to respond immediately In May 1822 the administrators made an official request of the sisters In the first week of June Mother St Jean of Chambery and three other sisters took charge of the hospital In November 1822 another sister was requested from Chambery to organize a school for poor girls the school opened in January 1824 and in January 1825 was authorized to accept paying students 57 The papacy was already interested in stabilizing the establishment at Maurienne and in May 1824 Cardinal Giulio Maria della Somaglia was engaged in negotiations with the bishop of Chambery and with the archbishop of Lyon to make the sisters in Maurienne an independent congregation 58 The Sisters of St Joseph a nursing and teaching order with mother house at St Jean de Maurienne are a branch of the Congregation of St Joseph at Lyon At the end of the nineteenth century they were in charge of 8 day nurseries and 2 hospitals In Algeria the East Indies 59 and Argentina houses were founded controlled by the motherhouse at Maurienne 60 Restoration edit In the Treaty of Paris signed on 30 May 1814 Chambery became part of France 61 In the General Treaty of the Congress of Vienna signed on 9 June 1815 the ancient boundaries of the Kingdom of Sardinia were restored This act returned Maurienne to the control of King Charles Felix 62 At the request of King Charles Felix of Sardinia and his ambassador at the Vatican Giovanni Nicolao Ludovico Crosa on 5 August 1825 with the papal bull Ecclesias quae antiquitate Pope Leo XII restored the Diocese of Saint Jean de Maurienne with territory consisting of 80 parishes removed from the diocese of Chambery The parish church of S John the Baptist was restored to cathedral status and it was assigned a cathedral chapter consisting of three dignities Provost Archdeacon and Cantor and ten canons two of whom would be the Theologus and the Penitentiarius The right of the king to nominate a candidate for an episcopal vacancy as well as a vacancy in the office of archdeacon and cantor as well as the vacancy in a canonry except for the theologus and penitentiarius was confirmed or granted The pope retained the right to nominate the provost The restored diocese of Maurienne was made a suffragan of the archbishop of Chambery 63 Bishop Alexis Billiet was installed on 18 April 1826 and he immediately set to work to recover the diocese s rights and property as well as to unify a clergy and people who had been thrown into confusion by the French occupation He began the process of canonically separating the house of the Sisters of S Joseph from their mother house in Chambery which was approved by King Charles Felix on 18 April 1827 In 1828 the Sisters signed a contract to purchase the chateau of the comtes d Arves as a new mother house 64 Modern changes edit In 1947 the diocese of Maurienne gained territory from the Metropolitan Archdiocese of Torino On 26 April 1966 Maurienne was suppressed as an independent diocese its title and territory being merged into the renamed Metropolitan Archdiocese of Chambery Saint Jean de Maurienne Tarentaise 65 Devotion editThis section may contain information not important or relevant to the article s subject Please help improve this section 11 March 2024 Learn how and when to remove this template message Among the saints specially honoured in or connected with the diocese are Aprus of Sens a priest who founded a refuge for pilgrims and the poor in the Village of St Avre seventh century Thomas of Maurienne b at Maurienne d in 720 famous for rebuilding the Abbey of Farfa of which the third abbot Lucerius was also a native of Maurienne Marinus monk of Chandor monasterium candorense in Maurienne martyred by the Saracens eighth century Landry of Paris pastor of Lanslevillard eleventh century drowned in the Arc during one of his apostolic journeys Benezet Benedict 1165 84 born at Hermillon a northern suburb of St Jean de Maurienne in the diocese and founder of the guild of Fratres Pontifices of Avignon Cabert or Gabert disciple of St Dominic who preached the Gospel for twenty years in the vicinity of AiguebelIe thirteenth century The chief shrines of the diocese were Notre Dame de Bonne Nouvelle near St Jean de Maurienne which dates from the sixteenth century Notre Dame de Charmaix in a mountain pass south of Modane Notre Dame de Beaurevers at Montaimon dating from the seventeenth century Bishops of Saint Jean de Maurienne editTo 1200 edit 579 Felmase I fr 66 581 602 Hiconius fr 67 650 Leporius ca 68 725 Walchinus c 736 to 738 Emilian of Cogolla 69 773 Witgarius 70 837 Mainardus 71 855 Joseph 72 858 Abbo 