Suburbicarian Diocese of Sabina–Poggio Mirteto


The Diocese of Sabina–Poggio Mirteto is a Latin suburbicarian see of the Holy Roman Church and a diocese of the Catholic Church in Italy in the Roman province of the Pope.

History

Sabina

Sabina has been the seat of such a bishopric since the 6th century, though the earliest names in the list of bishops may be apocryphal.
The ancient cathedral of San Salvatore of Sabina was located in Forum Novum.
The official papal province of Sabina was established under Pope Paul V in 1605.
Since 1842 the Cardinal Bishop of Sabina has also borne the title of Territorial Abbot of Farfa.

Poggio Mirteto

The Diocese of Poggio Mirteto, in central Italia region Lazio's Province of Rieti, was a Latin bishopric from 1841 until its merger in to the Diocese of Sabina in 1925. Poggio Mirteto was previously under the jurisdiction of the Territorial Abbey of Farfa, which later passed to the Diocese of Sabina.
The diocese of Poggio Mirteto was established on November 25, 1841 from territory split off from the Roman Catholic Diocese of Rieti, the Diocese of Sabina and the suppressed Territorial Abbacy of San Salvatore Maggiore, whose old collegiate church became the cathedral, and a diocesan seminary was established.
The diocese had in the early 20th century 38 parishes, with 32,600 inhabitants, 2 religious houses of men and 8 of sisters, under whose direction were the schools for girls in several communes.

Sabina–Poggio Mirteto

Since 1925, the cardinalitial suburbicarian see of Sabina has been united to that of Poggio Mirteto, and has been officially named Sabina e Poggio Mirteto, since 1986 Sabina–Poggio Mirteto. Some of territory of Poggio Mirteto was returned to the other mother-bishopric, the Diocese of Rieti.
The current Cardinal-Bishop is Giovanni Battista Re, while the Ordinary of the Diocese is Bishop Ernesto Mandara.

Cardinal-bishops of Sabina

''If ?, century or c. is given, exact years or dates have not yet been found for his tenure.''

To 1000

  • Mariano
  • Pietro
  • Issa
  • Teodoro
  • Samuele
  • Sergio
  • Leone
  • Gregorio
  • Anastasio
  • Giovanni
  • Giovanni
  • Domenico
  • Benedetto
  • Rainiero

    1000 to 1300

  • John of Crescenzi, future Pope Sylvester III
  • Ubaldo, first cardinal-bishop
  • *Regizzone , pseudocardinal
  • Crescenzio, seniore
  • Crescenzio, iuniore
  • Corrado della Suburra
  • Gregorio
  • Gregorio de Suburra
  • Conrad of Wittelsbach
  • * Giovanni, pseudocardinal of Antipope Callisto III
  • Giovanni di San Paolo
  • Peter of Benevento
  • Aldobrandino Orsini
  • Olivier von Paderborn
  • Jean Halgrin d'Abbeville, O.Clun.
  • Goffredo da Castiglione,
  • William of Modena
  • Pierre de Bar, Cistercian
  • Guido il Grosso 1261–1265, elected Pope Clement IV
  • Bertrand de Saint-Martin, Benedictine
  • Gerardo Bianchi

    1300–1500

  • Pedro Rodríguez
  • Arnaud de Falguières
  • Guillaume Pierre Godin, Dominican
  • Matteo Orsini, Dominican
  • Pedro Gòmez de Barroso
  • Bertrand de Déaulx
  • Egidio Albornoz
  • Guillaume d'Aigrefeuille, Benedictine
  • Philippe de Cabassoles
  • Jean de Blauzac
  • Hughes de Montelais the younger, called de Bretagne
  • Pierre de Sortenac
  • Philippe Valois d'Alençon second son of Charles II, Count of Alençon
  • Jaime de Aragón
  • Francesco Carbone Tomacelli, Cistercian
  • Enrico Minutoli
  • Jean Flandrin
  • Pedro Fernández
  • Francesco Lando
  • Giordano Orsini
  • Branda da Castiglione
  • Basilios Bessarion
  • Amedeo di Savoia, served as antipope Felix V 1439–1449
  • Isidore of Kiev
  • Juan de Torquemada
  • Basilios Bessarion
  • Alain de Coëtivy
  • Berardo Eroli
  • Giuliano della Rovere
  • Oliviero Carafa

