Samiksha Jaiswal (Editor)

Roman Catholic Diocese of Angoulême

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Ecclesiastical province
  
Poitiers

Denomination
  
Roman Catholic

Area
  
5,972 km²

Country
  
France

Parishes
  
47

Rite
  
Roman Rite

Phone
  
+33 5 45 91 34 44

Roman Catholic Diocese of Angoulême

Metropolitan
  
Archdiocese of Poitiers

Population - Total - Catholics
  
(as of 2015) 367,500 (est.) 276,000 (est.) (75.1%)

Address
  
226 Rue de Bordeaux, 16000 Angoulême, France

Hours
  
Closed now Tuesday9AM–6PMWednesday9AM–6PMThursday9AM–6PMFriday9AM–6PMSaturdayClosedSundayClosedMonday9AM–6PMSuggest an edit

Similar
  
Angoulême Cathedral, St Martial, Paroisse Ma Campagn, Paroisse St Jean Baptise, Presbytère

Profiles

The Roman Catholic Diocese of Angoulême (Latin: Dioecesis Engolismensis; French: Diocèse d'Angoulême) is a diocese of the Latin Rite of the Roman Catholic Church in France. Originally erected in the 3rd century, the episcopal see is the Angoulême Cathedral. Comprising the département of the Charente, the diocese has always been suffragan to the Archbishopric of Bordeaux, under the old régime as well as under the Concordat.

Contents

In 2015, in the Diocese of Angoulême there was one priest for every 3,680 Catholics.

History

Its first bishop was Ausonius, a disciple, it is said, of St. Martial, concerning whom we have two historical authorities: St. Gregory of Tours, who held that St. Martial preached the gospel in Limoges about the year 250, and the Limousin traditions, transmitted or invented by the chronicler Adhémar de Chabannes, who maintained that St. Martial was the immediate disciple of St. Peter. According to the latter opinion St. Ausonius was a bishop of the first century; according to the former, of the third century. At least one modern historian believes it likely that Ausonius lived even later, in the 4th century. His cult, however, does not appear until the end of the tenth century.

St. Salvius, honoured as a martyr at Valenciennes, whom the Gallia Christiana makes a Bishop of Angoulême, was undoubtedly only a missionary bishop of the eighth century. In the list of the Bishops of Angoulême is found the name of the poet Octavien de St. Gelais (1494–1502).

The religious monuments of the province of Angoumois are remarkable for their admirable Romano-Byzantine façades. The most beautiful of them is St. Peter's Cathedral at Angoulême. The original cathedral was dedicated to Saint Saturninus, but it was destroyed by the Arian Visigoths. After the defeat of Alaric II in 507, King Clovis had his chaplain Aptonius made bishop and had the cathedral rebuilt and named in honor of Saint Peter. It was consecrated around 570, according to tradition by Saint Germain, Bishop of Paris. The cathedral was ravaged again, this time by the Normans, in the middle of the ninth century. It was rebuilt by Bishop Grimoard and dedicated in 1017. The present edifice is the work of Bishop Gérard II de Blaye, the Papal Legate, ca. 1109–1120. The Cathedral was administered by a Chapter, composed of a Dean, the Archdeacon, the Treasurer, and twenty-one Canons. There were also a Cantor and Scholasticus, but they did not have a vote in Chapter unless they were also Canons.

The memory of a wealthy and famous Augustinian abbey, founded in 1122, is kept alive by its ruins at Couronne, near Angoulême.

In 1236, the Jewish community of Angouleme, along with those in Anjou, Poitou, and Bordeaux, was attacked by crusaders. 500 Jews from these communities chose conversion and over 3000 were massacred. Pope Gregory IX, who originally had called the crusade, was outraged about this brutality and criticized the clergy of the diocese of Angoulême for not preventing it.

since 1802

  • Dominique Lacombe (April 11, 1802 appointed–April 7, 1823 died)
  • Jean-Joseph-Pierre Guigou (September 10, 1823 appointed–May 21, 1842 died)
  • René-François Régnier (June 15, 1842 appointed–May 16, 1850 appointed Archbishop of Cambrai)
  • Antoine-Charles Cousseau (June 17, 1850 appointed–August 12, 1872 resigned)
  • Alexandre-Léopold Sebaux (December 16, 1872 appointed–May 17, 1891 died)
  • Jean-Baptiste Frérot (April 2, 1892 appointed–September 6, 1899 died)
  • Jean Louis Mando (December 7, 1899 appointed–July 24, 1900 died)
  • Joseph-François-Ernest Ricard (April 7, 1901 appointed–April 15, 1907 appointed Archbishop of Auch)
  • Henri-Marie Arlet (August 7, 1907 appointed–May 15, 1933 died)
  • Jean-Baptiste Mégnin (December 7, 1933 appointed–May 9, 1965 died)
  • René-Noël-Joseph Kérautret (May 9, 1965 succeeded–July 1, 1975 resigned)
  • Georges Rol (July 1, 1975 succeeded–Dec 22, 1993 resigned)
  • Claude Jean Pierre Dagens (December 22, 1993 succeeded–)
  • References

    Roman Catholic Diocese of Angoulême Wikipedia