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Arquidiócesis de Ancona-Osimo

La arquidiócesis de Ancona-Osimo (en latín: Archidioecesis Anconitana-Auximana) es un territorio eclesiástico conjunto y sede metropolitana de la Iglesia católica en Marche región de Italia.

Arquidiócesis de Ancona-Osimo
Archidioecesis Anconitana-Auximana (en latín)
Información general
Rito rito romano
Fecha de erección siglo III
Elevación a arquidiócesis 14 de septiembre de 1904
Catedral Catedral de Ancona
País Italia
Jerarquía
Arzobispo Angelo Spina
Arzobispo(s) emérito(s)
Estadísticas
Población
— Total
— Fieles
(2018)
221 764
207 708 (93.7%)
Sitio web
Diocese of Ancona website (en italiano)

Ha existido en su forma actual desde 1986, cuando la arquidiócesis de Ancona se unió a la histórica diócesis de Osimo. Desde los primeros tiempos, la diócesis ha estado directamente sujeta a la Santa Sede, sin autoridades intermedias.[1]

El arzobispo tiene su cátedra en la Catedral de Ancona, mientras la Catedral de Osimo tiene el estado de una co-catedral.

En los siglos XVII, XVIII y XIX, el arzobispo de Ancona era frecuentemente cardenal. Un exarzobispo, Prospero Lambertini, ascendió al papado como el papa Benedicto XIV.

Historia

El 19 de octubre de 1422, en virtud de la bula Ex supernae majestatis, el papa Martín V decretó la unión de la diócesis de Ancona y la diócesis de Numana (Humana, Umana). Excepto por el título, la diócesis de Numana fue completamente suprimida.[2]

El 14 de septiembre de 1904, la Congregación Consistorial de la Curia Papal emitió un decreto, que había sido aprobado por el papa Pío X, elevando la diócesis de Ancona-Numantia al rango de sede arzobispal, sin sufragáneos y con el estado y la definición geográfica de  La diócesis no ha cambiado.  El decreto también otorgó a los arzobispos el uso del palio y la cruz arzobispal, pero solo dentro de los límites de su propia diócesis. El cardenal Achille Manara fue continuado como jefe de la arquidiócesis.[3]

El 15 de agosto de 1972, por la bula Qui apostolico officio, el papa Pablo VI creó la nueva provincia eclesiástica de Ancona, y otorgó a su arzobispo el estatus de metropolitano. A la provincia eclesiástica se le asignaron las diócesis sufragáneas de Jesi (Aesina) y Osimo (Auximana).[4]

El 5 de julio de 1975, después de obtener el permiso del papa Pablo VI, la Congregación de los obispos de la Curia Papal ordenó que el título de la arquidiócesis fuera solo la arquidiócesis de Ancona. El título de Numana fue reservado, para convertirse en obispado titular.[5]

En un decreto del Concilio Vaticano II, se recomendó reorganizar las diócesis para tener en cuenta los desarrollos modernos.[6]​ Como parte del proyecto iniciado por órdenes del Papa Juan XXIII, y continuó bajo sus sucesores, para reducir el número de diócesis en Italia y racionalizar sus fronteras en términos de cambios modernos de población y escasez de clérigos, la diócesis de Ancona se unió a  la diócesis de Osimo por decreto de la Sagrada Congregación de Obispos de la Curia Papal, el 30 de septiembre de 1986. Su nombre debía ser Archidioecesis Anconitana-Auximana.  La sede de la diócesis debía estar en Ancona.  La antigua catedral de Osimo debía tener el título honorífico de co-catedral, y su capítulo debía ser el Capitulum Concathedralis.  Debía haber una sola curia episcopal, un seminario, un tribunal eclesiástico;  y todo el clero debía ser incardinado en la diócesis de Ancona-Osimo.[7]

Catedral y capilla

La catedral de Ancona sufrió daños considerables en la Primera Guerra Mundial, cuando la armada austriaca bombardeó el puerto de Ancona en mayo de 1915.[8]

En 816, el emperador Ludovico Pío celebró un consejo en Aix, en el que se le ordenó que los cánones y las canonesas vivieran juntos de acuerdo con un conjunto de reglas (cánones, regular). En el sínodo romano del de Papa Eugenio II de noviembre de 826, se ordenó que los cánones vivieran juntos en un claustro al lado de la iglesia. En 876, el Concilio de Pavía decretó en el Canon X que los obispos deberían encerrar los Cánones: uti episcopi in civitatibus suis proximum ecclesiae claustrum instituant, in quo ipsi cum clero secundum canonicam regulam Deo militepraesumantnt, et sacerdotes suos ad hoc constringant, ut ecclesiam non relinquant et alibi habitare praesumant.[9]

La historia más temprana de la Capilla de S. Cyriaco es sin documentación. Sin embargo, en 1179, el papa Alejandro III emitió un toro, confirmando al archidiácono y sus colegas en el Capítulo todos los derechos, privilegios y propiedades que poseían. En el toro menciona su derecho a las ofrendas hechas en ciertos altares de la catedral, que habían sido otorgados por los obispos Transbertus, Marcellinus y Bernardus. Por lo tanto, la Capilla existía a fines del siglo XI.[10]

El obispo Gerardus fijó el número máximo de canónigos en la Capilla de la catedral a doce. Luego obtuvo una bula del papa Honorio III en 1224 que confirmó su acción.[11]​ Desde los primeros tiempos hubo tres dignidades: el Archidiácono, el Arcipreste y el Primicerio.[12]

En 1622, la Capilla de la Catedral de S. Cyriaco estaba compuesto por dos dignidades y doce canónigos.[13]​ En 1710, además de los doce canónigos, había cuatro dignidades: estos incluían el Primicerius, el Archdeacon y el Arcipreste.[14]​ En 1746, había tres dignidades.[15]

La iglesia colegiata de S. Maria della Piazza en Ancona también fue atendida como Capilla, compuesta por un Rector y seis Canónigos.[16]

Sínodos

Un sínodo diocesano era una reunión irregular, pero importante, del obispo de una diócesis y su clero. Su propósito era (1) proclamar generalmente los diversos decretos ya emitidos por el obispo; (2) discutir y ratificar medidas sobre las cuales el obispo decidió consultar con su clero; (3) publicar estatutos y decretos del sínodo diocesano, del sínodo provincial y de la Santa Sede.[17]

El obispo Luigi Galli (1622-1657) presidió un sínodo diocesano en Ancona en 1654.[18]​ El sínodo diocesano fue celebrado por el cardenal Giannicolò Conti (1666-1698) del 4 al 5 de noviembre de 1674. [19]​ El cardenal Marcello d'Aste (1700-1709) celebró un sínodo diocesano en Ancona en 1708;  Sus Constituciones fueron publicadas en 1738.[20]​ El cardenal Giovanni Battista Bussi (1710-1726) presidió un sínodo diocesano en la catedral de Ancona del 15 al 18 de septiembre de 1726.[21]​ El cardenal Bartolomeo Massei (1731-1745) celebró un sínodo diocesano en la catedral de S. Cyriaco del 26 al 28 de octubre de 1738.[20]​ El cardenal Giovanni Ottavio Bufalini (1766-1782) celebró un sínodo diocesano del 1 al 3 de septiembre de 1779.[22]

Del 13 al 15 de noviembre de 1883, el cardenal Achille Manara celebró un sínodo diocesano en la catedral de Ancona.[23]

Obispos de Ancona

  • Primianus
...
  • Cyriacus ?
...
...
  • Ignotus (attested 496)[25]
...
  • Traso
...
...
...
  • Serenus (attested 598, 603)[28]
...
  • Maurosus (attested 649)[29]
...
  • Joannes (attested 680)[30]
...
  • Senator (attested 743)[31]
...
  • Tigrinus (attested 826)[32]
...
  • Leopardus (attested 869)[33]
  • Paulus (attested 873, 878, 880)[34]
...
  • Bolongerius (Benolegerius) (attested 887)[35]
...
  • Erfermarius (attested 967, 968)[36]
...
  • Traso (attested 996)[37]
  • Stephanus (c. 1020)[38]
...
  • Grimaldus (attested 1051)[39]
  • Gerardus (attested 1068)[40]
  • Transbertus[41]
  • Marcellinus
  • Bernardus (attested 1128)[42]
  • Anonymus (attested 1146)
  • Lambertus (menzionato nel 1150 or 1158)[43]
  • Thomas ? (c. 1172)[44]
  • Gentile (attested 1179)[45]
  • Rodolfus, O.S.B.Camald.
  • Beroaldus (attested 1186–1192)
...
  • Gerardus (attested 1204–1228)
...
  • Persevallus (c. 1239–c. 1242)[46]
  • Joannes Bonus (1244– ? )[47]
  • Petrus Capocci[48]
  • Petrus Romanucci (1284 or earlier – 1286)[49]
  • Berardus de Podio (1286–1296)[50]
  • Pandulfus
  • Nicolaus
  • Thomas
  • Nicolaus Rinonis
  • Augustinus de Podio
  • Lanfrancus Salvetti, O.Min.[51]
  • Joannes Tedeschi, O.E.S.A. (1349–1381)[52]
  • Bartholomaeus de Uliariis, O.S.B. (1381–1385)[53]
  • Guglielmo della Vigna, O.S.B. (1386–1405)[54]
  • Carolus de Actis de Saxoferrato, O.S.B. (1405–1406)[55]
  • Lorenzo de Ricci (1406–1410)[56]
  • Simone Vigilanti , O.E.S.A. (1410–1412)[57]
  • Pietro Liberotti (1412–1419)[58]
  • Astorgio Agnesi (1419–1436)[59]

Obispos de Ancona e Numana

Unidos: 19 de octubre de 1422 con la diócesis de Numana

  • Astorgius Agnesi
  • Joannes Caffarelli (1437–1460)[60]
  • Agapitus Rustici-Cenci (1460–1463)[61]
  • Antonio Fatati (1463–1484)[62]
  • Benincasa di Benincasis (1484–1502)[63]
  • Giovanni Sacca (1502–1505) Administrator[64]
  • Card. Pietro Accolti (4 Apr 1505 – 5 Apr 1514 Resigned)[65]
  • Francesco de Accolti (5 Apr 1514 – 1523 Resigned)
  • Baldovinetto de' Baldovinetti (26 Mar 1523 – 1538 Died)
  • Girolamo Ghianderoni (12 Nov 1538 – 1550 Resigned)
  • Matteo Lucchi (1550–1556)[66]
  • Vincenzo Lucchi (6 Feb 1556 – 31 Jan 1585 Died)[67]
Cardinal Alessandro Farnese (1585) Administrator[68]
  • Cardinal Carlo Conti (1585–1615)[69]
  • Giulio Savelli (11 Jan 1616 – 2 May 1622 Resigned)
  • Luigi Galli (1622–1657)[70]
Sede vacante (1657–1666)
  • Card. Giannicolò Conti (29 Mar 1666 –1698)[71]
  • Card. Marcello d'Aste (1700–1709)[72]
  • Card. Giovanni Battista Bussi (1710–1726)[73]
  • Card. Próspero Lorenzo Lambertini (20 Jan 1727 –1731)[74]
  • Card. Bartolomeo Massei (1731–1745)[75]
  • Nicola Manciforte (1746–1762)[76]
  • Card. Filippo Acciaioli (1763–1766)[77]
  • Card. Giovanni Ottavio Bufalini (1766–1782)[78]
  • Card. Vincenzo Ranuzzi (14 Feb 1785 – 27 Oct 1800 Died)[79]
Sede vacante (1800–1816)[80]
  • Card. Nicola Riganti (1816–1822)[81]
  • Card. Giovanni Francesco Falzacappa (1823–1824 Resigned)[82]
  • Card. Cesare Nembrini Pironi Gonzaga (1824–1837)[83]
  • Card. Antonio María Cadolini, B. (12 Feb 1838 – 1 Aug 1851 Died)
  • Card. Antonio Benedetto Antonucci (5 Sep 1851 – 29 Jan 1879 Died)[84]
  • Card. Achille Manara (1879–1906 Died)[85]

Arzobispos de Ancona y Numana

Título otorgado: 14 de septiembre de 1904

↵Nombre cambiado: 5 de julio de 1975 a: Anconitana-Numanensis

  • Giovanni Battista Ricci (21 Jul 1906 – 10 Nov 1929 Muerto)
  • Mario Giardini, B. (1931–1940 Dimitido)[86]
  • Marco Giovanni Della Pietra, O.F.M. (25 Mar 1940 – 13 Jan 1945 Muerto)
  • Egidio Bignamini (18 Nov 1945 @– 21 Dec 1966 Muerto)
  • Felicissimo Stefano Tinivella, O.F.M. (22 Feb 1967 – 6 Jul 1968 Dimitido)
  • Carlo Maccari (5 Aug 1968 @– 1 Jul 1989 Retirado)

Arzobispos de Ancona-Osimo

 
Co-Catedral en Osimo

Unidos: 30 de septiembre de 1986 con la diócesis de Osimo

↵Sede Metropolitana

Estadísticas

De acuerdo al Anuario Pontificio 2019 la arquidiócesis tenía a fines de 2018 un total de 207 708 fieles bautizados.

