Archdiocese of Rossano-Cariati
Archdiocese of Rossano-Cariati | |
Basic data | |
---|---|
Country | Italy |
Church region | Calabria |
Ecclesiastical province | Cosenza-Bisignano |
Metropolitan bishopric | Archdiocese of Cosenza-Bisignano |
Diocesan bishop | Giuseppe Satriano |
founding | April 4th 1979 |
surface | 1,415 km² |
Parishes | 56 (2014 / AP 2015 ) |
Residents | 139,700 (2014 / AP 2015 ) |
Catholics | 137,200 (2014 / AP 2015 ) |
proportion of | 98.2% |
Diocesan priest | 66 (2014 / AP 2015 ) |
Religious priest | 20 (2014 / AP 2015 ) |
Catholics per priest | 1,595 |
Permanent deacons | 2 (2014 / AP 2015 ) |
Friars | 22 (2014 / AP 2015 ) |
Religious sisters | 89 (2014 / AP 2015 ) |
rite | Roman rite |
Liturgical language | Italian |
cathedral | Cattedrale di Maria Santissima Achiropita in Rossano |
Co-cathedral | Concattedrale di San Michele arcangelo in Cariati |
Website | www.chiesacattolica.it |
Ecclesiastical province | |
The Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Rossano-Cariati ( lat. : Archidioecesis Rossanensis-Cariatensis , ital. : Arcidiocesi di Rossano-Cariati ) is in Italy situated Roman Catholic Archdiocese based in Rossano (municipality Corigliano-Rossano ).
history
At the beginning of the 10th century, the Diocese of Rossano is documented as a suffragan of Reggio Calabria . From the Vita of Saint Nilus of Rossano , which was written at the beginning of the 11th century, we learn that at that time archbishops were already residing in Rossano. At the Synod of Melfi in 1089, the Greek Archbishop Romanus submitted to Pope Urban II. The attempt of Roger Borsa , the Norman Duke of Apulia to appoint a Latin prelate in Rossano after the death of Romanus in 1093, failed due to popular resistance, the Greek rite remained in use until 1461. However, since the middle of the 14th century, the bishops were predominantly Latins, albeit partly from Calabria. Rossano is listed in the Liber censuum as a metropolis without suffragans .
On June 27, 1818 , the bishoprics of Cerenzia , Strongoli and Umbriatico were abolished by the Bull De utiliori of Pius VII , and their territories were annexed to the Bishopric Cariati.
The Archdiocese of Rossano was annexed on April 4, 1979 by Pope John Paul II with the Apostolic Constitution Quo aptius, the Diocese of Cariati . On September 30, 1986, the Archdiocese of Rossano Cariati by was the Congregation for Bishops with the decree Instantibus votis in Archdiocese of Rossano-Cariati renamed. The Archdiocese of Rossano-Cariati was subordinated to the Archdiocese of Cosenza-Bisignano on January 30, 2001 as a suffragan.
See also
literature
- Dieter Girgensohn : Italia pontificia X: Calabria - Insulae , Zurich 1975, pp. 99-102
- Norbert Kamp : Church and monarchy in the Staufer Kingdom of Sicily. Vol. 2, Prosopographical Foundation: Dioceses and Bishops of the Kingdom 1194–1266; Apulia and Calabria. Munich 1975, pp. 872-880 (online at Digi20).
- Horst Enzensberger : Mendicanti nelle sedi vescovili della Calabria (fino alla morte di Martino V 1431) . In: Archivio Storico per la Calabria e la Lucania 84, 2018, pp. 57–93, here 68–70. ( Digitized version )
Web links
- Sito ufficiale
- Entry of the Archdiocese of Rossano-Cariati (Italian) on Chiesa Cattolica Italiana.
- Entry on Archdiocese of Rossano-Cariati on catholic-hierarchy.org
- History of the diocese on BeWeB Beni ecclesiatici in web
Individual evidence
- ↑ Ioannes Paulus II: Const. Apost. Quo aptius , AAS 71 (1979), n.8, pp. 560f.
- ^ Congregatio pro Episcopis: Decretum Instantibus votis , AAS 79 (1987), n. 6, p. 775ff.