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Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Marseille

Latin Catholic archdiocese in France From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Marseillemap
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The Archdiocese of Marseille (Latin: Archidioecesis Massiliensis; French: Archidiocèse de Marseille) is a Latin Church ecclesiastical jurisdiction or archdiocese of the Catholic Church in France.[1][2] The archepiscopal see is in the city of Marseille, and the diocese comprises the arrondissement of Marseille, a subdivision of the department of Bouches-du-Rhône in the Region of Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur.

Quick Facts Archdiocese of MarseilleArchidioecesis Massiliensis Archidiocèse de Marseille, Location ...
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Ecclesiastical province of Marseille
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History

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The Church of Marseille is said to have been erected in the first century by St. Lazarus, the young man mentioned in the Gospels who had been raised from the dead by Jesus Christ himself. His family migrated to Provence at some point after the Resurrection.[3]

Revolution

The diocese of Marseille was abolished during the French Revolution, under the Civil Constitution of the Clergy (1790). Its territory was subsumed into the new diocese, called the 'Bouches-du-Rhone', which was part of the Metropolitanate called the 'Metropole des Côtes de la Méditerranée (which included ten new 'departements'). The electors of 'Bouches-du-Rhone' met at Aix beginning on 19 February 1791, and on 23 February elected Abbé Charles Benoît Roux, curé of Eyragues near Arles. He was consecrated in Paris by Constitutional Bishops Gobel, Miroudot and Gouttes. He very much enjoyed the social life of Marseille, but after the execution of Louis XVI on 21 January 1793, Roux joined the counter-revolutionaries. When Marseille was occupied by troops of the Convention, he fled to Aix. He was arrested and imprisoned on 20 September; he was taken to Marseille, where he faced a tribunal of the Revolution which condemned him to death. He was executed on 5 April 1794.[4]

An archdiocese

The diocese was raised to the level of an Archdiocese on 31 January 1948 by Pope Pius XII. The suffragans of the archdiocese are: the Archdiocese of Aix, the Diocese of Ajaccio, the Archdiocese of Avignon, the Diocese of Digne, the Diocese of Fréjus-Toulon, the Diocese of Gap, and the Diocese of Nice.[5]

In recent times the Archdiocese of Marseille has suffered from significant shortage of priests, despite having a reported Catholic population of over 700,000 not a single priest was ordained in 2018 or 2019.[6]

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Bishops and Archbishops of Marseille

to 1000

  • Oresius (ca. 314)[7]
  • Proculus
  • Venerius (ca. 431–451)[8]
  • Eustasius (attested in 463)[9]
  • Graecus
  • Honoratus (ca. 496–500)[10]
  • Cannatus (second half of the fifth century)[11]
  • Theodorus (ca. 580s)[12]
  • Serenus
  • Petrus of Marseille
  • Abdalong (8th century)[13]
  • Maurontus (ca. 780)[14]
  • Yvo (attested on 12 March 781)[15]
  • Wadalus (813–818)[16]
  • Theobertus (ca. 822–841)[17]
  • Alboin (attested 843/844)[18]
  • Litiduinus (attested in 878 and 879)[19]
  • Berengarius (attested in 884)[20]
  • [Gulfaric] (9th century)[21]
  • [Venator] (9th century)[22]
  • Drogon (attested in 923 and 924)[23]
  • Pons (977–1008)[24]

1000–1500

  • Pons (1008–1073)[25]
  • Raymond (1073 – 7 November 1122)[26]
  • Raymond de Soliers (1122 – 26 April 1151)[27]
  • Pierre (1151 – 2 April 1170)[28]
  • Fulco de Thorame (1170 – 31 March 1188)[29]
  • Rainier (1188–1214)[30]
  • Pierre de Montlaur (7 October 1217 – 29 August 1229)[31]
  • Benoît d'Aligan, O.S.B. (1229–1267)[32]
  • Raymond of Nîmes (23 December 1267 – 15 July 1288)[33]
  • Durand de Trésémines (17 April 1289 – 3 August 1312)[34]
  • Raymond Robaudi[35] (1 January 1313 – 12 September 1319)[36] (transferred to Archbishopric of Embrun)
  • Gasbert de la Val (18 September 1319 – 26 August 1323)[37] (transferred to Arles)
  • Aymar Amiel (26 August 1323 – 23 December 1333)[38]
  • Jean Artaudi (10 January 1334 – 1335, after July 7)[39]
  • Joannes Gasqui (13 October 1335 – 10 September 1344)[40]
  • Robert de Mandagot (13 September 1344 – 1358)[41]
  • Hugh d'Arpajon (4 February 1359 – 31 May 1361)[33]
  • Pierre Fabri (1361, June–September?)[33]
  • Guillaume Sudre, O.P. (27 August 1361 – 1366)[42]
  • [ Philippe de Cabassole ] (1366–1368) Administrator[43]
  • Guillaume de la Voute (9 December 1368 – 1 July 1379)[44] (transferred to Valence-et-Die, by Clement VII)
  • Aymar de La Voute (1379-1395)
  • Benoît II (1397-1418)
  • Paul de Sade (1418-1420)
  • Avignon Nicolaï (1420-1421)
  • André Boutaric (1433)
  • Barthélémy Rocalli (1433-1445)
  • Louis de Glandevès (1445)
  • Nicola de Brancas (1445-1466)
  • Jean Alardeau (1466-1496)
  • Ogier d'Anglure (1496-1506)

1500 to 1700

  • Pierre Baudonis (1506)
  • Antoine Dufour (1506-1509)
  • Claude de Seyssel (1511-1517)
  • Innocent Cibo (1517-1530)
  • Jean-Baptiste Cibo (1530-1550)
  • Cristoforo Guidalotti Ciocchi del Monte (1550-1556)
  • Pierre Ragueneau (1556-1572)
  • Frédéric Ragueneau (1572-1603)
  • Jacques Turricella (1605-1618)
  • Arthur d'Épinay de Saint-Luc (1619-1621)
  • Nicolas Coëffeteau (1621)
  • François de Loménie (1624-1639)
  • Eustache Gault (1639-1640)
  • Jean-Baptiste Gault (1640-1643)
  • Étienne de Puget (1644-1668)
  • Toussaint de Forbin-Janson (1668–1679)
  • Jean-Baptiste d'Estampes de Valençay (12 January 1680 – 6 January 1684)[45]
  • Charles Gaspard Guillaume de Vintimille du Luc (21 January 1692 – 14 May 1708)[46]

1700 to 1948

[1801–1817] Diocese of Marseille suppressed, by the Concordat of 1801.[50]
  • Charles-Fortuné de Mazenod[51] (1823–1837)
  • Charles-Joseph-Eugene de Mazenod[52] (1837–1861)
  • Patrice Cruice[53] (18 Jun 1861 – 1 Sep 1865)
  • Charles-Philippe Place[54] (6 Jan 1866 – 13 Jun 1878)
  • Joseph Robert[55] (13 Jun 1878 – 19 Nov 1900)
  • Cardinal Pierre Andrieu (5 Apr 1901 – 2 Jan 1909)
  • Joseph-Marie Fabre (29 Apr 1909 – 9 Jan 1923 )
  • Daniel Champavier (19 Jan 1923 – 2 Feb 1928 )
  • Maurice-Louis Dubourg (17 Dec 1928 – 9 Dec 1936 )
  • Jean Delay (14 Aug 1937 – 5 Sep 1956 ) first Archbishop of Marseille (31 January 1948)

Archbishops of Marseille since 1948

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See also

References

Bibliography

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