Roman Catholic Suburbicarian Diocese of Sabina-Poggio Mirteto
Encyclopedia
The Diocese of Sabina-Poggio Mirteto (Lat.: Sabinensis-Mandelensis) a suburbicarian see of the Holy Roman Church and a diocese
Diocese
A diocese is the district or see under the supervision of a bishop. It is divided into parishes.An archdiocese is more significant than a diocese. An archdiocese is presided over by an archbishop whose see may have or had importance due to size or historical significance...

 of the Catholic Church in Italy. Since 1842 the Cardinal Bishop of Sabina
Sabina
Sabina, the region in the Sabine Hills of Latium named for the Sabines, is the ancient territory that today is still identified mainly with the North-Eastern Province of Rome and the Province of Rieti, Lazio.-History:...

 also bears the title of Abbot of Farfa
Abbey of Farfa
Farfa Abbey is a territorial abbey in northern Lazio, central Italy. It is one of the most famous abbeys of Europe. It belongs to the Benedictine Order and is located about 60 km from Rome, in the commune of Fara Sabina, not far from the Fara Sabina railway station.-History:A legend in the...

. Since 1925 the Cardinal Titular Church of Sabina has been joined to that of Poggio Mirteto, and officially named Sabina e Poggio Mirteto
Poggio Mirteto
Poggio Mirteto is a comune in the province of Rieti in the Italian region Latium, about 45 km northeast of Rome and about 20 km southwest of Rieti, situated on a height by the River Sole, in a fertile region, where pot-herbs, cereals, grapes and pastures are cultivated, and where...

, since 1986 Sabina–Poggio Mirteto. The current Cardinal-Bishop is Giovanni Battista Re, while ordinary bishop is Ernesto Mandara.

Sabina has been the seat of such a bishopric since the 6th century, though the earliest names in the list of bishops may be apocryphal. The official papal province of Sabina was established under Pope Paul V
Pope Paul V
-Theology:Paul met with Galileo Galilei in 1616 after Cardinal Bellarmine had, on his orders, warned Galileo not to hold or defend the heliocentric ideas of Copernicus. Whether there was also an order not to teach those ideas in any way has been a matter for controversy...

 in 1605.

List of holders

If ?, century or c. is given, dates have not yet been found for his tenure.

To 1000

  • Pietro (778 to before 799)
  • Issa (or Jesse) (799 to before 804)
  • Teodoro (804 to before 826)
  • Samuele (826 before 853)
  • Sergio (853–868, or before 879)
  • Leone (879 to before 928)
  • Gregorio (928 to before 948)
  • Anastasio (948 to before 963)
  • Giovanni (963to before 984)
  • Giovanni (984 to before 993)
  • Domenico (993)
  • Benedetto (999)
  • Rainiero (999–1011)

1000 to 1300

  • John of Crescenzi, future Pope (or Antipope) Sylvester III (1011–1062)
  • Ubaldo (1063–1094), first cardinal-bishop
    • Regizzone (Regizzo) (1084/90–1092/97), pseudocardinal
  • Crescenzio (1100–1126)
  • Corrado della Suburra (1127/28–1153)
  • Gregorio (1154)
  • Gregorio de Suburra
    Gregorio de Suburra
    Gregorio della Suburra was an Italian cardinal, created by Pope Innocent II in 1140 as priest of the title of S. Maria in Trastevere. He was nephew of Pope Anastasius IV, who promoted him to suburbicarian see of Sabina in September 1154. After the double papal election in September 1159 he...

     (1154–1163)
  • Conrad of Wittelsbach
    Conrad of Wittelsbach
    Conrad of Wittelsbach was the Archbishop of Mainz and Archchancellor of Germany from 20 June 1161 to 1165 and again from 1183 to his death. He was also a cardinal of the Roman Catholic Church....