73 876 Adalbert 74 887 Asmundus 75 899 Guillelmus 76 c 915 Benedict 77 916 926 Odilard 78 994 1035 Evrardus 79 c 1037 1060 Theobaldus 80 1060 1073 Burchardus 81 1075 1081 Artaud 82 1081 1116 Conon 83 1116 1124 Amedee de Faucigny 84 1124 1132 Conon II 1132 1146 Ayrald I 85 1146 1158 Bernard 1158 1162 Ayrald II 1162 1176 Guillaume II 1177 Peter 1177 1198 Lambert 1198 1200 Allevard From 1200 to 1500 edit 1200 1211 Bernard de Chignin 86 1215 Amadeus of Geneva 87 1221 1223 Joannes 88 1223 1236 Aimar de Bernin 89 1236 1256 Amadeus of Savoy 90 1256 1261 Pierre de Morestel 1261 1269 Anthelmus de Clermont 91 1269 1273 Pierre de Guelis 92 1273 1301 Aymon I de Miolans 93 1302 Ayrald IV 1302 1308 Amblard d Entremont de Beaumont 1308 1334 Aymon II de Miolans d Hurtieres 1334 1349 Anselm de Clermont 94 1349 1376 Amadeus of Savoy Achaia 95 1376 1380 Jean Malabaylla 1380 1385 Henry de Severy 1385 1410 Savin de Floran 1410 1422 Amedee de Montmayeur 1422 1432 Aimon Gerbais 1433 1441 Oger Moriset 96 1441 1451 Cardinal Louis de La Palud 97 1451 1452 Cardinal Juan de Segovia 98 1453 1483 Cardinal Guillaume d Estouteville 99 1483 1499 Etienne de Morel 100 From 1500 to 1800 edit 1499 1532 Louis de Gorrevod de Challand 101 1532 1544 Jean Philibert de Challant 102 1544 1559 Girolamo Recanati Capodiferro 103 1560 1563 Brandisius de Trottis 104 1564 1567 Ippolito d Este Administrator 105 1567 1591 Pierre Lambert O S A 106 1591 1618 Philibeult Francois Milliet de Faverges 107 1618 1636 Charles Bobba 108 1640 1656 Paul Milliet de Challes 109 1656 1658 Sede vacante 110 1658 1686 Hercule Berzetti 111 1686 1736 Francois Hyacinthe Valpergue de Masin O P 112 1736 1741 Sede vacante 113 1741 1756 Ignace Dominique Grisella de Rosignan 114 1757 1779 Charles Joseph Filippa de Martiniana 115 1780 1793 Charles Joseph Compans de Brichanteau 116 Francois Molin Vicar Capitular 117 Dominique Roges Vicar Capitular 118 dd Bishops of Chambery Geneva and Maurienne from 1801 to 1825 edit 1802 1805 Rene des Monstiers de Merinville 119 1805 1823 Irenee Yves Desolle 120 1825 1840 Alexis Billiet 121 Bishops of Maurienne from 1825 to 1996 edit 1840 1876 Francois Marie Vibet 1876 1906 Michel Rosset 1906 1924 Adrien Alexis Fodere 1924 1946 Auguste Grumel 1946 1954 Frederic Duc 1954 1956 Louis Ferrand also coadjutor archbishop of Tours 1956 1960 Joel Andre Jean Marie Bellec also Bishop of Perpignan Elne 1961 1966 Andre Georges Bontemps 122 See also editList of Catholic dioceses in France Catholic Church in FranceNotes edit David M Cheney Catholic hierarchy org Saint Jean de Maurienne Diocese self published source De gloria martyrum Book I chapter 14 in Patrologiae Latinae Tomus LXXI Paris J P Migne 1858 p 719 Billiet 1861 Memoires Maurienne pp 290 291 293 294 places the dramatic date of Thecla c 545 550 R L Poole p 4 places the insertion of Thecla into Gregory of Tours narrative between 907 and 915 The cathedral of Troyes possessed another finger another was held at Brienne le Chateau the entire right hand was at Citeaux until the French Revolution Pierre Marie Jean Baptiste Gauthier La Legende de Saint Jean Baptiste in French Plancy Societe de St Victor 1850 pp 177 183 Jacques Albin Simon Collin de Plancy Grande vie des saints in French Volume 16 Paris Louis Vives 1878 pp 663 665 There were three heads of the Baptist in Italy in Rome Florence and Reggio S I Mahoney Six Years in the Monasteries of Italy and Two Years in the Islands of the Mediterranean and in Asia Minor Boston Jordan Swift and Wiley 1845 p 217 There was another at Amiens Charles Salmon Histoire du Chef de Saint Jean Baptiste conserve a Amiens depuis 1206 in French Amiens Langlois 1876 Duchesne p 240 Billiet amp Albrieux Chartes du diocese de Maurienne p 289 videlicet proprii manus digiti qui Christum baptizando tetigerunt The Latin text appears to state that Maurienne possessed more than one finger The pope owned another Jacobus de Voragine Legenda aurea the Golden Legend ed Th Graesse 1890 ch 125 2 Apud Mariennam urbem Galliae matrona quaedam Johanni baptistae valde devota Deum instantius exorabat ut sibi de reliquiis Johannis aliquando donaretur aliquid Cum autem orando nihil proficere se videret sumta de Deo fiducia juramento se adstrinxit quod hactenus non comederet donec quod petebat acciperet Cum autem diebus aliquibus jejunasset pollicem super altare miri candoris vidit et Dei donum laeta suscepit Besson p 302 Duchesne pp 239 240 Jean Barthelemy Haureau Gallia christiana vol XVI Paris 1865 coll 611 654 J P Migne ed Patrologiae Series Latina Tomus 126 Paris 1855 p 781 782 Monumenta Germaniae Historica Epistolarum