Roman Catholic Diocese of Mazara del Vallo

      Diocese of Mazara del Vallo
      Dioecesis Mazariensis

      Mazara del Vallo Cathedral
      Location
      Country Italy
      Ecclesiastical province Palermo
      Statistics
      Area 1,374 km2 (531 sq mi)
      Population
      - Total
      - Catholics
      (as of 2006)
      235,600
      220,906 (93.8%)
      Parishes 77
      Information
      Denomination Catholic Church
      Rite Roman Rite
      Established 1093 (920 years ago)
      Cathedral Basilica Cattedrale di SS. Salvatore
      Current leadership
      Pope Francis
      Bishop Domenico Mogavero
      Emeritus Bishops Emanuele Catarinicchia
      Map
      Website
      www.diocesimazara.it

      The Italian Catholic Diocese of Mazara del Vallo (Latin: Dioecesis Mazariensis) is in Sicily. It is a suffragan of the Archdiocese of Palermo.[1]

      History

      In the struggle of the Saracens against the Normans for the possession of Sicily, Mazara was hotly contested, especially in 1075 when Roger I of Sicily emerged victorious. The episcopal see of Lilybaeum was then transferred to Mazzara.

      Of the bishops of Lilybaeum the best known is Paschasinus, legate of Pope Leo I at the Council of Chalcedon (451). The first bishop of Mazara was Stefano de Ferro, a relative of Count Roger (1093). The cathedral was then founded, and later embellished by Bishop Tristiano (1157).

      Other bishops were

      • Cardinal Bessarion (1449)
      • Giovanni de Monteaperto (1470), who restored the cathedral and founded a library
      • Bernardo Gasco (1579), of Toledo
      • Cardinal Giandomenico Spinola (1637)
      • the Franciscan Francesco M. Graffeo (1685).[2]
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      Bishops of Mazara del Vallo since 1900

      • Gaetano Quattrocchi (15 Jun 1900 - 1903)
      • Nicola Maria Audino (22 Jun 1903 - 21 Jun 1933)
      • Salvatore Ballo Guercio (18 Sep 1933 - 8 Aug 1949 )
      • Gioacchino Di Leo (5 Jul 1950 - 8 Oct 1963 )
      • Giuseppe Mancuso (26 Dec 1963 - 21 Mar 1977)
      • Costantino Trapani, O.F.M. (21 Mar 1977 - 1987 )
      • Emanuele Catarinicchia (7 Dec 1987 - 15 Nov 2002)
      • Calogero La Piana, S.D.B. (15 Nov 2002 - 18 Nov 2006)
      • Domenico Mogavero (22 Feb 2007 - )
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      Notes

      1. ^ Catholic Hierarchy page
      2. ^ Catholic Encyclopedia article

       This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainHerbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). Catholic Encyclopedia. Robert Appleton Company. 

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      Last modified on 12 May 2013, at 16:41