Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Milan
Jump to navigationJump to search
Archdiocese of Milan
Archidioecesis Mediolanensis
Arcidiocesi di Milano
|
|
---|---|
The Cathedral of Milan
|
|
Location | |
Country | Italy |
Statistics | |
Area | 4,243 km2 (1,638 sq mi) |
Population – Total – Catholics (including non-members) |
(as of 2015) 5,512,245 5,032,130 (91.3%) |
Information | |
Denomination | Catholic |
Sui iuris church | Latin Church |
Rite | Ambrosian Rite (also Roman Rite) |
Established | 1st century |
Cathedral | Cattedrale di S. Maria Nascente |
Current leadership | |
Pope | Francis |
Archbishop | Mario Delpini |
Auxiliary Bishops | |
Bishops emeritus | |
Map | |
Website | |
chiesadimilano.it |
The Archdiocese of Milan (Italian: Arcidiocesi di Milano; Latin: Archidioecesis Mediolanensis) is a metropolitan see of the Catholic Church in Italy which covers the areas of Milan, Monza, Lecco and Varese. It has long maintained its own Latin liturgical rite, the Ambrosian rite, which is still used in the greater part of the diocesan territory. Among its past archbishops, the better known are Saint Ambrose, Saint Charles Borromeo, Pope Pius XI and Saint Pope Paul VI.
The Archdiocese of Milan is the metropolitan see of the ecclesiastical province of Milan, which includes the suffragan dioceses of Bergamo, Brescia, Como, Crema, Cremona, Lodi, Mantova, Pavia, and Vigevano.[2][3]
Milan’s Archdiocese is the largest in Europe[4], and the one having the most priests in the world, with 2,648 priests living in the diocese, among which 1,861 secular priests.
History[edit]
This section does not cite any sources. (May 2018) (Learn how and when to remove this template message)
|
According to the legend, the Gospel was brought to Milan by St. Barnabas, and the first Bishop of Milan, St. Anathalon, was a disciple of that apostle. But a diocese cannot have been established there before 200, and possibly not until much later, for the list of the bishops of Milan names only five predecessors of Mirocles, who participated at the Lateran council held in 313 in Rome. During the persecutions of the third and early fourth century, several Christians suffered martyrdom and were venerated at Milan: among them Gervasius and Protasius (first persecution of Diocletian), Victor, Nabor and Felix, and Nazarius and Celsus. The persecutions ended in 313 when the Emperors Constantine I and Licinius issued the Edict of Milan which proclaimed the religious toleration in the Roman Empire.
Archbishop of Milan
|
|
---|---|
CATHOLIC | |
Coat of arms
|
|
Incumbent: Mario Delpini Installed 9 September 2017 |
|
Information | |
First holder | Saint Anathalon |
Established | 1st century |
Cathedral | Cattedrale di S. Maria Nascente |
Historically, the Milanese church has been in full communion with the Papacy. Among its bishops should be named Eustorgius I and Dionysius, who firmly opposed apostasy imposed by the Roman Emperor Constantius II. Dionysus was exiled to Cappadocia (355), while the Romans put Auxentius on the episcopal throne of Milan. At the death of Auxentius, the great Saint Ambrose was elected bishop by the people of Milan (374-97). Among his successors, Simplicianus, Senator and Dacius (530-52), who lived almost always in exile at Constantinople on account of the Gothic War.
During the Lombard invasion, many things happened to the church in Milan. The Schism of the Three Chapters guaranteed autonomy of the Milanese Church for 38 years, since the Lombards were enemies of the Byzantines. At the siege of Milan by the Lombard Alboin, the Bishop Honoratus (568) sought refuge in Genoa, with a great number of his clergy, which returned to Milan only 70 years later under John the Good.
In the 10th-century, the archbishops of Milan became feudatory of the Emperor extending his jurisdiction to all North-West Italy. The most distinguished of these was Ariberto da Intimiano (1018–45). As the power of the burghers grew, that of the archbishops waned, and with it the imperial authority which the prelate represented, and since the 12th century Milan became a Guelph town who fought the Emperor.[5] The archbishop Ottone Visconti in the 13th-century caused himself to be proclaimed perpetual lord, thus putting an end to the Republic of Milan and establishing the power of the House of Visconti who ruled the Duchy of Milan from 1277 to 1447.
The figure who marked the modern history of the church of Milan was Saint Charles Borromeo, archbishop of Milan from 1564 to 1584, who was a leading figure during the Counter-Reformation and was responsible for significant reforms in the Catholic Church. His pastoral efforts were followed also by his successors, such as Federico Borromeo (died 1631) and Giuseppe Pozzobonelli (died 1783).
