Patriarch of Grado
Appearance
It has been suggested that this article be merged into List of bishops and patriarchs of Aquileia. (Discuss) Proposed since January 2020. |
This is a list of the Patriarchs of Grado (north-eastern Italy).[1][2] The patriarchate came into being when the schismatic Patriarch of Aquileia, Paulinus (557-569), moved to Grado in the mid 6th century. But in its reunion with Rome in 606, a rival office was set up in Old-Aquileia. Aquileia later entered communion with Rome but was able to keep its independence and title from Grado. In 1451 the see of Grado was merged with Castello to form the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Venice.
Patriarchs of Aquileia
- Paulinus I 557–569
- Probinus 569–570
- Elia 571–586
- Severus 586–606
Patriarchs of Aquileia nova in Grado
- Candidianus (606–612)
- Epiphanius (612–613)
- Cyprianus (613–627)
- Primogenius (630–647)
- Maximus II (649–?)
- Stephanus II (670–672)
- Agatho (?–679)
- Christophorus (682–717)
- Donatus (717–725)
- Antoninus (725–747)
- Emilianus (747–755)
- Vitalianus (755–767)
- Giovanni IV degli Antinori (767–802)
- Fortunatus (802–820)
- Giovanni V (820–825)
- Venerius Trasmondo (825–851)
- Victor I (852–858)
- Vitalis I Partecipazio (858–?)
- Petrus I Marturio (875–878)
- Victor II Partecipazio (878–?)
- Georgius (?)
- Vitalis II (?)
- Domenicus I Tribuno (904–?)
- Dominicus II (919–?)
- Laurentius Mastalico (?)
- Marinus Contarini (933–?)
- Bonus Blancanico (?–960)
- Vitalis III Barbolani (?)
- Vitalis IV Candiano (976–1017)
- Orso Orseolo (1018–1026, 1030–1049)
- Domenicus III Bulzano (?)
- Dominicus IV Marango (?)
- Dominicus V Cerbano (1074–1077)
- Johannes VI Saponario (?)
- Petrus II Badoer da Noale (1092–1105)
Patriarchs of Aquileia nova in Venezia
- Giovanni Gradenigo (1105–1108, 1112–1129)
- Enrico Dandolo (1134–1182)[3]
- Giovanni Segnale (1182–1201)
- Benedetto Falier (1201–1207)
- Angelo Barozzi (1211–1238)
- Leonardo Querini (1238–1244)
- Lorenzo (1244–1255)
- Jacopo Belligno (1255)
- Angelo Maltraverso (1255–1272)
- Giovanni da Ancona (1272–1279)
- Guido (1279–1289)
- Lorenzo di Parma (1289–1295)
- Egidio da Ferrara (1295–1310)
- Angelo Motonense (1310–1313)
- Paolo de Pilastris (1313–1316)
- Marco de Vinea (1316–1318)
- Domenico (1318–1332)
- Dino di Radicofani (1332–1337)
- Andrea da Padova (1337–1355)
- Orso Delfino (1355–1361)
- Fortanerius Vassalli 1361[4]
- Francesco Querini (1367–1372)
- Thomas of Frignano (1372–1383)[5]
- Urbano (1383–1389)
- Pietro Amelio (1389–1400)
- Pietro Chauchus (1400–1406)
- Giovanni de Zambottis de Mantua (1406–1408)
- Francesco Lando (1408–1409)
- Leonardo Delfino (1409–1427)
- Biagio Molino (1427–1439)[6]
- Marco Condulmer (1439–1445)
- Domenico Michiel (1445–1451)[7]
In 1451 the Patriarchate of Grado was merged with the Bishopric of Castello and Venice to form the Archdiocese of Venice.
Titular Archbishops of Grado
In 1968 Pope Paul VI reestablished Grado as a titular archbishopric
- José López Ortiz (1969–1992)
- Crescenzio Sepe (1992–2001)
- Diego Causero (2001–present)
See also
Notes
- ^ "Patriarchate of Grado" Catholic-Hierarchy.org. David M. Cheney. Retrieved September 25, 2016
- ^ "Patriarchal See of Grado" GCatholic.org. Gabriel Chow. Retrieved September 25, 2016
- ^ Madden, Thomas F. (2008-04-01). Enrico Dandolo and the Rise of Venice. JHU Press. p. 24. ISBN 978-0-8018-9184-7. Retrieved 2013-11-23.
- ^ Innozenz VI Archived 2007-09-27 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: Order of Friars Minor
- ^ "Patriarch Biaggio Molino" Catholic-Hierarchy.org. David M. Cheney. Retrieved September 28, 2016
- ^ Gli impianti paleocristiani e il patriarcato Archived 2007-10-07 at the Wayback Machine