Año Población Sacerdotes Bautizados por
sacerdote
Diáconos
permanentes
Religiosos Parroquias
Bautizados
católicos
Total % de
católicos
Total Clero
secular
Clero
regular
Varones Mujeres
Arquidiócesis de Ancona (y Numana)
1959 129 500 130 000 99.6 161 71 90 804 105 238 46
1969 153 000 153 428 99.7 177 89 88 864 100 280 52
1980 152 500 153 500 99.3 157 82 75 971 1 98 209 58
Diócesis de Osimo y Cingoli
1949 37 445 37 445 100.0 124 86 38 301 40 165 39
1969 55 247 55 272 100.0 114 73 41 484 49 157 39
1980 55 413 55 541 99.8 96 61 35 577 43 119 39
Arquidiócesis de Ancona-Osimo
1990 204 310 208 218 98.1 203 111 92 1006 4 140 244 71
1999 205 214 206 831 99.2 190 108 82 1080 8 101 206 72
2000 205 682 207 220 99.3 197 115 82 1044 8 99 203 72
2001 206 598 208 747 99.0 189 110 79 1093 15 94 196 72
2002 205 682 207 220 99.3 190 108 82 1082 15 96 192 72
2003 210 062 212 875 98.7 184 108 76 1141 15 89 173 72
2004 205 204 212 340 96.6 181 109 72 1133 16 82 165 72
2006 206 541 216 858 95.2 175 100 75 1180 17 88 124 72
2012 197 851 225 441 87.8 128 89 39 1545 18 45 86 72
2015 209 730 223 923 93.7 134 91 43 1565 17 57 94 72
2018 207 708 221 764 93.7 133 84 49 1561 15 64 83 72
Fuente: Catholic-Hierarchy, que a su vez toma los datos del Anuario Pontificio.[89]

