Catholic diocese in France
The Diocese of Périgueux and Sarlat (Latin : Dioecesis Petrocoricensis et Sarlatensis ; French : Diocèse de Périgueux et Sarlat ) is a Latin Church ecclesiastical territory or diocese of the Catholic Church in France . Its episcopal see is Périgueux , in the département of Dordogne , in the région of Aquitaine . The Diocese of Périgueux is a suffragan diocese in the ecclesiastical province of the metropolitan Archdiocese of Bordeaux . The current bishop is Philippe Mousset, who was appointed in 2014.
History
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(December 2016 )
The Martyrology of Ado gives St. Front as the first bishop of Périgueux; Saint Peter is said to have sent him to this town with the St. George to whom later traditions assign the foundation of the church of Le Puy . Subsequent biographies, which appeared between the 10th and 13th centuries, make St. Front's life one with that of St. Fronto of Nitria , thereby giving it an Egyptian colouring. At all events we know by the Chronicle of Sulpicius Severus that a Bishop of Périgueux, Paternus, was deposed for heresy about 361.
Among its bishops are:
The Abbey of Saint-Sauveur of Sarlat , later placed under the patronage of St. Sacerdos of Limoges , seems to have existed before the reigns of Pepin the Short and Charlemagne who came there in pilgrimage and because of their munificence deserved to be called "founders" in a Bull of Pope Eugene III (1153). About 936 St. Odo, Abbot of Cluny , was sent to reform the abbey. The abbey was made an episcopal see by pope John XXII , on 13 January 1318.
Bishops
to 1000
Saint Front[ 2]
Agnan
Chronope I
c. 356: Paterne
c. 380: Gavide
c. 410: Pégase
c. 506 – c. 533: Chronope II
c. 540: Sabaude
c. 582: Chartier
c. 590: Saffaire
c. 629: Austier
c. 767 – c. 778: Bertrand
c. 805 – c. 811: Raimond I
c. 844: Ainard
c. 900: Sébaude
977–991: Frotaire
992–1000: Martin
1000–1200
1000–1009: Rodolphe de Coué
1010–1036 or 1037: Arnaud de Vitabre
c. 1037–1059: Géraud de Gourdon
1060–1081: Guillaume I de Montberon
1081–1099: Renaud de Tivier
1100–1101: Raimond II
1102–1129: Guillaume II d'Auberoche
1130–1138: Guillaume III de Nanclars
1138–1142: Geoffroi I de Cauze
1142–1147: Pierre I
1148–1158: Raimond III de Mareuil
1160–1169: Jean I d'Assida
1169–1182: Pierre II Minet
1185–1197: Adhémar I de La Torre
1197–1210: Raimond IV de Châteauneuf
1200–1400
1210–1220: Raoul I de Lastours de Laron
1220–1233: Cardinal Raimond de Pons
1234–1266: Pierre III de Saint-Astier
1267 – c. 1280: Elie I Pilet
c. 1282 – c. 1295: Raimond VI d'Auberoche
1297 – c. 1312: Audouin
1314–1331: Raimond VII
1332–1333: Giraud
1333–1335: Pierre IV
1336–1340: Raimond VIII
1340 – c. 1346: Guillaume IV Audibert
1347–1348: Adhémar II
1349 – c. 1382: Pierre V Pin
1384–1385: Elie II Servient
1387 – c. 1400: Pierre VI de Durfort
1400–1600
c. 1402: Guillaume V Lefèvre
c. 1405: Gabriel I
1407–1408: Raimond IX de Castelnau
1408 – c. 1430: Jean II
1431 – c. 1436: Berenger
1437–1438: Elie III
1438–1439: Pierre VII de Durfort
1440–1441: Raimond X
1441 – c. 1446: Geoffroi II Bérenger d'Arpajon
1447–1463: Elie IV de Bourdeille
1463–1470: Raoul II du Fou (also Bishop of Angoulême )
1470–1485: Geoffroi III de Pompadour (also Bishop of Angoulême)
1486–1500: Gabriel II du Mas
1500–1504: Geoffroi III de Pompadour
1504 – c. 1510: Jean III Auriens
1510–1522: Gui I de Castelnau
1522–1524: Jacques de Castelnau
1524–1532: Jean de Plas
1532–1540: Foucaud de Bonneval
1540–1541: Claude de Longwy , Cardinal de Givry[ 3]
1541–1547 Agostino Trivulzio , administrator[ 4]
1548–1550: Jean de Lustrac
1551–1552: Geoffroi de Pompadour
1554–1560: Gui II Bouchard d'Aubeterre
1561–1575: Pierre VIII Fournier
1578–1600: François I de Bourdeille
1600–1800
1600–1612: Jean VI Martin
1614–1646: François II de La Béraudière
1646: Jean VII d'Estrades
1646–1652: Philibert de Brandon
1654–1665: Cyr de Villers-la-Faye
1666–1693: Guillaume VI Le Boux[ 5]
1693–1702: Daniel de Francheville
1702–1719: Pierre IX Clément
1721–1731: Michel-Pierre d'Argouges
1731–1771: Jean VIII Chrétien de Macheco de Prémeaux
1771–1773: Gabriel III Louis de Rougé
1773–1790: Emmanuel-Louis de Grossoles de Flamarens
1791–1793: Pontaud
from 1800
1817–1836: Alexandre-Charles-Louis-Rose de Lostanges-Saint-Alvère
1835–1840: Thomas-Marie-Joseph Gousset (also Archbishop of Reims )
1840–1860: Jean-Baptiste-Amédée Georges-Massonnais
1861–1863: Charles-Théodore Baudry
1863–1901: Nicolas-Joseph Dabert
1901–1906: François-Marie-Joseph Delamaire
1906–1915: Henri-Louis-Prosper Bougoin
1915–1920: Maurice-Louis-Marie Rivière
1920–1931: Christophe-Louis Légasse
1932–1965: Georges-Auguste Louis
1965–1988: Jacques-Julien-Émile Patria
1988–2004: Gaston Élie Poulain, P.S.S.
2004–2014: Michel Pierre Marie Mouïsse
2014–present: Philippe Mousset[ 6]
References
Bibliography
Reference books
Eubel, Conradus, ed. (1913). Hierarchia catholica, Tomus 1 (second ed.). Münster: Libreria Regensbergiana. p. 397-398. (in Latin)
Eubel, Conradus, ed. (1914). Hierarchia catholica, Tomus 2 (second ed.). Münster: Libreria Regensbergiana. pp. 215.
Eubel, Conradus, ed. (1923). Hierarchia catholica, Tomus 3 (second ed.). Münster: Libreria Regensbergiana. p. 272.
Gauchat, Patritius (Patrice) (1935). Hierarchia catholica IV (1592–1667) . Münster: Libraria Regensbergiana. Retrieved 2016-07-06 . p. 277.
Ritzler, Remigius; Sefrin, Pirminus (1952). Hierarchia catholica medii et recentis aevi V (1667–1730) . Patavii: Messagero di S. Antonio. Retrieved 2016-07-06 . pp. 311–312.
Ritzler, Remigius; Sefrin, Pirminus (1958). Hierarchia catholica medii et recentis aevi VI (1730–1799) . Patavii: Messagero di S. Antonio. Retrieved 2016-07-06 . p. 334.
Sainte-Marthe, Denis de (1720). Gallia Christiana: In Provincias Ecclesiasticas Distributa... Provinciae Burdigalensis, Bituricensis (in Latin). Vol. Tomus secundus. Paris: Typographia Regia. pp. 1446– 1507.
Studies
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