The Diocese of Volterra () is a Latin church diocese of the Catholic Church in Tuscany, central Italy. It is a suffragan of the Archdiocese of Pisa.
History
Volterra was an ancient Etruscan town, later conquered by the Romans.
According to the Liber Pontificalis, Volterra was the birthplace of St. Linus, the immediate successor of St. Peter. Nothing is known of its Christian origins. Justus (560), along with his brother Clement and Ottaviano, is one of the three patrons of the diocese of Volterra, and was involved in the Schism of the Three Chapters.
In the Carolingian period it belonged to the Marquisate of Tuscany; with the approval of Henry, son of Frederick Barbarossa, its governance passed into the hands of the bishop, until his temporal authority was suspended by the commune. In the wars or factions of the 13th century, Volterra, being Ghibelline, was continually embroiled with the Florentines, who captured it in 1254, but won permanent control only in 1361.
The diocese of Volterra was immediately subject to the Holy See until 1856, when it became a suffragan of Pisa.
Diocesan synods
A diocesan synod was an irregularly held but important meeting of the bishop of a diocese and his clergy. Its purposes were to proclaim the various decrees already issued by the bishop, to discuss and ratify measures on which the bishop chose to consult with his clergy, and to publish statutes and decrees of the diocesan synod, of the provincial synod, and of the Holy See.
Bishop Guido Servidio (1574âÂÂ1598) presided over a diocesan synod in the cathedral of Volterra on 8âÂÂ10 May 1590, and had the constitutions of the meeting published. Bishop Orazio degli Albizzi (1655âÂÂ1676) held a diocesan synod on 2 October 1657, and published the acts; he held another synod on 11 November 1674. A diocesan synod was held by Bishop Ottavio del Rosso (1681âÂÂ1714) in the cathedral on 14âÂÂ15 June 1684, the acts of which were published. He held his second synod in the cathedral of Volterra on 26âÂÂ27 April 1690; its decrees were also published.
Bishops of Volterra
to 800
...
- Eumantius (before 496)
- Opilio (before 496)
- Eucharistius (494-496)
- Elpidius (attested 496, 501, 502)
- Gaudentius (attested 556)
Leo (566?)
- Geminianus (attested 649)
...
...
...
800 to 1200
...
[Andreas (820 or 822)]
- Grippo (attested 821)
- Petrus (attested 826, 833)
- Andreas (attested 845, 851, 853)
...
- Gauginus (attested 874, 882)
- Petrus (attested 886)
...
- Alboinus (attested 904âÂÂ908)
...
- Adelardus (attested 918âÂÂ929)
...
- Boso (attested 943âÂÂ959)
- Petrus (attested 966âÂÂ991)
- Benedictus (attested 997âÂÂ1015)
- Gunfredus (attested 1017âÂÂ1039)
- Guido (Wido) (attested 1042âÂÂ1061)
- Herimannus (attested 1064âÂÂ1073)
- Petrus (attested 1018âÂÂ1099)
- Ruggero Gisalbertini (1103âÂÂ1132)
- Crescentius (attested 1133âÂÂ1136)
- Adimarus (Odimarus, Odalmarus) (attested 1137âÂÂ1147)
- Galganus (attested 1150âÂÂ1168)
- Hugo Saladini (attested 1171âÂÂ1184)
- Hildebrandus (attested 1185âÂÂ1211)
1200 to 1500
- Paganus de Ardenghesca (1212âÂÂ1239)
- Galganus (1244âÂÂ1251)
