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Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Turin

Coordinates: 45°04′24″N 7°41′07″E / 45.0733°N 7.6854°E / 45.0733; 7.6854
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Archdiocese of Turin

Archidioecesis Taurinensis

Arcidiocesi di Torino
Location
CountryItaly
Statistics
Area3,350 km2 (1,290 sq mi)
Population
- Total
- Catholics
(as of 2014)
2,153,000
2,057,000 (95.5%)
Information
RiteRoman Rite
Established4th Century
CathedralMetropolitan Cathedral of Saint John the Baptist
(Cattedrale Metropolitana di S. Giovanni Battista)
Current leadership
PopeFrancis
Metropolitan ArchbishopCesare Nosiglia
Auxiliary BishopsGuido Fiandino
Bishops emeritusSeverino Poletto
Map
Website
www.diocesi.torino.it

The Roman Catholic Metropolitan Archdiocese of Turin (Template:Lang-la) is an ecclesiastical territory or diocese of the Roman Catholic Church in Italy. Founded in the 4th century and elevated to the dignity of an archdiocese on 21 May 1515, by Pope Leo X. Its mother church is the Cathedral of Saint John the Baptist. Since 2010 the Archbishop of Turin has been Cesare Nosiglia.

History

The first bishop of Turin whose name has survived was St Maximus. He can hardly be considered the first bishop of Turin, even though no other bishop is known before him. Maximus, many of whose homilies are extant, died between 408 and 423.[1]

It was another Maximus who lived in 451 and 465. In 494 Victor of Turin went with St Epiphanius to France for the ransom of prisoners of war. St Ursicinus (569-609) suffered at the hands of the Franks. It was then that the Diocese of Moriana (Maurienne) was detached from that of Turin.[1]

Other bishops were Rusticus (d. 691);[1] Claudius of Turin (817-27), a copious and controversial writer, famous for his opposition to the veneration of images;[2] Regimirus (of uncertain date, in the 9th century), who established a rule of common life among his canons; Amolone (880-98), who incurred the ill-will of the Turinese and was driven out by them; Gezo (1000), who founded the monastery of San Solutore in Turin; Landulf (1037), who founded the Abbey of Cavour and repaired the damage inflicted on his Church by the Saracen incursions; Cunibert of Turin (1046–1080), to whom St Peter Damian wrote a letter exhorting him to repress the laxity of his clergy; Boso (1122–c.1127), who resigned as a cardinal to become bishop; Uguccione (1231–43), who abdicated the bishopric and became a Cistercian; Guido Canale enlarged the cathedral.[1]

Under Gianfrancesco della Rovere (1510), the diocese of Turin was detached from the metropolitan obedience of Milan and became an archiepiscopal see with the diocese of Mondovì and Ivrea for suffragans, other sees being added later on. In the time of Cesare Cybo the diocese saw the rise of Calvinism, and his successors were also called upon to attempt to restore Roman Catholicism. Cardinal Girolamo della Rovere, in 1564, brought to Turin the Holy Shroud and the body of St Maurice, the martyr.[1]

From 1713 to 1727, owing to difficulties with the Holy See, the See of Turin remained vacant. After 1848, Cardinal Luigi Fransoni (1832-62) became notable for his opposition to the Piedmontese Government's reform of the rights of the Church, and in consequence he went into exile. His successors include Gaetano Alimonda (1883–91) and Agostino Richelmy (1897).[1]

List of Bishops of Turin

to 900

900 to 1200

List of Archbishops of Turin since 1871

Notes

Books

  • Cross, F. L.; Livingstone, E. A., eds. (13 March 1997). The Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church, 3rd edition. USA: Oxford University Press. p. 359. ISBN 0-19-211655-X. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Fedele, Savio (1898). Gli antichi Vescovi d'Italia: il Piemonte (in Italian). Torino: Bocca. pp. 281–376.
  • Tuninetti, Giuseppe; D'Antino, Gianluca (2000). Il cardinal Domenico Della Rovere, costruttore della cattedrale, e gli arcivescovi di Torino dal 1515 al 2000: stemmi, alberi genealogici e profili biografici (in Italian). Torino: Effata Editrice IT. ISBN 978-88-86617-54-3.

acknowledgment

 This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainHerbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). "Turin". Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company.

45°04′24″N 7°41′07″E / 45.0733°N 7.6854°E / 45.0733; 7.6854