     (1166–1200)
    • Giovanni (1172–1173), pseudocardinal of Antipope Callisto III
  • Giovanni di San Paolo
    Giovanni di San Paolo
    Giovanni di San Paolo was a Benedictine monk at San Paolo fuori le Muri in Rome. He was made Cardinal-Deacon on February 20, 1193, then Cardinal Priest of Santa Prisca in May 1193 and finally Cardinal Bishop of Sabina at the end of 1204...

     (1204–1214)
  • Peter of Benevento
    Peter of Benevento
    Peter of Benevento was an Italian canon lawyer, papal legate and Cardinal.He was closely associated with Pope Innocent III, and produced in 1209/10 a collection of his decretals, the Compilatio tertia, as an active editor and competing with that of Bernard of Pavia..He was sent in 1214 by ...

     (1217–1220)
  • Aldobrandino Orsini (1221)
  • Olivier von Paderborn (1225–1227)
  • Jean Halgrin d'Abbeville, O.Clun. (1227–1237)
  • Goffredo da Castiglione, (1238–1241)
  • William of Modena
    William of Modena
    William of Modena , also known as William of Sabina, Guglielmo de Chartreaux, Guglielmo de Savoy, Guillelmus, was an Italian clergyman and papal diplomat. He was frequently appointed a legate, or papal ambassador by the popes Honorius III and Gregory IX, especially in Livonia in the 1220s and in...

     (1244–1251)
  • Pierre de Bar
    Pierre de Bar
    Pierre de Bar was a French Cardinal. He is also tentatively identified as a scholastic philosopher, at the University of Paris around 1230. Some sources indicate that he entered Cistercian Order but more recent research conclude that he was secular priest...

     (de Barro), Cistercian (1251/52-1253)
  • Gui Faucoi le Gros 1261–1265
  • Bertrand de Saint-Martin
    Bertrand de Saint-Martin
    Bertrand de Saint-Martin was a French cardinal.He entered the Order of Benedictines and by 1238 was dean of the abbey of Saint-André de Villeneuve at Avignon. In 1248 he was elected bishop of Fréjus. In 1264 he was transferred to the see of Avignon, and in 1266 to the metropolitan see of Arles...

    , Benedictine (1273–1277 or 1278)
  • Gerardo Bianchi
    Gerardo Bianchi
    Gerardo Bianchi – was an Italian churchman.He studied law at the University of Bologna and became canon of the cathedral chapter of Parma. Pope Nicholas III in the consistory of March 12, 1278 named him Cardinal Priest of SS. XII Apostoli...

     (1281–1302)

1300–1500

  • Pedro Rodríguez (cardinal) (Hispano) (1302–1310)
  • Arnaud de Falguières (Faugères) (1310–1317)
  • Guillaume Pierre Godin
    Guillaume Pierre Godin
    Guillaume Pierre Godin was a French Dominican theologian, and Cardinal.-Life:He was born in Bayonne and spent his early years in south-west France. He was an early opponent of Duns Scotus at Paris, where he was briefly in 1292.He was master of the Sacred Palace from 1306...

    , Dominican (1317–1336)
  • Matteo Orsini
    Matteo Orsini
    Matteo Orsini was an Italian Dominican and Cardinal.He entered the Dominican Order, completed the full course of theology, obtained the Degree of Master, and taught theology at Paris, Florence, and Rome...

    , Dominican (1338–1340)
  • Pedro Gòmez de Barroso (1341–1348)
  • Bertrand de Déaulx (1348–1355)
  • Egidio Albornoz (1356–1367)
  • Guillaume d'Aigrefeuille, Benedictine (1367–1369)
  • Philippe de Cabassole (1370–1372)
  • Jean de Blandiac (1372–1379)
  • Hughes de Montelais (or Montrelaix) the younger, called de Bretagne (the obedience of Avignon 1379–1384)
  • Pierre de Sortenac (or de Bernier) (the obedience of Avignon 1384–1390)
  • Philippe Valois d'Alençon (Philippe d'Alençon) second son of Charles II of Alençon
    Charles II of Alençon
    Charles II of Alençon, called the Magnanimous was the second son of Charles of Valois and his first wife Margaret, and brother of Philip VI, King of France...

