The first reliably documented Bishop of Uzès was
Constantius, who was present at the
Council of Vaison in 442. Other notable bishops were the fourth,
Saint Firminus (541-53), who is locally venerated as
Saint Firmin and whose
remains are kept in
Uzès Cathedral. The cathedral is dedicated to
Saint Theodoritus (
Saint Théodorit) priest of Antioch, martyr, and patron saint of the town, and who was invoked against
plague. Also honored is
Saint Ferreol (553-81). In the eighth century, Saracen occupation of the town resulted in the destruction of all the Christian structures. Under Charlemagne, who liberated Uzès, the territory was organized into a county. The count of Uzès freed the bishop from his military obligations. The counts, however, were dependent upon the counts of Toulouse, who in 1065 managed to place one of their nephews in Uzès; eventually Uzès lost the title of count and became a seignory of Toulouse. On 15 October 879, Bishop Walefridus of Uzès participated in the election of
Boso of Provence, the son of
Bivin of Gorze, count of Lotharingia, and Richildis, the daughter of
Boso the Elder, as King of Provence. In 1177, the Albigensians, who entirely rejected the idea of a church hierarchy, entered Uzès, destroyed the cathedral, the church of Ss. Peter and Paul, the church of S. Jean, and the church of the monastery of Saint-Ferreol. As the power of territorial magnates dispersed, the bishops obtained the right to strike coinage. The date of the beginning of coinage by the bishops is unknown, but the privilege was confirmed by
Louis the Younger in 1156, and again by Philip II in 1211. In the 13th century, at the height of the see's power, the bishop was able to purchase a part of the signory of Uzès. Prior
Guillaume de Grimoard held office as vicar-general of the bishop of Uzès, from 1357 to 1362, before becoming
Pope Urban V.
Huguenots Like many cloth-manufacturing centers (Uzès manufactures
serge), the city and the surrounding countryside were strongly Protestant during the
Wars of Religion in the 16th century, which wreaked havoc in the Languedoc regions, and Bishop Jean de Saint Gelais (1531–60) became a
Calvinist. The missionary
Jacques Bridaine (1701–67) was a native of the village of Chusclan in the diocese of Uzès. Even before he was ordained a priest, he was commissioned by Bishop
Michel Poncet de la Rivière of Uzès to preach in Vers, then in Saint-Quentin. His mission was to bring back Catholicism to an area which had been Huguenot for a century.
French Revolution The diocese of Uzès was a suffragan of the archdiocese of Narbonne. The diocese had two religious houses, one for men, the Cluniac Pont-Saint Esprit; the other for women, the
Cistercian Valsauve-de-Bagnols. Both were closed during the French revolution, their members releaste from their vows by governmental order and pensioned off, the properties appropriated by the government. The Chapter of the cathedral was also dissolved. For seventy days, from February to April 1813, the city of Uzès was the enforced residence of Cardinal
Bartolomeo Pacca, the pro-Secretary of State of Pope Pius VII. He had been deported from Rome along with
Pope Pius VII when Napoleon annexed the
Papal States to France. After his confinement at
Fenestrelle (1812–1813), he was permitted to visit Pius at Fontainebleau, before being sent under guard to Uzès. The
bishopric of Nîmes was re-established as a separate diocese in 1821. A
Papal Brief of 27 April 1877, granted to its bishop the right to add the titles
Alais and Uzès to Nîmes, with the territory of the two suppressed dioceses combined with that of Nîmes. ==Bishops of Uzès==