MarketPatriarch of Grado
Company Profile

Patriarch of Grado

The Patriarchate of Grado, also known as the Patriarchate of New Aquileia, was an episcopal see and ecclesiastical province in northeastern Italy, centered in Grado, on the northern coasts of the Adriatic Sea. It was created as a result of an internal schism within the ancient Patriarchate of Aquileia. In 568, after the Lombard conquest of Aquileia, patriarch Paulinus left the city and fled to the minor coastal, but better protected town of Grado, that still remained under the Byzantine rule. First patriarchs who resided in Grado continued to exercise their jurisdiction over bishops in Lombard-held parts of the province, but at the very beginning of the 7th century a schism occurred, when bishops in Lombard regions elected their separate patriarch (Ioannes), who took residence in the old Aquileia, thus becoming rival to Candidianus of Grado. From that time, the region was divided between two distinctive jurisdictions: the Patriarchate of Old Aquileia in Lombard-held lands, and the Patriarchate of New Aquileia, with residence in Grado and jurisdiction over Byzantine possessions in the northern Adriatic.

List of the Patriarchs of Grado
List of the Patriarchs of new Aquileia/Grado is not complete for the oldest periods, but from the 12th century data are quite complete. Patriarchs of Aquileia, in Grado (before the split) Paulinus I 557–569 • Probinus 569–570 • Elia 571–586 • Severus 586–606 Patriarchs of new Aquileia-Grado (after the split) • Candidianus (606–612) • Epiphanius (612–613) • Cyprianus (613–627) • Fortunatus I (627–628) • Primogenius (630–647) • Maximus II (649–?) • Stephanus II (670–672) • Agatho (?–679) • Christophorus (682–717) • Donatus (717–725) • Antoninus (725–747) • Emilianus (747–755) • Vitalianus (755–767) • Giovanni IV degli Antinori (767–802) • Fortunatus II (802–820) • Giovanni V (820–825) • Venerius Trasmondo (825–851) • Victor I (852–858) • Vitalis I Partecipazio (858–?) • Petrus I Marturio (875–878) • Victor II Partecipazio (878–?) • Georgius (?) • Vitalis II (?) • Domenicus I Tribuno (904–?) • Dominicus II (919–?) • Laurentius Mastalico (?) • Marinus Contarini (933–?) • Bonus Blancanico (?–960) • Vitalis III Barbolani (?) • Vitalis IV Candiano (976–1017) • Orso Orseolo (1018–1026, 1030–1049) • Domenicus III Bulzano (?) • Dominicus IV Marango (?) • Dominicus V Cerbano (1074–1077) • Johannes VI Saponario (?) • Petrus II Badoer da Noale (1092–1105) Patriarchs of new Aquileia-Grado, residing in Venice • Giovanni Gradenigo (1105–1108, 1112–1129) • Enrico Dandolo (1134–1182) • Giovanni Segnale (1182–1201) • Benedetto Falier (1201–1207) • Angelo Barozzi (1211–1238) • Leonardo Querini (1238–1244) • Lorenzo (1244–1255) • Jacopo Belligno (1255) • Angelo Maltraverso (1255–1272) • Giovanni da Ancona (1272–1279) • Guido (1279–1289) • Lorenzo di Parma (1289–1295) • Egidio da Ferrara (1295–1310) • Angelo Motonense (1310–1313) • Paolo de Pilastris (1313–1316) • Marco de Vinea (1316–1318) • Domenico (1318–1332) • Dino di Radicofani (1332–1337) • Andrea da Padova (1337–1355) • Orso Delfino (1355–1361) • Fortanerius Vassalli 1361 • Francesco Querini (1367–1372) • Thomas of Frignano (1372–1383) • Urbano (1383–1389) • Pietro Amelio (1389–1400) • Pietro Chauchus (1400–1406) • Giovanni de Zambottis de Mantua (1406–1408) • Francesco Lando (1408–1409) • Leonardo Delfino (1409–1427) • Biagio Molino (1427–1439) • Marco Condulmer (1439–1445) • Domenico Michiel (1445–1451) ==Titular Archbishops of Grado==
Titular Archbishops of Grado
In 1968 Pope Paul VI reestablished Grado as a titular archbishopric • José López Ortiz (1969–1992) • Crescenzio Sepe (1992–2001) • Diego Causero (2001–present) ==See also==
tickerdossier.comtickerdossier.substack.com