Roman Catholic Diocese of Salamanca
The Diocese of Salamanca is a Latin diocese of the Catholic Church located in the city of Salamanca in the ecclesiastical province of Valladolid in Spain.
History
The See of Salamanca is of unknown origin. St. Secundus is said to have founded the Diocese of Avila. Signatures of bishops of Salamanca are found in the Councils of Toledo; in the third council is that of Eleutherius; at the coronation of King Gondemar, that of Teveristus; in the fourth and sixth of Hiccila; in the seventh, eighth and tenth, of Egeretus; in the Provincial Council of Mérida the signature of Justus;in the twelfth of Toledo that of Providentius; in the thirteenth, fifteenth, and sixteenth, of Holemund, probably contemporaneous with the Muslim invasion.Alfonso I the Catholic pushed his conquests as far as Salamanca, and Ordoño I of Asturias captured the city, but its bishops continued to reside in Asturias, where the Church of San Julian, outside the walls of Oviedo, was assigned to them. Bishop Quindulfus signed a royal deed of gift. Ramiro II of León, who defeated the Muslim forces at Simancas, began to repopulate Salamanca. In 1102 the king's son-in-law Raymond, Count of Burgundy, and his wife Urraca of Castile, gave the churches of the city to Don Jerónimo, the count's master, and built the Cathedral of S. Maria. The celebrated bishop, comrade of the Cid Campeador, died in 1120 and was interred in the newly built basilica, to which he left the "Christ of the Battles".
Later bishops were:
- Gerardo; Munio, a partisan of Alfonso of Aragon;
- Berengario, consecrated in 1135 and transferred to Santiago de Compostela in 1151;
- Navarro;
- Ordoño Gonzalo;
- Pedro Suárez de Deza, praised by Pope Alexander III for learning and prudence;
- Vitalis, who maintained the validity of Alfonso IX's marriage with his cousin Teresa of Portugal against the censures of Pope Celestine III and the sentence of the bishops presided over by Cardinal Guillermo in 1197.
Bishop Juan Lucero accompanied King Alfonso XI to the conquest of Algeciras. Later on he became subservient to the caprices of Pedro I the Cruel and annulled his marriage with Blanche of Bourbon in order to unite him with Juana de Castro. Lucero's successor, Alsonso Barrasa, on the contrary, supported Henry of Trastamare against Pedro. In May, 1382, a council was held at Salamanca to take action in the matter of the schism of Avignon, and Castile decided in favour of the antipope. In another council Salamanca again recognized Peter de Luna as pope. At this time Vincent Ferrer laboured to convert the Jews of Salamanca; from 1460 to 1478 John of Sahagun preached in the diocese.
Special churches
- Minor Basilicas:
- * Basílica de Santa Teresa, Alba de Tormes, Salamanca, Castilla y Leon
List of bishops
Roman period
- Pius
- Cetulus
- Salutatus
- Peter I
- Peter II
- Germanus
- Savius
- John
- Juvencius
Visigothic period
- Eleutherius
- Teveristus
- Hiccila
- Egeretus
- Justus
- Providentius
- Holemund
Astru-Leonese period
- Quindulf
- Duclidius I
- Sebastian I
- Fredesind
- Duclidius II
- Theodomund
- Salvatus
- Sebastian II
- Gonzalo I
Leonese–Castilian period
- Jerome
- Gerald
- Munio
- Alonso Pérez
- Navarro
- Berengar, translated to Santiago de Compostela
- Íñigo Navarro
- Ordoño González
- Gonzalo II
- Pedro Suárez de Deza, translated to Santiago de Compostela
- Vitalis
- Gonzalo Fernández
- Diego
- Pelagius or Peter
- Martín Fernández
- Mateo de Reinal, translated to Cuenca
- Pedro Pérez
- Domingo Martínez
- Gonzalo Rodríguez
- Nuño Fernández, elected, never consecrated
- Pedro Suárez
- Pedro Fechor
- Alfonso
- Peter V
- Bernardo Juan de Compostela
- Gonzalo González de Toledo
- Alonso OO
- Lorenzo I
- Lorenzo y Rodrigo Díaz
- Juan Lucero, translated to Segovia
- Alfonso Barasaque, cardinal
- Alfonso II
- Juan de Castellanos
- Peter
- Carlos de Guevara
- Diego de Anaya Maldonado, translated to Cuenca
- Alonso de Carrillo, cardinal
- Gonzalo de Alba
- Alfonso de Cusanza
- Sancho López de Castilla
- Alfonso V
- Gonzalo Pérez de Vivero
- Raffaele Sansone Riario, cardinal
- Diego Meléndez de Valdés, elect, never consecrated
- Hernando de Talavera, named bishop of Ávila
- Pedro Díaz de Toledo
Modern period
- Oliviero Carafa
- Diego de Deza, OP
- Juan de Castilla
- Francisco Bobadilla
- Luis Cabeza de Vaca
- Rodrigo Mendoza Manrique
- Pedro Castro Lemos
- Pedro Acuña Avellaneda
- Francisco Manrique de Lara
- Pedro González Mendoza
- Francisco Soto Salazar
- Fernando Tricio Arenzana
- Jerónimo Manrique de Lara (bishop of Salamanca)
- Pedro Junco Posada
- Luis Fernández de Córdoba
- Diego Ordonez, OFM
- Francisco Hurtado de Mendoza y Ribera
- Antonio Corrionero
- Cristóbal de la Cámara y Murga
- Juan Valenzuela Velázquez
- Juan Ortiz de Zárate (bishop)
- Francisco Diego Alarcón y Covarrubias
- Pedro Carrillo Acuña y Bureba
- Juan Pérez Delgado
- Antonio Peña Hermosa
- Francisco Antonio Díaz de Cabrera
- Gabriel de Esparza Pérez
- Francisco de Seijas Losada
- Pedro de Salazar Gutiérrez de Toledo, OdeM
- José Cosío Barreda
- Martín Ascargorta
- Francisco Calderón de la Barca Nieto
- Silvestre García Escalona
- José Sancho Granado
- José Zorrilla de Sanmartín
- Felipe Beltrán Serrano
- Andrés José Barco Espinosa
- Felipe Antonio Fernández Vallejo
- Antonio Tavira Almazán
- Gerardo José Andrés Vázquez Parga, OCist
- Agustín Lorenzo Varela Temes
- Salvador Sanz Grado
- Antolín García Lozano
- Fernando de la Puente y Primo de Rivera
- Anastasio Rodrigo Yusto
- Joaquín Lluch y Garriga, OCD
- Narciso Martínez Izquierdo
- Tomás Jenaro de Cámara y Castro, OSA
- Francisco Javier Valdés y Noriega, OSA
- Julián de Diego y García Alcolea
- Ángel Regueras y López
- Francisco Frutos y Valiente
- Enrique Pla y Deniel
- Francisco Barbado y Viejo, OP
- Mauro Rubio Repullés
- Braulio Rodríguez Plaza
- Carlos López Hernández
- José Luis Retana Gozalo