Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Bar
Archdiocese of Bar Archidioecesis Antibarensis Barska Nadbiskupija Kryedioqeza e Tivarit | |
---|---|
Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception | |
Location | |
Country | Montenegro |
Metropolitan | Immediately Subject to the Holy See |
Statistics | |
Area | 13,198 km2 (5,096 sq mi) |
Population - Total - Catholics |
(as of 2012) 631,000 11,227 (1.8%) |
Parishes | 19 |
Information | |
Denomination | Roman Catholic |
Established |
9th Century (As Diocese of Bar) 1034 (As Archdiocese of Bar) |
Cathedral | Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception in Bar, Montenegro |
Current leadership | |
Pope | Francis |
Metropolitan Archbishop | Rrok Gjonlleshaj |
Map | |
Map of Montenegro Diocese of Kotor Archdiocese of Bar |
The Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Bar is an ecclesiastical territory or diocese of the Roman Catholic Church in Montenegro.[1][2] It is centred in the city of Bar (Italian Antivari). It was erected as a diocese in the 9th century and elevated to an archdiocese in 1089. The Archbishopric was by Pope's decree abolished some time after 1140, until it was restored by the Serbian medieval Nemanjić dynasty in 1199.
The Archbishops regularly bore titles of "Primates of Serbia" (Primas Serviae), implemented as a permanent part of the title by Archbishop Stephen Tegliatti in 1475, since 1256 early on self-styled as "Archbishop of Slavians".[Note 1]
The archdiocese's cathedral is the Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception in Bar. Zef Gashi currently serves as Archbishop in the archdiocese.[3]
In 1923, Traboin, Tuzi, Grude, and Klezna were added to the Archbishopric from the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Shkodër. In 1969, the territory of the municipalities of Plav, Gusinje, and Vojno Selo were added to the Archbishopric from the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Skopje.
Archbishops
- Peter (1064–1094)
- Sergius (1094?/ca. 1110?-1124?)
- Elijah (ca. 1124 - 1140)
- John I (1199–1247)
- John II (Giovanni da Pian del Carpine) (1248–1252)
- Gufrid (April 1253 - 1254)
- Lawrence I (1255–1270)
- Gašpar Adam (1270–1280)
- Michael (1282–1298)
- Rudger (1298–1301), member of the
Cistercian order, writer
of the Chronicle of the Priest of Dioclea - Marinus I (Marin Petrov Žaretić) (1301–1306)
- Andrew I (1307–1324)
- William I (Guillaume Adam) (1324–1341)
- John III (1341–1347)
- Dominic (1349–1360)
- Stephen (1361–1363)
- John IV (1363–1373)
- John V (1373–1382)
- Anton (1383–1390)
- Raymond (1391–1395)
- Ludovik I (Ludovik Bonito) (1395)
- Marinus II (1396–1420)
- John VI (1420–1422)
- Peter II (1423–1448)
- Andrew II (1448–1459)
- Lawrence II (1459–1460)
- Mark I (1460–1461)
- Simon I (Šimun Vosić) (1462–1473)[4][5]
- Stephen II (Stephen Teglatius) (1473–1485)[6]
- Philip (Philip Gaius) (1485–1509)
- Jeronim (1509–1517)
- Lawrence III (1517–1525)
- John VII (1525?-1528?)
- Ludovik II (Lodovico Chieregati) (1528–1551)
- John VIII (1551–1571)
- Theodore (1575)
- Ambrosius (Ambrozije Kapić) (1579–1598)
- Thomas (Toma Ursini) (1598–1607)
- Marinus III (Marino Bizzi) (1608–1624)
- Peter III (Pjetër Mazreku) (1624–1634)
- George I (Gjergj Bardhi) (1635–1644)
- Francis I (Franjo Leonardi) (1644–1646)
- Joseph (Josip Buonaldo) (1646–1653)
- Mark II (1654–1656)
- Andrew III (Andrija Zmajević) (1671–1694)
- Mark III (Marco Giorga) (1696–1700)
- Vincent I (Vićenco (Vicko) Zmajević) (1701–1713)
- Egidio Quinto (1719-1722?)
- Matthew (Matija Štukanović(?)) (1722-1744?)
- Mark IV (Marco de Luchi) (1745–1749)
- Lazarus I (Lazër Vladanji) (1749–1786)
- George II (Gjergj Junki) (1786–1787)
- George III (Gjergj Radovani) (1787–1790)
- Francis II (Francesco Borzi) (1791–1822)
- Vincent II (Vincenzo Battucci) (1824–1839)
- Charles (Karlo Poten) (1855–1886)
- Simon II (Šimun Milinović) (1886–1910)
- Nicholas (Nikola Dobrečić) (1912–1955)
- Alexander (Aleksandar Tokić) (1955–1979)
- Peter IV (Petar Perkolić) (1979–1997)
- Zef Gashi (1998–2016)
- Rrok Gjonlleshaj (5 April 2016-)
See also
Notes
- ↑ Serbs, referring to the Serbian medieval state
References
- ↑ "Archdiocese of Bar (Antivari)" Catholic-Hierarchy.org. David M. Cheney. Retrieved February 29, 2016
- ↑ "Archdiocese of Bar" GCatholic.org. Gabriel Chow. Retrieved February 29, 2016
- ↑ International Bishops' Conference of St. Cyril and Methodius: Diocese of Bar
- ↑ "Archbishop Šimun Vosić (Vossich)" Catholic-Hierarchy.org. David M. Cheney. Retrieved March 21, 2016
- ↑ "Archbishop Šimun Vosić" GCatholic.org. Gabriel Chow. Retrieved February 29, 2016
- ↑ "Archbishop Stefan Teglatije (de Taleazis)" Catholic-Hierarchy.org. David M. Cheney. Retrieved August 6, 2016
Sources
- Istorijski Leksion Crne Gore Book One: A-Crn ISBN 86-7706-165-7
External links
- A short look at the history of the Bishoprics of Kotor and Bar
- Catholic Encyclopedia article, Antivari
- GCatholic.org
- Catholic Hierarchy
Coordinates: 42°05′41″N 19°07′51″E / 42.09472°N 19.13083°E