     (1380–1388) (deposed and reinstated by Pope Urban VI
    Pope Urban VI
    Pope Urban VI , born Bartolomeo Prignano, was Pope from 1378 to 1389.-Biography:Born in Itri, he was a devout monk and learned casuist, trained at Avignon. On March 21, 1364, he was consecrated Archbishop of Acerenza in the Kingdom of Naples...

    )
  • Jaime de Aragón (the obedience of Avignon 1391–1392)
  • Francesco Carbone Tomacelli
    Francesco Carbone Tomacelli
    Francesco Carbone Tomacelli was Italian cardinal at the time of the Great Western Schism. He was nephew of Pope Boniface IX....

    , Cistercian (1405)
  • Enrico Minutoli
    Enrico Minutoli
    Enrico Minutoli was an Italian Cardinal.He was bishop of Bitonto from 1382 to 1389 and then archbishop of Naples. He was also archpriest of the Liberian Basilica and Camerlengo of the Holy Roman Church ). He is buried in the Cappella Minutolo, Naples, with other members of the Minutolo family...

     (or Minutolo) (1409–1412)
  • Jean Flandrin (the obedience of Avignon 1405–1415)
  • Pedro Fernández (de Frías) (1412–1420)
  • Francesco Lando (1424–1427)
  • Giordano Orsini (1431–1438)
  • Branda Castiglione (1440–1443)
  • Bessarion (1449)
  • Amedeo di Savoia
    Antipope Felix V
    -External links:*...

     (1449–1451)
  • Isidoro da Tessalonica (1451–1462)
  • Juan de Torquemada
    Juan de Torquemada (Cardinal)
    Juan de Torquemada , or rather Johannes de Turrecremata, Spanish ecclesiastic, was born at Valladolid, and was educated in that city....

     (1463–1468)
  • Bessarion (again) (1468–1472)
  • Alain de Coëtivy
    Alain de Coëtivy
    Alain de Coëtivy was a French prelate from a Breton noble family. He was bishop of Avignon, Uzès, Nîmes and of Dol, titular cardinal of Santa Prassede, then cardinal-bishop of Palestrina and cardinal-bishop of Sabina....

     (1472–1474)
  • Berardo Eruli (1474–1479)
  • Giuliano della Rovere (1479–1483)
  • Oliviero Carafa
    Oliviero Carafa
    Oliviero Carafa was an Italian cardinal and diplomat of the Renaissance. Like the majority of his era's prelates, he displayed the lavish and conspicuous standard of living that was expected of a prince of the Church...

     (1483–1503)

1500–1700

  • Girolamo Basso della Rovere
    Girolamo Basso della Rovere
    Girolamo Basso della Rovere was an Italian Cardinal of the Roman Catholic Church.Basso della Rovere was the son of Giovanni Basso and his wife Luchina della Rovere of the House of della Rovere and sister of Pope Sixtus IVHe was bishop of Albenga in 1472, and then Bishop of Recanati in 1476...

     (1503–1507)
  • Raffaele Sansoni Galeotti Riario (1507–1508)
  • Giovanni Antonio Sangiorgio
    Giovanni Antonio Sangiorgio
    Giovanni Antonio Sangiorgio was an Italian canon lawyer and Cardinal. He has been called one of the ‘last two great commentators on feudal law’....

     (1508–1509)
  • Bernardino Lopez de Carvajal
    Bernardino López de Carvajal
    Bernardino López de Carvajal was a Spanish Cardinal.He was a nephew of Cardinal Juan Carvajal, and advanced rapidly in the ecclesiastical career at Rome, whither he came during the pontificate of Pope Sixtus IV...

     (1509–1511, deposed, again 1513–1521)
  • Francesco Soderini
    Francesco Soderini
    Francesco di Tommaso Soderini was a major diplomatic and Church figure of Renaissance Italy, and brother of Piero Soderini. He was an adversary of the Medici family....

