The
See of Athens is one of the oldest Christian bishoprics, dating back to
Hierotheos the Thesmothete in the mid-1st century AD. In ca. 800, it was raised to a
metropolitan see. In 1205, the city was captured by the
Crusaders, who had conquered
Constantinople and dissolved the
Byzantine Empire the year before. The city's incumbent
Greek Orthodox bishop,
Michael Choniates, retired to the island of
Kea, and a Latin Catholic archbishop was installed in his place, with the French cleric Berard being elected to the post in 1206. The Crusaders largely maintained the ecclesiastical order they found, appointing Catholic bishops to replace the Orthodox prelates. Thus, in a letter by
Pope Innocent III to Berard in 1209, 11
suffragan sees are mentioned under Athens, identical to those under Byzantine rule, although most of them were
de facto vacant:
Negroponte (
Egripontis),
Thermopylae (
Cermopilensis, seat in
Bodonitsa),
Davleia (
Davaliensem),
Aulon (
Abelonensem),
Oreoi (
Zorconensis),
Karystos (
Caristiensem),
Koroneia (
Coroniacensem), Andros (
Andrensem),
Megara (
Megarensem),
Skyros (
Squirensem), and Kea (
Cheensem). In the
Provinciale Romanum, a list of the sees subordinate to the
See of Rome, dating to some time before 1228, the number of suffragans is reduced to eight: Thermopylae, Daulia,
Salona, Negroponte, Aulon, Oreoi, Megara, and Skyros. The Catholic see remained vacant for a period after the
Catalan Company conquered the
Duchy of Athens in 1311 due to the Catalans' conflict with the papacy, and a residential archbishop is not attested until around the mid-14th century. Beginning with
Dorotheus I ca. 1388, the Orthodox bishops of Athens, who had been continued to be appointed as titular holders since the Latin conquest, were allowed to resume residence in the city, but the Latin Archbishop retained his pre-eminent position until the conquest of the
Duchy of Athens by the
Ottoman Empire in 1456. The last Latin Archbishop, Nicholas Protimo, fled to Venetian-held
Euboea, where he died in 1482. The Catholic see was held by
titular archbishops thereafter. On 23 July 1875, the see was restored as the modern Catholic Archdiocese of Athens, ministering to the Catholic inhabitants of the Greek capital and most of mainland Greece. Caritas Athens, founded in 1978 and a member of
Caritas Hellas, is the official social arm of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Athens. ==List of Archbishops of Athens ==