- Rainerius Ubertini (1251âÂÂ1260)
- Albertus Scolari (1261âÂÂ1269)
Sede vacante (1269âÂÂ1273)
- Rainerius Ubertini (attested 1273âÂÂ1301)
- Rainerius Belforti (1301âÂÂ1320)
- Rainuccius Allegretti (1321âÂÂ1348)
- Filippo Belforti (1348âÂÂ1358)
- Almerico Chiati (1358âÂÂ1361) Bishop-elect
- Pietro Corsini (18 Mar 1362 âÂÂ1363)
- Andrea Cordoni (1363âÂÂ1373)
- Lucius de Cagli (1374âÂÂ1375)
- Simon Pagani (1375âÂÂ1384)
- Onofrio Visdomini O.E.S.A. (1384âÂÂ1390)
- Antonio Cipolloni (1390âÂÂ1396)
- Giovanni Ricci (1396âÂÂ1398)
- Luigi Aliotti (1398âÂÂ1411)
- Jacopo di Scolaio degli Spini (1411)
- Stefano del Buono (1411âÂÂ1435)
- Roberto Adimari (1435âÂÂ1439 Resigned)
- Roberto Cavalcanti (27 Apr 1440 â 25 Feb 1450)
- Giovanni Neroni Diotisalvi (21 Feb 1450 âÂÂ1462)
- Ugolino Giugni (1462âÂÂ1470)
- Antonio degli Agli (1470âÂÂ1477)
- Cardinal Francesco Soderini (1478âÂÂ1509 Resigned)
1500 to 1800
Cardinal Giovanni Salviati (1530-1532 Resigned) Administrator
since 1800
- Giuseppe Gaetano Incontri (6 Oct 1806 â 15 Apr 1848)
- Ferdinando Baldanzi (1851âÂÂ1855)
- Giuseppe Targioni (3 Aug 1857 â 17 Apr 1873)
- Ferdinando Capponi (25 Jul 1873 âÂÂ1881)
- Giuseppe Gelli (27 Mar 1882 â 2 Mar 1909)
- Emanuele Mignone (29 Apr 1909 âÂÂ1919)
- Raffaele Carlo Rossi, O.C.D. (22 Apr 1920 âÂÂ1923)
- Dante Carlo Munerati, S.D.B. (20 Dec 1923 â 20 Dec 1942)
- Antonio Bagnoli (17 Aug 1943 âÂÂ1954
- Ismaele Mario Castellano, O.P. (24 Aug 1954 â 3 Aug 1956 Resigned)
- Marino Bergonzini (12 Jan 1957 âÂÂ1970)
- Roberto Carniello (7 Oct 1975 â 5 Mar 1985 Resigned)
- Vasco Giuseppe Bertelli (25 May 1985 â 18 Mar 2000 Retired)
- Mansueto Bianchi (18 Mar 2000 âÂÂ2006)
- Alberto Silvani (8 May 2007 â 12 January 2022)
- Roberto Campiotti (12 January 2022 â present)
Notes and references
Books
- p. 763-764. (Use with caution; obsolete)
Studies
- [with many documents]
- Kehr, Paul Fridolin (1908). Italia pontificia. vol. III. Berlin 1908. pp. 279âÂÂ315.
- Lancini, Gaetano (1869). Illustrazione sulla cattedrale di Volterra. Siena: Sordo-Muti.
- Lanzoni, Francesco (1927), Le diocesi d'Italia dalle origini al principio del secolo VII (an. 604), Faenza 1927, pp. 559âÂÂ564.
- Paganelli, Jacopo (2015). ëEpiscopus vulterranus est dominusû. Il principato dei vescovi di Volterra fino a Federico II. Dissertation: University of Pisa. 2015.
- Paganelli, Jacopo (2015). "ëInfra nostrum episcopatum et comitatumû. Alcuni caratteri del principato vescovile di Volterra (IX-XIII sec.)". 2015, Rassegna Volterrana.
- Schwartz, Gerhard (1913), Die Besetzung der Bistümer Reichsitaliens unter den sächsischen und salischen Kaisern : mit den Listen der Bischöfe, 951-1122, Leipzig-Berlin 1913, pp. 223âÂÂ224.
- Schneider, Fedor (1907). Regestum volaterranum: Regesten der Urkunden von Volterra (778-1303). Roma: Loescher.
- Volpe, G. (1964). "Vescovi e Comune di Volterra," in: Toscana Medievale (Firenze: Sansoni 1964), pp. 143âÂÂ311.
External links
- Benigni, Umberto. "Volterra." The Catholic Encyclopedia. Vol. 15. New York: Robert Appleton Company, 1912. Retrieved: 29 February 2020.