Ancient Diocese of Carpentras
Encyclopedia
The former French catholic diocese of Carpentras was suppressed after the French Revolution
French Revolution
The French Revolution , sometimes distinguished as the 'Great French Revolution' , was a period of radical social and political upheaval in France and Europe. The absolute monarchy that had ruled France for centuries collapsed in three years...

, by the Concordat of 1801
Concordat of 1801
The Concordat of 1801 was an agreement between Napoleon and Pope Pius VII, signed on 15 July 1801. It solidified the Roman Catholic Church as the majority church of France and brought back most of its civil status....

. Its territory was added to the archdiocese of Avignon.

Bishops

  • c. 280: Saint Valentin
  • 482–529: Julien I.
  • 529–536: Principius
  • 536–c. 540: Saint Siffrein
  • 541–550: Clément or Clematius
  • c. 573: Tétrade
  • c. 584: Boetius
  • c. 590: Aufroi I.
  • c. 604: Georg I.
  • c. 630: Peter I.
  • c. 640: Dominique
  • c. 660: Lizier
  • c. 664: Paul I.
  • c. 686: Anastase
  • c. 702: Innozenz
  • c. 730: Odoard
  • c. 747: Aufroi II.
  • c. 770: Agapit
  • c. 781: Aimé
  • c. 791: Antoine
  • c. 813: Johannes I.
  • c. 831: Albert
  • c. 857: Philipp
  • c. 880: Johannes II.
  • c. 882: Berenger I.
  • c. 895: Franz I.
  • c. 914: Bernard
  • c. 932: Gui
  • c. 948–c. 990: Ayrard
  • 994–1006: Stephan
  • c. 1035: Matthias
  • 1040–1056: Franz II.
  • 1056–1066: Jules
  • c. 1068: Wilhelm I.
  • c. 1095: Arnold
  • c. 1120: Gottfried I.
  • 1121–1142: Gaspard I.
  • 1142–1170: Raimond I.
  • c. 1173: Guillaume II. de Risole
  • c. 1175: Pierre II.
  • c. 1178: Raimbaud
  • c. 1200: Gottfried II.
  • 1211–1218: Guillaume III.
  • 1224–1228: Isnard
  • c. 1230: Bertrand
  • 1233–1258: Guillaume IV. Béroard
  • 1258–1262: Guillaume V. de Barjols
  • 1263–1273: Raimond II. de Barjols
  • c. 1278: Pierre III. Rostaing
  • 1280–1288: Raimond III. de Mazan
  • c. 1292–1317: Berenger II. de Mazan
  • c. 1318–c. 1328: Eudes
  • 1330–c. 1345: Hugo
  • 1347–c. 1356: Gottfried III.
  • 1358–1365: Jean III. Roger
  • 1365–1375: Jean IV. Flandrini
  • 1375–1376: Guillaume VI. de L'Estrange
  • 1377–1394: Pierre IV.
  • 1399–1406: Jean V.
  • 1406–1407: Paul II. Camplon
  • 1408–1410: Benedict XIII (antipope)
  • 1411–1415: Louis I. de Fiesque
  • c. 1420: Charles Le Double
  • c. August–November 1424: Jacques I. Camplon
  • 1426–1446: Sagax de Comitibus
  • 1447–1448: Barthélémi Vitelleschi
  • 1448–1449: Guillaume VII. Soibert
  • 1449–1452: Georges II. d'Ornone
  • 1452–c. 1474: Michel L'Anglais
  • c. 1475: Jean VI. de Montmirail
  • 1475–1476: Giuliano della Rovere
    Pope Julius II
    Pope Julius II , nicknamed "The Fearsome Pope" and "The Warrior Pope" , born Giuliano della Rovere, was Pope from 1503 to 1513...

    , who later became Pope Julius II
    Pope Julius II
    Pope Julius II , nicknamed "The Fearsome Pope" and "The Warrior Pope" , born Giuliano della Rovere, was Pope from 1503 to 1513...

  • 1476–1481: Frédéric de Saluces
  • 1482–1514: Pierre V. de Valetariis
  • 1517–1547: Jacopo Sadoleto
    Jacopo Sadoleto
    Jacopo Sadoleto was Catholic Bishop and Cardinal, loyal to the Catholic Church.-Life:He was born at Modena in 1477, the son of a noted jurist, he acquired reputation as a neo-Latin poet, his best-known piece being one on the group of Laocoön. In Rome, he obtained the patronage of Cardinal Carafa...

  • 1547–1569: Paul III. Sadolet
  • 1569–1593: Jacques III. Sacratus
  • c. 1595–c. 1615: Horace Caponi
  • 1616–1630: Côme Bardi
  • 1630–1657: Alexandre Bichi
  • 1657–1661: Louis II. de Fortia de Montréal
  • 1662–6. December 1684: Gaspard II. de Vintimille
  • 1688–1690: Marcel Durazzo
  • 1691–22. April 1710: Laurent Buti
  • 1710–1733: François-Marie de Abbatibus
  • 1733–6. September 1757: Dominique-Joseph-Malachie d'Inguimbert
  • 12. December 1757–1776: Joseph I. Vignoli
  • 16. September 1776–1791: Joseph II. de Beni
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