Tomus VII Berlin Weidmann 1928 p 107 no 117 Innotescimus denique quia venerabilis frater et coepiscopus noster Bernarius nostram nuper audiens praesentiam reclamavit se super fratre Adalberlo suffraganeo tuo de quo jam Romae proclamaverat et libellum suae reclamationis ostenderat Unde tibi et Viennensi arcbiepiscopo epistolas direximus ut amborum querimonias ventilantes quae canonum sunt instituta dijudicaretis Billiet 1861 Memoires Maurienne p 328 quoting an unpublished document Utque largiter admodum Guntramnus ecclesiam maurianensem per concessum apostolicae sedis cum omnibus pagis suis subjectam jure perenni sanctae viennensi fecit ecclesiae ita una cum ecclesia Secusina et ecclesiis de eadem valle ad eam pertinentibus cum omnibus pagis integram eam illi subjectam esse firmamus R L Poole 1916 p 5 Wilhelm Grundlach Der Streit der Bisthumer Arles und Vienne um den Primatus Galliarum Zweiter Theil in German in Neues Archiv der Gesellschaft fur Altere deutsche Geschichtskunde 15 Hannover Hahn 1890 9 102 esp pp 58 71 77 Monumenta Germaniae Historica Epistolarum Tomus III Merowingici et Karolini aevi I Berlin Weidmann 1892 pp 100 102 no 23 Billiet 1861 Memoires pp 332 333 Billiet amp Albrieux 1861 Chartes du diocese de Maurienne Documents recueillis pp 24 26 no 14 Saturnin Truchet Saint Jean de Maurienne au XVIe siecle in French pp 25 42 Saturnin Truchet Saint Jean de Maurienne au XVIe siecle in French p 25 Billiet 1861 Memoires Maurienne p 320 Billiet 1861 Memoires Maurienne p 324 Besson p 285 Besson 1759 pp 344 345 no 6 sanctae Ecclesiae Taurinensi donamus Episcopatum scilicet Maurianensis civitatis domos cum omnibus aedificiis suis curtem videlicet decimas quoque ipsius Episcopatus nec non Ecclesias eidem Episcopatui pertinentes montes vero et valles aquas molendina piscationes foresta sylvas pascua buscalia omnia in integrum quidquid videtur esse de appenditiis supradictae civitatis Moriennae donamus concedimus atque delegamus jam dictae Ecclesiae S Joannis Baptista Taurinensis sedis H Bresslau Monumenta Germaniae Historica Diplomatum Regum et Imperatorum Germaniae in Latin and German Tomus IV Conradi II Diplomata Hannover Hahn 1909 pp 411 413 no 291 If the diploma is a forgery then the transfer of Maurienne to Turin did not take place which explains why Conrad s decree did not go into effect and why Maurienne continued independent after 1044 Harry Bresslau Jahrbucher des deutschen Reichs unter Konrad II in German Volume 2 Leipzig Duncker amp Humblot 1884 pp 475 476 R L Poole p 1 The influence of the fabrications of the church of Vienne has not been finally extirpated the forged charter of King Boso 887 is still appealed to as an authority and the spuriousness of the diploma of the Emperor Conrad II 1038 has not yet everywhere been recognized On the Boso charter being a forgery see also Rene Poupardin Le royaume de Provence sous les Carolingiens 855 933 in French Paris E Bouillon 1901 p 111 with note 2 La donation faite par Boson a l eglise de Maurienne du chateau d Hermillon Hist de Fr t IX p 672 est un faux datant probablement du XIe siecle Truchet Saint Jean de Maurienne au XVIe siecle pp 27 28 Billiet amp Albrieux Chartes du diocese de Maurienne pp 258 260 Truchet 1887 Saint Jean de Maurienne au XVIe siecle p 247 Guillaume d Estouteville n y avait jamais reside Les droits de l eveche avaient ete fort mal defendus ses revenus avaient meme ete reduits sous la main de l Etat pendant la plus grande partie de l episcopat de Guillaume d Estouteville Eubel II p 188 John Burchard Diarium in L Thuasne Johannis Burchardi Diarium sive Rerum urbanarum commentarii in Latin and French Vol 1 Paris E Leroux 1883 p 73 Eubel II p 48 no 507 Burchard p 140 Haureau Gallia christiana XVI p 644 Billiet amp Albrieux Chartes du diocese de Maurienne pp 303 307 Eugene Burnier Les constitutions du cardinal Louis II de Gorrevod eveque de Maurienne et prince 1506 Etude historique in Memoires et documents publies par la Societe savoisienne d histoire et d archeologie in French and Latin Vol 7 Chambery A Bottero 1863 pp 225 271 text at pp 255 271 Truchet 1887 Saint Jean de Maurienne au XVIe siecle Saint Jean de Maurienne au XVIe siecle pp 345 348 Charles Buet Les ducs de Savoie aux XVe et XVIe siecles in French Tours A Mame 1878 p 318 Paulin Piolin ed Gallia christiana in provincias ecclesiasticas distributa Tomus quartus in Latin Bruxelles G Lebrocquy Paris V Palme 1876 p 181 Eubel III p 208 Eugene Burnier Le Parlement de Chambery sous Francois Ier et Henri II 1536 1559 Fragment historique in French Memoires et documents Societe savoisienne d