     (1511–1513)
  • Niccolò Fieschi
    Niccolò Fieschi
    Niccolò Fieschi was an Italian Cardinal, of a prominent family of Genoa which features in Verdi's Simon Boccanegra.He was bishop of Fréjus from 1485, and bishop of Agde from 1488...

     (1521–1523)
  • Alessandro Farnese
    Pope Paul III
    Pope Paul III , born Alessandro Farnese, was Pope of the Roman Catholic Church from 1534 to his death in 1549. He came to the papal throne in an era following the sack of Rome in 1527 and rife with uncertainties in the Catholic Church following the Protestant Reformation...

     (1523–1524)
  • Antonio Maria Ciocchi del Monte (1524)
  • Pietro Accolti
    Pietro Accolti
    Pietro Accolti , known as the "cardinal of Ancona", was an Italian Roman Catholic cardinal. He was born in Florence, the son of Benedetto Accolti sr, and died at Rome Pietro Accolti (15 March 1455 – 11 December 1532), known as the "cardinal of Ancona", was an Italian Roman Catholic cardinal. He was...

     (1524–1532)
  • Giovanni Domenico de Cupi (1533–1535)
  • Bonifacio Ferrero (1535–1537)
  • Lorenzo Campeggio (1537–1539)
  • Antonio Sanseverino (1539–1543)
  • Antonio Pucci
    Antonio Pucci (cardinal)
    Antonio Pucci was a Cardinal of the Catholic Church.Antonio Pucci emanated from the Florentine noble family of Pucci. He was a nephew of Cardinals Roberto Pucci and Lorenzo Pucci....

     (1543–1544)
  • Giovanni Salviati
    Giovanni Salviati
    Giovanni Salviati was an Italian Cardinal and diplomat. He was papal legate in France, and conducted negotiations with the Emperor Charles V....

     (1544–1546)
  • Giovanni Pietro Carafa (1546–1550)
  • François de Tournon
    François de Tournon
    François de Tournon was a French Augustinian diplomat and Cardinal. From 1536 he was also a military leader of French forces operating in Provence, Savoy and Piedmont. In the same year he founded the Collège de Tournon. For a period he was effectively France's foreign minister.-External links:*...

     (1550–1560)
  • Robert de Lenoncourt
  • Giovanni Girolamo Morone (1561–1562)
  • Alessandro Farnese (1564–1565)
  • Ranuccio Farnese
    Ranuccio Farnese (Cardinal)
    Ranuccio Farnese was an Italian prelate, who was Cardinal of Santa Lucia in Messina, Sicily from 1545 to his death in 1565....

     (1565)
  • Cristoforo Madruzzo
    Cristoforo Madruzzo
    thumb|200px|Portrait of Cristoforo Madruzzo by [[Titian]] .[[Museu de Arte de São Paulo]], [[São Paulo]].Cristoforo Madruzzo was an Italian Roman Catholic cardinal and statesman. His brother Eriprando was a mercenary captain who fought in the Italian Wars.-Biography:Madruzzo was born on July 5,...

    , sometime between 1567 and 1578
  • Tiberio Crispo
    Tiberio Crispo
    Tiberio Crispo was a cardinal-nephew of Pope Paul III, raised to the cardinalate on December 19, 1544, and the bishop of Sessa Aurunca . He was possibly an illegitimate son of Paul III; Costanza Farnese and Ranuccio Farnese , the two undisputed legitimate children of Paul III, were born before his...

     (1565–1566)
  • Giovanni Michele Saraceni
    Giovanni Michele Saraceni
    Giovanni Michele Saraceni was a Cardinal of the Roman Catholic Church.Saraceni was born in Naples and was a relative of Cardinal Fabio Mignatelli.He was the archbishop of Acerenza and Matera from 1536...

