Latin Catholic Archdiocese of Nicosia
The Latin (Roman Catholic) archbishopric of Nicosia was created during the Crusades (1095-1487) in Cyprus; later becoming titular. According to the Catholic Encyclopedia[1] 31 Latin archbishops served beginning in 1196, shortly after the conquest of Cyprus by Richard I of England, to 1502.
- You may be looking for the Roman Catholic Diocese of Nicosia, Sicily
List (incomplete)
- Alan
- Eustorgius, Eustorge de Montaigu,[2]
- Bartolommeo da Breganze[3]
- 1251–1261 Ugo di Fagiano[4]
- 1274 Gérard de Langres[5]
- 1312-1332 Giovanni del Conte
- 1332-1342 Elias de Nabinal[6]
- 1421 Hugh of Lusignan[7]
- 1439 Galesius de Montolif[8]
- 1447 Andreas of Rhodes[4]
- 1456 James II of Cyprus
- 1471-76 Juuan Perez de Fabregues
- 1484 Benedetto Soranzo
- 1495 Domenico Grimani
- 1559 Filippo Mocenigo[4]
- 1728 Raniero Felice Simonetti[9]
- Carlo Vittorio Amedeo delle Lanze[10]
- 1818–1826 Antonio Fernando Echanove Zaldívar[11]
- 1915 Francesco Cherubini[12]
- 1934 Guglielmo Piani[13]
Notes
- CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: Nicosia (Cyprus)
- Chronological 1250–1299 Archived 2007-04-03 at the Wayback Machine
- Catholic Encyclopedia: Vicenza
- Catholic Encyclopedia: Cyprus
- ,
- ,
- Cawley, Charles, CYPRUS, Medieval Lands database, Foundation for Medieval Genealogy,
- A History of Cyprus
- The Cardinals of the Holy Roman Church - Biographical Dictionary - Consistory of April 10, 1747
- The Cardinals of the Holy Roman Church - Conclaves by century
- Metropolitan Archdiocese of Tarragona, Spain
- Archbishop Francesco Cherubini [Catholic-Hierarchy]
- Archbishop Guglielmo Piani [Catholic-Hierarchy]
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.