histoire et d archeologie vol 6 Chambery Bottero 1862 p 368 Besson Memoires pour l histoire ecclesiastique des dioceses de Geneve Tarantaise Aoste et Maurienne p 303 Eubel III p 21 no 21 Eubel III p 238 note 3 1530 Mart 9 el in episc Burgien Bourg cfr AC 3 f 165 qui ep iscop atus de novo e partibus eccl esiae Maurianen sis erectus et nunc cum eodem iterum conjungitur Besson Memoires pour l histoire ecclesiastique des dioceses de Geneve Tarantaise Aoste et Maurienne p 303 Eubel III p 238 with note 3 Besson p 303 Eugene Burnier Le Parlement de Chambery pp 279 280 Burnier pp 281 282 The diocese was established and Urbain de Miolans was appointed in 1515 by Pope Leo X at the urging of Duke Charles III but Pope Leo was compelled by Francis I of France to void the bull Picolet d Hermillon Note sur la fondation du diocese de Chambery in French in Bulletin mensual de l Academie delphinale 4e serie Tome 19 Grenoble Allier 1904 1905 pp 51 83 at p 69 Burnier p 368 Haureau Gallia christiana XVI p 645 Burnier Le Parlement de Chambery p 368 Eubel III p 29 no 59 with notes 5 7 p 238 with note 4 S Truchet Saint Jean de Maurienne p 53 Haureau Gallia christiana XVI p 644 Instrumenta p 320 no 34 Alexis Billiet Notice sur la peste qui a afflige le diocese de Maurienne en 1630 in French Chambery Puthod 1836 Eugene Burnier Pieces inedits relatives a la province de Maurienne et tirees des archives du Senat de Savoie in Travaux de la Societe d histoire et d archeologie de la Maurienne Savoie Vol 1 1878 pp 393 396 Billiet 1865 p 23 Francois Molin Souvenirs de la persecution soufferte par le clerge du Diocese de Maurienne pendant la revolutionnaire de 1792 a 1802 in French A Pouchet et Cie 1868 pp 7 9 Paul Pisani Repertoire biographique de l episcopat constitutionnel 1791 1802 in French Paris A Picard 1907 pp 19 24 306 Billiet 1865 pp 22 23 J B Duvergier ed Collection complete des lois decrets ordonnances reglemens et avis du Conseil d etat in French and Latin Volume 13 Paris A Guyot et Scribe 1826 pp 372 373 L archeveche de Vienne dans le ci devant Dauphine et ses suffragans les eveches de Grenoble Viviers Valence Die Maurienne et Geneve p 387 Leon Bouchage Chroniques de la Congregation des Soeurs de Saint Joseph de Chambery in French Chambery Imprimerie generale Savoisienne 1911 Memoires de l Academie des sciences belles lettres et arts de Savoie 4e serie Tome 12 pp 233 248 Bouchage Chroniques de la Congregation des Soeurs de Saint Joseph de Chambery pp 611 612 in Italian Bouchage Chroniques de la Congregation des Soeurs de Saint Joseph de Chambery Book VIII pp 403 581 Bouchage Chroniques de la Congregation des Soeurs de Saint Joseph de Chambery pp 233 248 Treaty of Paris 1814 Article III section 7 Final Act of the Congress of Vienna General Treaty Article 85 The frontiers of the states of his Majesty the King of Sardinia shall be On the side of France such as they were on the 1st of January 1792 with the exception of the changes effected by the Treaty of Paris of 30th May 1814 On the side or the Helvetic Confederation such as they existed on the 1st of January 1792 with the exception of the change produced by the cession in favour of the canton of Geneva as specified by the 80th Article of the present Act A Barberi R Segreti edd Bullarii Romani continuatio in Latin Tomus decimus sextus Volume 16 Rome 1854 pp 336 340 nonis Augusti 1825 Bouchage Chroniques de la Congregation des Soeurs de Saint Joseph de Chambery p 240 Pope Paul VI Animorum bonum in Acta Apostolicae Sedis 58 1966 pp 625 626 Maurianensem et Tarantasiensem dioeceses archidioecesi Chamberiensi aeque principaliter unimus ita scilicet ut unus idemque Antistes tribus praesit Ecclesiis sitque simul Archiepiscopus Chamberiensis atque Episcopus Maurianensis et Tarantasiensis Billiet 1865 Memoires p 290 quotes an 11th century manuscript that names Felmasius the first bishop of Maurienne consecrated by Bishop Isicius of Vienne Isicius ecclesiam maurianensem consecravit et sanctum Felmasium primum episcopum ordinavit agente Gumteramno rege propter reliquias sancti Iohannis Baptiste que ibi ab Iherosolimis translate fuerunt Seusiam que est in Italia mauriannensi ecclesie subditam fecit ad ius viennensis ecclesie sicut in eiusdem auctoritatis scr legitur Bishop Hiconius Aeconius participated in the church councils of Macon in 581 and 585 In 601 or 602 he presided at the moving of the remains of Saints Ours and Vctor Fredegarius Chronica IV 22 in Monumenta Germaniae Historica Scriptorum rerum Merovingicarum Tomus II in Latin Hannover Hahn 1888 p 129 Charles De Clercq Concilia Galliae A 511 A 695 in