     (1566–1569)
  • Giovanni Battista Cicala (o Cicada) (1569–1570)
  • Otto von Truchsess von Waldburg (1570)
  • Giulio della Rovere
    Giulio della Rovere
    Giulio della Rovere, also known as Giulio Feltrio della Rovere was an Italian Catholic Cardinal of the della Rovere family....

     (1570–1573)
  • Giovanni Ricci (1573–1574)
  • Scipione Rebiba
    Scipione Rebiba
    Scipione Rebiba was an Italian Cardinal of the Roman Catholic Church.He is of particular significance as more than 90% of all living Catholic bishops can trace their episcopal lineage back to him.-Biography:...

     (1574–1577)
  • Giacomo Savelli (1577–1578)
  • Giovanni Antonio Serbelloni
    Giovanni Antonio Serbelloni
    Giovanni Antonio Serbelloni was an Italian Cardinal, created in 1560, and papal legate. He was a cousin of Pope Pius IV, or nephew or uncle.He was bishop of Foligno in 1557 and bishop of Novara in 1560...

     (1578)
  • Antoine Perrenot de Granvelle
    Antoine Perrenot de Granvelle
    Antoine Perrenot de Granvelle , Comte de La Baume Saint Amour, was a Burgundian statesman, made a cardinal, who followed his father as a leading minister of the Spanish Habsburgs, and was one of the most influential European politicians during the time which immediately followed the appearance of...

     (1578–1586)
  • Innico d'Avalos d'Aragona
    Innico d'Avalos d'Aragona
    Innico d'Avalos d'Aragona , , was an Italian Cardinal, from Naples.He was the son of condottiero Alfonso d'Avalos d´Aquino,...

     Ordine di San Giacomo (1586–1589)
  • Tolomeo Gallio
    Tolomeo Gallio
    Tolomeo Gallio was an Italian Cardinal.In the time of Pope Gregory XIII, he acted as papal secretary of state , having a key role in the curia....

     (1589–1591)
  • Gabriele Paleotti
    Gabriele Paleotti
    Gabriele Paleotti was an Italian Cardinal and Archbishop of Bologna.-Life:Paleotti was born at Bologna. Having acquired, in 1546, the title of Doctor of Civil and Canon Law, he was appointed to teach civil law. In 1549 he became a canon of the cathedral, but he did not become a priest until later...

     (1591–1597)
  • Ludovico Madruzzo
    Ludovico Madruzzo
    thumb|200px|Portrait of Ludovico Madruzzo by [[Giovanni Battista Moroni]].Art Institute, [[Chicago]].Ludovico Madruzzo was an Italian Roman Catholic cardinal and statesman, the Imperial crown-cardinal and Prince-Bishop of the Bishopric of Trento .-Biography:Born in Trento, he was the son of baron...

     (1597–1600)
  • Girolamo Rusticucci (1600–1603)
  • Simeone Tagliavia d'Aragonia (1603–1604)
  • François de Joyeuse
    François de Joyeuse
    François de Joyeuse was a French churchman and politician.Born at Carcassonne, François de Joyeuse was the second son of Guillaume de Joyeuse and Marie Eléanor de Batarnay. As the younger son of a seigneur in an intensely religious family of bishops and soldiers, he was destined for a career in...

     (1604–1611)
  • Antonimaria Sauli (1611–1615)
  • Benedetto Giustiniani
    Benedetto Giustiniani
    Benedetto Giustiniani was an Italian clergyman who was made a cardinal in the consistory of 16 November 1586 by Pope Sixtus V....

     (1615–1620)
  • Pietro Aldobrandini
    Pietro Aldobrandini
    Pietro Aldobrandini was an Italian Cardinal and patron of the arts.He was made a cardinal in 1593 by his uncle, Pope Clement VIII. He took over the duchy of Ferrara in 1598 when it fell to the Papal States...

