Roman Catholic diocese in Italy
The Diocese of Caltagirone (Latin : Dioecesis Calatayeronensis ) is a Latin Church diocese of the Catholic Church situated in the east of Sicily . It is a suffragan of the archdiocese of Catania . Since 20 March 2012 the bishop is Calogero Peri .[ 1]
The diocese consists of fifteen towns in the province of Catania : Caltagirone , Castel di Judica , Grammichele , Mazzarrone , San Michele di Ganzaria , Raddusa , Ramacca , Mirabella Imbaccari , Scordia , Militello in Val di Catania , Palagonia , Mineo , Licodia Eubea , San Cono and Vizzini . The main town, where is St. Julian 's cathedral church , is Caltagirone .
The territory is subdivided into 57 parish churches .
History
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(October 2016 )
The diocese was created on 12 September 1817 with the papal bull Romanus Pontifex of Pope Pius VII , and the permission of the King of Naples which was registered on 20 February 1818.[ 2] Originally it was a suffragan of the diocese of Monreale , but from 20 May 1844 it entered in the ecclesiastic province of Siracusa . From 2 December 2000, with the Pope John Paul II 's papal bull , Ad maiori consulendum , the diocese became a suffragan of archdiocese of Catania . On 20 March 2010, the 15th bishop of Caltagirone , Calogero Peri , OFMCap, was the first bishop to be consecrated in St. Julian's cathedral of Caltagirone .
Bishops
Gaetano Maria Giuseppe Benedetto Placido Vincenzo Trigona e Parisi (21 December 1818 – 15 April 1833)[ 3]
Benedetto Denti, OSB (15 March 1833 – 3 August 1853)
Giuseppe Maria Maniscalco, OFM (17 April 1854 – 10 April 1855)[ 4]
Luigi Natoli (15 March 1858 – 22 February 1867)
Antonio Morana (23 February 1872 – 18 August 1879)
Giovanni Battista Bongiorno † (22 September 1879 – 14 March 1887)
Saverio Gerbino (14 March 1887 – 16 March 1898)
Damaso Pio De Bono (28 November 1898 – 17 December 1925)
Giovanni Bargiggia (14 March 1927 – 6 July 1937)
Pietro Capizzi (12 August 1937 – 11 November 1960)
Francesco Fasola , OSSGCN (11 November 1960 – 25 June 1963)
Carmelo Canzonieri (30 July 1963 – 8 January 1983)
Vittorio Luigi Mondello (30 July 1983 – 28 July 1990)
Vincenzo Manzella (30 April 1991 – 17 September 2009)
Calogero Peri, OFMCap, from 30 January 2010
See also
Notes
^ Catholic Hierarchy page .
^ Andrea Gallo, ed. (1846). Codice ecclesiastico sicolo contenente le costituzioni, i capitoli del Regno, le sanzioni, le prammatiche, i reali dispacci, le leggi, i decreti, i reali rescritti ed altri documenti relativi alle materie del diritto ecclesiastico sicolo, dalla fondazione della monarchia siciliana sino a' nostri giorni opera dell'avv. Andrea Gallo: 2 (in Italian and Latin). Vol. II. Palermo: Stamperia Carini. pp. 72– 73.
^ Saverio Grasso, in Vincenzo D'Avino (1848). Cenni storici sulle chiese arcivescovili, vescovili, e prelatizie (nulluis) del Regno delle Due Sicilie (in Italian). Napoli: Ranucci. p. 131 .
^ Zigarelli, Giuseppe (1856). Storia della Cattedra di Avellino e de'suoi pastori, con brevi notizie de'Metropolitani della chiesa di Benevento seguito dalla serie cronologica de'vescovi di Frigento e da una esatta descrizione de'luoghi onde di presente viene composta la prima opera (in Italian). Zigarelli, Gius (1856). Volume II . Napoli: Vaglio, pp. 259-311.
External links
Roman Catholic Ecclesiastical Province of Catania
37°14′00″N 14°31′00″E / 37.2333°N 14.5167°E / 37.2333; 14.5167