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Diocese of San Marino-Montefeltro

The Diocese of San Marino-Montefeltro, known until 1977 as the Diocese of Montefeltro, is a Latin Church ecclesiastical jurisdiction or diocese of the Catholic Church in both Italy and San Marino. It is a suffragan in the ecclesiastical province of the metropolitan Archdiocese of Ravenna-Cervia. The current diocese includes all the parishes of San Marino.

History
The earliest mention of Montefeltro, as Montem Feretri, is in the diplomas by which first Holy Roman Emperor Charlemagne confirmed the donation of Pepin. In 785 the bishopric was established as Diocese of Montefeltro. The first known bishop of Montefeltro was Agatho (826), whose residence was at San Leo. Bishop Joannes was granted the title of Count by the Emperor Frederick II. Under Bishop Flaminios Dondi (1724) the see was again transferred to San Leo, but later it returned to Pennabilli. The historic diocese was a suffragan of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Urbino. The parish of S. Apollinaris in the village of Paderno was removed from the diocese of Montefeltro by order of Pope Pius XI and the Sacred Consistorial Congregation on 20 February 1938, and assigned to the diocese of Sarsina. A change of territory took place on 3 January 1942, when Pope Pius XII and the Sacred Consistorial Congregation removed the parish of S. Marina in Bese from the jurisdiction of the diocese of Montefeltro and placed it in the diocese of Borgo San Sepolcro. Revising diocesan boundaries, conference, metropolitanate Acting in conformity to the decree "Christus Dominus" of the Second Vatican Council (1962–1965), Pope Paul VI and the Sacred Congregation for Bishops issued the decree "Proprius dioecesis" on 22 February 1977. To consolidate the diocese, the territories of three parishes were removed from the jurisdiction of the diocese of Sarsina and added to Montefeltro; likewise, two parishes were removed from San Marino-Montefeltro and assigned to Sarsina. Eleven parishes were removed and assigned to the Diocese of Rimini. The diocese was renamed the 'Diocese of San Marino–Montefeltro. The pope also decided that San Marino-Montefeltro would no longer belong to the ecclesiastical conference of Picenum, but rather be assigned to the conference of Aemiliana-Flaminia. At the same time, the diocese was removed from the metropolitanate of Urbino, and transferred to the metropolitan of Ravenna-Cervia. Montefeltro enjoyed Papal visits from Pope John Paul II in August 1982, and Pope Benedict XVI on 19 June 2011. On 18 September 2012, Pope Benedict XVI appointed the bishop of San Marino-Montefeltro, Bishop Luigi Negri, to serve as one of the Synod Fathers for the October 2012 13th Ordinary General Assembly of the Synod of Bishops. == Bishops ==
Bishops
(incomplete; sometimes sources contradict) Diocese of Montefeltro Latin Name: Feretrana (seu Montis Feltri) Erected: 9th Century Metropolitan: Archdiocese of Urbino To 1498 • Agatho (826), whose residence was at San Leo. ::... • Arduino (1015–1044) • Adolfo (1053–1074) • Gebizone (1075–1079) ::... • Pietro Carpegna (?–1125?) • Arnoldo (1140–1154) • Gualfredo (?–1172?) • Valentino (1173), who finished the cathedral • Albertus (attested 1206–1208) • Giovanni (1218–1221?) • Rolando (1222–1229) • Ugolino (1232–1252) • Giovanni (1252–1275) • Roberto da Montefeltro (1282–1284) • Liberto (1286–1311) • Benvenuto (1318–1347) • Claro Peruzzi (1349–1375) • Pietro (1378–1385?) • Pinus Ordelaffi (1386–1390?), Administrator, Roman Obedience • Lucas Contraguerra, O.P. (1388– ? ), Avignon Obedience • Benedetto di Salnucio, O.S.B. (1390–1408), Roman Obedience • Giovanni Sedani, O.F.M. (1409–1444), Roman ObedienceFrancesco da Chiaravalle (1444–1450) • Giacomo Tebaldi (1450–1456) • Andrea (1456.11 – 1458) • Corrado Marcellino (1458) • Giacomo da Foglia (27 October 1458 – 1459?) • Roberto degli Adimari (1459–1484) • Celso Mellini (1484–1498) Since 1498 • Luca Mellini (1498.11.21 – death 1507) • Antonio Castriani (21 May 1507 – death 11 August 1510), previously Bishop of Fossombrone (Italy) (1506.01.30 – 1507.05.21) • Paolo Alessandri degli Strabuzzi (1510.10 – death 1538) • Ennio Filonardi (1538.08.12 – death 1549.12.19), previously Bishop of Veroli (Italy) (1503.08.04 – 1538.08.12), created Cardinal-Priest of S. Angelo in Pescheria as pro hac vice Title (1537.01.15 – 1546.10.08); later promoted Cardinal-Bishop of Albano (1546.10.08 – 1549.12.19) • Ennio Massari Filonardi (1549 – death 1565) • Carlo