Archdiocese of Catania Archidioecesis Catanensis Arcidiocesi di Catania | |
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Cathedral in Catania | |
Location | |
Country | Italy |
Ecclesiastical province | Catania |
Coordinates | 37°30′10″N15°05′19″E / 37.502809°N 15.088604°E |
Statistics | |
Area | 1,332 km2 (514 sq mi) |
Population
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Parishes | 157 |
Information | |
Denomination | Catholic Church |
Rite | Roman Rite |
Established | unknown 1859 (Archdiocese) |
Cathedral | Basilica Cattedrale di S. Agata |
Secular priests | 218 (diocesan) ![]() 101 (Religious Orders) ![]() 66 Deacons ![]() |
Current leadership | |
Pope | Leo XIV |
Archbishop | Luigi Renna |
Bishops emeritus | Salvatore Gristina |
Map | |
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Website | |
www.diocesi.catania.it |
The Archdiocese of Catania (Latin : Archidioecesis Catanensis) is a Latin Church diocese of the Catholic Church in Sicily, southern Italy, with its seat in Catania. It was elevated to an archdiocese in 1859, and became a metropolitan see in 2000. Its suffragans are the diocese of Acireale and the diocese of Caltagirone. [1] [2]
According to legend, Christianity was first preached in Catania by St. Beryllus. [3] During the persecution of Decius the virgin St. Agatha suffered martyrdom. [4] At the same period or a little later the Bishop of Catania was Everus, who is mentioned in the acts of the martyrs of Leontini (303). [5] The Deacon Euplius and others were martyred in the same year. [6]
It is said that a Domninus (or Domnicius) was Bishop of Catania and was present at the Council of Ephesus (431); the Acts of the council, however, show that he was bishop of Coliaeum (Cotyaeum, Cotyaion) in Phrygia, not bishop of Catania. [7]
A genuine bishop, Fortunatus, was twice sent with Bishop Ennodius of Pavia by Pope Hormisdas to Emperor Anastasius I to effect the union of the Eastern Churches with Rome (514, 516). Bishops Leo I appear in the correspondence of Gregory the Great. In 730 Bishop James the Confessor suffered martyrdom for his defence of images. In 750, or thereabouts, Sabino was Bishop of Catania. [8] His successor, Saint Leo II of Catania, was known as a wonder-worker (thaumaturgus).
Bishop Euthymius was at first an adherent of the Patriarch Photius, but in the Eighth General Council approved the restoration of Ignatius as patriarch. John of Ajello, who died in the 1169 Sicily earthquake, won a contested episcopal election against William of Blois in 1167.
In the 9th century, while still a Greek city, Catania became suffragan to the archdiocese of Monreale.
From c. 827 to 1071 Catania was subject to the Arab (Saracen) occupation of the island of Sicily. [9]
In 1169 an eruption of Mount Etna completely destroyed Catania, with a loss of life of some 15,000 persons. The Bishop of Catania, Ioannes de Agello, was among the dead. [10]
On 7 July 1274 Pope Gregory X wrote to the Bishop of Syracuse that he had received information that the Bishop of Catania (Angelo Boccamazza), along with his cousin Bartolomeo Romano and two nephews, had attacked a Franciscan convent at Castro Orsino and destroyed its buildings; the Bishop of Syracuse was ordered to investigate, and if the charges were true, he was to excommunicate the offending parties. [11]
In 1409 a severe earthquake reduced the monastery of San Niccolò l'Arena to ruins. [12]
On 11 March 1669 a major fissure opened up on the southeast side of Mt. Etna, some ten miles from Catania, and sent lava in the direction of the city. The stream passed along the walls of the city and reached the sea, but at the beginning of May fresh supplies of lava overtopped the walls of Catania and destroyed the monastery of the Benedictines. The vineyards of the Jesuits, who staffed a college in Catania, were also destroyed. By mid-May three quarters of Catania was surrounded by lava, and several streams entered the city. Fourteen towns and villages between the volcano and Catania were obliterated, leaving only the tower of a ruined church visible. [13]
On 9 January 1693 [14] a major earthquake destroyed the city of Catania and killed eighteen thousand people. [15] Only a part of the cathedral and one house survived. [16] Another earthquake struck the ruins of Catania at the end of September 1693. [17]
From 1679 to 1818, the bishop of Catania was the Great Chancellor of the University of Catania. [18] The University had been founded in 1444 by King Alfonso I of Sicily, and was under the administration of the Senate of Catania, [19] with the supervision of the Viceroy of Sicily. [20] In 1556 the Jesuits established a secondary school ('college') in Catania.
