Monday, May 20, 2019


France—2

This blog covers 7 ecclesiastical provinces in Southern France. 

Province of Lyon

The province consists of the civil province of Rhone-Alpes.  The Diocese of Lyon was established in the 2nd Century and it was promoted to a metropolitan archdiocese in the 3rd Century.

The Cathedral of St. John the Baptist in Lyon was built between 1180 and 1476 in Romanesque and Gothic styles.  The Cathedral features two crosses dating to 1274, a 15th Century chapel, a 14th Century astronomical clock, and a 19th Century pipe organ.  The Cathedral’s website is cathedral-lyon.fr.




All are from Wikipedia.

The Province has seven suffragan dioceses.
·         The Archdiocese of Chambery—Saint-Jean-de-Maurienne—Tarentaise began as the Diocese of Chambery in 1779.  It became a Metropolitan Archdiocese in 1817 and was given its current name in 1966.  It was demoted to an archdiocese in 2002.
·         The Diocese of Viviers was established in the 4th Century.  The Diocese was suppressed in 1801 and restored in 1822.
·         The Diocese of Grenoble was established in the 4th Century and became the Diocese of Grenoble-Vienne in 2006.
·         The Diocese of Valence was established in the 4th Century.
·         The Diocese of Belley-Ars began as the Diocese of Belley in the 5th Century.  It was suppressed in 1801 and restored in 1822.  It acquired its current name in 1988.
·         The Diocese of Annecy was created in 1822.
·         The Diocese of Saint-Etienne was created in 1970.

Province of Bordeaux

The province consists of the civil province of Aquitaine.  The Metropolitan Archdiocese of Bordeaux was established in the 3rd Century.

The Cathedral of St. Andrew in Bordeaux was consecrated in 1096, but mostly dates to the 14th and 15th Centuries.  The future King Louis VII married Eleanor of Aquitaine here in 1137.  The Cathedral is home to the Marcade collection, consisting of illuminations, paintings, sculptures, liturgical vestments, and silver goods.  See cathedrale-bordeaux.fr.





All are from Wikipedia.

The Province has four suffragan dioceses.
·         The Diocese of Perigueux was created in the 3rd Century, was suppressed in 1801, and restored in 1822.  It was renamed Perigueux and Sarlat in 1854.
·         The Diocese of Agen was established in the 4th Century.
·         The Diocese of Bayonne was established in the 4th Century and was renamed Bayonne, Lescar, and Oloron in 1909.
·         The Diocese of Aire was established in the 5th Century and suppressed in 1801.  It was restored in 1822 and acquired its current name of Aire and Dax in 1857.

Province of Toulouse

The province consists of the civil province of Midi-Pyrenees.  The Diocese of Toulouse was established in the 3rd Century and became a metropolitan archdiocese in 1317.

The Cathedral of St. Stephen in Toulouse was built between 1073 and the 13th Century in both Gothic and Romanesque styles.  The Cathedral has 15 chapels and stained glass windows dating to the 13th Century.  The choir stalls and organ case were made of walnut in the early 1600s.  The Cathedral also has 17th Century tapestries.  See paroissescathedraletoulouse.fr.





The first picture is from Flickr and the rest are from Wikipedia.

The Province has seven suffragan dioceses.
·         The Diocese of Albi was established in the 3rd Century and was promoted to a metropolitan archdiocese in 1678.  It was suppressed in 1801, restored in 1822, and demoted to an archdiocese in 2002.
·         The Archdiocese of Auch began as the Diocese of Auch in the 6th Century.  It became a metropolitan archdiocese in 879.  It was suppressed in 1801, restored in 1822, and demoted to an archdiocese in 2002.
·         The Diocese of Cahors was established in the 3rd Century. 
·         The Diocese of Tarbes and Lourdes began as the Diocese of Tarbes in the 4th Century.  It was suppressed in 1801 and restored in 1822.  It acquired its current name in 1912.
·         The Diocese of Rodez was established in the 5th Century, was suppressed in 1801, and restored in 1822.
·         The Diocese of Pamiers was established in 1295, was suppressed in 1801, and restored in 1822.
·         The Diocese of Montauban was established in 1317, was suppressed in 1801, and restored in 1822.