Latin Turnholt Brepols 1963 pp 230 249 Duchesne pp 240 241 Bishop Leporius Leborius was present at the council of Chalon sur Saone in 650 De Clercq Concilia Galliae A 511 A 695 p 309 Duchesne p 241 martyred by the Saracens 736 or 738 Haureau Gallia christiana XVI p 618 Savio p 228 Mainardus Duchesne p 241 no 5 Joseph c 853 Savio p 229 Duchesne p 241 no 5 Bishop Abbo was present at the concilium Tullense apud Saponarias in 859 and at the council of Tusiacum Thusey in 860 Jacques Sirmond Concilia antiqua Galliae in Latin Volume 3 Paris Sebastiani Cramoisy 1629 pp 144 163 Savio p 229 Bishop Adalbertus was present at the council of Pontigny in June and July 876 and at the assembly of Mantaille in October 879 He was summoned to Rome by Pope John VIII to appear at the synod to be held in September 882 to explain his behavior in seizing Bishop Barnerius of Grenoble Haureau Gallia christiana XVI Instrumenta p 292 no III Sirmond Concilia antiqua Galliae p 443 Savio p 229 Philippus Jaffe Regesta pontificum Romanorum in Latin Vol 1 second edition Leipzig Veit 1885 pp 420 421 nos 3375 3376 Boso King of Burgundy and Provence granted the castle of Chatel to the bishop of Maurienne Billiet amp Albrieux Chartes pp 5 7 no 1 Interfuit quoque noster dilectus Asmundus Secusinae civitatis vel Maurianorum episcopus una cum proprio fratre Leotmanno Cremonensis ecclesiae presule qui suadentes ditari regalibus opibus ecclesiam proprii episcopii sancti Johannis Baptistae in confinio Burgundiae positam quae admodum destituta esse cognoscitur saevitia hostium euntium vel redeuntium In 899 Bishop Guillelmus was present at the election of the archbishop of Vienne Ragenfridus Savio p 229 Duchesne p 242 Savio p 2Venice29 Bishop Odilard took part in the council of Chalons in 915 Savio p 229 He also took part in the council at Carilocum in 926 Sirmond Concilia antiqua Galliae III p 579 Anno Incarnationis dominica DCCCCXXVI domnus Anchericus sanctae Lugdunenfis Ecclesiae Archiepiscopus domnus quoque Geraldus Matiscensis Ecclesiae venerabilis Pontifex necnon Odelardus Maurianensis Episcopus ad Carilocum monasterium conuenerunt The notion that he was slain by the Saracens 916 together with Benedict Archbishop of Embrun has been rejected by Haureau Gallia christiana XVI p 620 Eberardus Ebraldus lt Urardus Bishop Urardus was present at the council of Anse in 1025 J D Mansi ed Sacrorum Conciliorum nova et amplissima collectio editio novissima in Latin Vol 19 Venice A Zatta 1774 p 425 Haureau Gallia christiana XVI pp 621 622 Savio p 230 Theobaldus Thibaud Savio p 230 states that Theobaldus was present at a council held at Romans sur Isere Haureau Gallia christiana XVI p 622 Savio pp 230 231 Burchardus Brochard Burchard Haureau Gallia christiana XVI p 622 Artaldus is attested in 1080 Savio p 231 no XIX Conon Pope Urban II announced his election to the bishops of the province of Vienne in a letter of March 1088 the name of the bishop of Maurienne is not specified In 1093 he witnessed a donation of Count Umberto II of Savoy He was still governing the diocese in 1108 Savio p 231 no XX Amadeus de Faucigny Savio p 231 no XXI Ayrald was once a monk of the Charterhouse of Portes fr Truchet 1867 Histoire hagiologique du diocese de Maurienne pp 223 236 Antoine Mottard Documents sur le B Ayrald eveque de Maurienne in French in Travaux de la Societe d histoire et d archeologie de la Maurienne Savoie in French Vol 4 Chambery F Puthod 1876 pp 141 154 Bernard was transferred to the diocese of Tarentaise by Pope Innocent III He was in office there in 1213 Eubel I pp 331 472 Amadeus Eubel I p 331 The election of Joannes Dean of the cathedral of Maurienne by the cathedral Chapter was far from unanimous and some of the canons appealed to the pope to provide appoint a bishop Pope Honorius III ordered the archbishop of Vienne in a letter of 24 April 1221 to investigate whether Joannes was suitable and the choice of the better part of the canons in which case he was to confirm him Gams p 830 Savio p 236 Eubel I p 331 P Pressutti Regesta Honorii papae III in Latin vol 1 p 535 no 3281 giving a misleading summary Cesar Auguste Horoy Honorii III romani pontificis opera omnia in Latin Tomus tertius Volume 3 Paris Imprimerie de la Bibliotheque ecclesiastique 1879 pp 778 779 no 341 On 26 January 1223 Bishop Aimarus entered into an agreement with the canons of the cathedral Savio p 236 He was transferred to the diocese of Embrun in 1236 according to Gams p 830 Savio p 236 Eubel I p 331 Bishop Amadeus son of Count Thomas I of Savoy died in 1268 Last Will and Testament dated 28 February 1269 Billiet