Referencias

  1. Kehr, p. 195.
  2. Cappelletti, VII, pp. 109-112, quoting the Bull in full. The bull uses the phrase, incorporatio, annexio, et unio.
  3. Acta Sanctae Sedis Volumen XXXVII (Roma 1904–05), pp. 195-200.
  4. Acta Apostolicae Sedis An. et Vol. LXIV (Città del Vaticano: Typis Polyglottis Vaticanis 1972), pp. 664-665.
  5. Acta Apostolicae Sedis An. et Vol. LXVII (Città del Vaticano: Typis Polyglottis Vaticanis 1975), p. 557: Quapropter Summus Pontifex Paulus, Divina Providentia Pp. VI, in Audientia diei 5 iulii 1975, referente infrascripto Cardinale sacrae Congregationis pro Episcopis Praefecto, oblatis precibus benigne annuendum censuit simulque statuit, ut titulus praefatae Ecclesiae Numanensis seu Humanatensis, ne omnino periret, in Indice Sedium Titularium insereretur atque Episcopis titularibus nuncupatis conferretur.
  6. Directoriae normae clare a Concilio impertitae de dioecesium recognitione; indicia atque elementa apta ad actionem pastoralem aestimandam ab episcopis suppeditata quibus plurium dioecesium regimen commissum est.
  7. Acta Apostolicae Sedis An. et Vol. LXXIX (Città del Vaticano: Typis Polyglottis Vaticanis 1987), pp. 642-645.
  8. Rodolfo Ragnini (1920). Il duomo di ancona dopo il bombardamento del 1915: cenni storici e descrittivi (en italiano). Osimo: Officina Tipografica G. Scarponi. 
  9. Lupi, Mario (1784). Josephus Ronchetti, ed. Codex diplomaticus civitatis, et ecclesiæ Bergomatis (en latin). Volumen primum. Bergamo: Vincenzo Antoine. pp. 1064-1065.  'Bishops are to create a cloister next to their church, in which they serve God along with their clergy according to the rule of canons, and they should compel their priests not to leave the church and presume to live elsewhere.'
  10. Peruzzi, p. 101, 151. The text in which the names of Bishops Transbertus, Marcellinus, and Bernardus occurs was published by P. Kehr, en Nachrichten von der Königlichen Gesellschaft der Wissenschafter zu Göttingen, philologisch-historische Klasse (Berlin: Weidmann 1909), pp. 470-472.
  11. Ughelli, p. 334. Cappelletti, p. 58. However, Peruzzi (p. 152) gives the title of the Bull, Ecclesiarum utilitati, and provides the date of 12 July 1216; but Honorius III had not yet been elected pope on that date. The full text, but only with the date of anno octavo (AD 1224), is given by Giuliano Saracini (1675). Notitie historiche della città d'Ancona (en italian, Latin). Roma: Tinassi. p. 193.  The date of Kalendas julii, pontificatus anno octavo (1 July 1224) is given by César Auguste Horoy, ed. (1880). Honorii III opera omnia. Medii Aevi Bibliotheca Patristica (en latin). Tomus IV. Paris: Bibliotheque ecclesiastique. pp. 681, no. 249. 
  12. Peruzzi, p. 153.
  13. Gauchat, Hierarchia catholica IV, p. 82, note 1.
  14. Ritzler-Sefrin, V, p. 83 note 1.
  15. Ritzler-Sefrin, VI, p. 82 note 1.
  16. Ughelli, p. 326.
  17. Benedictus XIV (1842). «Lib. I. caput secundum. De Synodi Dioecesanae utilitate». Benedicti XIV ... De Synodo dioecesana libri tredecim (en latin). Tomus primus. Mechlin: Hanicq. pp. 42-49.  George Phillips (1849). Die Diöcesansynode (en alemán). Freiburg im Breisgau: Herder. pp. 1-23. 
  18. Synodus Anconitana a Luigi Gallo episcopo habita. Ancona: Salvioni l654. Galli held a total of four diocesan synods, according to Cappelletti, p. 124.
  19. Conti, Giannicolò (1675). Anconitana synodus ab Eminentiss. et Reverendiss. Domino D. Ioanne Nicolao ... Cardinali de Comitibvs, Anconitano Episcopo ... habita die 4. & 5. Novembris M. DC. LXXIV (en latin). Ancona: ex Typographia Camerali.  Cappelletti, p. 124.
  20. Massei, Bartolomeo (1738). Synodus Anconitana habita 1708 confirmata et aucta a Bartholomaes Massaei in sua Synodo celebrata diebus 26.27.28. Octobris anno 1738 (en latin). Ancona: Nicolaus Bellelli. 
  21. Bussi, Giovanni Battista (1727). Synodus Anconitana celebrata diebus 15. 16. 17. et 18. Septembris anno 1726 (en latin). Rome: Antonius de Rubeis (Rossi). 
  22. Bufalini, Giovanni Ottavio (1779). Synodus dioecesana ab eccellentissimo, & reverendissimo domino Johanne Octavio ... Bufalini (en latin). Romae: typis Josephi, et Aloysii Lazzarini. 
  23. Synodus dioecesana ab Illustrissimo ac Reverendissimo domino Achille Manara Episcopo Anconitano et Humanatensi celebrata, diebus XIII, XIV et XV novembris MDCGCLXXXIII in cathedrali Ecclesia. Anconae, 1884, typ. G. Cherubini.
  24. Lanzoni, p. 385, notes that the second edition of Ughelli leaves his name out. Peruzzi, p. 92, and Gams, p. 664, however, keep the name. Marcus is just a name, without documentary support.
  25. Kehr, p. 195, no. 1.
  26. Marcellinus: Lanzoni, p. 385, no. 2.
  27. Thomas is known only from a brief mention in a miracle sequence in the "Acts of Saint Marcellinus". Lanzoni, p. 385.
  28. Pope Gregory I wrote to Bishop Serenus in November 598, ordering him to intervene in a financial problem involving Serenus, a deacon of the Church of Ancona. In December 1603, the Church of Ancona was in the hands of an Apostolic Visitor, Bishop Serenus having died; Arminius, the Visitor, and Archbishop John of Rimini, are instructed to investigate the careers of two candidates for the office of Bishop of Ancona: the Archdeacon Florentinus, Florentinus a deacon, and Rusticus a deacon. Peruzzi, p. 93. Kehr, p. 196, nos. 2-4.
  29. Bishop Maurosus was present at the Lateran Synod of Pope Martin I in October 649. J. D. Mansi (ed.), Sacrorum Conciloiorum nova et amplissima collectio, editio novissima, Tomus X (Florence: A. Zatta 1764),p. 866. Peruzzi, p. 94. Cappelletti, p. 29
  30. Bishop Joannes was present at the Roman Synod of Pope Agatho on 27 March 680. J.-P. Migne (ed.), Patrologiae Latinae Tomus LXXXVII (Paris 1863), p. 1244. Peruzzi, p. 95.
  31. Bishop Senator was present at the Roman Synod of Pope Zacharias in 743. J. D. Mansi (ed.), Sacrorum Conciloiorum nova et amplissima collectio, editio novissima, Tomus XII (Florence: A. Zatta 1766),p. 384c. Peruzzi, p. 95.
  32. Bishop Tigrinus was present at the Roman Synod of Pope Eugenius II on 15 November 826. J. D. Mansi (ed.), Sacrorum Conciloiorum nova et amplissima collectio, editio novissima, Tomus XIV (Venice: A. Zatta 1769), p. 1000. Philippus Jaffé and S. Lowenfeld, Regesta pontificum Romanorum Vol. I, second ed. (Leipzig: Veit 1885), p. 321. Peruzzi, pp. 95-96.
  33. According to Peruzzi (p. 96) and Ughelli (I, p. 330), Leopardus was instituted by Pope Nicholas I (858–867). In 866, according to Ughelli, he was sent to spread the gospel in Bulgaria. In 869, Pope Hadrian II wrote to King Michael of the Bulgarians, mentioning his legates Leopardus of Ancona and Dominicus of Treviso. Philippus Jaffé and S. Lowenfeld, p. 372, no. 2925.
  34. Bishop Paul had been a papal legate in Germany and Pannonia in 873–874, and carried papal letters for Bishop Methodius, forbidding the use of Sclavonic in the Mass. Philippus Jaffé and S. Lowenfeld, pp. 379-380, nos. 2976-2978. He was papal ambassador to Constantinople during the Photian schism, but on his return, in August 880, he was deposed by Pope John VIII. Peruzzi, p. 97. Cappelletti, pp. 32-33. Joseph Hergenröther (1867). Photius, Patriarch von Constantinopel (en german (Fraktur)). Vol. II. Regensburg: Manz. pp. 288, 298, 313, 512, 573, 618. 
  35. is attested by a document published by L. Muratori, but the document, a donation to a monastery by Bishop Teodosio (his name was really Teodicio) of Fermo in the presence of Charles the Bald, has been denounced as a forgery. Peruzzi, pp. 97-98. Cappelletti, p. 33.
  36. Erfermarius was present at the synod of Ravenna, held by Pope John XIII on 25 April 967. He also participated in the Roman synod of John XIII on 2 January 968. J. D. Mansi (ed.), Sacrorum Conciliorum nova et amplissima collectio, editio novissima, Tomus XVIII (Venice: A. Zatta 1773), p. 499. Schwartz, p. 240.
  37. Bishop Traso was present at a meeting held in May 996 in Ravenna by Emperor Otto III. Schwartz, p. 240.
  38. Stefano: Peruzzi, p. 99.
  39. Grimaldus: Peruzzi, p. 100. Gams p. 665. Schwartz, p. 241.
  40. Bishop Gerardus subscribed a decree of Pope Alexander II in 1068. Peruzzi, p. 100.Gams p. 665. Schwartz, p. 241.
  41. Peruzzi, p. 101, 151. The text in which the names of Bishops Transbertus, Marcellinus, and Bernardus occurs was published by P. Kehr, in Nachrichten von der Königlichen Gesellschaft der Wissenschafter zu Göttingen, philologisch-historische Klasse (Berlin: Weidmann 1909), pp. 470-472.
  42. Bernardus: Peruzzi, p. 101. Schwartz, p. 241.
  43. Lambertus: Peruzzi, pp. 102-103.
  44. Thomas: Gams, p. 665 column 1.
  45. Bishop Gentile attended the Third Lateran Council, held by Pope Alexander III in March 1179. Peruzzi, p. 103.
  46. Pope Gregory IX, in 1239, confirmed Bishop Persevallus' decision to fix the number of Canons in the Cathedral Chapter at twelve. Cappelletti, VII, p. 59. Eubel, Hierarchia catholica I, p. 87.
  47. Giovanni was a citizen of Ancona and a Canon in the Cathedral Chapter. He was elected by the Chapter and confirmed by Pope Innocent IV in a letter of 8 January 1245. His diocese was in a bad state, being constantly harassed by the men of Osimo. who were partisans of the Emperor Frederick II. On account of this, he was released in 1246 from his obligation to make an ad limina visit. In 1256, according to Ughelli (Italia sacra I, p. 335), Bishop Giovanni served in the territory of Bari as Vicar General of Cardinal Ottavio Ubaldini when he was papal Legate in the Kingdom of Naples. Cappelletti, VII, p. 59-60. Eubel, Hierarchia catholica I, p. 87.
  48. Scholars are not agreed as to whether Giovanni Bono was followed by one Petrus or by two. Cappelletti, pp. 60-61. Ughelli, I, p. 335, refers to a letter of Honorius IV of 5 July 1285, in which he orders Petrus Capocci, Bishop of Ancona, to protect a monastery's property (citing an original in a Vatican register, folio 123, letter 6; but letter 6 is a letter to Cardinal Gerardo Bishop of Sabina on another topic entirely: see Prou, no. 473). In Marcel Prou, Les registres d'Honorius IV (Paris: Ernest Thorin 1888), p. 338, no. 474 (which is folio 123, letter 7), Prou's summary gives the date as 4 July, and the name of the bishop of Ancona is given only as "P.", without surname or cognomen. The superscription address is: Venerabili fratri P., episcopo Anconitano.
  49. Petrus Romanucci, Bishop of Ancona, was present in the castle of Palumbaria as a witness to a document of Pope Urban IV on 10 May 1284 (The date, to say the least, is wrong, since Honorius IV was not elected pope until 2 April 1285). He was transferred to the diocese of Viterbo on 24 August 1286. He died in 1303. Eubel, I, p. 87, 532. Marcel Prou, Les registres d'Honorius IV (Paris: Ernest Thorin 1888), p. 636.
  50. Berardus was a papal chaplain. He was appointed on 27 August 1286 by Pope Honorius IV. He was transferred to the diocese of Reate (Rieti) on 4 February 1296 by Pope Boniface VIII. Eubel, Hierarchia catholica I, pp. 87, 416.
  51. Lanfranc was transferred to the diocese of Bergamo by Pope Clement VI.
  52. Joannes was appointed Bishop of Ancona by Pope Clement VI on 23 October 1349. He died in 1381. Gams, p. 665. Eubel, I, p. 88.
  53. Bartholomaeus was transferred to the diocese of Florence by Pope Urban VI on 9 December 1385. Eubel, I, pp. 88, 250.
  54. Guilelmus was appointed by Urban VI on 6 February 1386. He was transferred to the diocese of Todi on 12 June 1405 by Pope Innocent VII. He died on 28 October 1407. Eubel, I, pp. 88, 502.
  55. Carlo had been a monk of S. Giorgio in Venice, and a papal chamberlain. He was apointed Bishop of Ancona by Pope Innocent VII on 12 June 1405. He died in 1406. Eubel, I, p. 88.
  56. Lorenzo was a Canon of the Cathedral of Florence. He was appointed Bishop of Ancona on 26 May 1406 by Innocent VII. He was removed from office by Gregory XII as a supporter of the Council of Pisa and Pope Alexander V. Gregory XII had been deposed for schism, heresy, and perjury in 1409. Lorenzo was transferred to the diocese of Sinigaglia by John XXIII. Peruzzi, pp. 111-112. Eubel, I, pp. 88, 447.
