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Archdiocese of Rossano-Cariati

The Archdiocese of Rossano–Cariati is a Latin diocese of the Catholic Church in Calabria that has existed since 597, beginning as the Diocese of Rossano. It is a suffragan of the Archdiocese of Cosenza-Bisignano.

History
Middle Ages In 597, the Diocese of Rossano was established from the former Diocese of Thurio. The first known bishop of this see is Valerianus, Bishop of the "Ecclesia Rosana" in the Roman Council of 680. In 982 Emperor Otto II captured Rossano temporarily from the Byzantines, who had made it the capital of their possessions in Southern Italy. It preserved its Greek character long after its conquest by the Normans after which its Greek bishop acknowledged papal jurisdiction at the synod of Melfi in 1089. The Cattedrale di Maria Santissima Achiropita is the seat of the Archbishop of Rossano-Cariati. Built in the 11th century, it houses an ancient image of the Madonna Acheropita, an image of the Madonna and Child dated to somewhere between about 580 and the first half of the 8th century. In 1460, the Diocese was elevated to an Archdiocese. The famous Codex Rossanensis was discovered in 1879 in the Rossano cathedral sacristy. Inspired by Pope Francis' encyclical ''Laudato si''', the nuns of the Convent of Saint Augustine in Rossano developed in conjunction with ten sponsoring organizations, the Rossano Garden Park project. They arrived in Rossano in 2009 from Eremo di Lecceto in Siena; St. Augustine's is the first convent of Augustinian nuns in Calabria. ==Rite==
Rite
In the tenth century, or perhaps earlier, the Greek Rite was introduced at Rossano, and continued until the sixteenth century, although two attempts were made to introduce the Latin Rite – once in 1092, and again by Bishop Matteo de' Saraceni in 1460. Priests of the Latin Rite, however, were often appointed bishops. The Greek Rite was maintained especially by the seven Basilian monasteries in the diocese, the most famous of which was Santa Maria in Patiro. In 1571 the Greek Rite was abandoned in the cathedral, and half a century afterwards throughout the city. ==Bishops==
Bishops
Among the prominent archbishops were: • Juan Rodríguez de Fonseca (1519–1524), architect of the colonization of New Spain; • Vincenzo Pimpinella (1525), nuncio to Germany; • Giovanni Battista Castagna (1553), afterwards Pope Urban VII; • Lucio Sanseverino; • Pier Antonio Spinelli (1628) and Jacopo Carafa (1646), both of whom restored and embellished the cathedral. ==Ordinaries==
Ordinaries
Diocese of Rossano Latin Name: RossanensisErected: 7th Century • Nicholas Maleinos (fl. 1105) • Angelo (1429–1433 Appointed Archbishop (Personal Title) of Tricarico) • Stefano Carrara (1433–1434 Died) • Antonio Roda (1434–1442 Resigned) • Nicola de Martino (1442–1447 Died) • Giacomo Della Ratta (1447–1451 Appointed, Archbishop of Benevento) • Domenico de Lagonessa, O.S.B. (1452–1459 Died) Archdiocese of Rossano Latin Name: RossanensisElevated: 1460Matteo de Saraceni, O.F.M. (1460–1481 Died) • Nicola Ippoliti (September 5, 1481 – January 13, 1493 Appointed Archbishop (Personal Title) of Città di Castello) • Giovanni Battista Lagni (January 18, 1493 – 1500 Died) • Bernardino López de Carvajal y Sande, Apostolic Administrator (January 10, 1508 – June 20, 1519 Resigned) • Juan Rodríguez de Fonseca (June 20, 1519 – November 12, 1524 Died) • Vincenzo Pimpinella (July 3, 1525 – November 3, 1534 Died) • Francesco Colonna (December 18, 1534 – October 22, 1544 Appointed Archbishop of Taranto) • Girolamo Verallo (November 14, 1544 – 1551 Resigned) • Paolo Emilio Verallo (April 22, 1551 – March 1, 1553 Appointed Archbishop (Personal Title) of Capaccio) • Giovanni Battista Castagna (March 1, 1553 – Jan 1573 Resigned) • Lancillotto Lancellotti (January 23, 1573 – 1580 Died) • Lelio Giordano (November 28, 1580 – 1581 Died) • Silvio Savelli (January 26, 1582 – 1589 Resigned) • Scipione Floccaro (July 17, 1589 – September 26, 1592 Died) • Lucio Sanseverino (December 2, 1592 – November 19, 1612 Appointed Archbishop of Salerno) • Mario Sassi (November 26, 1612 – January 9, 1615 Died) • Girolamo Pignatelli, CR (May 18, 1615 – December 22, 1618 Died) • Ercole Vaccari (February 18, 1619 – July 27, 1624 Died) • Paolo Torelli (October 7, 1624 – 1629 Resigned) • Pietro Antonio Spinelli (May 28, 1629 – December 9, 1645 Died) • Giacomo Carafa (October 18, 1646 – April 7, 1664 Died) • Carlo Spinola, OSM (September 15, 1664 – January 6, 1671 Died) • Angelo della Noca, OSB (March 18, 1671 – December 14, 1675 Resigned) • Girolamo Orsaja, OM (February 24, 1676 – June 13, 1683 Died) • (May 6, 2006 – October 10, 2013 Appointed Archbishop of Italy, Military) • (July 15, 2014 – October 29, 2020 Appointed Archbishop of Bari-Bitonto) • Maurizio Aloise (March 20, 2021 – present) ==Diocese of Turio==
Diocese of Turio
The archdiocese includes the ancient Diocese of Turio (Thurii), a city which arose after the destruction of Sybaris; five of its bishops are known, the first being Giovanni (501) and the last Guglielmo (1170). ==See also==
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