Province of Clermont

The province mostly consists of the civil province of Auvergne.  The Diocese of Clermont was established in the 3rd Century and became a metropolitan archdiocese in 2002.

The Cathedral of Our Lady of the Assumption in Clermont was built during the 13th and 14th Centuries and is made of black lava stone in a northern Gothic style.  It was badly damaged during the French Revolution and subsequent wars and was not completely finished until 1884.  Twin towers rise over 300 feet above the street.  The stained glass windows may have been made by the same studio that made the windows for Sainte-Chapelle in Paris.  There are also two rose windows with 25-foot diameters.  See cathedrale-catholique-clermont.fr.




All pictures are from Wikipedia.

The Province has three suffragan dioceses.
  •          The Diocese of Le Puy-en-Velay was established in the 3rd Century, was suppressed in 1801, and restored in 1822.  
·         The Diocese of Moulins was established in 1817.
·         The Diocese of Saint-Flour was established in 1317, suppressed in 1801, and restored in 1822.

Province of Marseille

The province consists of the civil provinces of Provence-Alpes-Cote d’Azur and Corse.  The Diocese of Marseille was established in the 1st Century, was suppressed in 1801, and restored in 1822.  It became an archdiocese in 1948 and the Metropolitan Archdiocese of Marseille in 2002. 

The Basilica-Cathedral of St. Mary Major was designed by Leon Vaudoyer and Henri-Jacques Esperandieu in a Byzantine-Roman Revival style.  The church was built between 1852 and 1896 on the site of cathedrals dating back to the 5th Century.  It seats 3,000 people.  The Cathedral was designated as a minor basilica in 1896 by Pope Leo XIII.  




All pictures are from Wikipedia.

The Province has seven suffragan dioceses.
  •          The Archdiocese of Aix was established in the 1st Century and became a metropolitan archdiocese in the 5th Century.  It was demoted to an archdiocese in 2002.  
·         The Archdiocese of Avignon was established in the 4th Century and became a metropolitan archdiocese in 1475.  It was demoted a diocese in 1801 before being restored as a metropolitan archdiocese in 1822.  It was demoted to an archdiocese in 2002.
·         The Diocese of Ajaccio was established in the 3rd Century.
·         The Diocese of Nice was established in the 3rd Century.
·         The Diocese of Digne was established in the 4th Century.
·         The Diocese of Frejus-Toulon was established in 4th Century as the Diocese of Frejus.  It was suppressed in 1801 and restored in 1822.  The current name dates to 1957.
·         The Diocese of Gap was established in the 5th Century, was suppressed in 1801, and restored in 1822.  It was renamed Gap and Emburn in 2007.

Province of Poitiers

The province consists of the civil provinces of Poitou-Charentes and Limousin.  The Diocese of Poitiers was established in the 3rd Century and became a metropolitan archdiocese in 2002.  

Saint Peter’s Cathedral Basilica in Poitiers was constructed by Henry II of England and Eleanor of Aquitaine.  Its style is early Gothic and Romanesque and has two unfinished towers in front, the tallest being 110 feet tall.  The stained glass windows and the choir stalls date to the 13th Century.  The pipe organ was built in 1791 by Claude-Francois Clicpuot.  Pope Saint Pius X designated it as a minor basilica in 1912.




All pictures are from Wikipedia.

The Province has four suffragan dioceses.
·         The Diocese of Limoges was established in the 1st Century. 
·         The Diocese of Angouleme was established in the 3rd Century.
·         The Diocese of Tulle was established in 1317, was suppressed in 1801, and restored in 1822.
·         The Diocese of La Rochelle was created in 1648 and became the Diocese of La Rochelle and Saintes in 1852.  The Diocese includes the French colony of Saint Pierre and Miquelon, located off the east coast of Canada.  The colony has a population of 5,500 almost all of whom are Catholic.

Province of Montpellier

The province consists of the civil province of Languedoc-Roussillon.  The Diocese of Maguelonne was established in the 3rd Century and was renamed as the Diocese of Montpellier in 1536.  It became a metropolitan archdiocese in 2002.