amp Albrieux 1861 Chartes du diocese de Maurienne Documents recueillis pp 95 103 no 62 Last Will and Testament dated 11 January 1273 Billiet amp Albrieux 1861 Chartes du diocese de Maurienne Documents recueillis pp 103 110 no 64 Aymon is attested first on 5 February 1276 and last on 23 April 1299 Billiet and Albrieux Chartes du diocese de Maurienne pp 152 155 no 78 Duchesne p 237 Antelmus de Clermont was appointed by Pope John XXII on 10 September 1334 He died on 23 February 1349 Eubel I p 331 Amadeus was the son of Philippe de Savoie Prince of Piedmont of Achaia and of the Morea and of Isabelle de Villehardouin He had been a canon of Orleans and a canon and count of Lyon He was appointed bishop of Maurienne by Pope Clement VI on 18 March 1349 He died on 13 June 1376 Haureau Gallia christiana XVI p 639 Eubel I p 331 Ogerius de Confleto Eubel II p 187 Louis de La Palud de Varembon as Bishop of Lausanne had taken an active part at the Council of Basle in favour of the pope of the Council of Basel Felix V who named him Bishop of Maurienne in 1441 and afterwards Cardinal The cardinal de Varembon was confirmed in both appointments by Pope Nicholas V in 1449 John of Segovia at the Council of Basle was representative of the King of Aragon he also worked for Pope Felix V who appointed him Cardinal in 1441 and whom pope Nicholas V ten years later gave the see of Maurienne He is the author of Gesta Concilii Basileensis on the council D Estouteville was made cardinal in 1439 and had been bishop of Angers 1439 1447 and of Digne 1439 1445 He was appointed bishop of Maurienne by Pope Nicholas V and his bulls were issued on 26 January 1453 on 20 April 1453 he took possession of the diocese by proxy He was appointed Archbishop of Rouen on 20 April 1453 and allowed to keep Maurienne as its Administrator He stopped in Maurienne on his way to Rouen on 12 June 1454 He granted the cathedral Chapter all the revenues of the bishopric during his lifetime which amounted to more than 16 000 florins for the completion of the cloister Saturnin Truchet Saint Jean de Maurienne au XVIe siecle pp 29 30 Eubel II pp 179 188 Morel Moriel Morelli was a protonotary apostolic and the papal datary of Pope Sixtus IV he was also Abbot commendatory of Ambronay Bresse of S Pierre de Berne and Prior commendatory of La Boisse Bresse He was appointed bishop of Maurienne on 31 January 1483 He died on 24 July 1499 He is credited with building the choir of the cathedral and stalls for the canons Besson Memoires pour l histoire ecclesiastique des dioceses de Geneve Tarantaise Aoste et Maurienne p 302 Eubel II p 188 Gorrevod was the brother of Laurent de Gorrevod a councillor of Marguerite of Austria Louis certificate of election dated 29 July 1499 is printed by Billiet amp Albrieux Chartes du diocese de Maurienne Documents recueillis pp 314 318 He was made cardinal on 9 March 1530 by Pope Clement VII He resigned the diocese in 1532 his successor and nephew was appointed on 10 April 1532 He died on 22 April 1535 Andre Chagny Correspondance politique et administrative de Laurent de Gorrevod 1509 1520 Volume 1 Macon Protat 1913 pp lxix lxxi Truchet 1887 Saint Jean de Maurienne au XVIe siecle pp 333 350 Eubel II pp 188 with note 5 III p 21 no 21 238 note 2 Nephew of Louis de Gorrevod Challant did not receive episcopal consecration until 22 May 1541 Besson p 303 Haureau Gallia christiana XVI p 645 Eubel III p 238 with note 3 Recanati was a member of the official family of Cardinal Alessandro Farnese seniore who became Pope Paul III in 1534 In 1541 Recanati was sent as papal nuncio to Portugal and France to promote the Council of Trent On his return he was appointed papal datary 1541 1544 On 6 February he was named bishop of Nice but he was still bishop elect when he was transferred to Maurienne on 30 July 1544 Recanati was named a cardinal by Paul III on 19 December 1544 and on 26 August 1545 was named papal legate of the Romandiola which appointment was renewed by Pope Julius III In 1547 he was twice sent to the king of France to encourage attendance at the Council and to attempt to arrange a marriage for the pope s son Orazio He attended the conclaves of 1549 1550 1555 and 1559 5 September to 25 December but he died on 1 December 1559 Eubel III pp 29 no 59 238 with note 4 257 Brandelisio Trotti was a cleric of Ferrara and served as a conclavist of Cardinal Ippolito d Este in the conclave of 1550 He was provost of the cathedral of Ferrara Pope Paul IV named him bishop of Maurienne in the consistory of 27 March 1560 He delayed entering his diocese for three years dying in 1563 while