  57. Simone was a patrician of Ancona, and was the Vicar General of the Order of Augustine Hermits. He was appointed by Gregory XII on 5 April 1410. Simone was transferred to the diocese of Sinigaglia on 6 March 1419 by Pope Martin V. Peruzzi, p. 112. Eubel, I, pp. 88, 447.
  58. Pietro was appointed by John XXIII to replace Simone Vigilanti on 19 December 1412. He was transferred to the diocese of Ascoli Piceno on 11 September 1419 by Martin V. Peruzzi, p. 112. Eubel, I, p. 88, 111.
  59. Astorgio was a native of Naples. In 1422 he became Bishop of Ancona and Bishop of Numana. He was transferred to the diocese of Benevento on 8 February 1436. Peruzzi, p. 113. Eubel, I, p. 88; II, pp. 87, 104.
  60. Giovanni Caffarelli was a Roman, a doctor of Canon Law, and a Canon of the Basilica of S. Maria Maggiore in Rome. He was appointed Bishop of Forlì by Pope Martin V on 28 April 1427. He was transferred to the diocese of Ancona by Pope Eugene IV on 18 Februart 1437. He died in 1460. Peruzzi, pp. 113-114: Il Caffarelli però dalla santa Sede, per la sua dottrina e per la sua prudenza, occupato sempre ne' più ardui affari della chiesa universale, non potè fare in Ancona nè assidua nè lunga residenza. (He was not a residentiary bishop) Eubel, I, pp. 253; II, p. 87.
  61. Agapitus Rustici-Cenci was a Roman, and a Canon of the Vatican Basilica. He held the degree of Doctor in utroque iure. He held the post of Referendary, and then Auditor (judge) of the Roman Rota. He was appointed Bishop of Ancona by Pope Pius II on 16 April 1460, and transferred to the diocese of Camerino on 22 August 1463. He died in 1464. Peruzzi, p. 114. Eubel, II, pp. 87 with note 2; 116.
  62. Fatati was a native of Ancona, of the Counts Fatati. and a papal chaplain. On 5 November 1430 he was appointed a Canon in the Cathedral Chapter of Ancona, and he rose to be Archpriest of the cathedral. In 1444 he was named Vicar Apostolic in the diocese of Siena following the death of Bishop Cristoforo de S. Marcello. He was papal commissary in Lucca and in Piombino in 1446, and Treasurer General of the Marches in 1449. He was appointed Bishop of Teramo by Pope Pius II on 6 November 1450. In 1455 he was appointed Governor General of the Marches. On 3 November 1463 he became Bishop of Ancona. In 1467, he was Treasurer in Bologna (Peruzzi, p. 117, note). He created six Canons in the Cathedral Chapter, raising the total number to twenty, and instituted the dignity of Provost. He died on 9 January 1484. Peruzzi, pp. 114-115. Eubel, II, pp. 87, 90.
  63. Benincasa was an aristocrat of Ancona, a member of the family of the Marchesi Benincasa. He was a Canon of the Vatican Basilica, and an Abbreviator of Apostolic Letters. He was appointed Bishop of Ancona by Pope Clement VIII on 5 October 1484. He died in 1502. Peruzzi, pp. 116-118. Eubel, II, p. 87.
  64. Sacca was born in Sirolo, a rural territory in the diocese of Ancona. He was Provost of the Collegiate Church of S. Maria del Popolo e S. Rocco, and Abbot Commendatory of the abandoned Benedictine abbey of S. Giovanni in Pennochiara. He was appointed papal Datary by Pope Innocent VIII. He was named Archbishop of Ragusa (Dubrovnik) on 29 August 1490. On 1 January 1500, he was installed as Regent of the Apostolic Chancery and Vice-chancellor (Joannes Burchard, Diarium, ed. L. Thuasne, Vol. III, p. 4). He was named Administrator of the diocese of Ancona on 15 July 1502. In August 1503, Burchard (III, p. 242) mentions that Giovanni Sacca was Governor of the City of Rome, in which capacity he took part in the funeral of Pope Alexander VI on 22 August 1503 (Burchard, III, p. 447). He took part in the two conclaves of 1503. and was an assistant at the throne at the coronation of Pope Julius II (Burchard, III, p. 306). He died in Rome in 1505. Peruzzi, p. 118. G. Moroni (ed.), Dizionario di erudizione storico-ecclesiastica, Vol. XIX (Venice: Tip. Emiliana 1843), p. 131. Eubel, II, pp. 87. 220; III, p. 281.
  65. Of a family originally from Arezzo, Pietro Accolti was born in Florence in 1455, the son of Benedetto Accolti the historian, and nephew of Francesco Accolti, the jurist. Pietro was Doctor in Laws and then professor of law at the University of Pisa. He went to Rome, and was serving as an Auditor of the Rota when named Bishop of Ancona on 4 April 1505. Accolti was named a cardinal by Pope Julius II, in a Consistory held at Ravenna on 10 March 1511. At the time he was Papal Vicar of the City of Rome, and Scriptor Apostolicarum Litterarum. He resigned the diocese of Ancona on 5 April 1514, in favor of nephew Francesco Accolti, but since Francesco was only sixteen years old, Cardinal Pietro continued in office as Administrator until 1523. He died in Rome on 11 December 1532. Lorenzo Cardella (1793). Memorie storiche de'cardinali della santa Romana chiesa (en italiano). Volume IV. Roma: Pagliarini. pp. 350-352.  The Biographical Dictionary of the Society for the Diffusion of Useful Knowledge. Volume I. London: Longman, Brown, Green, and Longmans. 1842. pp. 225-226.  Eubel, II, pp. 12 no.21; 87, with notes 3, 4, 5.
  66. A native of Bologna, Matteo Giovanni Lucchi was appointed Archbishop of Ancona by Pope Julius III on 23 May 1550. He was transferred to the diocese of Tropea (Kingdom of Naples) on 6 February 1556 by Pope Paul IV. He died in Rome on 22 June 1558. Ughelli, p. 341 (who calls him Joannes Matthaeus Luchius). Peruzzi, p. 119. Cappelletti, p. 121. Eubel, III, p. 108; 320 (where the name is given as Giovanni Matteo Lucchi).
  67. Vincenzo Lucchi was the brother of Matteo Lucchi, his predecessor. Peruzzi, p. 119. Cappelletti, p. 121. Eubel, III, p. 108.
  68. Cardinal Farnese was appointed Apostolic Administrator on 24 February 1555, and served until 1 July 1585; he resigned upon the appointment of a successor to Bishop Lucchi. Peruzzi, p. 120, does not recognize him as an archbishop. Eubel, III, p. 108.
  69. Conti was a Roman, son of Troquato, Duke of Poli. He held the degree of Doctor in utroque iure from Perugia. He was appointed Archbishop of Ancona on 1 July 1585 by Pope Sixtus V. He was appointed governor of Perugia in 1594. From 1599 to 1604, he was Vice-Legate in Avignon. He was named a cardinal by Pope Clement VIII on 9 June 1604, and assigned the titular church of San Crisogono. He died in Rome of a stroke on 3 December 1615. Peruzzi, p. 120. Eubel, III, pp. 7 no. 40; 108.
  70. A native of Osimo, Galli (Joannes Aloysius Galli) had been a Referenday of the Tribunal of the Two Signatures. He served as Regent of the Apostolic Chancery, delegating for Cardinal Alessandro Montalto. He was appointed Bishop of Ancona in the Consistory of 2 May 1622 by Pope Gregory XV. In 1627 he was appointed Governor of the terra Tileolarum in Piedmont. He restored the cathedral, increased the number of students in the diocesan seminary, conducted five pastoral visits of the parishes in his diocese, and held four diocesan synods. He died on 22 August 1657. Cappelletti, pp. 123-124. Peruzzi, p. 120. Gauchat, Hierarchia catholica IV, p. 82 with note 3.
  71. Conti was the nephew of Cardinal Carlo Conti. He died in Ancona on 20 January 1698. Cappelletti, pp. 124. Peruzzi, pp. 120-121. Ritzler-Sefrin, Hierarchia catholica V, p. 83 note 2.
  72. Born in Aversa in 1657, D'Aste held the degree of Doctor in utroque iure from the Sapienza in Rome. He was made a Referendary of the Tribune of the Two Signatures, and Auditor of the Pope. He was a Canon of the Vatican Basilica and consultor of the Holy Office (Inquisition). He was titular Archbishop of Athens (1691–1700), and President of Urbino (1698–1700). He was named a cardinal by Pope Innocent XII on 29 November 1699. On 3 February 1700 he was appointed Archbishop of Ancona, and on 10 May was named Vice-Legate of Urbino. He died in Bologna, in the house of the Dominicans, on 11 June 1709. Peruzzi, pp. 121-122. Ritzler-Sefrin, V, pp. 21 no. 23, with notes 12 and 13; 83; 103 with note 3.
  73. Bussi was born in Viterbo in 1656, and held the degree of Doctor in utroque iure (Sapienza, 1696). He was a Canon of the Vatican Basilica. He had been Archbishop of Tarsus (1706–1710) and papal Nuncio in Cologne. He was transferred to the diocese of Ancona on 19 February 1710 by Pope Clement XI (Albani). On 18 May 1712, he was named a cardinal in pectore (secretly), which was publicly disclosed on 26 September; on 30 January 1713 he was given the red galero and assigned the titular church of S. Maria in Aracoeli. He held a diocesan synod in September 1726. He was appointed Prefect of the Holy House of Loreto. He died on 23 December 1726. Peruzzi, pp. 123-125. Ritzler-Sefrin, V, pp. 28 no. 39 with notes 19 and 20; 83 with note 4; 370 with note 4.
  74. Lambertini was appointed Archbishop of Bologna on 30 April 1731.
  75. Massei was born in Montepulciano in 1663. He held the degree of Doctor in utroque iure (Pisa 1683). He was appointed Referendary of the Tribunal of the Two Signatures in 1717. He was named titular Archbishop of Athens and papal Nuncio to the King of France (1721–1730). He was named a cardinal by Pope Clement XII on 2 October 1730 while he was still in France. He received the red galero on 18 December 1730, and was assigned the titular church of Sant'Agostino on 12 January 1731. He was appointed Archbishop of Ancona on 21 May 1731. He died in Ancona on 20 November 1745. Peruzzi, pp. 126-130. Ritzler-Sefrin, Hierarchia catholica V, p. 103 with note 8; VI, pp. 5 no. 3; 82 with note 2.
  76. Born in Montesanto (diocese of Fermo) in 1692, Manciforte held the degree of Doctor in utroque iure (Macerata 1738). He was appointed a Protonotary Apostolic (1734) and was named a Councilor of the Holy Office (Inquisition) in Ancona in 1737. He was named Bishop of Senigallia on 28 February 1742, and was consecrated a bishop in Rome by Pope Benedict XIV, a former bishop of Ancona. He was transferred to Ancona from the diocese of Senigallia (1742–1746) on 17 January 1746. He died on 19 December 1762. Peruzzi, pp. 130-131. Ritzler-Sefrin, Hierarchia catholica VI, pp. 82 with note 3; 375 with note 3.
  77. A native of Florence, Acciaioli had been papal Nuncio in Switzerland (1744–1754), for which purpose he had been appointed Bishop of Petra (Arabia) in 1743; he was consecrated a bishop by Pope Benedict XIV on 21 December. He was then Nuncio to the King of Portugal (1754–1763). He was appointed a cardinal by Pope Clement XIII in the Consistory of 24 September 1759, and given the red galero on 12 March 1761. On 6 April 1761 he was assigned the titular church of S. Maria degli Angeli. On 24 January 1763 he was appointed Archbishop of Ancona. His family had their own palazzo in Ancona, where he chose to live instead of in the Episcopal Palace. He died in Ancona on 24 July 1766. Peruzzi, pp. 131-132. Ritzler-Sefrin VI, pp. 21 no. 8 with notes 21 and 22; 82 with note 4; 334 with note 3.
  78. Bufalini was born in Città di Castello in 1709. He held the degree of Doctor in utroque iure (Macerata 1740). He held civil posts in the Papal States: Governor of Benevento (1741), and Loreto (1743). He was appointed Referendary of the Tribunal of the Two Signatures, and Cleric of the Apostolic Camera (Treasury). He became Preceptor of the Ospedale di Santo Spirito in Sassia. He had been titular Archbishop of Chalcedon, and was sent as Nuncio to Switzerland (1754). He became Prefect of the Apostolic Palace in 1759. On 21 July 1766 he was named a cardinal by Pope Clement XIII, and was assigned the titular church of S. Maria degli Angeli. He was appointed Bishop of Ancona on 1 December 1766 by Pope Clement XIII. He died on 3 August 1782 in the episcopal villa at Montesicuro, near Ancona. Mario Natalucci, "Il Cardinal Bufalini vescovo e administratore attraverso l'Archivio capitolare di Ancona," in: Quaderni storici delle Marche Vol. 2, No. 5 (2) (maggio 1967), pp. 353-368. (en italiano) Giuseppe Pignatelli, "Bufalini, Giovanni Ottavio," in: Dizionario Biografico degli Italiani Volume 14 (1972). (en italiano) Ritzler-Sefrin VI, pp. 23 no. 38; 161 with note 4.