The Cathedral Basilica of St. Peter and St. Paul in Montpellier is a 14th Century Gothic building.  Protestants murdered several Catholics in the Cathedral in 1561 and looted everything inside.  The Cathedral today has an 18th Century pipe organ and seven bells in two bell towers.  The Cathedral was raised to the status of a minor basilica by Pope Pius IX in 1847.  The Cathedral Basilica’s website is cathedrale-montpellier.fr.




All pictures are from Wikipedia.

The Province has four suffragan dioceses.
·         The Diocese of Mende was established in the 3rd Century.
·         The Diocese of Carcassonne and Narbonne was established as the Diocese of Carcassone in 533 and acquired its current name in 2006.
·         The Diocese of Nimes was established in the 5th Century, suppressed in 1801, and restored in 1822. 
·         The Diocese of Perpignan-Elne was created as the Diocese of Elne in 570 and took its current name in 1601.  It was suppressed in 1801 and restored in 1822.

Definitions

The Catholic Church is mostly divided into ecclesiastical provinces—a province consists of a metropolitan archdiocese and one or more dioceses.  The province and the archdiocese are led by an archbishop.  Each of the dioceses is called a suffragan diocese and is led by a bishop.  Archbishops have some responsibilities for the province, but all bishops answer directly to the Pope.  There are also archdioceses that are not part of a province that are directly under the jurisdiction of the Pope.  

A basilica is an honorary title bestowed on a church by the Pope because of the church’s antiquity, dignity, historical importance, or significance as a center of worship.  Some cathedrals are also basilicas.  Each basilica has a ceremonial umbrella in the papal colors of white and yellow and a ceremonial bell (although some basilicas do not display them).  Both of these are symbolic of the Pope’s special relationship to the basilica. 

Wednesday, May 15, 2019


France—1

Catholicism first came to France around 120 AD in the area around Lyon.  By 250 AD, there were 30 dioceses in France.  The baptism of King Clovis in 496 resulted in the conversion of the entire nation.  Catholicism in France has faced many challenges over the centuries, especially during the French Revolution at the end the 18th Century.  The Revolution split the Church into a faction loyal to Rome and a faction loyal to the revolutionaries.  After Napoleon became emperor, he sought to bring peace between the two factions.  This resulted in the Concordat of 1801 between Napoleon and Pope Pius VII.  One result of the Concordat was that the number of dioceses were reduced from 136 to 60.   King Louis XVIII, who ruled from 1815 to 1824, restored some of the former dioceses.  Pope John Paul II reorganized French provinces in 2002 to coincide with French administrative regions.  France today has an official policy of strict neutrality in regards to religion.

France has 48 million Catholics or 75 percent of the total population.   There are 15 ecclesiastical provinces in France.  In addition, the Archdiocese of Strasbourg (which was established as a diocese in the 3rd Century) and the Diocese of Metz (also established in the 3rd Century) are immediately subject to the Pope.  These dioceses cover the civil province of Alsace and part of the province of Lorraine.  There are also Eastern rite dioceses for Armenian Catholics, Maronite Catholics, Ukrainian Catholics, and all other Eastern rite Catholics.  In addition, there is a military diocese. 

This blog covers 8 ecclesiastical provinces in Northern France. 

Province of Besancon

The province consists of the civil province of Franche-Comte and part of Lorraine.  The Diocese of Besancon was created in the 2nd Century and became a metropolitan archdiocese in the 4th Century.  The Cathedral of St. John the Evangelist in Besancon was constructed between the 11th and 19th Centuries in a Romanesque style.  Pope Pius IX declared the cathedral to be a minor basilica in 1877.





The top picture is from pinterest and the other two are from Wikipedia.

The Province has five suffragan dioceses.
·         The Diocese of Verdun was created in 340, suppressed in 1801, and restored in 1822.
·         The Diocese of Saint-Claude was established in 1742, suppressed in 1801, and restored in 1822.
·         The Diocese of Nancy was established in 1777 and became the Diocese of Nancy and Toul in 1824.
·         The Diocese of Saint-Die was established in 1777, suppressed in 1801, and restored in 1822.
·         The Diocese of Belfort-Montbeliard was established in 1979.

