Roman Catholic Diocese of Nantes

(Redirected from Diocese of Nantes)

The Diocese of Nantes (Latin: Dioecesis Nannetensis; French: Diocèse de Nantes; Breton: Eskopti Naoned) is a Latin Church diocese of the Catholic Church in Nantes, France. The diocese consists of the department of Loire-Atlantique. It has existed since the 4th century. It is now suffragan of the Archdiocese of Rennes, Dol, and Saint-Malo, having previously been suffragan to the Archdiocese of Tours. Its see is Nantes Cathedral in the city of Nantes.

Diocese of Nantes

Dioecesis Nannetensis

Diocèse de Nantes
Eskopti Naoned
Location
CountryFrance
Ecclesiastical provinceRennes
MetropolitanArchdiocese of Rennes, Dol, and Saint-Malo
Statistics
Area6,980 km2 (2,690 sq mi)
Population
- Total
- Catholics
(as of 2021)
1,441,302
1,064,600 (73.9%)
Parishes73 'new parishes'
Information
DenominationRoman Catholic
Sui iuris churchLatin Church
RiteRoman Rite
Established4th Century
CathedralCathedral of St. Peter in Nantes
Patron saintSt. Donatian and St. Rogatian
Secular priests232 (Diocesan)
48 (Religious Orders)
69 Permanent Deacons
Current leadership
PopeFrancis
BishopLaurent Percerou
Metropolitan ArchbishopPierre d'Ornellas
Bishops emeritusGeorges Pierre Soubrier, P.S.S.
Map
Website
Website of the Diocese

In 2021, in the Diocese of Tulle there was one priest for every 3,802 Catholics.

History

edit

According to late traditions, Saint Clarus (Saint Clair), first Bishop of Nantes, was a disciple of Saint Peter. De la Borderie, however, has shown that the ritual of the Church of Nantes, drawn up by Helius the precentor in 1263, ignores the apostolic mission of Saint Clarus, and also that Saint Peter's nail in Nantes Cathedral was not brought there by Saint Clarus, but at a time subsequent to the invasions of the Northmen in the 10th century. He showed further that Saint Felix, writing with six other bishops in 567 to Saint Radegund, attributed to Saint Martin of Vertou the chief role in the conversion of the Nantais to Christianity, and that the traditions concerning the mission of Saint Clarus are later than 1400.

The earliest list of the bishops of Nantes (made, according to Louis Duchesne, at the beginning of the 10th century) does not favour the thesis of a bishop of Nantes prior to Constantine I. The author of the Passion of the Nantes martyrs, Saints Donatian and Rogatian, places their death in the reign of Constantius Chlorus, and seems to believe that Rogatian could not be baptized, because the bishop was absent. Duchesne believes that the two saints suffered at an earlier date, and disputes the inference of the ancient writer concerning the absence of the bishop. He believes that the first bishop of Nantes, whose date is certain, is Desiderius (453), correspondent of Sulpicius Severus and St. Paulinus of Nola. Several bishops, it is true, occupied the see before him, among others Saint Clarus and Saint Similianus, but their dates are uncertain. Duchesne considers as legendary the Saint Aemilianus supposed to have been Bishop of Nantes in Charlemagne's reign and to have fought the Saracens in Burgundy.

Among the noteworthy bishops are: Saint Felix (550-83), whose municipal improvements at Nantes were praised in the poems of Venantius Fortunatus, and who often mediated between the people of Brittany and the Frankish kings; Saint Pacharius (end of 7th century); Saint Gohard (Gohardus), martyred by the Northmen in 843, with the monks of the monastery of Aindre; Actardus (843–871), during whose time the Breton prince Nominoe, in his conflict with the metropolitan see of Tours, created a see at Guérande, in favour of an ecclesiastic of Vannes, in the heart of the Diocese of Nantes; the preacher Cospeau (1621–36).

The diocese venerates: the monk Saint Hervé (6th century); the hermits Saint Friard and Saint Secondel of Besné (6th century); Saint Victor, hermit at Cambon (6th or 7th century); the English hermit Saint Viaud (7th or 8th century); the Greek Saint Benoît, Abbot of Masserac in Charlemagne's time; Saint Martin of Vertou (d. 601), apostle of the Herbauges district and founder of the Benedictine Vertou Abbey; Saint Hermeland, sent by Lambert, Abbot of Fontenelle, at the end of the 7th century to found on an island in the Loire the great monastery of Aindre (now Indret); the celebrated missionary Saint Amand, Bishop of Maastricht (7th century), a native of the district of Herbauges.

