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Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Pisa

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Ecclesiastical province
  
Pisa

Pope
  
Francis

Phone
  
+39 050 565511

Country
  
Italy

Established
  
4th century

Area
  
847 km²

Province
  
Province of Pisa

Archbishop
  
Giovanni Paolo Benotto

Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Pisa

Population - Total - Catholics
  
(as of 2006) 310.333 305.270 (98.4%)

Address
  
Piazza Arcivescovado, 18, 56126 Pisa PI, Italy

Cathedral
  
Pisa Cathedral (Cattedrale di S. Maria Assunta)

Similar
  
Chiesa di Santa Caterina, Cattedrale di Pisa, Gruppo Universitari San Fredi, Chiesa di San Michele d, Parish of St Francis

The Archdiocese of Pisa (Latin: Archidioecesis Pisana) is a metropolitan see of the Catholic Church in Italy. It was founded in the 4th century and elevated to the dignity of an archdiocese on 21 April 1092, by Pope Urban II. Its mother church is the cathedral in the Piazza del Duomo. Since 2008 the Archbishop of Pisa has been Giovanni Paolo Benotto.

Contents

History

From the late 12th to the early 13th century, the Pisan archdiocese was the feudal suzerain of the four giudicati of Sardinia.

In 1092 Pope Urban II gave the archbishop of Pisa the title of Primate of Corsica and Sardinia. The title is nowadays honorary for historical reasons.

List of Archbishops and Bishops of Pisa (incomplete)

  • Gaudentius, present at the Council of Rome (313)
  • St. Senior (410), who consecrated St. Patrick
  • Joannes (493)
  • one, name unknown, who took part in the schism of the Three Chapters (556)
  • Alexander (648)
  • Maurianus (680)
  • one, name unknown, taken prisoner by Charlemagne at the siege of Pavia (774)
  • Guido (1005–1012)
  • Azzone (1015–1031)
  • Oppizo or Opizio (1039–1059), the founder of the Camaldolite convent of S. Michele
  • Guido (1061–1076)
  • Landolfo (1077–1079)
  • Gerardo or Gerard (1080–1085)
  • Vacant (1085–1088)
  • Dagobert (1088–1105), the first archbishop and the second Latin Patriarch of Jerusalem
  • Pietro Moriconi (1105–1119)
  • Azzone (1119–1121)
  • Rogerio Ghisalbertini (1123–1131)
  • Uberto Rossi Lanfranchi (1133–1137)
  • Balduino da Pisa (1138–1145)
  • Villano Gaetani (1146–1175), compelled to flee from the city on account of his support for Pope Alexander III (1167), returned in 1172
  • Ubaldo Lanfranchi (1176–1208)
  • Lotario Rosari (1208), also Patriarch of Jerusalem (1216)
  • Federico Visconti (1254), who held provincial synods in 1258, 1260, and 1262
  • Teodorico Ranieri
  • Ruggieri degli Ubaldini
  • John of Polo (Giovanni de Polo)
  • Oddone della Sala (1312) had litigations with the republic, and later became Latin Patriarch of Alexandria
  • Simone Saltorelli
  • Giovanni Scarlatti (1348), who had been legate to Armenia and to the emperor at Constantinople
  • Francesco Moricotti Prignani
  • Lotto Gambacorta (1381), compelled to flee after the death of his brother Pietro, tyrant of Pisa (1392)
  • Alamanno Adinari (1406), a cardinal who had an important part in the conciliabulum of Pisa and in the Council of Constance
  • ...
  • Filippo de' Medici
  • Francesco Salviati Riario (1475), hanged at Florence in connexion with the conspiracy of the Pazzi; succeeded by his nephew
  • Rafaele Riario (1497)
  • Cesare Riario (1499)
  • Onofrio de' Bartolini (1518)
  • Pietro Jacopo of Bourbon
  • Giovanni Ricci
  • Scipione Rebiba (1556)
  • Giovanni de' Medici (1560), a son of Cosimo
  • Angelo Nicolini (1564)
  • Carlo Antonio Dal Pozzo (1582), founder of the Collegio Puteano, and author of works on canon and on civil law
  • Francesco Bonciani, Galileo's opponent
  • Giulio de' Medici (1620), served on missions for the duke, founded the seminary
  • Scipione Pannocchieschi (1636)
  • ...
  • Cosimo Corsi (19 December 1853 - 7 October 1870)
  • Paolo Micallef (1871–1883)
  • Ferdinando Capponi (8 March 1883 - 21 March 1903)
  • Pietro Maffi (22 June 1903 - 17 March 1931)
  • Gabriele Vettori (6 February 1932 - 2 July 1947)
  • Ugo Camozzo (13 January 1948 - 22 September 1970)
  • Benvenuto Matteucci (2 January 1971 - 7 June 1986)
  • Alessandro Plotti (7 June 1986 - 6 April 2008)
  • Giovanni Paolo Benotto (6 April 2008 - )
  • References

    Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Pisa Wikipedia