Italian Roman Catholic prelate
Pier Antonio Capobianco (26 January 1619 – 30 October 1689) was a Roman Catholic prelate who served as Bishop of Lacedonia from 1663 to 1672.[1]
Biography
Pier Antonio Capobianco was born in Naples, Italy, on 26 January 1619.[2] On 12 March 1663, he was appointed during the papacy of Pope Alexander VII as Bishop of Lacedonia.[1][2] He served as Bishop of Lacedonia until his resignation on 9 September 1672.[2] He died on 30 October 1689.[2]
Episcopal succession
Episcopal succession of Pier Antonio Capobianco
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While bishop, he was the principal co-consecrator of:[2]
- Nicolò d'Arcano, Bishop of Comacchio (1671);
- Stefano Sculco, Bishop of Gerace (1671);
- Carlo Pellegrini, Bishop of Avellino e Frigento (1673);
- Domenico Sorrentino (bishop), Bishop of Ruvo (1673);
- Nikola Spanic, Bishop of Korčula (1673);
- Giovanni Battista Desio, Bishop of Venosa (1674);
- Raffaele Riario Di Saono, Bishop of Montepeloso (1674);
- Domenico Antonio Bernardini, Bishop of Castellaneta (1677);
- Giacomo Santoro, Bishop of Bitetto (1677);
- Niels Stensen, Titular Bishop of Titopolis (1677);
- Jakub Gorecki, Bishop of Bacău (1678);
- Andrea Massarenghi, Bishop of Massa Lubrense (1678);
- Marcantonio Barbarigo, Archbishop of Corfù (1678);
- Carlo Felice de Matta, Bishop of San Severo (1678);
- Francesco Scannagatta, Bishop of Avellino e Frigento (1679);
- Carlo Berlingeri, Archbishop of Santa Severina (1679);
- Francesco Megale, Bishop of Isola (1679);
- Giacomo Villani, Bishop of Caiazzo (1679);
- Giovanni Battista Nepita, Bishop of Sant'Angelo dei Lombardi e Bisaccia (1680);
- Tommaso Guzzoni, Bishop of Sora (1681);
- Andrea Brancaccio, Bishop of Conversano (1681);
- Pietro Pietra (Petria), Bishop of Colle di Val d'Elsa (1681);
- Stefano Ghirardelli, Bishop of Alatri (1683);
- Agostino Fieschi, Bishop of Accia and Mariana (1683);
- Giambattista Quaranta, Bishop of Larino (1683);
- Domenico Menna, Bishop of Minori (1683);
- Vincenzo Maria Durazzo, Bishop of Savona (1683);
- Ferdinando de Rojas (Roxas), Bishop of Vigevano (1683);
- Giambattista Rubini, Bishop of Vicenza (1684);
- Giovanni Battista De Pace, Bishop of Capaccio (1684);
- Giambattista Morea, Bishop of Lacedonia (1684);
- Pietro Luigi Malaspina, Bishop of Cortona (1684);
- Giovanni Riccanale, Bishop of Boiano (1684);
- Girolamo Compagnone, Archbishop of Rossano (1685);
- Angelo Cerasi, Bishop of Bovino (1685);
- Giovanni Battista Antici, Bishop of Amelia (1685);
- Pietro Valentini, Bishop of Sovana (1685);
- Emiddio Lenti, Bishop of Nocera de' Pagani (1685);
- Domenico Valvassori, Bishop of Gravina di Puglia (1686);
- François Genet, Bishop of Vaison (1686);
- Paolo Naldini (bishop), Bishop of Capodistria (1686);
- Baldassare de Benavente, Bishop of Potenza (1686);
- Filippo Massarenghi, Bishop of Bitonto (1686);
- Stefano Giuseppe Menatti, Titular Bishop of Cyrene (1686);
- Tommaso Caracciolo, Bishop of Gerace (1687);
- Domenico Maria Marchese, Bishop of Pozzuoli (1688);
- Pietro Antonio d'Alessandro, Bishop of San Marco (1688);
- Andrea de Rossi (archbishop), Archbishop of Rossano (1688);
- Baldassarre Nosadini, Bishop of Krk (1688);
- Alfonso de Aloysio, Bishop of Squillace (1688);
- Francesco Verde, Bishop of Vico Equense (1688);
- Giovanni Battista Costa, Bishop of Sagone (1688);
- Giorgio Emo, Archbishop of Corfù (1688);
- Giovanni Vusich, Bishop of Nona (1688); and
- Manuel de la Torre Gutiérrez, Archbishop of Lanciano (1688).
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See also
References
External links and additional sources
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