Blessed Françoise d'Amboise (1427–85), who became Duchess of Brittany in 1450, had a great share in the canonization of Saint Vincent Ferrer, rebuilt the choir of the collegiate church of Notre-Dame, and founded at Nantes the monastery of the Poor Clares. Widowed in 1457, she resisted the intrigues of Louis XI, who urged her to contract a second marriage, and in 1468 became a Carmelite nun at Vannes. In 1477, at the request of Sixtus IV, she restored the Benedictine monastery of Couëts, near Nantes. The philosopher Abelard was a native of the diocese. The Abbey of La Meilleraye, founded in 1132, was the beginning of an establishment of Trappist Fathers, who played a part in the agricultural development of the country. The crusades were preached at Nantes by Blessed Robert of Arbrissel, founder of Fontevrault. Charles of Blois won Nantes from his rival Jean de Montfort in 1341. On 8 August 1499, Louis XII married Anne of Brittany at Nantes.

Chateaubriant, a town of the diocese, was a Calvinist centre in the 16th century. The Edict of Nantes (1595), which granted Protestants religious freedom and certain political prerogatives.

In 1665, by order of Louis XIV, Cardinal de Retz was imprisoned in the castle of Nantes, from which he contrived to escape. A college was created at Nantes in 1680 for the education of Irish ecclesiastics. Certain regions of the diocese were, during the Revolution, the scene of the War of La Vendée, waged in defence of religious freedom and to restore royalty. At Savenay in December, 1793, succumbed the remains of the Vendean army, already defeated in the battle of Cholet. The atrocities committed at Nantes by the Terrorist Carrier are well-known.

Four councils were held at Nantes, in 600, 1127, 1264, and 1431. The mausoleum of Francis II, Duke of Brittany, executed in 1507 by Michel Colomb, is one of the finest monuments of the Renaissance. The chief places of pilgrimage of the diocese are: Notre-Dame de Bon Garant at Orvault, a very old pilgrimage, repeatedly made by Francis II, Duke of Brittany; Notre-Dame de Bon Secours at Nantes, a pilgrimage centre which dates back to the 14th century; Notre-Dame de Toutes Aides. Notre-Dame de Miséricorde became a place of pilgrimage in 1026 in memory of the miracle by which the country is said to have been freed from a dragon; the present seat of the pilgrimage is the Church of St. Similien at Nantes.

The Ursulines, founded by Saint Angela Merici, were established at Nantes in 1640. Among the congregations for women originating in the diocese are: the Sisters of Christian Instruction, a teaching order founded in 1820 at Beignon (Diocese of Vannes) by Abbé Deshayes, of which the mother-house was transferred to St-Gildas des Bois in 1828; Sisters of the Immaculate Conception, a teaching and nursing order, founded in 1853 (mother-house at La Haye Mahéas); Franciscan Sisters, founded in 1871 (mother-house at St-Philbert de Grandlieu); Oblate Franciscan Sisters of the Heart of Jesus, founded in 1875 by Sophie Victorine de Gazeau (mother-house at Nantes).

Bishops

edit

To 1000

edit
  • c. 280: Saint Clair
  • c. 310–330: Ennius
  • c. 330: Saint Similien
  • c. 374: Eumalius or Evhémère I.
  • c. 383: Martius
  • End of 4th century: Arisius
  • Didier, † c. 444
  • c. 446: Léon
  • Euribe, † 461
  • 462 – † c. 472: Nonnechius I.
  • Cariundus, † c. 475
  • Cerunius
  • Clemens or Clément I., † c. 502
  • 511: Epiphane
  • c. 515 – † 541: Evhémère II.
  • 548 – † 8. June 582: Saint Felix I.
  • Nonnechius II., † 596.
  • 610–614: Eufronius
  • c. 614–626: Léobard
  • c. 630: Saint Pascharius
  • c. 637: Taurinus
  • c. 640: Haïco
  • c. 650: Salapius
  • c. 703: Agathée
  • Amelon
  • c. 725: Émilien
  • 732: Salvius
  • 756–757: Déomart
  • c. 776 – † c. 800: Odilard
  • c. 800: Alain
  • c. 820 – † 833: Atton
  • 834 – † 835: Drutcaire
  • 835–824. June 843: Saint Gonthard
  • 843–846: Actard
  • 851: Gislard
  • 853–871: Actard (again)
  • 872–886: Ermengar
  • 886 – † 5. February 896: Landrain
  • 900 – † 906: Foucher
  • c. 906: Isayas
  • 907: Adalard
  • Hoctron
  • 950–958: Herdren
  • c. 960 – † c. 980: Gauthier I.
  • 987: Judicaël
  • 990: Hugo
  • 992 – † 1005: Hervé

1000 to 1300

edit

1500–1800

edit

From 1800

edit

See also

edit

References

edit
  1. ^ Jean Dunbabin, France in the Making, 843-1180 (2000), p. 198.
  2. ^ William Ziezulewicz, Sources of reform in the episcopate of Airard of Nantes, 1050-1054, Journal of Ecclesiastical History, July 1996
  3. ^ "Resignations and Appointments, 14.11.2019" (Press release). Holy See Press Office. 14 November 2019. Retrieved 14 November 2019.

Sources

edit
edit

47°13′N 1°33′W / 47.22°N 1.55°W / 47.22; -1.55