Province of Reims

The province consists of the civil provinces of Picardie and Champagne-Ardenne.  The Diocese of Reims was created in the 3rd Century and it became a metropolitan archdiocese in the 4th Century.  The Archdiocese was suppressed in 1801 and restored in 1822.

Notre Dame Cathedral in Reims was built in the 13th Century in a French Gothic style.  The coronation of French kings was usually held in the Cathedral or its predecessors.  Notre Dame has tapestries and dozens of sculpted statues.  Marc Chagall designed some of the stained glass windows.  See cathedrale-reims.com.






All pictures are from Wikipedia.

The Province has six suffragan dioceses. 
·         The Diocese of Amiens was established in the 3rd Century.
·         The Diocese of Beauvais was created in the 3rd Century, was suppressed in 1801, before being restored in 1822.  It became the Diocese of Beauvais, Noyon, and Senlis in 1851.
·         The Diocese of Langres was created in the 3rd Century, was suppressed in 1801, and restored in 1822.
·         The Diocese of Soissons was created in the 3rd Century and became the Diocese of Soissons, Laon, and Saint-Quentin in 1901.
·         The Diocese of Troyes was created in the 4th Century.
·         The Diocese of Chalons-en-Champagne was established as the Diocese of Chalons-sur-Marne in the 4th Century.  It was suppressed in 1801 before being restored under its current name in 1822.

Province of Rouen

The province consists of the civil provinces of Basse-Normandie and Haute-Normandie.  The Diocese of Rouen was established in the 2nd Century and became the Metropolitan Archdiocese of Rouen in the 5th Century.

The Gothic Notre Dame Cathedral in Rouen dates to the 12th Century, but fires and wars have damaged the church over the centuries and reconstruction has been necessary several times.  Impressionist artist Claude Monet used the Cathedral as a subject of 28 of his paintings.  The heart of Richard the Lionheart, King of England, is buried in the Cathedral.  See cathedrale-rouen.net/site for more information.




All pictures are from Wikipedia.

The Province has five suffragan dioceses.
·         The Diocese of Bayeux was created in the 2nd Century and became the Diocese of Bayeux and Lisieux in 1854.
·         The Diocese of Evreux was created in the 3rd Century. 
·         The Diocese of Seez was created in the 3rd Century.
·         The Diocese of Coutances was created in the 5th Century.
·         The Diocese of La Havre was created in 1974.

Province of Tours

The province consists of the civil province of Centre.  The Diocese of Tours was established in the 3rd Century and became the Metropolitan Archdiocese of Tours in the 5th Century.  

The Cathedral of St. Gatianus in Tours was built between 1170 and 1547.  The Cathedral is primarily Gothic, but has Romanesque and Renaissance features.  Gatianus was the first Bishop of Tours.  The Cathedral’s website is paroisse-cathedrale-tours.fr.





All pictures are from Wikipedia.

The Province has four suffragan dioceses.
·         The Archdiocese of Bourges began as a metropolitan archdiocese in the 3rd Century and was demoted to an archdiocese in 2002.
·         The Diocese of Chartres was created in the 3rd Century, was suppressed in 1801, and restored in 1822.
·         The Diocese of Orleans was created in the 3rd Century.
·         The Diocese of Blois was established in 1697, was suppressed in 1801, and restored in 1822.

Province of Paris

The province consists of the civil province of Ile-de-France.  The Diocese of Paris was established in the 3rd Century and the Metropolitan Archdiocese of Paris was created in 1622.  The Basilica-Cathedral of Notre Dame in Paris is one of the best known churches in the world.  Construction began on the Gothic church in 1163 and was substantially completed 100 years later, but was not dedicated until 1864.  Notre Dame contains stained-glass windows, paintings, and statuary that date back centuries.  The Basilica-Cathedral contains among its treasures, the Crown of Thorns, a piece of the True Cross, and a nail used to hold Our Lord to the Cross.  About 30,000 people visit Notre Dame every day.  Notre Dame was honored as a minor basilica by Pope Pius VII in 1805.  Notre Dame was badly damaged by a fire earlier this year.  See notredamedeparis.fr/en/ for more information.










