On 29 July 1322,
Pope John XXII reserved to the pope the right to nominate as well as confirm the bishops of Florence. Due to heavy rains in the autumn and winter of 1346–1347, the crops were a failure, in wheat as well as in grapes and olives. By May 1347 the price of wheat in Florence had doubled. Arrangements were made to import grain from south Italy, Sicily and Africa, but the merchants of Siena and Genoa, who were contracted to transport the foodstuffs, kept half for their own cities. 94,000 inhabitants of Florence were dependent upon municipal charity, and some 4,000 were said to have died of starvation. Then, in April 1348, the pestilence known as the
Black Death, struck Florence. By July nearly 100,000 people were dead. The historian
Giovanni Villani estimated that nearly three out of every five persons in Florence and its neighborhood had been struck down. Ultimately he himself succumbed. In his famous introduction to the
Decameron, Giovanni Boccaccio repeats the number 100,000 and provides harrowing details of the breakdown of social connections and human feelings. Other episodes of pestilence in Florence occurred in 1325, 1340, 1344, 1363, 1509, 1522–1528, and 1630.
Council of Florence In 1438, the
Council of Basel was moved to Ferrara, and, in doing so, split into two factions, one remaining at Basel and electing their own pope, the
Antipope Felix V. The faction that settled at Ferrara had to leave soon, however, due to an appearance of the plague. They were reconstituted at Florence by
Pope Eugenius IV, and became the
Council of Florence, which was transferred to Rome in 1443.
Chapter and cathedral The current cathedral of Florence is dedicated to the Assumption of the Body of the Virgin Mary into Heaven. The cathedral was originally dedicated to S. John the Baptist, and occupied the former temple of Mars. When it became too small for the clergy and necessary rituals, a new cathedral, dedicated to S. Reparata, was built. In 816, the Emperor
Louis the Pious held a council at
Aix, at which it was ordered that Canons and Canonesses live together according to a set of rules (canons,
regulae). In the Roman synod of
Pope Eugene II of November 826, it was ordered that Canons live together in a cloister next to the church. In 876, the Council of Pavia decreed in Canon X that the bishops should enclose the Canons:
uti episcopi in civitatibus suis proximum ecclesiae claustrum instituant, in quo ipsi cum clero secundum canonicam regulam Deo militent, et sacerdotes suos ad hoc constringant, ut ecclesiam non relinquant et alibi habitare praesumant. The cathedral was administered by a Chapter, composed of five dignities and thirty-seven Canons. The dignities were: the Provost, the Archdeacon, the Archpriest, and the Dean. The diocese also had twelve collegiate churches, the most important of which is San Lorenzo.
Diocesan synods A diocesan synod was an irregularly held, but important, meeting of the bishop of a diocese and his clergy. Its purpose was (1) to proclaim generally the various decrees already issued by the bishop; (2) to discuss and ratify measures on which the bishop chose to consult with his clergy; (3) to publish statutes and decrees of the diocesan synod, of the provincial synod, and of the Holy See. • 1073 - Raynerius. • 1139 - Gottifredo degli Alberti. • 1310, 13 August - Antonio D'Orso. • 1327, 1 August - Francesco di Silvestro. • 1343 - Angelo Acciaiuoli seniore. • 1346 Angelo Acciaiuoli • 1350, March - Angelo Acciaioli seniore. • 1372, 13–14 January -Angelo Ricasoli. • 1393, 3 July - Onofrio Visdomini. • 1415 - Amerigo Corsini. • 1446, 22 April - Antonino Pierozzi. • 1508 - Cosimo Pazzi. • 1517 - Cardinal Giulio de' Medici • 1565, 29 March - Antonio Altoviti. • 1569, 5 May - Antonio Altoviti. • 1573, 9 April - Antonio Altoviti (provincial synod) • 1589, 26 March – 11 June - Cardinal Alessandro de' Medici. • 1603, 17 June - Cardinal Alessandro de' Medici. • 1610, 27 May - Alessandro Marzi Medici. • 1614, 4 June - Alessandro Marzi Medici. • 1619, 14–15 May - Alessandro Marzi Medici. • 1623, 17 May - Alessandro Marzi Medici. • 1627, 18 May - Alessandro Marzi Medici. • 1629, 10 May - Alessandro Marzi Medici. • 1637, 16 June - Pietro Niccolini. • 1645, 17 May - Pietro Niccolini. • 1656, 4 April - Cardinal Francesco Nerli seniore. • 1663, 26 September - Cardinal Francesco Nerli seniore. • 1666, 23 September - Cardinal Francesco Nerli seniore. • 1669, 25 September - Cardinal Francesco Nerli seniore. • 1674, 12 September - Cardinal Francesco Nerli iuniore. • 1678, 31 August - Cardinal Francesco Nerli iuniore. • 1681, 27 August - Cardinal Francesco Nerli iuniore. • 1691, 26 September - Jacopo Antonio Morigia. • 1699, 24 September - Jacopo Antonio Morigia • 1710, 10 September - Tommaso Bonaventura Della Gherardesca. • 1732, 24 September - Giuseppe Maria Martelli. • 1905, 21–23 November - Alfonso Maria Mistrangelo. • 1936, 10–12 September - Cardinal Elia Dalla Costa. • 1946, 8–9 May - Cardinal Elia Dalla Costa. • 1988 - Cardinal Silvano Piovanelli. • 1992 - Cardinal Silvano Piovanelli. ==Bishops of Florence==