     (1620–1621)
  • Odoardo Farnese (1621–1623)
  • Bonifazio Bevilacqua Aldobrandini
    Bonifazio Bevilacqua Aldobrandini
    Bonifazio Bevilacqua Aldobrandini was an Italian Cardinal. He was the uncle of Pope Gregory XIV.-Biography:In 1601, Pope Clement VIII associated Count Luigi Bevilacqua and his two brothers, Conte Bonifazio IV and Conte Alfonso II , with his own family granting them use of his family’s...

     (1623–1626)
  • Carlo Gaudenzio Madruzzo
    Carlo Gaudenzio Madruzzo
    Carlo Gaudenzio Madruzzo was an Italian Roman Catholic cardinal and statesman.-Biography:Born in the castle of Issogne, Aosta Valley, he was the son of Baron Giovanni Federico Madruzzo and Isabelle of Challant, and nephew of Cardinal Ludovico Madruzzo, Prince-Bishop of Trento.After his studies in...

     (1626–1629)
  • Scipione Caffarelli-Borghese (1629–1633)
  • Felice Centini, OFMConv] (1633–1641)
  • Francesco Cennini de' Salamandri
    Francesco Cennini de' Salamandri
    Francesco Cennini de' Salamandri was an Italian Catholic Cardinal.Cennini de' Salamandri was born 21 November 1566 in Sarteano into a noble family of Marquises of Castiglioncello del Trinoro...

     (1641–1645)
  • Carlo de' Medici (1645), Giovanni Carlo de' Medici
  • Francesco Barberini
    Francesco Barberini (seniore)
    Francesco Barberini was an Italian Catholic Cardinal. The nephew of Pope Urban VIII , he benefited immensely from the nepotism practiced by his uncle...

     (1645–1652)
  • Bernardino Spada (1652–1655)
  • Giulio Cesare Sacchetti
    Giulio Cesare Sacchetti
    thumb|Cardinal Giulio Cesare Sacchetti, Pietro da Cortona, 1626Giulio Cesare Sacchetti was an Italian Catholic Cardinal and was twice unsuccessfully nominated by France for election as Pope.-Early life:...

     (1655–1663)
  • Marzio Ginetti
    Marzio Ginetti
    Marzio Ginetti was an Italian Catholic Cardinal and Cardinal Vicar of Rome. He was the uncle of Giovanni Francesco Ginetti....

     (1663–1666)
  • Francesco Maria Brancaccio
    Francesco Maria Brancaccio
    Francesco Maria Brancaccio was an Italian cardinal.He was elevated to the rank of cardinal by Pope Urban VIII in his consistory of 28 November 1633. He became Bishop of Viterbo in 1638, then of Sabina , and finally of Frascati...

     (1666–1668)
  • Giulio Gabrielli
    Giulio Gabrielli
    Giulio Gabrielli was an Italian Catholic Cardinal. He is sometimes referred to as Giulio Gabrielli the Elder to distinguish him from Giulio Gabrielli the Younger.-Early life:...

     (1668–1677)
  • Niccolò Albergati-Ludovisi
    Niccolò Albergati-Ludovisi
    thumb|Cardinal Niccolò Albergati-Ludovisi.Niccolò Albergati-Ludovisi was an Italian Catholic Cardinal and Archbishop of Bologna. He was a cousin of Cardinal Ludovico Ludovisi....

     (1677–1681)
  • Pietro Vito Ottoboni
    Pope Alexander VIII
    Pope Alexander VIII , born Pietro Vito Ottoboni, was Pope from 1689 to 1691.-Early life:Pietro Ottoboni was born of a noble Venetian family, and was the son of Marco Ottoboni, chancellor of the Republic of Venice...

     (1681–1683)
  • Carlo Pio di Savoia iuniore (1683–1689)
  • Paluzzo Paluzzi Altieri degli Albertoni
    Paluzzo Paluzzi Altieri degli Albertoni
    thumb|Cardinal Paluzzo Paluzzi Altieri degli Albertoni.Paluzzo Paluzzi Altieri degli Albertoni was an Italian Catholic Cardinal and Cardinal-Nephew to Pope Clement X.-Biography:...