All pictures are from Wikipedia and reflect the Cathedral before the fire.

The Province has seven suffragan dioceses.
·         The Diocese of Meaux was established in 3rd Century.
·         The Diocese of Versailles was established in 1801.
·         The Diocese of Creteil was established in 1966.
·         The Diocese of Evry-Corbeil-Essonnes was created as the Diocese of Corbeil in 1966 and acquired in current name in 1988.
·         The Diocese of Nanterre was established in 1966.
·         The Diocese of Pontoise was created in 1966.
·         The Diocese of Saint-Denis was established in 1966.

Province of Rennes

The province consists of the civil provinces of Bretagne and Pays de la Loire.  The Diocese of Rennes was created in the 3rd Century and became the Metropolitan Archdiocese of Rennes in 1859.

St. Peter’s Cathedral in Rennes was originally constructed in the 12th Century, but portions of the building have collapsed over the centuries and today’s cathedral essentially dates to the 19th Century.  The Cathedral is built in a Gothic style with neoclassical features.  The 19th Century reconstruction added stucco and many paintings.  Some of the marble near the altar came from the ruins of the Forum in Rome.  Additional information can be found at cathedralerennes.catholique.fr.



Both pictures are from Wikipedia.

The Province has eight suffragan dioceses.
  •             The Diocese of Angers was established in 372.
·         The Diocese of Nantes was established in the 4th Century.
·         The Diocese of Le Mans was established in the 5th Century.
·         The Diocese of Quimper was established in the 5th Century and was renamed Quimper and Leon in 1853.
·         The Diocese of Saint-Brieuc was established in the 5th Century and was renamed Saint-Brieuc and Treguier in 1852.
·         The Diocese of Vannes was established in the 5th Century.
·         The Diocese of Lucon was established in 1317, was suppressed in 1801, and restored in 1822.
·         The Diocese of Laval was established in 1855.

Province of Dijon

The province consists of the civil province of Bourgogne.  The Diocese of Dijon was created in 1731 and it became a metropolitan archdiocese in 2002.  The Cathedral of St. Benignus, dedicated to a 3rd Century martyr who brought the Faith to the Dijon area, is a Gothic structure built between 1280 and 1325.  The Cathedral website is cathedrale-dijon.fr.




The first picture is from Panaramio and the other two are from Wikipedia.

The Province has four suffragan dioceses.
  •          The Archdiocese of Sens was established a diocese in the 1st Century and as a metropolitan archdiocese in the 3rd Century.  It was suppressed in 1801 before being restored in 1822.  It was renamed Sens and Auxerre in 1823.  It was demoted to an archdiocese in 2002.  
·         The Diocese of Autun was established in the 3rd Century.
·         The Diocese of Nevers was established in the 4th Century, suppressed in 1801, and restored in 1822.
·         The Territorial Prelature of Mission de France was established in 1954.

Province of Lille

The province consists of the civil province of Nord-Pas-de-Calais.  The Diocese of Lille was established in 1913 and became the Metropolitan Archdiocese of Lille in 2008.

The Cathedral-Basilica of Our Lady of the Treille in Lille was constructed between 1854 and 1999 in a neo-Gothic style.  The Cathedral has a rose window depicting the Resurrection.  Our Lady of the Treille is represented by a stone statue and numerous miracles have been attributed to Our Lady’s intercession.  The Cathedral was given the status of a minor basilica in 1904 by Pope Saint Pius X.  Additional information can be found at cathedralelille.com.



From pinterest and Wikipedia.

The Province has two suffragan dioceses.
·         The Archdiocese of Cambrai was established as a diocese in 580.  It became a metropolitan archdiocese in 1559, was demoted to a diocese in 1801, and promoted again to a metropolitan archdiocese in 1841, before being demoted to an archdiocese in 2008.
·         The Diocese of Arras was created in the 6th Century.