  79. Ranuzzi was titular Archbishop of Tyre (Phoenicia, Syria) (1775–1785). Ritzler-Sefrin, VI, p. 82 note 5; 424 note 6.
  80. An Apostolic Administrator, Archbishop Francesco Xaverio Passari, the titular Archbishop of Larissa (Thessaly), was appointed on 21 November 1800. He was able to reopen the seminary. He died on 4 June 1808. The episcopal throne was vacant for an additional eight years, during which time Pope Pius VII was a prisoner of Napoleon Bonaparte in France. Cappelletti, pp. 168-169, 171. Ritzler-Sefrin, VI, p. 82 note 6.
  81. A native of Molfetta and the nephew of another Nicola Riganti who was the author of a commentary on the rules of the Apostolic Camera, Riganti held the degree of Doctor in utroque iure, and was a Protonotary Apostolic. He served in various offices in the Roman Curia, in particular as a judge in the Apostolic Camera (Finance Ministry). He was secretary of the Congregation of the Consulta, the supreme court in civil and criminal matters for subjects of the Papal States. At the age of 72, he was named a cardinal and Bishop of Ancona on the same day, 8 March 1816. He was consecrated a bishop on 21 April by Pope Pius VII. Having suffered a stroke in 1819, he was taken to Rome, while his duties in Ancona were taken over by the titular Bishop of Lydda, Msgr. Francesco de'Conti Pichi. Riganti died in Rome on 31 August 1822, and was buried in S. Maria sopra Minerva. Gaetano Moroni (1852). Dizionario di erudizione storico-ecclesiastica (en italiano). Vol. LVII: Ref-Rin. Venezia: Tipografia Emiliana. pp. 243-244.  Cappelletti, p. 171. Peruzzi, pp. 138-139. Ritzler-Sefrin, Hierarchia catholica VII, p. 73.
  82. A native of Corneto, Falzacappa had previously been a Canon of the Vatican Basilica, and then titular Archbishop of Athens (1819–1823). He was appointed a cardinal and Archbishop (personal title) of Ancona on the same day, 10 March 1823. He resigned the diocese of Ancona on 23 May 1824. Vercellone remarks that his membership in numerous bodies in the Roman Curia was the reason: in realtà sussistevano valide ragioni per evitare il suo allontanamento da Roma. Infatti era membro attivo di numerose congregazioni permanenti, come la Concistoriale, il S. Offizio, il Concilio, le Immunità, l'Indice, i Riti, il Cerimoniale, l'Esame dei vescovi, il Buon Governo e le Acque, oltre che di molte congregazioni straordinarie. He died in Rome, where he had been named Suburbicarian Bishop of Porto and Santa Rufina as well as Prefect of the Tribunal of the Apostolic Signature, on 18 November 1840. Gaetano Moroni, ed. (1843). Dizionario di erudizione storico-ecclesiastica (en italiano). Vol. XXIII. Venezia: Tipografia Emiliana. pp. 21-22.  Peruzzi, p. 139. Ritzler-Sefrin, VII, pp. 73, 93. Guido Fagioli Vercellone, "Falzacappa, Giovanni Francesco," in: Dizionario Biografico degli Italiani Volume 44 (1994)
  83. Born in Ancona in 1768, the son of Marchese Alessandro Nembrini Pironi Gonzaga and Maria Trionfi, Cesare Nembrini was educated in Recanati and then in Bologna at the Collegio Montalto. He served as civil governor of several cities in the Papal States under Pius VI and Pius VII. He was named Bishop of Ancona on 24 May 1824 by Pope Leo XII, and appointed a cardinal on 27 July 1829 by Pope Pius VIII. He died in Umana in the episcopal residence on 5 December 1837. Gaetano Moroni, ed. (1847). Dizionario di erudizione storico-ecclesiastica (en italiano). Vol. XLVII: Mos-Nic. Venezia: Tipografia Emiliana. pp. 264-265.  Peruzzi, pp. 137-143. Ritzler-Sefrin, VII, p. 73.
  84. Antonucci: Ritzler-Sefrin, VII, p. 193; VIII, 53, 99. Martin Bräuer (2014). Handbuch der Kardinäle: 1846-2012 (en alemán). Berlin: De Gruyter. p. 62. ISBN 978-3-11-026947-5. 
  85. Manara was a native of Bologna, son of a painter. His father had to supplement his income from commissions by teaching art in the municipal school of Lugo, where Achille had his early education. He attended the University of Bologna, enjoying the patronage of the Bishop of Lugo, Giovanni Mastai-Ferretti (later Pope Pius IX), and obtained a doctorate in theology and the doctorate in Civil and Canon Law (1855). He was named a Canon of the Collegiate Church of S. Petronio in Bologna by Pius IX in 1855. He served in the diocese of Bologna as ecclesastical judge, Chancellor, and pro-Vicar General. He was appointed Bishop of Ancona on 12 May 1879 by Pope Leo XIII, and named cardinal on 29 November 1895. He died on 15 February 1906. Albert Battandier, ed. (1907). Annuaire pontifical catholique 1907 (en francés). Paris: La Bonne Presse. p. 645.  Ritzler-Sefrin, VIII, pp. 51, 99. Bräuer, Handbuch der Kardinäle, p. 175.
  86. A native of Milan, Giardini had been Apostolic Delegate in Tokyo (1922–1931), and titular Archbishop of Edessa (Mesopotamia). He was appointed Archbishop of Ancona e Numana on 16 May 1931, and resigned the diocese on 5 February 1940. On the same day he was named titular Archbishop of Laodicea (Syria). He died on 30 August 1941. Annuario Pontificio 1943 (Città del Vaticano 1943), p. 362. George Minamiki (1985). The Chinese rites controversy, from its beginning to modern times. Chicago: Loyola University Press. p. 135. ISBN 978-0-8294-0457-9.  Charles R. Gallagher (2008). Vatican Secret Diplomacy: Joseph P. Hurley and Pope Pius XII. New Haven CT USA: Yale University Press. pp. 33-34. ISBN 978-0-300-14821-3. 
  87. Tettamanzi was born at Renate (Milano) in 1934. After teaching in seminaries at Masnago, Seveso and Venegono Inferiore, he was named Rector of the Pontificio Seminario Lombardo in Rome in 1987. On 1 July 1991 he was appointed Archbishop of Ancona-Osimo. He resigned the diocese on 6 April 1991, when he was appointed Secretary General of Episcopal Conference of Italy) for a four-year term. On 20 April 1995 he was appointed Archbishop of Genoa, and on 21 February 1998 he was named a cardinal by Pope John Paul II. He was appointed Archbishop of Milan on 11 July 2002. He died on 5 August 2017. Martin Bräuer (2014). Handbuch der Kardinäle: 1846-2012 (en alemán). Berlin: De Gruyter. pp. 582, 663. ISBN 978-3-11-026947-5.  Chiesa di Milano, "E morto il cardinale Dionigio Tettamanzi" (5 August 2017); retrieved: 12 January 2019. Harris M. Lentz III (2015). Popes and Cardinals of the 20th Century: A Biographical Dictionary (en italiano). McFarland. p. 187. ISBN 978-1-4766-2155-5. 
  88. Arcidiocesi di Ancona-Osimo, Arcivescovo: Mons. Angelo Spina; retrieved: 12 January 2019. (en italiano)
  89. Cheney, David (8 de diciembre de 2021). [en la página https://www.catholic-hierarchy.org/diocese/danos.html «Archdiocese of Ancona-Osimo»]. del sitio web Catholic-Hierarchy (en inglés). Kansas City. Consultado el 19 de diciembre de 2021. «Datos tomados del Anuario Pontificio de 2019 y precedentes ». 
  •   Datos: Q1329838
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arquidiócesis, ancona, osimo, arquidiócesis, ancona, osimo, latín, archidioecesis, anconitana, auximana, territorio, eclesiástico, conjunto, sede, metropolitana, iglesia, católica, marche, región, italia, archidioecesis, anconitana, auximana, latín, informació. La arquidiocesis de Ancona Osimo en latin Archidioecesis Anconitana Auximana es un territorio eclesiastico conjunto y sede metropolitana de la Iglesia catolica en Marche region de Italia Arquidiocesis de Ancona OsimoArchidioecesis Anconitana Auximana en latin Informacion generalRitorito romanoFecha de ereccionsiglo IIIElevacion a arquidiocesis14 de septiembre de 1904CatedralCatedral de AnconaPaisItaliaJerarquiaArzobispoAngelo SpinaArzobispo s emerito s Franco Festorazzi Edoardo MenichelliEstadisticasPoblacion Total Fieles 2018 221 764207 708 93 7 Sitio webDiocese of Ancona website en italiano editar datos en Wikidata Ha existido en su forma actual desde 1986 cuando la arquidiocesis de Ancona se unio a la historica diocesis de Osimo Desde los primeros tiempos la diocesis ha estado directamente sujeta a la Santa Sede sin autoridades intermedias 1 El arzobispo tiene su catedra en la Catedral de Ancona mientras la Catedral de Osimo tiene el estado de una co catedral En los siglos XVII XVIII y XIX el arzobispo de Ancona era frecuentemente cardenal Un exarzobispo Prospero Lambertini ascendio al papado como el papa Benedicto XIV Indice 1 Historia 1 1 Catedral y capilla 1 2 Sinodos 2 Obispos de Ancona 3 Obispos de Ancona e Numana 4 Arzobispos de Ancona y Numana 5 Arzobispos de Ancona Osimo 6 Estadisticas 7 ReferenciasHistoria EditarEl 19 de octubre de 1422 en virtud de la bula Ex supernae majestatis el papa Martin V decreto la union de la diocesis de Ancona y la diocesis de Numana Humana Umana Excepto por el titulo la diocesis de Numana fue completamente suprimida 2 El 14 de septiembre de 1904 la Congregacion Consistorial de la Curia Papal emitio un decreto que habia sido aprobado por el papa Pio X elevando la diocesis de Ancona Numantia al rango de sede arzobispal sin sufraganeos y con el estado y la definicion geografica de La diocesis no ha cambiado El decreto tambien otorgo a los arzobispos el uso del palio y la cruz arzobispal pero solo dentro de los limites de su propia diocesis El cardenal Achille Manara fue continuado como jefe de la arquidiocesis 3 El 15 de agosto de 1972 por la bula Qui apostolico officio el papa Pablo VI creo la nueva provincia eclesiastica de Ancona y otorgo a su arzobispo el estatus de metropolitano A la provincia eclesiastica se le asignaron las diocesis sufraganeas de Jesi Aesina y Osimo Auximana 4 El 5 de julio de 1975 despues de obtener el permiso del papa Pablo VI la Congregacion de los obispos de la Curia Papal ordeno que el titulo de la arquidiocesis fuera solo la arquidiocesis de Ancona El titulo de Numana fue reservado para convertirse en obispado titular 5 En un decreto del Concilio Vaticano II se recomendo reorganizar las diocesis para tener en cuenta los desarrollos modernos 6 Como parte del proyecto iniciado por ordenes del Papa Juan XXIII y continuo bajo sus sucesores para reducir el numero de diocesis en Italia y racionalizar sus fronteras en terminos de cambios modernos de poblacion y escasez de clerigos la diocesis de Ancona se unio a la diocesis de Osimo por decreto de la Sagrada Congregacion de Obispos de la Curia Papal el 30 de septiembre de 1986 Su nombre debia ser Archidioecesis Anconitana Auximana La sede de la diocesis debia estar en Ancona La antigua catedral de Osimo debia tener el titulo honorifico de co catedral y su capitulo debia ser el Capitulum Concathedralis Debia haber una sola curia episcopal un seminario un tribunal eclesiastico y todo el clero debia ser incardinado en la diocesis de Ancona Osimo 7 Catedral y capilla Editar La catedral de Ancona sufrio danos considerables en la Primera Guerra Mundial cuando la armada austriaca bombardeo el puerto de Ancona en mayo de 1915 8 En 816 el emperador Ludovico Pio celebro un consejo en Aix en el que se le ordeno que los canones y las canonesas vivieran juntos de acuerdo con un conjunto de reglas canones regular En el sinodo romano del de Papa Eugenio II de noviembre de 826 se ordeno que los canones vivieran juntos en un claustro al lado de la iglesia En 876 el Concilio de Pavia decreto en el Canon X que los obispos deberian encerrar los Canones uti episcopi in civitatibus suis proximum ecclesiae claustrum instituant in quo ipsi cum clero secundum canonicam regulam Deo militepraesumantnt et sacerdotes suos ad hoc constringant ut ecclesiam non relinquant et alibi habitare praesumant 9 La historia mas temprana de la Capilla de S Cyriaco es sin documentacion Sin embargo en 1179 el papa Alejandro III emitio un toro confirmando al archidiacono y sus colegas en el Capitulo todos los derechos privilegios y propiedades que poseian En el toro menciona su derecho a las ofrendas hechas en ciertos altares de