Roman Catholic Diocese of Pinerolo
Diocese of Pinerolo Dioecesis Pineroliensis | |
---|---|
Pinerolo Cathedral | |
Location | |
Country | Italy |
Ecclesiastical province | Turin |
Statistics | |
Area | 1,440 km2 (560 sq mi) |
Population - Total - Catholics |
(as of 2013) 101,400 (est.) 81,200 (est.) (80.1%) |
Parishes | 62 |
Information | |
Denomination | Catholic Church |
Rite | Roman Rite |
Established | 23 December 1748 |
Cathedral | Cattedrale di S. Donato |
Secular priests |
67 (diocesan) 21 (Religious Orders) |
Current leadership | |
Pope | Francis |
Bishop | Piergiorgio Debernardi |
Map | |
Website | |
www.diocesipinerolo.it |
The Diocese of Pinerolo (Latin: Dioecesis Pineroliensis) is a Roman Catholic ecclesiastical territory in the province of Turin of Piedmont, Northern Italy. It is a suffragan of the archbishopric of Turin.
Ecclesiastical history
Pinerolo’s episcopal see was originally an abbey nullius. It was founded in 1064 by Adelaide, Princess of Susa, in Abbadia Alpina. In the tenth century it belonged to the Marca di Torino (March of Turin) and was governed by the abbots of Pinerolo, even after the city had established itself as a commune (1200). From 1235, however, Amadeus IV of Savoy exercised over the town a kind of protectorate which, in 1243, became absolute, and was exercised thereafter either by the house of Savoy.
Pinerolo was made a diocese in 1748, at the request of Charles Emmanuel III of Sardinia, its first prelate being G. B. d'Orlié.
In 1805, conformably with the wish of Napoleon I Bonaparte, the diocese was united with the bishopric of Saluzzo, but in 1817 it was re-established as an independent episcopal see.
Those of its churches deserving mention are the cathedral (which dates from the ninth century, and has an architecturally significant campanile) and San Maurizio, a Gothic church, from the belfry of which there is a superb view of the Alps and of the sub-Alpine plain.
Parishes
The 62 parishes are all within the Piedmontese province of Turin[1]
Piedmont
Province of Turin
- Angrogna
- S. Lorenzo
- Bibiana
- S. Marcellino
- Bobbio Pellice
- S. Maria Assunta
- Bricherasio
- S. Maria Assunta
- S. Michele (San Michele)
- Buriasco
- S. Michele
- Nostra Signora del Buon Rimedio (Appendini)
- Campiglione-Fenile
- S. Giovanni Battista (Campiglione Fenile)
- Santi Gervasio e Protasio (Fenile)
- Cantalupa
- S. Maria Assunta
- Fenestrelle
- S. Luigi Ix
- S. Giusto (Mentoulles)
- Frossasco
- S. Donato
- Inverso Pinasca
- S. Francesco di Sales
- Luserna San Giovanni
- S. Cuore di Gesù
- S. Giacomo
- S. Giovanni Battista
- Lusernetta
- S. Antonio
- Macello
- S. Maria Maddalena
- Osasco
- Natività di Maria Vergine
- Perosa Argentina
- S. Genesio
- S. Giuseppe
- Perrero
- S. Maria Maddalena
- S. Martino (San Martino)
- Invenzione di S. Croce (Trossieri)
- Pinasca
- S. Maria Assunta
- S. Antonio (Grandubbione)
- S. Rocco (Pinasca-Dubbione)
- Pinerolo
- Cuore Immacolato di Maria
- Madonna di Fatima
- S. Donato nella Cattedrale
- S. Leonardo Murialdo
- S. Luigi Ix
- S. Maurizio
- Santi Michele e Lorenzo
- Spirito Santo
- S. Verano (Abbadia Alpina)
- S. Marco (Baudenasca)
- S. Maria della Neve (Pascaretto)
- S. Barbara (Riva di Pinerolo)
- S. Maddalena (Talucco)
- Pomaretto
- S. Nicolao
- Porte
- S. Michele
- Pragelato
- S. Maria Assunta (La Ruà)
- S. Lorenzo (Traverses)
- Prali
- S. Lorenzo (Rodoretto)
- S. Giovanni Battista (Villa di Rodoretto)
- Pramollo
- Natività di Maria Vergine (Rue)
- Prarostino
- S. Bartolomeo
- Roletto
- Natività di Maria Vergine
- Roure
- S. Stefano (Castel del Bosco)
- S. Giovanni Battista (Villaretto)
- Salza di Pinerolo
- Natività di Maria Vergine
- San Germano Chisone
- S. Germano
- S. Carlo Borromeo (Inverso Porte)
- San Pietro Val Lemina
- Santi Pietro e Paolo
- San Secondo di Pinerolo
- S. Secondo
- S. Maria Assunta (Miradolo)
- Torre Pellice
- S. Martino
- Usseaux
- S. Pietro
- Villar Pellice
- S. Maurizio
- Villar Perosa
- S. Pietro in Vincoli
Notes
- ↑ Source: chiesacattolica.it ([Retrieved:2008-03-12 14:37:02 +0000)
Sources and references
- Herbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). "Diocese of Pinerolo". Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company.
This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Herbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). "Diocese of Pinerolo". Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton.
Coordinates: 44°53′09″N 7°19′47″E / 44.8857°N 7.3298°E