     (1689–1691)
  • Giannicolò Conti (1691–1698)
  • Gasparo Carpegna (1698–1714)

1700–1900

  • Fulvio Astalli (1714–1719)
  • Francesco Pignatelli
    Francesco Pignatelli
    Francesco Pignatelli was an Italian cardinal.He entered the order of Theatines in 1665. On September 27, 1684 he was elected archbishop of Taranto. On February 19, 1703 he was transferred to the metropolitan see of Naples and occupied it until his death. Apostolic nuncio in Poland 1700-03...

     (1719–1724)
  • Francesco Acquaviva d'Aragona (1724–1725)
  • Pietro Ottoboni (1725–1730)
  • Annibale Albani
    Annibale Albani
    Annibale Albani was an Italian Cardinal.Albani was born in Urbino, to Albanian parents. A cousin of Pope Clement XI, he became Cardinal Bishop of Sabina ....

     (1730–1743)
  • Vincenzo Bichi (1743–1747)
  • Raniero d'Elci (1747–1753)
  • Silvio Valenti Gonzaga
    Silvio Valenti Gonzaga
    Silvio Valenti Gonzaga was an Italian nobleman and Catholic priest.Gonzaga was born in Mantua. He was elevated to the rank of cardinal in 1738 by Pope Clement XII. On the 15 May 1747 he was given the titular church of San Callisto...

     (1753–1756)
  • Joaquín Fernàndez de Portocarrero Mendoza (1756–1760)
  • Gian Francesco Albani
    Gian Francesco Albani
    Gian Francesco Albani was a Roman Catholic Cardinal. He was a member of the Albani family.Albani was born in Rome, the son of Carlo Albani, Duke of Soriano; his grand-uncle was Pope Clement XI...

     (1760–1773)
  • Carlo Rezzonico iuniore (1773–1776)
  • Andrea Corsini
    Andrea Corsini (cardinal)
    Andrea Corsini was an Italian cardinal. A great-nephew of pope Clement XII and a nephew of cardinal Neri Maria Corsini. Pope Clement XIII made him a cardinal in the consistory of 24 September 1759...

     (1776–1795)
  • Giovanni Archinto (1795–1799)
  • Giovanni Andrea Archetti
    Giovanni Andrea Archetti
    Giovanni Andrea Archetti was an Italian Roman Catholic CardinalBorn in Brescia, Lombardy, Archetti studied canon and civil law in La Sapienza University of Rome. He was ordained priest on September 10, 1775, elected titular archbishop of Chalcedon on the next day, and named Apostolic nuncio in...

     (1800–1805)
  • Ippolito Antonio Vincenti Mareri (1807–1811)
  • Lorenzo Litta
    Lorenzo Litta
    Lorenzo Litta was an Italian littérateur and churchman, who became a Cardinal.-Biography:Litta was born in Milan....

     (1814–1820)
  • Tomasso Arezzo (1820–1833)
  • Carlo Odescalchi
    Carlo Odescalchi
    Carlo Odescalchi, was an Italian prince and priest, archbishop of Ferrara, cardinal of the Roman Catholic Church and Vicar of the diocese of Rome. Close collaborator of Pope Pius VII. and of Gregory XVI he renounced his titles in order to become a Jesuit in 1638.He was born in Rome to a family of...

     (1833–1838)
  • Antonio Domenico Gamberini (1839–1841)
  • Luigi Emmanuele Nicolo Lambruschini (1842–1847)
  • Giacomo Luigi Brignole
    Giacomo Luigi Brignole
    Giacomo Luigi Brignole was a Catholic Cardinal and Camerlengo of the Sacred College of Cardinals.-Early life:Brignole was born on 8 May 1797 in Genoa....

     (1847–1853)
  • Gabriele Ferretti
    Gabriele Ferretti
    Gabriele Ferretti was an Italian Catholic Cardinal and Camerlengo of the Sacred College of Cardinals.-Personal life:Ferretti was born on 31 January 1795 in Ancona....