la catedral que habian sido otorgados por los obispos Transbertus Marcellinus y Bernardus Por lo tanto la Capilla existia a fines del siglo XI 10 El obispo Gerardus fijo el numero maximo de canonigos en la Capilla de la catedral a doce Luego obtuvo una bula del papa Honorio III en 1224 que confirmo su accion 11 Desde los primeros tiempos hubo tres dignidades el Archidiacono el Arcipreste y el Primicerio 12 En 1622 la Capilla de la Catedral de S Cyriaco estaba compuesto por dos dignidades y doce canonigos 13 En 1710 ademas de los doce canonigos habia cuatro dignidades estos incluian el Primicerius el Archdeacon y el Arcipreste 14 En 1746 habia tres dignidades 15 La iglesia colegiata de S Maria della Piazza en Ancona tambien fue atendida como Capilla compuesta por un Rector y seis Canonigos 16 Sinodos Editar Un sinodo diocesano era una reunion irregular pero importante del obispo de una diocesis y su clero Su proposito era 1 proclamar generalmente los diversos decretos ya emitidos por el obispo 2 discutir y ratificar medidas sobre las cuales el obispo decidio consultar con su clero 3 publicar estatutos y decretos del sinodo diocesano del sinodo provincial y de la Santa Sede 17 El obispo Luigi Galli 1622 1657 presidio un sinodo diocesano en Ancona en 1654 18 El sinodo diocesano fue celebrado por el cardenal Giannicolo Conti 1666 1698 del 4 al 5 de noviembre de 1674 19 El cardenal Marcello d Aste 1700 1709 celebro un sinodo diocesano en Ancona en 1708 Sus Constituciones fueron publicadas en 1738 20 El cardenal Giovanni Battista Bussi 1710 1726 presidio un sinodo diocesano en la catedral de Ancona del 15 al 18 de septiembre de 1726 21 El cardenal Bartolomeo Massei 1731 1745 celebro un sinodo diocesano en la catedral de S Cyriaco del 26 al 28 de octubre de 1738 20 El cardenal Giovanni Ottavio Bufalini 1766 1782 celebro un sinodo diocesano del 1 al 3 de septiembre de 1779 22 Del 13 al 15 de noviembre de 1883 el cardenal Achille Manara celebro un sinodo diocesano en la catedral de Ancona 23 Obispos de Ancona EditarPrimianus Cyriacus Marcus 24 Ignotus attested 496 25 Traso Marcellinus 26 Thomas 27 Serenus attested 598 603 28 Maurosus attested 649 29 Joannes attested 680 30 Senator attested 743 31 Tigrinus attested 826 32 Leopardus attested 869 33 Paulus attested 873 878 880 34 Bolongerius Benolegerius attested 887 35 Erfermarius attested 967 968 36 Traso attested 996 37 Stephanus c 1020 38 Grimaldus attested 1051 39 Gerardus attested 1068 40 Transbertus 41 Marcellinus Bernardus attested 1128 42 Anonymus attested 1146 Lambertus menzionato nel 1150 or 1158 43 Thomas c 1172 44 Gentile attested 1179 45 Rodolfus O S B Camald Beroaldus attested 1186 1192 Gerardus attested 1204 1228 Persevallus c 1239 c 1242 46 Joannes Bonus 1244 47 Petrus Capocci 48 Petrus Romanucci 1284 or earlier 1286 49 Berardus de Podio 1286 1296 50 Pandulfus Nicolaus Thomas Nicolaus Rinonis Augustinus de Podio Lanfrancus Salvetti O Min 51 Joannes Tedeschi O E S A 1349 1381 52 Bartholomaeus de Uliariis O S B 1381 1385 53 Guglielmo della Vigna O S B 1386 1405 54 Carolus de Actis de Saxoferrato O S B 1405 1406 55 Lorenzo de Ricci 1406 1410 56 Simone Vigilanti O E S A 1410 1412 57 Pietro Liberotti 1412 1419 58 Astorgio Agnesi 1419 1436 59 Obispos de Ancona e Numana EditarUnidos 19 de octubre de 1422 con la diocesis de Numana Astorgius Agnesi Joannes Caffarelli 1437 1460 60 Agapitus Rustici Cenci 1460 1463 61 Antonio Fatati 1463 1484 62 Benincasa di Benincasis 1484 1502 63 Giovanni Sacca 1502 1505 Administrator 64 Card Pietro Accolti 4 Apr 1505 5 Apr 1514 Resigned 65 Francesco de Accolti 5 Apr 1514 1523 Resigned Baldovinetto de Baldovinetti 26 Mar 1523 1538 Died Girolamo Ghianderoni 12 Nov 1538 1550 Resigned Matteo Lucchi 1550 1556 66 Vincenzo Lucchi 6 Feb 1556 31 Jan 1585 Died 67 Cardinal Alessandro Farnese 1585 Administrator 68 Cardinal Carlo Conti 1585 1615 69 Giulio Savelli 11 Jan 1616 2 May 1622 Resigned Luigi Galli 1622 1657 70 Sede vacante 1657 1666 Card Giannicolo Conti 29 Mar 1666 1698 71 Card Marcello d Aste 1700 1709 72 Card Giovanni Battista Bussi 1710 1726 73 Card Prospero Lorenzo Lambertini 20 Jan 1727 1731 74 Card Bartolomeo Massei 1731 1745 75 Nicola Manciforte 1746 1762 76 Card Filippo Acciaioli 1763 1766 77 Card Giovanni Ottavio Bufalini 1766 1782 78 Card Vincenzo Ranuzzi 14 Feb 1785 27 Oct 1800 Died 79 Sede vacante 1800 1816 80 Card Nicola Riganti 1816 1822 81 Card Giovanni Francesco Falzacappa 1823 1824 Resigned 82 Card Cesare Nembrini Pironi Gonzaga 1824 1837 83 Card Antonio Maria Cadolini B 12 Feb 1838 1 Aug 1851 Died Card Antonio Benedetto Antonucci 5 Sep 1851 29 Jan 1879 Died 84 Card Achille Manara 1879 1906 Died 85 Arzobispos de Ancona y Numana EditarTitulo otorgado 14 de septiembre de 1904 Nombre cambiado 5 de julio de 1975 a Anconitana Numanensis Giovanni Battista Ricci 21 Jul 1906 10 Nov 1929 Muerto Mario Giardini B 1931 1940 Dimitido 86 Marco Giovanni Della Pietra O F M 25 Mar 1940 13 Jan 1945 Muerto Egidio Bignamini 18 Nov 1945 21 Dec 1966 Muerto Felicissimo Stefano Tinivella O F M 22 Feb 1967 6 Jul 1968 Dimitido Carlo Maccari 5 Aug 1968 1 Jul 1989 Retirado Arzobispos de Ancona Osimo Editar Co Catedral en Osimo Unidos 30 de septiembre de 1986 con la diocesis de Osimo Sede Metropolitana Cardenal Dionigi Tettamanzi 1989 1991 87 Franco Festorazzi 6 de abril de 1991 8 de enero de 2004 retirado Cardenal Edoardo Menichelli 8 de enero de 2004 14 de julio de 2017 retirado Angelo Spina 14 de julio de 2017 88 Estadisticas EditarDe acuerdo al Anuario Pontificio 2019 la arquidiocesis tenia a fines de 2018 un total de 207 708 fieles bautizados Ano Poblacion Sacerdotes Bautizados porsacerdote Diaconospermanentes Religiosos ParroquiasBautizadoscatolicos Total decatolicos Total Clerosecular Cleroregular Varones MujeresArquidiocesis de Ancona y Numana 1959 129 500 130 000 99 6 161 71 90 804 105 238 461969 153 000 153 428 99 7 177 89 88 864 100 280 521980 152 500 153 500 99 3 157 82 75 971 1 98 209 58Diocesis de Osimo y Cingoli1949 37 445 37 445 100 0 124 86 38 301 40 165 391969 55 247 55 272 100 0 114 73 41 484 49 157 391980 55 413 55 541 99 8 96 61 35 577 43 119 39Arquidiocesis de Ancona Osimo1990 204 310 208 218 98 1 203 111 92 1006 4 140 244 711999 205 214 206 831 99 2 190 108 82 1080 8 101 206 722000 205 682 207 220 99 3 197 115 82 1044 8 99 203 722001 206 598 208 747 99 0 189 110 79 1093 15 94 196 722002 205 682 207 220 99 3 190 108 82 1082 15 96 192 722003 210 062 212 875 98 7 184 108 76 1141 15 89 173 722004 205 204 212 340 96 6 181 109 72 1133 16 82 165 722006 206 541 216 858 95 2 175 100 75 1180 17 88 124 722012 197 851 225 441 87 8 128 89 39 1545 18 45 86 722015 209 730 223 923 93 7 134 91 43 1565 17 57 94 722018 207 708 221 764 93 7 133 84 49 1561 15 64 83 72Fuente Catholic Hierarchy que a su vez toma los datos del Anuario Pontificio 89 Referencias Editar Kehr p 195 Cappelletti VII pp 109 112 quoting the Bull in full The bull uses the phrase incorporatio annexio et unio Acta Sanctae Sedis Volumen XXXVII Roma 1904 05 pp 195 200 Acta Apostolicae Sedis An et Vol LXIV Citta del Vaticano Typis Polyglottis Vaticanis 1972 pp 664 665 Acta Apostolicae Sedis An et Vol LXVII Citta del Vaticano Typis Polyglottis Vaticanis 1975 p 557 Quapropter Summus Pontifex Paulus Divina Providentia Pp VI in Audientia diei 5 iulii 1975 referente infrascripto Cardinale sacrae Congregationis pro Episcopis Praefecto oblatis precibus benigne annuendum censuit simulque statuit ut titulus praefatae Ecclesiae Numanensis seu Humanatensis ne omnino periret in Indice Sedium Titularium insereretur atque Episcopis titularibus nuncupatis conferretur Directoriae normae clare a Concilio impertitae de dioecesium recognitione indicia atque elementa apta ad actionem pastoralem aestimandam ab episcopis suppeditata quibus plurium dioecesium regimen commissum est Acta Apostolicae Sedis An et Vol LXXIX Citta del Vaticano Typis Polyglottis Vaticanis 1987 pp 642 645 Rodolfo Ragnini 1920 Il duomo di ancona dopo il bombardamento del 1915 cenni storici e descrittivi en italiano Osimo Officina Tipografica G Scarponi Lupi Mario 1784 Josephus Ronchetti ed Codex diplomaticus civitatis et ecclesiae Bergomatis en latin Volumen primum Bergamo Vincenzo Antoine pp 1064 1065 Bishops are to create a cloister next to their church in which they serve God along with their clergy according to the rule of canons and they should compel their priests not to leave the church and presume to live elsewhere Peruzzi p 101 151 The text in which the names of Bishops Transbertus Marcellinus and Bernardus occurs was published by P Kehr en Nachrichten von der Koniglichen Gesellschaft der Wissenschafter zu Gottingen philologisch historische Klasse Berlin Weidmann 1909 pp 470 472 Ughelli p 334 Cappelletti p 58 However Peruzzi p 152 gives the title of the Bull Ecclesiarum utilitati and provides the date of 12 July 1216 but Honorius III had not yet been elected pope on that date The full text but only with the date of anno octavo AD 1224 is given by Giuliano Saracini 1675 Notitie historiche della citta d Ancona en italian Latin Roma Tinassi p 193 The date of Kalendas julii pontificatus anno octavo 1 July 1224 is given by Cesar Auguste Horoy ed 1880 Honorii III opera omnia Medii Aevi Bibliotheca Patristica en latin Tomus IV Paris Bibliotheque ecclesiastique pp 681 no 249 Peruzzi p 153 Gauchat Hierarchia catholica IV p 82 note 1 Ritzler Sefrin V p 83 note 1 Ritzler Sefrin VI p 82 note 1 Ughelli p 326 Benedictus XIV 1842 Lib I caput secundum De Synodi Dioecesanae utilitate Benedicti XIV De Synodo dioecesana libri tredecim en latin Tomus primus Mechlin Hanicq pp 42 49 George Phillips 1849 Die Diocesansynode en aleman Freiburg im Breisgau Herder pp 1 23 Synodus Anconitana a Luigi Gallo episcopo habita Ancona Salvioni l654 Galli held a total of four diocesan synods according to Cappelletti p 124 Conti Giannicolo 1675 Anconitana synodus ab Eminentiss et Reverendiss Domino D Ioanne Nicolao Cardinali de Comitibvs Anconitano Episcopo habita die 4 amp 5 Novembris M DC LXXIV en latin Ancona ex Typographia Camerali Cappelletti p 124 a b Massei Bartolomeo 1738 Synodus Anconitana habita 1708 confirmata et aucta a Bartholomaes Massaei in sua Synodo celebrata diebus 26 27 28 Octobris anno 1738 en latin Ancona Nicolaus Bellelli Bussi Giovanni Battista 1727 Synodus Anconitana celebrata diebus 15 16 17 et 18 Septembris anno 1726 en latin Rome Antonius de Rubeis Rossi Bufalini Giovanni Ottavio 1779 Synodus dioecesana ab eccellentissimo amp reverendissimo domino Johanne Octavio Bufalini en latin Romae typis Josephi et Aloysii Lazzarini Synodus dioecesana ab Illustrissimo ac Reverendissimo domino Achille Manara Episcopo Anconitano et Humanatensi celebrata diebus XIII XIV et XV novembris MDCGCLXXXIII in cathedrali Ecclesia Anconae 1884 typ G Cherubini Lanzoni p 385 notes that the second edition of Ughelli leaves his name out Peruzzi p 92 and Gams p 664 however keep the name Marcus is just a name without documentary support Kehr p 195 no 1 Marcellinus Lanzoni p 385 no 2 Thomas is known only from a brief mention in a miracle sequence in the Acts of Saint Marcellinus Lanzoni p 385 Pope Gregory I wrote to Bishop Serenus in November 598 ordering him to intervene in a financial problem involving Serenus a deacon of the Church of Ancona In December 1603 the Church of Ancona was in the hands of an Apostolic Visitor Bishop Serenus having died Arminius the Visitor and Archbishop John of Rimini are instructed to investigate the careers of two candidates for the office of Bishop of Ancona the Archdeacon Florentinus Florentinus a deacon and Rusticus a deacon Peruzzi p 93 Kehr p 196 nos 2 4 Bishop Maurosus was present at the Lateran Synod of Pope Martin I in October 649 J D Mansi ed Sacrorum Conciloiorum nova et amplissima collectio editio novissima Tomus X Florence A Zatta 1764 p 866 Peruzzi p 94 Cappelletti p 29 Bishop Joannes was present at the Roman Synod of Pope Agatho on 27 March 680 J P Migne ed Patrologiae