Archdiocese of Syracuse
The Archdiocese of Siracusa or Syracuse is a Latin Church ecclesiastical territory or diocese of the Catholic Church in Sicily. It became an archdiocese in 1844. The current archbishop is Francesco Lomanto.
History
claimed to be the second Church founded by St. Peter, after that of Antioch. It also claims that St. Paul preached there. As its first bishop it venerates St. Marcianus, whose dates are uncertain, though some claim he was ordained by St. Peter himself. Little trust can be placed in the authenticity of the list of the seventeen bishops who were predecessors of Chrestus, to whom the Emperor Constantine wrote a letter.In the times of St. Cyprian, Christianity certainly flourished at Syracuse, and the catacombs located there attest to Christian worship there in the 2nd century. Besides its martyred bishops, Syracuse claims other Christian martyrs, such as Saints Benignus and Evagrius, St. Bassianus ; and the martyrdom of the deacon Euplus and the virgin St. Lucy under Diocletian are thought to be historical.
The names of the known bishops of the following century are few in number: Germanus ; Eulalius ; Agatho, during whose rule Pope Vigilius died at Syracuse; another bishop was denounced by Pope Honorius for the protection which he accorded to prostitutes; St. Zozimus, who founded the monastery of Santa Lucia fuori-le-mura; St. Elias.
Of Marcianos II, it is said that he was consecrated not at Rome, but at Syracuse, since the Emperor Leo the Isaurian had removed Southern Italy from the jurisdiction of Rome, and had then elevated Syracuse to the dignity of a metropolitan see, over the thirteen other dioceses of Sicily. Bishop Stephen II was present at the Second Council of Nicaea, and carried to Constantinople the relics of St. Lucy for safety against the Saracen incursions.
Archbishop Gregorios Asbestas was deposed by Ignatius of Constantinople|Ignatius], who had become Patriarch of Constantinople in 847, though Ignatius' election and then his act of deposition of Gregory were condemned by Pope Leo IV. Gregory and two other bishops had appealed to Rome, and Pope Leo insisted that no bishop should be deposed without the consent of Rome. Gregory then became the principal supporter of Patriarch St. Photius, and actually carried out his consecration in 857. He lost his See when Syracuse fell to the Arabs.
After Syracuse fell to the Arabs in 878, Bishop Sophronius was thrown into prison at Palermo together with the monk Theodosius, where he died in a dungeon. Until the Norman Conquest in the eleventh century the names of other bishops are not known. The series of bishops begins again in 1093 with Bishop Rogerius, who received the pallium from Pope Urban II.
On 19 October 1188, Pope Celestine III wrote to the Archbishop of Monreale, Guglielmo, finally settling the dissention between Siracusa and Monreale over the right to metropolitan status, which had turned into a scandal. The Pope decided that the pallium, which the Archbishops of Siracusa had been accustomed to wear through the indulgence of the Holy See, should not be used by the bishop of Syracuse and his successors. The diocese of Siracusa became suffragan of the archdiocese of Monreale.
Among the bishops of this period were:
- Pietro de Urries, ambassador of Emperor Charles V to the Fifth Lateran Council;
- Jacopo Orozco, who introduced the Roman ritual in place of the Gallican, and who founded the seminary.
On 6 May 1950, Pope Pius XII established the new Roman Catholic [Diocese of Ragusa, Sicily|diocese of Ragusa] out of the territory of the Archdiocese of Siracusa, and made it suffragan to the ecclesiastical province of Siracusa. The Archbishop of Siracusa, Ettore Baranzini, was appointed to guide the formation of the new diocese, and, on 9 September 1950, the Papal Legate, Cardinal Ernesto Ruffini of Palermo, handed over the new diocese to Archbishop Baranzini. His Auxiliary Bishop, Francesco Pennisi, was appointed Vicar General of Ragusa and took up residence in the town of some 73,000. On 1 October 1955, the definitive separation of the two dioceses took effect, and Bishop Pennisi became the first bishop of Ragusa.
Bishops
Diocese of Siracusa
Erected: 2nd CenturyLatin Name: Syracusanus
''Metropolitan: Archdiocese of Monreale''
Before 1400
- Chrestus
- Eulalius
- Maximianus, O.S.B.
- Ioannes
- Gregory Asbestas
- Sophronius
- Riccardus Palmeri
- Laurentius
- Gottofredus
- Andreas
- Adam
- Bartolomeo
- Gualterus de Palena
- Conradus
- Gregorius
- Mathaeus de Panormo
- Reynaldus de Lusio
- Simon de Leontino, O.P.
- Domenico de Saragossa, O.P.
- Philippus de Sanchio
- Petrus de Montecateno
- Thomas de Herbes, O.S.B.
From 1400 to 1600
- Rogerius
- Joannes Garsias, O.P.
- Paolo de Santafé
- Giacopo Antonio Venier
- Andrea Tolomei
- Dalmazio Gabrielli, O.P.
- Guillermo Raimundo Centelles
- Pedro de Urieta
- Ludovico Platamone
- Girolamo Beccadelli Bologna
- Juan Orozco de Arce
- Gilberto Isfar y Corillas
- Juan Castellano Orozco
From 1600 to 1840
- Giuseppe Saladino
- Juan Torres de Osorio
- Paolo Faraone
- Fabrizio Antinori
- Francesco d'Elia e Rossi
- Giovanni Antonio Capobianco
- Francesco Maria Rini, O.F.M.
- Francesco Fortezza
- Asdrubale Termini
- Tomás Marín, O.P.
- Matteo Trigona
- Francesco Maria Testa
- Giuseppe Antonio de Requeséns, O.S.B.
- Giovanni Battista Alagona
- Gaetano Maria Bonanno
- Filippo Trigona
- Giuseppe-Maria Amorelli
Archbishops of Siracusa
- Michele Manzo
- Angelo Robino
- Giuseppe Guarino
- Benedetto Lavecchia Guarnieri, O.F.M.
- Giuseppe Fiorenza
- Luigi Bignami
- Giacomo Carabelli
- Ettore Baranzini
- Giuseppe Bonfigioli
- Calogero Lauricella
- Giuseppe Costanzo
- Salvatore Pappalardo
- Francesco Lomanto
Books
Studies
- Kamp, Norbert. Kirche und Monarchie im staufischen Königreich Sizilien: München: Wilhelm Fink 1975
- ;