he was on his way to Savoy Haureau Gallia Christiana XVI p 646 Eubel III p 238 with note 5 S Merkle Concilii tridentini Diariorum Pars Secunda Massarelli Diaria V VII in Latin Friburg im Breisgau Herder 1911 p 125 There is no evidence that Cardinal d Este was ever consecrated a bishop Eubel III p 238 Lambert the son of Philibert de Lambert and Philippa Lotier of Cambrai was the brother of Bishop Franccois Lambert of Nice and Bishop Pietro Lambert of Caserta Pierre was a canon of Geneva in 1535 and compelled to flee by Protestant activists He returned to Cambrai where he became Dean of S Sindonis the Holy Shroud He was appointed bishop of Maurienne in the consistory of 21 November 1567 by Pope Pius V In Maurienne he established the Schola Lambertina restored the episcopal palace and embellished the cathedral He died on 6 May 1591 Haureau Gallia Christiana XVI p 646 Eubel III p 238 with note 7 Saturnin Truchet Notes sur Philibert Milliet Paul Milliet et Charles Bobba eveques de Maurienne extraites de titres inedits in Travaux de la Societe d histoire et d archeologie de la Maurienne Savoie in French Vol 2 Chambery F Puthod 1867 pp 41 47 Charles Bobba Gauchat Hierarchia catholica IV p 235 Bishop Paul died on 30 October 1656 Haureau Gallia Christiana XVI p 648 Haureau Gallia Christiana XVI p 648 Berzetti belonged to the family of the counts of Burontium Balloci and Bastia and was related to important families of Savoy and Piedmont He was a priest of the diocese of Vercelli and a master of theology he held the degree of Doctor in utroque iure He was a domestic prelate in the papal household and an assistant at the papal throne as well as a Roman patrician and senator for life He was appointed around the age of 42 by Pope Alexander VII in the consistory of 6 May 1658 He died on 4 March 1686 E Burnier Pieces inedits relatives a la province de Maurienne et tirees des archives du Senat de Savoie in Travaux de la Societe d histoire et d archeologie de la Maurienne Savoie Vol 1 1878 pp 393 396 Gauchat Hierarchia catholica IV p 235 Ritzler amp Sefrin V p 261 note 2 Valpergue died on 7 September 1736 Ritzler amp Sefrin Hierarchia catholica V p 261 with note 3 His Last Will and Testament 4 September 1736 is given in Bailleux and Antoine Mottard Testament de Reverendissime et Illustrissime Seigneur Eveque de Maurienne Comte de Masin et de Valperga in Travaux de la Societe d histoire et d archeologie de la Maurienne Savoie pp 394 396 Haureau Gallia Christiana XVI p 648 Grisella held the degree of Doctor in utroque iure Bologna 1716 He was nominated bishop of Maurienne by King Charles Emmanuel III of Sardinia on 15 February 1741 and confirmed by Pope Benedict XIV on 6 March 1741 He died on 21 or 22 September 1756 Ritzler amp Sefrin Hierarchia catholica VI p 281 with note 2 Filippa was the son of Carlo Baldassare Filippa count della Martiniana He held a doctorate in theology from the University of Turin 1757 He was rector of the charity hospital in Turin and held the priorship of S Nicholas de Gerry He was nominated bishop of Maurienne by King Charles Emmanuel III of Sardinia on 25 May 1757 and confirmed by Pope Benedict XIV on 18 July 1757 He was made a cardinal by Pope Pius VI on 1 June 1778 He was nominated bishop of Vercelli on 21 April 1779 and confirmed by Pope Pius VI on 12 July 1779 He was the first to whom Napoleon I Bonaparte after the battle of Marengo confided his intention of concluding a concordat with Rome He died on 7 December 1802 Ritzler amp Sefrin Hierarchia catholica VI pp 281 438 VII p 40 Brichtanteau was born in Turin in 1737 and earned the degree of Doctor in utroque iure from the University of Turin in 1760 He was eleemosynary to the King of Sardinia who nominated him to the diocese of Maurienne on 26 January 1780 he was confirmed by Pope Pius VI on 20 March 1780 He was nominated bishop of Acqui on 20 July 1796 but was not confirmed He wrote his Last Will and Testament on 18 August 1796 Adolph Gros 1916 L instruction publique en Maurienne avant la Revolution in French parts 2 3 Saint Jean de Maurienne J Salomon 1916 p 149 He died in Biella in the Piedmont on 27 August 1796 Francois Molin Souvenirs de la persecution soufferte par le clerge du Diocese de Maurienne pendant la revolutionnaire de 1792 a 1802 in French A Pouchet et Cie 1868 pp 83 84 Ritzler amp Sefrin VI p 281 with note 4 He and Roges were elected vicars capitular on 7 November 1796 by the Chapter of Maurienne meeting in a parish church in Susa Molin Souvenirs p 84 Roges had been Vicar General of the diocese Billiet 1865 pp 325 371 Merinville was nominated