Latinae Tomus LXXXVII Paris 1863 p 1244 Peruzzi p 95 Bishop Senator was present at the Roman Synod of Pope Zacharias in 743 J D Mansi ed Sacrorum Conciloiorum nova et amplissima collectio editio novissima Tomus XII Florence A Zatta 1766 p 384c Peruzzi p 95 Bishop Tigrinus was present at the Roman Synod of Pope Eugenius II on 15 November 826 J D Mansi ed Sacrorum Conciloiorum nova et amplissima collectio editio novissima Tomus XIV Venice A Zatta 1769 p 1000 Philippus Jaffe and S Lowenfeld Regesta pontificum Romanorum Vol I second ed Leipzig Veit 1885 p 321 Peruzzi pp 95 96 According to Peruzzi p 96 and Ughelli I p 330 Leopardus was instituted by Pope Nicholas I 858 867 In 866 according to Ughelli he was sent to spread the gospel in Bulgaria In 869 Pope Hadrian II wrote to King Michael of the Bulgarians mentioning his legates Leopardus of Ancona and Dominicus of Treviso Philippus Jaffe and S Lowenfeld p 372 no 2925 Bishop Paul had been a papal legate in Germany and Pannonia in 873 874 and carried papal letters for Bishop Methodius forbidding the use of Sclavonic in the Mass Philippus Jaffe and S Lowenfeld pp 379 380 nos 2976 2978 He was papal ambassador to Constantinople during the Photian schism but on his return in August 880 he was deposed by Pope John VIII Peruzzi p 97 Cappelletti pp 32 33 Joseph Hergenrother 1867 Photius Patriarch von Constantinopel en german Fraktur Vol II Regensburg Manz pp 288 298 313 512 573 618 is attested by a document published by L Muratori but the document a donation to a monastery by Bishop Teodosio his name was really Teodicio of Fermo in the presence of Charles the Bald has been denounced as a forgery Peruzzi pp 97 98 Cappelletti p 33 Erfermarius was present at the synod of Ravenna held by Pope John XIII on 25 April 967 He also participated in the Roman synod of John XIII on 2 January 968 J D Mansi ed Sacrorum Conciliorum nova et amplissima collectio editio novissima Tomus XVIII Venice A Zatta 1773 p 499 Schwartz p 240 Bishop Traso was present at a meeting held in May 996 in Ravenna by Emperor Otto III Schwartz p 240 Stefano Peruzzi p 99 Grimaldus Peruzzi p 100 Gams p 665 Schwartz p 241 Bishop Gerardus subscribed a decree of Pope Alexander II in 1068 Peruzzi p 100 Gams p 665 Schwartz p 241 Peruzzi p 101 151 The text in which the names of Bishops Transbertus Marcellinus and Bernardus occurs was published by P Kehr in Nachrichten von der Koniglichen Gesellschaft der Wissenschafter zu Gottingen philologisch historische Klasse Berlin Weidmann 1909 pp 470 472 Bernardus Peruzzi p 101 Schwartz p 241 Lambertus Peruzzi pp 102 103 Thomas Gams p 665 column 1 Bishop Gentile attended the Third Lateran Council held by Pope Alexander III in March 1179 Peruzzi p 103 Pope Gregory IX in 1239 confirmed Bishop Persevallus decision to fix the number of Canons in the Cathedral Chapter at twelve Cappelletti VII p 59 Eubel Hierarchia catholica I p 87 Giovanni was a citizen of Ancona and a Canon in the Cathedral Chapter He was elected by the Chapter and confirmed by Pope Innocent IV in a letter of 8 January 1245 His diocese was in a bad state being constantly harassed by the men of Osimo who were partisans of the Emperor Frederick II On account of this he was released in 1246 from his obligation to make an ad limina visit In 1256 according to Ughelli Italia sacra I p 335 Bishop Giovanni served in the territory of Bari as Vicar General of Cardinal Ottavio Ubaldini when he was papal Legate in the Kingdom of Naples Cappelletti VII p 59 60 Eubel Hierarchia catholica I p 87 Scholars are not agreed as to whether Giovanni Bono was followed by one Petrus or by two Cappelletti pp 60 61 Ughelli I p 335 refers to a letter of Honorius IV of 5 July 1285 in which he orders Petrus Capocci Bishop of Ancona to protect a monastery s property citing an original in a Vatican register folio 123 letter 6 but letter 6 is a letter to Cardinal Gerardo Bishop of Sabina on another topic entirely see Prou no 473 In Marcel Prou Les registres d Honorius IV Paris Ernest Thorin 1888 p 338 no 474 which is folio 123 letter 7 Prou s summary gives the date as 4 July and the name of the bishop of Ancona is given only as P without surname or cognomen The superscription address is Venerabili fratri P episcopo Anconitano Petrus Romanucci Bishop of Ancona was present in the castle of Palumbaria as a witness to a document of Pope Urban IV on 10 May 1284 The date to say the least is wrong since Honorius IV was not elected pope until 2 April 1285 He was transferred to the diocese of Viterbo on 24 August 1286 He died in 1303 Eubel I p 87 532 Marcel Prou Les registres d Honorius IV Paris Ernest Thorin 1888 p 636 Berardus was a papal chaplain He was appointed on 27 August 1286 by Pope Honorius IV He was transferred to the diocese of Reate Rieti on 4 February 1296 by Pope Boniface VIII Eubel Hierarchia catholica I pp 87 416 Lanfranc was transferred to the diocese of Bergamo by Pope Clement VI Joannes was appointed Bishop of Ancona by Pope Clement VI on 23 October 1349 He died in 1381 Gams p 665 Eubel I p 88 Bartholomaeus was transferred to the diocese of Florence by Pope Urban VI on 9 December 1385 Eubel I pp 88 250 Guilelmus was appointed by Urban VI on 6 February 1386 He was transferred to the diocese of Todi on 12 June 1405 by Pope Innocent VII He died on 28 October 1407 Eubel I pp 88 502 Carlo had been a monk of S Giorgio in Venice and a papal chamberlain He was apointed Bishop of Ancona by Pope Innocent VII on 12 June 1405 He died in 1406 Eubel I p 88 Lorenzo was a Canon of the Cathedral of Florence He was appointed Bishop of Ancona on 26 May 1406 by Innocent VII He was removed from office by Gregory XII as a supporter of the Council of Pisa and Pope Alexander V Gregory XII had been deposed for schism heresy and perjury in 1409 Lorenzo was transferred to the diocese of Sinigaglia by John XXIII Peruzzi pp 111 112 Eubel I pp 88 447 Simone was a patrician of Ancona and was the Vicar General of the Order of Augustine Hermits He was appointed by Gregory XII on 5 April 1410 Simone was transferred to the diocese of Sinigaglia on 6 March 1419 by Pope Martin V Peruzzi p 112 Eubel I pp 88 447 Pietro was appointed by John XXIII to replace Simone Vigilanti on 19 December 1412 He was transferred to the diocese of Ascoli Piceno on 11 September 1419 by Martin V Peruzzi p 112 Eubel I p 88 111 Astorgio was a native of Naples In 1422 he became Bishop of Ancona and Bishop of Numana He was transferred to the diocese of Benevento on 8 February 1436 Peruzzi p 113 Eubel I p 88 II pp 87 104 Giovanni Caffarelli was a Roman a doctor of Canon Law and a Canon of the Basilica of S Maria Maggiore in Rome He was appointed Bishop of Forli by Pope Martin V on 28 April 1427 He was transferred to the diocese of Ancona by Pope Eugene IV on 18 Februart 1437 He died in 1460 Peruzzi pp 113 114 Il Caffarelli pero dalla santa Sede per la sua dottrina e per la sua prudenza occupato sempre ne piu ardui affari della chiesa universale non pote fare in Ancona ne assidua ne lunga residenza He was not a residentiary bishop Eubel I pp 253 II p 87 Agapitus Rustici Cenci was a Roman and a Canon of the Vatican Basilica He held the degree of Doctor in utroque iure He held the post of Referendary and then Auditor judge of the Roman Rota He was appointed Bishop of Ancona by Pope Pius II on 16 April 1460 and transferred to the diocese of Camerino on 22 August 1463 He died in 1464 Peruzzi p 114 Eubel II pp 87 with note 2 116 Fatati was a native of Ancona of the Counts Fatati and a papal chaplain On 5 November 1430 he was appointed a Canon in the Cathedral Chapter of Ancona and he rose to be Archpriest of the cathedral In 1444 he was named Vicar Apostolic in the diocese of Siena following the death of Bishop Cristoforo de S Marcello He was papal commissary in Lucca and in Piombino in 1446 and Treasurer General of the Marches in 1449 He was appointed Bishop of Teramo by Pope Pius II on 6 November 1450 In 1455 he was appointed Governor General of the Marches On 3 November 1463 he became Bishop of Ancona In 1467 he was Treasurer in Bologna Peruzzi p 117 note He created six Canons in the Cathedral Chapter raising the total number to twenty and instituted the dignity of Provost He died on 9 January 1484 Peruzzi pp 114 115 Eubel II pp 87 90 Benincasa was an aristocrat of Ancona a member of the family of the Marchesi Benincasa He was a Canon of the Vatican Basilica and an Abbreviator of Apostolic Letters He was appointed Bishop of Ancona by Pope Clement VIII on 5 October 1484 He died in 1502 Peruzzi pp 116 118 Eubel II p 87 Sacca was born in Sirolo a rural territory in the diocese of Ancona He was Provost of the Collegiate Church of S Maria del Popolo e S Rocco and Abbot Commendatory of the abandoned Benedictine abbey of S Giovanni in Pennochiara He was appointed papal Datary by Pope Innocent VIII He was named Archbishop of Ragusa Dubrovnik on 29 August 1490 On 1 January 1500 he was installed as Regent of the Apostolic Chancery and Vice chancellor Joannes Burchard Diarium ed L Thuasne Vol III p 4 He was named Administrator of the diocese of Ancona on 15 July 1502 In August 1503 Burchard III p 242 mentions that Giovanni Sacca was Governor of the City of Rome in which capacity he took part in the funeral of Pope Alexander VI on 22 August 1503 Burchard III p 447 He took part in the two conclaves of 1503 and was an assistant at the throne at the coronation of Pope Julius II Burchard III p 306 He died in Rome in 1505 Peruzzi p 118 G Moroni ed Dizionario di erudizione storico ecclesiastica Vol XIX Venice Tip Emiliana 1843 p 131 Eubel II pp 87 220 III p 281 Of a family originally from Arezzo Pietro Accolti was born in Florence in 1455 the son of Benedetto Accolti the historian and nephew of Francesco Accolti the jurist Pietro was Doctor in Laws and then professor of law at the University of Pisa He went to Rome and was serving as an Auditor of the Rota when named Bishop of Ancona on 4 April 1505 Accolti was named a cardinal by Pope Julius II in a Consistory held at Ravenna on 10 March 1511 At the time he was Papal Vicar of the City of Rome and Scriptor Apostolicarum Litterarum He resigned the diocese of Ancona on 5 April 1514 in favor of nephew Francesco Accolti but since Francesco was only sixteen years old Cardinal Pietro continued in office as Administrator until 1523 He died in Rome on 11 December 1532 Lorenzo Cardella 1793 Memorie storiche de cardinali della santa Romana chiesa en italiano Volume IV Roma Pagliarini pp 350 352 The Biographical Dictionary of the Society for the Diffusion of Useful Knowledge Volume I London Longman Brown Green and Longmans 1842 pp 225 226 Eubel II pp 12 no 21 87 with notes 3 4 5 A native of Bologna Matteo Giovanni Lucchi was appointed Archbishop of Ancona by Pope Julius III on 23 May 1550 He was transferred to the diocese of Tropea Kingdom of Naples on 6 February 1556 by Pope Paul IV He died in Rome on 22 June 1558 Ughelli p 341 who calls him Joannes Matthaeus Luchius Peruzzi p 119 Cappelletti p 121 Eubel III p 108 320 where the name is given as Giovanni Matteo Lucchi Vincenzo Lucchi was the brother of Matteo Lucchi his predecessor Peruzzi p 119 Cappelletti p 121 Eubel III p 108 Cardinal Farnese was appointed Apostolic Administrator on 24 February 1555 and served until 1 July 1585 he resigned upon the appointment of a successor to Bishop Lucchi Peruzzi p 120 does not recognize him as an archbishop Eubel III p 108 Conti was a Roman son of Troquato Duke of Poli He held the degree of Doctor in utroque iure from Perugia He was appointed Archbishop of Ancona on 1 July 1585 by Pope Sixtus V He was appointed governor of Perugia in 1594 From 1599 to 1604 he was Vice Legate in Avignon He was named a cardinal by Pope Clement VIII on 9 June 1604 and assigned the titular church of San Crisogono He died in Rome of a stroke on 3 December 1615 Peruzzi p 120 Eubel III pp 7 no 40 108 A native of Osimo Galli Joannes Aloysius Galli had been a Referenday of the