Catholic archdiocese of Ephesus
The Catholic Archdiocese of Ephesus is a suppressed and titular see of the Roman Catholic Church. It is the Catholic counterpart of the Greek Orthodox Metropolis of Ephesus, which is a titular bishopric under Patriarchate of Constantinople.
History
Both the Catholic and Orthodox churches lay claim to the ancient bishopric founded in the 1st century by Saint Timothy.Beginning in the 14th century, Ephesus was one of the archbishopric claimed by the Catholic Church, due in part to the Catholic Church involvement in the east Mediterranean.
The first known bishop was Franciscan named Corrado (fl1318) whom Le Quien called vir doctus et in linguis orientalis versatus.
On several occasions the bishopric was attributed to bishops who later became cardinals. The last Catholic holder was Giovanni Enrico Boccella, emeritus bishop of Smyrna, who died on 22 May 1992.
Catholic Bishops
- Corrado, O.F.M. †
- Raimondo Stefano, O.P. †
- Guglielmo,
- Giovanni di Perugia,
- Federico Mons,
- Luca Borsciani Cybo,
- Pierre de Villars †
- Vitalis de L'Estang
- Jacobus de la Torre
- Vitaliano Visconti
- Opisto Pallavicini
- Francesco Liberati
- Antonio Francesco Sanvitale
- Giacomo Caracciolo †
- Domenico Silvio Passionei
- Antonio Maria Pescatori, of Gallipoli
- Antonio Eugenio Visconti
- Nicola Buschi
- Benedict Sinibaldi
- Paolo Leardi
- Giovanni Soglia Ceroni
- Lodovico Altieri
- Alessandro Asinari of San Marzano †
- Francesco Folicaldi
- Tobias Kirby †
- Sebastiano Martinelli,
- Donato Raffaele Sbarretti Tazza †
- Lorenzo Lauri
- Valerio Valeri
- Sebastiano Baggio
- Giovanni Enrico Boccella