Visconti (6 July 1565 – death 12 November 1565), previously Bishop of Ventimiglia (Italy) (1561.12.05 – 1565.07.06), created Cardinal-Priest of Ss. Vito e Modesto in Macello Martyrum pro hac vice Title (1565.05.15 – 1565.11.12) • Giovanni Francesco Sormani (or Sarmani; 6 March 1567 – death 1601), founder of the seminary of Pennabilli, thenceforth residence of the bishops, the episcopal see having been transferred there. • Pietro Cartolari (29 November 1601 – death 1607) • Consalvo Duranti (19 March 1607 – death 10 January 1643) • Bernardino Scala (28 May 1643 – death 19 January 1667), previously Bishop of Bisceglie (Italy) (1637.01.12 – 1643.05.28) • Antonio Possenti (3 August 1667 – death 14 December 1671) • Giacomo Buoni (8 February 1672 – 28 February 1678), later Bishop of Nepi e Sutri (1678.02.25 – death 1679) • Bernardino Belluzzi (5 September 1678- 25 September 1702), later Bishop of Camerino (Italy) (1702.09.25 – death 1719.02.15) • Pietro Valerio Martorelli (5 March 1703 – 18 November 1724) • Flaminio Dondi (20 November 1724 – death 12 August 1729), previously Titular Bishop of Abdera (1717.04.12 – 1724.11.20) & Auxiliary Bishop of Sabina (Italy) (1717.04.12 – 1724.11.20) • Giovanni Crisostomo Calvi (7 September 1729 – death 27 April 1747), previously Bishop of Roman Catholic Diocese of Kefalonia–Zakynthos (insular Greece; 1718.05.11 – 1729.09.07) • Sebastiano Bonaiuti (29 May 1747 – death 27 February 1765) • Giovanni Pergolini (22 April 1765 – 17 February 1777), later Bishop of Urbania e Sant'Angelo in Vado (Italy) (1777.02.17 – 1779.08) • Giuseppe Maria Terzi (17 February 1777 – death 27 October 1803) • Antonio Begni (28 May 1804 – death 11 June 1840) • Antonio Benedetto Antonucci (17 December 1840 – 22 July 1842), previously Ecclesiastical Superior of Mission sui iuris of Batavia ('Dutch Mission', northern Netherlands) (1831 – 1840.12.17); later Bishop of Ferentino (Italy) (1842.07.22 – 1844.07.25), Titular Archbishop of Tarsus (1844.07.25 – 1851.09.05), Archbishop-Bishop of Ancona e Umana (Italy) (1851.09.05 – 1879.01.29), created Cardinal-Priest of S. Martino ai Monti (1858.03.18 – death 1879.01.29) • Salvatore Leziroli (22 July 1842 – 20 January 1845), later Bishop of Rimini (Italy) (1845.01.20 – death 1863) • Martino Caliendi (21 April 1845 – death 1849), previously Bishop of Ripatransone (Italy) (1842.01.27 – 1845.04.21) • Crispino Agostinucci (5 November 1849 – death 1856) • Elia Antonio Alberini (16 June 1856 – 23 March 1860), later Bishop of Ascoli Piceno (Italy) (1860.03.23 – death 1876) • Luigi Mariotti (23 March 1860 – death 1890) • Carlo Bonaiuti (23 Jun 1890 – 22 June 1896), later Bishop of Pesaro (Italy) (1896.06.22 – death 1904) • Alfonso Andreoli (6 December 1896 – 20 December 1911), later Bishop of Loreto (Italy) (1911.12.20 – 1923.11.10), Bishop of Recanati(Italy) (1911.12.20 – death 1923.11.10) • Raffaele Santi (22 April 1912 – 15 June 1940), emeritate as Titular Archbishop of Oxyrynchus (1940.06.15 – death 1944.01.28) • Vittorio De Zanche (9 August 1940 – 25 September 1949), later Bishop of Concordia (Italy) (1949.09.25 – 1971.01.12), restyled Bishop of Concordia–Pordenone (Italy) (1971.01.12 – death 1977.04.14) • Antonio Bergamaschi (12 December 1949 – death 17 April 1966) • Apostolic Administrator Emilio Biancheri (1966 – 1977.02.22), while Bishop of Rimini (Italy) (1953.09.07 – 1976.12.17) and next on emeritate Diocese of San Marino-Montefeltro Name Changed: 22 February 1977 Latin Name: Sammarinensis-Feretrana Metropolitan: Archdiocese of Ravenna-CerviaGiovanni Locatelli (1977–1988) • Mariano De Nicolò (1989–1995) • Paolo Rabitti (1995–2004) • Luigi Negri (2005–2012) • Andrea Turazzi (30 November 2013 - 3 February 2024) • Domenico Beneventi (3 February 2024 - ) == See also ==
Sources and external links
Reference works for bishops • • . Archived. • . Archived. • . Archived. • • • • • • {{cite book|last= Pięta|first=Zenon|title=Hierarchia catholica medii et recentioris aevi|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=QXuJQwAACAAJ|volume=IX (1903–1922)|year=2002|publisher=Messagero di San Antonio|location=Padua|language=Latin|isbn=978-88-250-1000-8} Studies • • Kehr, Paul Fridolin (1909). Italia pontificia Vol. IV (Berlin: Weidmann 1909), pp. 227-230. • Ughelli, Ferdinando (1717). Italia sacra sive de Episcopis Italiae, et insularum adjacentium... , second ed., Tomus secundus (vol. 2). Venice: Sebastian Colet 1717. pp. 841-856. External links • GCatholic with incumbent bio links ::
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