Tribunal of the Two Signatures He served as Regent of the Apostolic Chancery delegating for Cardinal Alessandro Montalto He was appointed Bishop of Ancona in the Consistory of 2 May 1622 by Pope Gregory XV In 1627 he was appointed Governor of the terra Tileolarum in Piedmont He restored the cathedral increased the number of students in the diocesan seminary conducted five pastoral visits of the parishes in his diocese and held four diocesan synods He died on 22 August 1657 Cappelletti pp 123 124 Peruzzi p 120 Gauchat Hierarchia catholica IV p 82 with note 3 Conti was the nephew of Cardinal Carlo Conti He died in Ancona on 20 January 1698 Cappelletti pp 124 Peruzzi pp 120 121 Ritzler Sefrin Hierarchia catholica V p 83 note 2 Born in Aversa in 1657 D Aste held the degree of Doctor in utroque iure from the Sapienza in Rome He was made a Referendary of the Tribune of the Two Signatures and Auditor of the Pope He was a Canon of the Vatican Basilica and consultor of the Holy Office Inquisition He was titular Archbishop of Athens 1691 1700 and President of Urbino 1698 1700 He was named a cardinal by Pope Innocent XII on 29 November 1699 On 3 February 1700 he was appointed Archbishop of Ancona and on 10 May was named Vice Legate of Urbino He died in Bologna in the house of the Dominicans on 11 June 1709 Peruzzi pp 121 122 Ritzler Sefrin V pp 21 no 23 with notes 12 and 13 83 103 with note 3 Bussi was born in Viterbo in 1656 and held the degree of Doctor in utroque iure Sapienza 1696 He was a Canon of the Vatican Basilica He had been Archbishop of Tarsus 1706 1710 and papal Nuncio in Cologne He was transferred to the diocese of Ancona on 19 February 1710 by Pope Clement XI Albani On 18 May 1712 he was named a cardinal in pectore secretly which was publicly disclosed on 26 September on 30 January 1713 he was given the red galero and assigned the titular church of S Maria in Aracoeli He held a diocesan synod in September 1726 He was appointed Prefect of the Holy House of Loreto He died on 23 December 1726 Peruzzi pp 123 125 Ritzler Sefrin V pp 28 no 39 with notes 19 and 20 83 with note 4 370 with note 4 Lambertini was appointed Archbishop of Bologna on 30 April 1731 Massei was born in Montepulciano in 1663 He held the degree of Doctor in utroque iure Pisa 1683 He was appointed Referendary of the Tribunal of the Two Signatures in 1717 He was named titular Archbishop of Athens and papal Nuncio to the King of France 1721 1730 He was named a cardinal by Pope Clement XII on 2 October 1730 while he was still in France He received the red galero on 18 December 1730 and was assigned the titular church of Sant Agostino on 12 January 1731 He was appointed Archbishop of Ancona on 21 May 1731 He died in Ancona on 20 November 1745 Peruzzi pp 126 130 Ritzler Sefrin Hierarchia catholica V p 103 with note 8 VI pp 5 no 3 82 with note 2 Born in Montesanto diocese of Fermo in 1692 Manciforte held the degree of Doctor in utroque iure Macerata 1738 He was appointed a Protonotary Apostolic 1734 and was named a Councilor of the Holy Office Inquisition in Ancona in 1737 He was named Bishop of Senigallia on 28 February 1742 and was consecrated a bishop in Rome by Pope Benedict XIV a former bishop of Ancona He was transferred to Ancona from the diocese of Senigallia 1742 1746 on 17 January 1746 He died on 19 December 1762 Peruzzi pp 130 131 Ritzler Sefrin Hierarchia catholica VI pp 82 with note 3 375 with note 3 A native of Florence Acciaioli had been papal Nuncio in Switzerland 1744 1754 for which purpose he had been appointed Bishop of Petra Arabia in 1743 he was consecrated a bishop by Pope Benedict XIV on 21 December He was then Nuncio to the King of Portugal 1754 1763 He was appointed a cardinal by Pope Clement XIII in the Consistory of 24 September 1759 and given the red galero on 12 March 1761 On 6 April 1761 he was assigned the titular church of S Maria degli Angeli On 24 January 1763 he was appointed Archbishop of Ancona His family had their own palazzo in Ancona where he chose to live instead of in the Episcopal Palace He died in Ancona on 24 July 1766 Peruzzi pp 131 132 Ritzler Sefrin VI pp 21 no 8 with notes 21 and 22 82 with note 4 334 with note 3 Bufalini was born in Citta di Castello in 1709 He held the degree of Doctor in utroque iure Macerata 1740 He held civil posts in the Papal States Governor of Benevento 1741 and Loreto 1743 He was appointed Referendary of the Tribunal of the Two Signatures and Cleric of the Apostolic Camera Treasury He became Preceptor of the Ospedale di Santo Spirito in Sassia He had been titular Archbishop of Chalcedon and was sent as Nuncio to Switzerland 1754 He became Prefect of the Apostolic Palace in 1759 On 21 July 1766 he was named a cardinal by Pope Clement XIII and was assigned the titular church of S Maria degli Angeli He was appointed Bishop of Ancona on 1 December 1766 by Pope Clement XIII He died on 3 August 1782 in the episcopal villa at Montesicuro near Ancona Mario Natalucci Il Cardinal Bufalini vescovo e administratore attraverso l Archivio capitolare di Ancona in Quaderni storici delle Marche Vol 2 No 5 2 maggio 1967 pp 353 368 en italiano Giuseppe Pignatelli Bufalini Giovanni Ottavio in Dizionario Biografico degli Italiani Volume 14 1972 en italiano Ritzler Sefrin VI pp 23 no 38 161 with note 4 Ranuzzi was titular Archbishop of Tyre Phoenicia Syria 1775 1785 Ritzler Sefrin VI p 82 note 5 424 note 6 An Apostolic Administrator Archbishop Francesco Xaverio Passari the titular Archbishop of Larissa Thessaly was appointed on 21 November 1800 He was able to reopen the seminary He died on 4 June 1808 The episcopal throne was vacant for an additional eight years during which time Pope Pius VII was a prisoner of Napoleon Bonaparte in France Cappelletti pp 168 169 171 Ritzler Sefrin VI p 82 note 6 A native of Molfetta and the nephew of another Nicola Riganti who was the author of a commentary on the rules of the Apostolic Camera Riganti held the degree of Doctor in utroque iure and was a Protonotary Apostolic He served in various offices in the Roman Curia in particular as a judge in the Apostolic Camera Finance Ministry He was secretary of the Congregation of the Consulta the supreme court in civil and criminal matters for subjects of the Papal States At the age of 72 he was named a cardinal and Bishop of Ancona on the same day 8 March 1816 He was consecrated a bishop on 21 April by Pope Pius VII Having suffered a stroke in 1819 he was taken to Rome while his duties in Ancona were taken over by the titular Bishop of Lydda Msgr Francesco de Conti Pichi Riganti died in Rome on 31 August 1822 and was buried in S Maria sopra Minerva Gaetano Moroni 1852 Dizionario di erudizione storico ecclesiastica en italiano Vol LVII Ref Rin Venezia Tipografia Emiliana pp 243 244 Cappelletti p 171 Peruzzi pp 138 139 Ritzler Sefrin Hierarchia catholica VII p 73 A native of Corneto Falzacappa had previously been a Canon of the Vatican Basilica and then titular Archbishop of Athens 1819 1823 He was appointed a cardinal and Archbishop personal title of Ancona on the same day 10 March 1823 He resigned the diocese of Ancona on 23 May 1824 Vercellone remarks that his membership in numerous bodies in the Roman Curia was the reason in realta sussistevano valide ragioni per evitare il suo allontanamento da Roma Infatti era membro attivo di numerose congregazioni permanenti come la Concistoriale il S Offizio il Concilio le Immunita l Indice i Riti il Cerimoniale l Esame dei vescovi il Buon Governo e le Acque oltre che di molte congregazioni straordinarie He died in Rome where he had been named Suburbicarian Bishop of Porto and Santa Rufina as well as Prefect of the Tribunal of the Apostolic Signature on 18 November 1840 Gaetano Moroni ed 1843 Dizionario di erudizione storico ecclesiastica en italiano Vol XXIII Venezia Tipografia Emiliana pp 21 22 Peruzzi p 139 Ritzler Sefrin VII pp 73 93 Guido Fagioli Vercellone Falzacappa Giovanni Francesco in Dizionario Biografico degli Italiani Volume 44 1994 Born in Ancona in 1768 the son of Marchese Alessandro Nembrini Pironi Gonzaga and Maria Trionfi Cesare Nembrini was educated in Recanati and then in Bologna at the Collegio Montalto He served as civil governor of several cities in the Papal States under Pius VI and Pius VII He was named Bishop of Ancona on 24 May 1824 by Pope Leo XII and appointed a cardinal on 27 July 1829 by Pope Pius VIII He died in Umana in the episcopal residence on 5 December 1837 Gaetano Moroni ed 1847 Dizionario di erudizione storico ecclesiastica en italiano Vol XLVII Mos Nic Venezia Tipografia Emiliana pp 264 265 Peruzzi pp 137 143 Ritzler Sefrin VII p 73 Antonucci Ritzler Sefrin VII p 193 VIII 53 99 Martin Brauer 2014 Handbuch der Kardinale 1846 2012 en aleman Berlin De Gruyter p 62 ISBN 978 3 11 026947 5 Manara was a native of Bologna son of a painter His father had to supplement his income from commissions by teaching art in the municipal school of Lugo where Achille had his early education He attended the University of Bologna enjoying the patronage of the Bishop of Lugo Giovanni Mastai Ferretti later Pope Pius IX and obtained a doctorate in theology and the doctorate in Civil and Canon Law 1855 He was named a Canon of the Collegiate Church of S Petronio in Bologna by Pius IX in 1855 He served in the diocese of Bologna as ecclesastical judge Chancellor and pro Vicar General He was appointed Bishop of Ancona on 12 May 1879 by Pope Leo XIII and named cardinal on 29 November 1895 He died on 15 February 1906 Albert Battandier ed 1907 Annuaire pontifical catholique 1907 en frances Paris La Bonne Presse p 645 Ritzler Sefrin VIII pp 51 99 Brauer Handbuch der Kardinale p 175 A native of Milan Giardini had been Apostolic Delegate in Tokyo 1922 1931 and titular Archbishop of Edessa Mesopotamia He was appointed Archbishop of Ancona e Numana on 16 May 1931 and resigned the diocese on 5 February 1940 On the same day he was named titular Archbishop of Laodicea Syria He died on 30 August 1941 Annuario Pontificio 1943 Citta del Vaticano 1943 p 362 George Minamiki 1985 The Chinese rites controversy from its beginning to modern times Chicago Loyola University Press p 135 ISBN 978 0 8294 0457 9 Charles R Gallagher 2008 Vatican Secret Diplomacy Joseph P Hurley and Pope Pius XII New Haven CT USA Yale University Press pp 33 34 ISBN 978 0 300 14821 3 Tettamanzi was born at Renate Milano in 1934 After teaching in seminaries at Masnago Seveso and Venegono Inferiore he was named Rector of the Pontificio Seminario Lombardo in Rome in 1987 On 1 July 1991 he was appointed Archbishop of Ancona Osimo He resigned the diocese on 6 April 1991 when he was appointed Secretary General of Episcopal Conference of Italy for a four year term On 20 April 1995 he was appointed Archbishop of Genoa and on 21 February 1998 he was named a cardinal by Pope John Paul II He was appointed Archbishop of Milan on 11 July 2002 He died on 5 August 2017 Martin Brauer 2014 Handbuch der Kardinale 1846 2012 en aleman Berlin De Gruyter pp 582 663 ISBN 978 3 11 026947 5 Chiesa di Milano E morto il cardinale Dionigio Tettamanzi 5 August 2017 retrieved 12 January 2019 Harris M Lentz III 2015 Popes and Cardinals of the 20th Century A Biographical Dictionary en italiano McFarland p 187 ISBN 978 1 4766 2155 5 Arcidiocesi di Ancona Osimo Arcivescovo Mons Angelo Spina retrieved 12 January 2019 en italiano Cheney David 8 de diciembre de 2021 en la pagina https www catholic hierarchy org diocese danos html Archdiocese of Ancona Osimo del sitio web Catholic Hierarchy en ingles Kansas City Consultado el 19 de diciembre de 2021 Datos tomados del Anuario Pontificio de 2019 y precedentes Datos Q1329838 Multimedia Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Ancona Osimo Q1329838 Obtenido de https es wikipedia org w index php title Arquidiocesis de Ancona Osimo amp oldid 150420454, wikipedia, wiki, leyendo, leer, libro, biblioteca,

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