Roman Catholic Diocese of Nice

Diocese of Nice
Dioecesis Nicensis
Diocèse de Nice

Location
Country France
Ecclesiastical province Marseille
Metropolitan Archdiocese of Marseille
Statistics
Area 4,283 km2 (1,654 sq mi)
Population
- Total
- Catholics
(as of 2013)
1,210,000
778,000 (64.3%)
Information
Denomination Roman Catholic
Sui iuris church Latin Church
Rite Roman Rite
Established 3rd Century
Cathedral Cathedral Basilica of St Mary and St Reparata in Nice
Patron saint Saint Reparata
Current leadership
Pope Francis
Bishop André Marceau
Metropolitan Archbishop Georges Pontier
Apostolic Administrator Guy Marie Alexandre Thomazeau
Emeritus Bishops Louis Sankalé Bishop Emeritus (2005-2013)
Jean Marie Louis Bonfils Bishop Emeritus (1998-2005)
Website
Website of the Diocese

The Roman Catholic Diocese of Nice is a diocese of the Latin Church of the Roman Catholic Church in France. The diocese comprises the Départment of Alpes-Maritimes. The diocese is a suffragan of the archdiocese of Marseille.

Bishop Louis Albert Joseph Roger Sankalé, appointed on March 28, 2005, tendered his resignation on August 8, 2013. On Thursday, March 6, 2014, Pope Francis appointed Bishop André Marceau, who until then had been serving as bishop of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Perpignan-Elne, France, as Bishop of Nice.[1] He was installed as bishop of Nice on May 11, 2014.[2]

History

By tradition, Nice was evangelized by St. Barnabas, sent by St. Paul, or else by St. Mary Magdalen, St. Martha, and St. Lazarus. St. Bassus, a martyr under Emperor Decius, is believed to have been the first Bishop of Nice. The See of Nice in Roman Gallia Narbonensis existed in 314, since the bishop sent delegates to the Council of Arles in that year. The first bishop historically known is Amantius, who attended the Council of Aquileia in 381.

Cimiez, near Nice, had also an episcopal see around 260, held in the middle of the fifth century by St. Valerianus; a papal rescript of St. Leo the Great, issued after 450 and confirmed by pope Saint Hilarus in 465, united the sees of Nice and Cimiez. This newly formed see remained a suffragan of Embrun up to the French Revolution.

St. Anselm, a former monk of Lérins, is mentioned as Bishop of Nice (1100–07).

Bishops of Nice bore the title of Counts of Drap, making them prince-bishops, since the donation of property situated at Drap, made in 1073 by Pierre, Bishop of Vaison, a native of Nice, to Raymond I, its bishop, and to his successors.

Charlemagne, when visiting Cimiez (devastated by the Lombards in 574), caused Saint Syagrius to build on its ruins the monastery of Saint Pontius, the largest Alpine abbey of the Middle Ages.

The diocese was re-established by the Concordat of 1801 as suffragan of Aix. While the Countship of Nice from 1818 to 1860 was part of the Sardinian States, the see became a suffragan of Genoa. When Nice was annexed to France in 1860, certain parts which remained Italian were cut off from it and added to the Diocese of Vintimille. In 1862 the diocese was again a suffragan of Aix. The arrondissement of Grasse was separated from the Diocese of Fréjus in 1886, and given to Nice which since unites the three former diocese of Nice, diocese of Grasse and diocese of Vence.

Ordinaries

Roman Bishops

Frankish Bishops

Mediaeval Bishops

Bishops to the Revolution

Modern Bishops

Sources and references

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Roman Catholic Diocese of Nice.

See also

  1. http://press.vatican.va/content/salastampa/en/bollettino/pubblico/2014/03/06/0166/00348.html
  2. http://catholic-hierarchy.org/bishop/bmarceau.html
  3. Diocese of Nice. at GCatholic.org.
  4. Diocese of Nice at catholic.org.
  5. Diocese of Nice at catholic.org.
  6. Reported in the legend of a local saint in the Nice area by Gregory Tour - St. Hospice - in his History of the Franks.
  7. Saint Syagrius of Nice.
  8. Bishop of Nice at Catholic Heirachy.org.
  9. Hierarchia Catholica, Volume 4, Page 249, and Page 258
  10. Hierarchia Catholica, Volume 5, Page 275, and Page 309.
  11. Les Ordinations Épiscopales, Year 1659, Number 19.

Coordinates: 43°42′53″N 7°15′26″E / 43.71472°N 7.25722°E / 43.71472; 7.25722

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