The title of
count and the rights of sovereignty of the medieval Bishops of Toul originated in certain grants which
Henry the Fowler gave
St. Gauzelin in 927. During the
Conflict of Investitures in 1108, the chapter became divided: the majority elected
Riquin of Commercy as bishop; the minority chose
Conrad of Schwarzenburg.
Henry V granted Conrad the title of
bishop, with the stipulation that he did not exercise
episcopal office. In 1271 grave differences broke out again in the chapter of
Toul. In 1278
Pope Nicholas III personally appointed Conrad of
Tübingen as bishop. Thereafter, it was generally the
Holy See which appointed the bishops, alleging various reasons as vacancies arose. As a result, many Italian
prelates held this important see until 1552, when Toul was occupied by
France. In 1597
Charles III,
duke of
Lorraine asked
Pope Clement VIII for the dismemberment of the See of Toul and the creation of a see at Nancy; this failed through the opposition of Arnaud d'Ossat, Henry's ambassador at
Rome. In the end, Clement VIII decided that Nancy was to have a primatial church and that its
prelate would have the title of Primate of Lorraine and wear episcopal insignia, but should not exercise episcopal jurisdiction. In 1648 according to the
Treaty of Westphalia the bishoprics of Metz, Toul and Verdun (all belonging to the
Holy Roman Empire) became French cities. The duchy of
Lothringen, surrounded by French territories and repeatedly occupied by French troops, finally fell to the French, and Lorraine became a French
province. The population of Toul was around 10,000 persons in 1688. After the
French Revolution of 1789 France was divided into departments—Lorraine consisted of the departments of Meurthe, Meuse, Moselle and Vosges. Nancy, Verdun, Metz and Epinal became the capitals of these departments. In 1688, the Cathedral of Toul had a Chapter with ten dignities and forty Canons. In the city of Toul there were seven parishes, seven houses of male religious and four monasteries of monks. The diocese had around 200 parishes. In 1777, the Cathedral of Nancy had a Chapter in which there were three dignities and twenty-four Canons. In the city of 30,000 persons there were 7 parishes, twelve houses of male religious, and ten monasteries of monks. All cathedral chapters in France were abolished in 1790 by the Constituent Assembly. In 1777 and 1778 Toul lost territories out of which were formed two new dioceses:
Saint-Die and
Nancy, both of them suffragans of Trier. The Concordat of 1802, suppressing
Toul, made Nancy the seat of a vast
diocese which included three Departments: Meurthe, Meuse, and Vosges.
Revolution The diocese of Nancy was abolished during the
French Revolution by the
Legislative Assembly, under the
Civil Constitution of the Clergy (1790). Its territory was subsumed into the new diocese, called 'Meurthe', which was part of the Metropolitanate called the 'Metropole du Nord-Est' (which included seven new 'départements' and dioceses). The Civil Constitution mandated that bishops be elected by the citizens of each 'département', which immediately raised the most severe canonical questions, since the electors did not need to be Catholics and the approval of the Pope was not only not required, but actually forbidden. Erection of new dioceses and transfer of bishops, moreover, was not in the competence of civil authorities or of the Church in France. The result was schism between the 'Constitutional Church' and the Catholic Church. The legitimate bishop of Nancy, Anne Louis Henri de La Fare, refused to take the oath, and therefore the episcopal seat was declared vacant. On 13 March 1791 the electors of Meurthe were assembled, and elected the Lazarist P.-F. Chatelain, a Professor at the Seminary in Toul. After some considerable consideration, he refused the election. The electors therefore returned to their deliberations, and, on the recommendation of the Ecclesiastical Committee of the National Assembly, on 8 May 1791 chose the Oratorian Luc-François Lalande of Saint-Lô, a theologian and student of Hebrew. He was consecrated a bishop at Notre Dame in Paris on 29 May by Jean-Baptiste Gobel, the titular Bishop of Lydda, who had been installed as Constitutional Bishop of Paris. On 3 June he made his official entry into Nancy, where he began a war of pamphlets with Bishop de la Fare, who was in exile in Trier. In September 1792 Lalande was elected a delegate to the Convention, where, on 7 November, he renounced his functions. In 1795 he became a member of the Council of 500. In 1801 he wrote a letter of submission to Pope Pius VII. At the end of 1799, an assembly of Constitutional priests elected Francois Nicolas of Epinal as a successor to Lalande.
Afterward Nicolas, and all the Constitutional Bishops, were required to resign in May 1801 by First Consul Bonaparte, who was negotiating a treaty with
Pope Pius VII, the
Concordat of 1801 (15 July 1801). Nicolas never recanted. Once the Concordat went into effect, Pius VII was able to issue the appropriate bulls to restore many of the dioceses and to regulate their boundaries, most of which corresponded closely to the new 'départements'. The Concordat of 1802, suppressing
Toul, made Nancy the seat of a vast
diocese which included three Departments: Meurthe, Meuse, and Vosges. In a Bull of 6 October 1822,
Pope Pius VII re-established the Dioceses of
Verdun and Saint-Dié, detaching from the diocese of Nancy the departments of Meuse and Vosges. Since 1824 the bishops of Nancy have borne the title of Bishops of Nancy and Toul, since nearly all of the territory of the ancient
Diocese of Toul is united with that of Nancy. ==Bishops==