The Diocese of Toul was a Roman Catholic diocese seated at Toul in present-day France. It existed from 365 until 1802. From 1048 until 1552 (de jure until 1648), it was also a state of the Holy Roman Empire.
History
The diocese was erected in 338 AD by St. Mansuetus. The diocese was a suffragan of the ecclesiastical province of Trier. In 550 AD, the Frankish Council of Toul was held in the city.
By the high Middle Ages, the diocese was located at the western edge of the Holy Roman Empire; it was bordered by France, the Duchy of Bar, and the Duchy of Lorraine. In 1048 it become a state of the Empire while that city of Toul itself became a Free Imperial City.
In 1552, both states were annexed by King Henry II of France; the annexations were formally recognized by the Empire in 1648 by the Peace of Westphalia. By then, they were part of the French province of the Three Bishoprics.
In 1766, the Duchy of Lorraine became part of France. In 1777 and 1778, territory was carved out of Toul to form two new dioceses: Saint Dié and Nancy, both of them suffragans of Trier. By the terms of the Concordat of 1802, Toul was suppressed. Its territory was merged with that of Nancy to form a new diocese â the Diocese of Nancy-Toul with it seat in Nancy. The geographic remit included three Departments of France: Meurthe, Meuse, and Vosges.
List of bishops and prince-bishops
Bishops
- Mansuetus 338âÂÂ375, first bishop
- Amon c. 400?
- Alchas c. 423?
- Gelsimus c. 455?
- Auspicius c. 478?
- Ursus around 490
- Aprus (Aper) 500âÂÂ507
- Aladius 508âÂÂ525?
- Trifsorich 525âÂÂ532
- Dulcitius 532?âÂÂ549
- Alodius c. 549
- Premon
- Antimund
- Eudolius c. 602
- Theofred 640âÂÂ653
- Bodo of Toul c. 660
- Eborinus around 664
- Leudinus 667?âÂÂ669
- Adeotatus 679âÂÂ680
- Ermentheus c. 690?
- Magnald c. 695?
- Dodo c. 705
- Griboald 706âÂÂ739?
- Godo 739?âÂÂ756
- Jakob 756âÂÂ767
- Borno 775âÂÂ794
- Wannich 794?âÂÂ813
- Frotar 814âÂÂ846
- Arnulf 847âÂÂ871
- Arnald 872âÂÂ894
- Ludhelm 895âÂÂ905
- Drogo 907âÂÂ922
- Gosselin 922âÂÂ962
- Gerard I 963âÂÂ994 (Saint Gerard)
- Stephen 994âÂÂ995
- Robert 995âÂÂ996
- Berthold 996âÂÂ1019
- Herman 1020âÂÂ1026
Prince-Bishops
- Bruno Egisheim-Dagsburg â (1026 - 12 February 1049; elected as Pope Leo IX, served until his death in 1054)
- Sede Vacant 1049-1051
- Odo 1052âÂÂ1069
- Pippo 1070âÂÂ1107
- Richwin of Commercy 1108âÂÂ1126
- Henry I of Lorraine 1127-1167
- Peter of Brixey 1168âÂÂ1192
- Odo of Vaudemont 1192âÂÂ1197
- Matthias of Lorraine 1197âÂÂ1206, â 1217
- Reinald of Chantilly 1210âÂÂ1217
- Gerard II of Vaudemont 1218âÂÂ1219
- Odo II of Sorcy 1219âÂÂ1228
- Garin 1228âÂÂ1230
- Roger of Marcey 1231âÂÂ1251
- Giles of Sorcy 1253âÂÂ1271
- Conrad II of Tübingen 1272âÂÂ1296
- John I of Sierck 1296âÂÂ1305
- Vito Venosa 1305âÂÂ1306
- Odo III of Grançon 1306âÂÂ1308
- Giacomo Ottone Colonna 1308âÂÂ1309
- John II of Arzillières 1309âÂÂ1320
- Amatus of Geneva 1320âÂÂ1330
- Thomas of Bourlemont 1330âÂÂ1353
- Bertrand de la Tour 1353âÂÂ1361
- Pietro di la Barreria 1361âÂÂ1363
- John III of Hoya 1363âÂÂ1372
- John IV of Neufchatel 1373âÂÂ1384, â 1398
- Savin de Floxence 1384âÂÂ1398
- Philip II de la Ville-sur-Illon 1399âÂÂ1409
- Henry II de la Ville-sur-Illom 1409âÂÂ1436
- Louis de Haraucourt 1437âÂÂ1449
- Guillaume Fillastre 1449âÂÂ1460
- John V de Chevrot 1460
- Anthony I of Neufchatel 1461âÂÂ1495
- Ulric of Blankenberg 1495âÂÂ1506
- Hugh des Hazards 1506âÂÂ1517
- John, Cardinal of Lorraine 1517âÂÂ1524, â 1544 (Bishop of Verdun 1523âÂÂ1544)
- Hector de Ailly-Rochefort 1526âÂÂ1532
- John, Cardinal of Lorraine (again) 1532âÂÂ1537
- Anthony II Pellagrin 1537âÂÂ1542
- John of Lorraine-Guise (again) 1542âÂÂ1543, â 1544
Bishops after the French annexation
See also
References
Bibliography
Reference Sources
- pp. 548âÂÂ549. (Use with caution; obsolete)
- p. 301. (in Latin)
- p. 175.
- p. 219.
Studies
External links