In 1859 the diocese of Catania was made an archiepiscopal see, immediately subject to the Holy See. [21]
Bishop Bellomi (1450–1472) petitioned Pope Nicholas V that the Cathedral Chapter of Catania should include the dignities of the Archdeacon, Prior, Cantor, the Dean, and the Treasurer. Papal permission was granted on 12 June 1453. [22] There were twelve primary Canons and twelve secondary Canons. [23] Pope Pius V (1566–1572) abolished the dignity of Archdeacon. Originally the Canons were all members of a monastic community and followed the Rule of St. Benedict (hence the office of Prior), [24] but Bishop Vincenzo Cutelli (1577-1589) obtained permission from Pope Gregory XIII on 9 February 1578 to convert the Chapter into a corporation of secular priests. [25] Bishop Ottavio Branciforte (1638-1646) revived the dignity of Archdeacon in April 1639, and appointed his brother Luigi Branciforte, Doctor in utroque iure (Civil and Canon Law) to the dignity. [26]
On 14 July 1926, the cathedral of Saint Agatha, which was about to celebrate the eighth centenary of the return of the remains of Saint Agatha from Constantinople, [27] was granted the title and honors of a minor basilica. [28]
In observance of the 5th centenary of the establishment at the church of Santa Maria dell'Elemosina in Catania as a collegiate church, and to promote the cult of the Virgin Mary, on 31 March 1946 Pope Pius XII granted the collegiate church the title and honors of a minor basilica. [29]
The church of Santa Maria dell'Elemosina in the town of Biancavilla (diocese of Catania) was granted the title and honors of a minor basilica on 14 March 1970 by Pope Paul VI. [30]
At the request of Archbishop Domenico Picchinenna (1974–1988), Pope John Paul II granted the title and honors of a minor basilica to the church of Maria Santissima Annunziata al Carmine in Catania on 7 November 1987. [31]
On 16 April 1996, at the petition of Archbishop Luigi Bommarito (1988–2002), Pope John Paul II granted the church of Saint Catherine of Alexandria in Pedara (diocese of Catania) the title and honors of a minor basilica. [32]
On 4 September 1859, the diocese of Catania was elevated to the status of an archdiocese by Pope Pius IX. Bishop Felice Regano (1839–1861) was granted the pallium in the papal consistory of 26 September 1859. [33] It had no suffragans, but its archbishop took precedence over bishops in assmblies of prelates.
The diocese of Catania had been an archdiocese for well over a century. Population movements, changes in occupations, and reorganization of civil districts and boundaries since world war II, made it desirable to carry out adjustments in the ecclesiastical structures of Sicily. In addition, the new concordat between the Vatican and the Italian Republic (1984) envisioned the end of the practice of having dioceses directly dependent upon the Holy See. After extensive consultations, on 2 December 2000, Pope John Paul II ordered a new arrangement of the dioceses of Sicily. The archdiocese of Catania was promoted to the status of a mentroplitan archdiocese, and assigned as suffragans the diocese of Acireale, formerly directly subject to the Papacy, and the diocese of Caltagirone, formerly a suffragan of the archdiocese of Syracuse. [34]
The traditional list and chronology of early bishops may have a lack of evidence.