bishop of Dijon by King Louis XVI on 25 February 1787 and confirmed by Pope Pius VI on 23 April 1787 He was nominated bishop of Chambery on 12 April 1802 by First Consul Napoleon Bonaparte and approved by Pope Pius VII on 4 May 1802 He resigned in January 1805 Ritzler and Sefrin Hierarchia catholica VII p 147 Desolle was nominated bishop of Digne by Napoleon on 29 April 1802 and confirmed by Pope Pius VII on 10 July 1802 He was nominated bishop of Chambery on 30 January 1805 and confirmed on 22 March 1805 He was promoted Archbishop of Chambery on 7 December 1817 He resigned on 11 November 1823 at the age of 79 He died on 31 December 1824 Ritzler amp Sefrin VII pp 147 176 Archbishop of Chambery made cardinal in 1861 Brauer Martin 2014 Handbuch der Kardinale 1846 2012 in German Berlin De Gruyter p 61 ISBN 978 3 11 026947 5 On the resignation of Archbishop Louis Marie Fernand de Bazelaire de Ruppierre of Chambery on 26 Apr 1966 the diocese of Maurienne was suppressed and Bishop Bontemps of Maurienne was transferred by Pope Paul VI to the archdiocese of Chambery He retired resigned on 14 May 1985 Sources and external links editEpiscopal lists edit Gams Pius Bonifatius 1873 Series episcoporum Ecclesiae catholicae quotquot innotuerunt a beato Petro apostolo Ratisbon Typis et Sumptibus Georgii Josephi Manz pp 548 549 Use with caution obsolete Eubel Conradus ed 1913 Hierarchia catholica in Latin Vol 1 Tomus I second ed Munster Libreria Regensbergiana in Latin Eubel Conradus ed 1914 Hierarchia catholica in Latin Vol 2 Tomus II second ed Munster Libreria Regensbergiana archived Eubel Conradus Gulik Guilelmus eds 1923 Hierarchia catholica in Latin Vol 3 Tomus III second ed Munster Libreria Regensbergiana Gauchat Patritius Patrice 1935 Hierarchia catholica Vol 4 Tomus IV 1592 1667 Munster Libraria Regensbergiana Retrieved 2016 07 06 Ritzler Remigius Sefrin Pirminus 1952 Hierarchia catholica medii et recentis aevi Vol 5 Tomus V 1667 1730 Patavii Messagero di S Antonio Retrieved 2016 07 06 Ritzler Remigius Sefrin Pirminus 1958 Hierarchia catholica medii et recentis aevi Vol 6 Tomus VI 1730 1799 Patavii Messagero di S Antonio Retrieved 2016 07 06 Ritzler Remigius Sefrin Pirminus 1968 Hierarchia Catholica medii et recentioris aevi in Latin Vol VII 1800 1846 Monasterii Libreria Regensburgiana Remigius Ritzler Pirminus Sefrin 1978 Hierarchia catholica Medii et recentioris aevi in Latin Vol VIII 1846 1903 Il Messaggero di S Antonio Pieta Zenon 2002 Hierarchia catholica medii et recentioris aevi in Latin Vol IX 1903 1922 Padua Messagero di San Antonio ISBN 978 88 250 1000 8 Studies edit Besson Joseph A 1759 Memoires pour l histoire ecclesiastique des dioceses de Geneve Tarantaise Aoste et Maurienne in French Nancy Sebastien Henault 1759 pp 282 309 Billiet Alexis 1861 Memoires sur les premiers eveques du diocese de Maurienne Chambery Puthod fils 1861 Billiet Alexis Albrieux Canon edd 1861 Chartes du diocese de Maurienne Documents recueillis in Latin and French Chambery Puthod fils 1861 Billiet Alexis 1865 Memoires pour servir a l histoire ecclesiastique du diocese de Chambery in French Chambery F Puthod 1865 Buet Charles 1867 Etude sur les droits seigneuriaux des eveques de Maurienne in French in Travaux de la Societe d histoire et d archeologie de la Maurienne Savoie Vol 2 Chambery F Puthod 1867 pp 71 97 Duchesne Louis 1907 Fastes episcopaux de l ancienne Gaule in French Vol I second edition Paris 1907 pp 239 242 Haureau Jean Barthelemy 1865 Gallia christiana in Latin vol XVI Paris 1865 coll 611 654 Pisani Paul 1907 Repertoire biographique de l episcopat constitutionnel 1791 1802 in French Paris A Picard et fils Poole Reginald L 1916 The See of Maurienne and the Valley of Susa in English Historical Review 31 1916 pp 1 19 Savio Fedele 1899 Gli antichi vescovi d Italia Il Piemonte in Italian Torino Fratelli Bocca 1899 pp 221 237 Truchet Saturnin 1867 Histoire hagiologique du diocese de Maurienne in French Chambery F Puthod 1867 Truchet Saturnin 1887 Saint Jean de Maurienne au XVIe siecle in French Chambery Impr Savoisienne 1887 External links edit Chow Gabriel GCatholic with Google satellite photo self published source Goyau Georges Saint Jean de Maurienne The Catholic Encyclopedia Volume XIII New York Robert Appleton 1913 pp 353 354 45 16 22 N 6 20 54 E 45 2729 N 6 3484 E 45 2729 6 3484 Portals nbsp Catholicism nbsp France Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Roman Catholic Diocese of Saint Jean de Maurienne amp oldid 1219081660, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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