    1500–1700

  • Girolamo Basso della Rovere
  • Raffaele Riario
  • Giovanni Antonio Sangiorgio
  • Bernardino López de Carvajal
  • Francesco Soderini
  • Niccolò Fieschi
  • Alessandro Farnese
  • Antonio Maria Ciocchi del Monte
  • Pietro Accolti
  • Giovanni Domenico de Cupis
  • Bonifacio Ferrero
  • Lorenzo Campeggio
  • Antonio Sanseverino
  • Antonio Pucci
  • Giovanni Salviati
  • Giovanni Pietro Carafa
  • François de Tournon
  • Robert de Lenoncourt
  • Giovanni Morone
  • Alessandro Farnese
  • Ranuccio Farnese
  • Cristoforo Madruzzo, sometime between 1567 and 1578
  • Tiberio Crispo
  • Giovanni Michele Saraceni
  • Giovanni Battista Cicala
  • Otto Truchsess von Waldburg
  • Giulio della Rovere
  • Giovanni Ricci
  • Scipione Rebiba
  • Giacomo Savelli
  • Giovanni Antonio Serbelloni
  • Antoine Perrenot de Granvelle
  • Innico d'Avalos d'Aragona Order of Santiago
  • Tolomeo Gallio
  • Gabriele Paleotti
  • Ludovico Madruzzo
  • Girolamo Rusticucci
  • Simeone Tagliavia d'Aragonia
  • François de Joyeuse
  • Antonmaria Sauli
  • Benedetto Giustiniani
  • Pietro Aldobrandini
  • Odoardo Farnese
  • Bonifazio Bevilacqua Aldobrandini
  • Carlo Gaudenzio Madruzzo
  • Scipione Borghese
  • Felice Centini, OFMConv]
  • Francesco Cennini de' Salamandri
  • Carlo de' Medici, Giovanni Carlo de' Medici
  • Francesco Barberini
  • Bernardino Spada
  • Giulio Cesare Sacchetti
  • Marzio Ginetti
  • Francesco Maria Brancaccio
  • Giulio Gabrielli
  • Niccolò Albergati-Ludovisi
  • Pietro Vito Ottoboni
  • Carlo Pio di Savoia
  • Paluzzo Paluzzi Altieri degli Albertoni
  • Giannicolò Conti
  • Gasparo Carpegna

    1700–1925

  • Fulvio Astalli
  • Francesco Pignatelli
  • Francesco Acquaviva d'Aragona
  • Pietro Ottoboni
  • Annibale Albani
  • Vincenzo Bichi
  • Raniero d'Elci
  • Silvio Valenti Gonzaga
  • Joaquín Fernàndez de Portocarrero Mendoza
  • Gian Francesco Albani
  • Carlo Rezzonico iuniore
  • Andrea Corsini
  • Giovanni Archinto
  • Giovanni Andrea Archetti
  • Ippolito Antonio Vincenti Mareri
  • Lorenzo Litta
  • Tommaso Arezzo
  • Carlo Odescalchi
  • Antonio Domenico Gamberini
  • Luigi Emmanuele Nicolo Lambruschini
  • Giacomo Luigi Brignole
  • Gabriele Ferretti
  • Girolamo D'Andrea
  • Karl August von Reisach
  • Giuseppe Milesi Pironi Ferretti
  • Luigi Bilio, Barnabite
  • Tommaso Martinelli, OSA
  • Luigi Serafini
  • Mario Mocenni
  • Francesco di Paola Cassetta
  • Gaetano de Lai

    Episcopal ordinaries of Poggio Mirteto

The first bishop was Nicolo Crispigni. The last was Cardinal Gaetano de Lai.
;Bishops of Poggio Mirteto