     (1853–1860)
  • Girolamo D'Andrea (1860–1868)
  • Karl August von Reisach (1868–1869)
  • Giuseppe Milesi Pironi Ferretti
    Giuseppe Milesi Pironi Ferretti
    Giuseppe Milesi Pironi Ferretti was an Italian Catholic Cardinal and politician of the Holy See.-Early life and career:...

     (1870–1873)
  • Luigi Bilio
    Luigi Bilio
    Luigi Maria Bilio B was a Cardinal of the Roman Catholic Church who among other things was Secretary of the Supreme Sacred Congregation of the Holy Office.Luigi Maria Bilio was born in Alessandria, Piedmont, Italy...

    , Barnabite (1873–1884)
  • Tommaso Martinelli
    Tommaso Martinelli
    Tommaso Maria Martinelli was a Cardinal of the Roman Catholic Church who served as Prefect of the Congregation of Rites....

    , OSA (1884–1888)
  • Luigi Serafini (1888–1894)
  • Mario Mocenni
    Mario Mocenni
    Mario Mocenni was an Italian Cardinal of the Roman Catholic Church, who served both in the diplomatic service of the Holy See and in the Roman Curia, and was elevated to the cardinalate in 1893.-Biography:...

     (1894–1904)

From 1900

  • Francesco di Paola Cassetta
    Francesco di Paola Cassetta
    Francesco di Paola Cassetta was an Italian Cardinal of the Catholic Church who served as Prefect of the Sacred Congregation of the Council from 1914 until his death, and was elevated to the cardinalate in 1899.-Biography:...

     (1905–1911)
  • Gaetano de Lai
    Gaetano de Lai
    Gaetano de Lai was an Italian cardinal of the Roman Catholic Church. He was part of the Roman Curia. He was an outspoken defender of the French monarchist Action française....

     (1911–1928)
  • Donato Sbarretti (1928–1939)
  • Enrico Sibilia
    Enrico Sibilia
    Enrico Sibilia was an Italian Roman Catholic Cardinal and former Nuncio to Austria.He was born in Anagni...

     (1939–1948)
  • Adeodato Giovanni Piazza (1949–1957)
  • Marcello Mimmi
    Marcello Mimmi
    Marcello Mimmi was an Italian Cardinal of the Roman Catholic Church. He served as Archbishop of Naples from 1952 to 1957, and Secretary of the Sacred Consistorial Congregation from 1957 until his death...

     (1958–1961)
  • Giuseppe Antonio Ferretto
    Giuseppe Ferretto
    Giuseppe Antonio Ferretto was an Italian Cardinal of the Roman Catholic Church who served as Major Penitentiary in the Roman Curia from 1967 to 1973, and was elevated to the cardinalate in 1961.-Biography:...

     (1961–1973)
  • Antonio Samoré (1974-1983)
  • Agnelo Rossi, (1984–1995)
  • Eduardo Francisco Pironio
    Eduardo Francisco Pironio
    Eduardo Francisco Pironio, Servant of God was a Roman Catholic Cardinal-Bishop. On 30 June 2006 the Diocese of Rome began requesting testimonies about the life and sanctity of Cardinal Pironio.-Early life:...

     (1995–1998)
  • Lucas Moreira Neves
    Lucas Moreira Neves
    Lucas Moreira Neves O.P. was a Brazilian Cardinal Bishop and Prefect of the Congregation for Bishops.Neves was born in São João del Rei, in Minas Gerais state, Brazil. He was ordained a priest on 9 July 1950...

     (1998–2002)
  • Giovanni Battista Re (from 2002)

External links


  • Konrad Eubel
    Konrad Eubel
    Konrad Eubel or Conradus Eubel was a German Franciscan historian. He is known for his reference work, the Hierarchia Catholica Medii Aevi, on medieval popes, cardinals and bishops. It appeared in three volumes, beginning in 1898...

    , Hierarchia Catholica Medii Aevi, vol. I-IV
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