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Archdiocese of Toledo

The Archdiocese of Toledo () is a Latin Church archdiocese of the Catholic Church located in Spain. They are also the Primates of Spain. It was, according to tradition, established in the 1st century by James the Great and was elevated to an archdiocese in 313 after the Edict of Milan. The incumbent Metropolitan Archbishop also bears the title Primate of Spain and since 1937 the title General Vicar of the Armies (but the pastoral care for the Spanish armed forces is now provided, since 1986, by the Military Archbishopric of Spain)

List

Bishops

  1. Eugenius (1st century?) – legendary, supposedly a disciple of Dionysius the Areopagite
  2. <li value="2"> Melantius (286?–306?)

There are thought to have been bishops between and after these two, but their identities and dates of tenure are unknown.

Archbishops

  1. <li value="3"> Patruinus (325–335)
  2. Toribius (335–345)
  3. Quintus (345–355)
  4. Vincent (355–365)
  5. Paulatus (365–375)
  6. Natallus (375–385)
  7. Audentius (385–395)
  8. (395–412)
  9. Isicius (412–427)
  10. Martin I (427–440)
  11. Castinus (440–454)
  12. Campeius (454–467)
  13. Sinticius (467–482)
  14. Praumatus (482–494)
  15. Petrus I (494–508)
  16. (?–520)
  17. (523–531)
  18. Julian I
  19. Bacauda
  20. Petrus II
  21. Exuperius
  22. Adelphus
  23. Conancius
  24. (603–615)
  25. Eladius (615–633)
  26. Justus (633–636)
  27. Eugenius I (636–646)
  28. <li value="31"> Eugenius II (646–657)
  29. Ildefonso (657–667)
  30. Quiricus (667–680)
  31. Julian II (680–690)
  32. Sisbert (690–693)
  33. Felix (694–700)
  34. Gunderic (700–710)
  35. Sindered (711–?)
  36. Cixila (745/774–754/783)
  37. Elipandus (754/783–808?)
  38. (?–828)
  39. (?–858)
  40. *(Eulogius 859; elected but did not take office)
  41. (859–892)
  42. (892–926)

See vacant due to Muslim rule (Umayyad Caliphate of Córdoba)

  1. <li value="48"> (1058–1080)
  2. * Vacant
  3. Bernard de Sedirac (1086–1124)
  4. Raymond de Sauvetât (1124–1152)
  5. Juan II (1152–1166)
  6. Cerebruno (1167–1180)
  7. Pedro III de Cardona (1181–1182)
  8. Gonzalo I Petrez (1182–1191)
  9. Martín II López de Pisuerga (1192–1208)
  10. Rodrigo Jimenez de Rada (1209–1247)
  11. Juan III Medina de Pomar (1248–1248)
  12. Gutierre I Ruiz Dolea (1249–1250)
  13. Infante Sancho of Castile (1251–1261)
  14. Domingo Pascual (1262–1265)
  15. Infante Sancho of Aragon (1266–1275)
  16. Fernando I Rodriguez de Covarubias (1276–1280)
  17. Gonzalo II Pérez Gudiel (1280–1299)
  18. Gonzalo III Diaz Palomeque (1299–1310)
  19. Gutierre II Gomez de Toledo (1310–1319)
  20. Juan III, Infante of Aragon (1319–1328); also Latin Patriarch of Alexandria
  21. Jimeno de Luna (1328–1338)
  22. Gil Alvarez de Albornoz (1338–1350)
  23. Gonzalo IV de Aguilar (1351–1353)
  24. Blas Fernandez de Toledo (1353–1362)
  25. Gómez Manrique (bishop) (1362–1375)
  26. Pedro IV Tenorio (1375–1399)
  27. * Vacant
  28. Pedro V de Luna (1403–1414)
  29. Sancho III de Rojas (1415–1422)
  30. Juan IV Martinez de Contreras (1423–1434)
  31. Juan V de Cerezuela (1434–1442)
  32. Gutierre III Alvarez de Toledo (1442–1445)
  33. Alfonso Carillo de Acuna (1446–1482)
  34. Pedro VI Gonzalez de Mendoza (1482–1495)
  35. Francisco I Ximénez de Cisneros (1495–1517)
  36. Guillermo de Croy (1517–1521)
  37. * Vacant
  38. Alonso III Fonseca (1523–1534)
  39. Juan VI Pardo Tavera (1534–1545)
  40. Juan VII Martinez Silecio (1545–1557)
  41. Bartolomé Carranza (1558–1576)
  42. Gaspar I de Quiroga y Vela (1577–1594)
  43. Albert of Austria (1595–1598), later Archduke of Austria
  44. García Loaysa y Girón (1598–1599)
  45. Bernardo II de Sandoval y Rojas (1599–1618)
  46. * Vacant
  47. Ferdinand of Austria (Apostolic Administrator, 1620–1641)
  48. * Vacant
  49. Gaspar II de Borja y Velasco (1645)
  50. Baltasar Moscoso y Sandoval (1646–1665)
  51. Pascual II de Aragon (1666–1677)
  52. Luis Manuel Fernández de Portocarrero (1677–1709)
  53. * Vacant
  54. Francisco Valero y Losa (1715–1720)
  55. Diego de Astorga y Céspedes (1720–1724)
  56. * Vacant
  57. Luis I de Borbon y Farnesio (1735–1754)
  58. Luis II Fernandez de Cordoba (1755–1771)
  59. Francisco Antonio de Lorenzana (1772–1800)
  60. Luis María de Borbón y Vallabriga, 14th Count of Chinchón (1800–1823)
  61. (1824–1836)
  62. * Vacant
  63. Juan José Bonel y Orbe (1849–1857)
  64. (1857–1872)
  65. * Vacant
  66. (1875–1884)
  67. Zeferino González y Díaz Tuñón (1885–1886)
  68. (1886–1891)
  69. Antolín Monescillo y Viso (1892–1898)
  70. Bl. Ciriaco María Sancha y Hervás (1898–1909)
  71. Gregorio Maria Aguirre y Garcia (1909–1913)
  72. Victoriano Guisasola y Menendez (1913–1920)
  73. Enrique Almaraz y Santos (1920–1921)
  74. Enrique Reig y Casanova (1922–1927)
  75. Pedro Segura y Sáenz (1927–1931)
  76. * Vacant
  77. Isidro Goma y Tomas (1933–1940)
  78. Enrique Pla y Deniel (1941–1968)
  79. Vicente Enrique y Tarancón (1969–1972)
  80. Marcelo Gonzalez Martin (1972–1995)
  81. Francisco Alvarez Martínez (1995–2002)
  82. Antonio Cañizares Llovera (2002–2008)
  83. Braulio Rodríguez Plaza (2009–2019)
  84. Francisco Cerro Chaves (2019–present)

Auxiliary bishops in the archdiocese

Suffragan dioceses

See also

References