In the 20th century, two Cardinal Archbishops of Milan were elected to the papacy: in 1922, Cardinal Achille Ratti was elected as Pope Pius XI, and in 1963 Cardinal Giovanni Battista Montini was elected as Pope Paul VI. The church of Milan was governed from 1979 to 2002 by Cardinal Carlo Maria Martini, S.J., who had been a favorite of the Catholic left.
Present leadership[edit]
As of 7 July 2017, the current Metropolitan Archbishop of Milan is Archbishop Mario Enrico Delpini, who has been serving since his appointment by Pope Francis, having served previously as the Vicar-General and the Auxiliary Bishop of Milan. Delpini had succeeded the retiring Cardinal Angelo Scola, who had been in office since 2011 and had been a possible papabile.
Archbishop Delpini is assisted by four Auxiliary Bishops: Erminio De Scalzi, Luigi Stucchi, Franco Agnesi, and Paolo Martinelli. The resignations of Stucchi and De Scalzi were accepted by Pope Francis on 30 April 2020. That same day, he appointed Giovanni Raimondi and Giuseppe Vegezzi as auxiliary bishops.[1]
Seminaries[edit]
The Seminary of the archdiocese has the principal see in Venegono Inferiore. The minor seminary were located in Seveso.
Bishops and archbishops[edit]
A list of the bishops and archbishops of Milan is engraved in plaque in the South nave of the Cathedral of Milan, but such list contains some historical errors. The data here below follow the work of Eugenio Cazzani.[6]
Ancient age[edit]
- St Barnabas the Apostle, 1st century
- St Anathalon
- St Caius
- St Castricianus
- St Calimerus (about 270–280)
- St Monas (283–313?)
- St Mirocles (313–316?)
- St Maternus (316–328?)
- St Protasius (328–343?)
- St Eustorgius I (343–349?)
- St Dionysius (349–355)
- Auxentius (355–374), Arian, considered an intruder by the Catholic Church
- St Ambrose (374–397)
- St Simplician (397–400)
- St Venerius (400–408)
- St Marolus (408–423)
- St Martinianus (423–435)
- St Glycerius (436–438)
- St Lazarus (438–449)
- St Eusebius (449–462)
- St Gerontius (462–465)
- St Benignus (465–472)
- St Senator (472–475)
- St Theodorus I (475–490)
- St Lawrence I (490–512)
- St Eustorgius II (512–518)
- St Magnus (518–530?)
- St Dacius (530–552)
- Vitale (552–556)
- St Ausanus (556–559?)
Genoa period[edit]
- St Honoratus (560–571?)
- Frontone (571–573?)
- Lawrence II (573–592)
- Constantius (593–600)
- Deodatus (601–628)
- Asterius (629–639)
- Forte (639–641)
Middle Age[edit]
- St John the Good (641–669)
- St Antoninus (669–671)
- St Maurilius (671)
- St Ampelius (671–676)
- St Mansuetus (676–685)
- St Benedict (685–732)
- Theodorus II (732–746)
- St Natalis (746–747)
- Arifred (747–748)
- Stabile (748–750)
- Leto (751–755)
- Tommaso (755–783)
- Peter (784–803)
- Odelperto (803–813)
- St Anselm I (bishop of Milan) (813–818)
- St Buono (818–822)
- Angilbert I (822–823)
- Angilberto II Pusterla (824–859)
- Tadone (860–868)
- Ansperto Confalonieri of Biassono (868–881)
- Anselmo II Capra (882–896)
- Landulf I (896–899)
- Andrea of Canciano (899–906)
- Aicone (906–918)
- Gariberto of Besana (918–921)
- Lambert (921–931)
- Elduin (931–936)
- Arderico (936–948)
- Adelman (948–953)
- Walpert (953–970)
- Arnulf I (970–974)
- Gotofredo I (974–979)
- Landulf II of Carcano (980–998)
- Arnolfo II da Arsago (998–1018)
- Ariberto da Intimiano (1018–1045)
- Guido da Velate (1045–1069)
- Attone (1070–1075)
- Gotofredo II da Castiglione (1070–1075), antibishop
- Tedald (1075–1080)
- Anselmo III da Rho (1086–1093)
- Arnolfo III (1093–1097)
- Anselmo IV da Bovisio (1097–1101)
- Grossolano (1102–1112)
- Giordano da Clivio (1112–1120)
- Olrico da Corte (1120–1126)
- Anselmo V della Pusterla (1126–1135)
- Robaldo (1135–1145)
- Umberto I da Pirovano (1146–1166)
- St Galdino della Sala (1166–1176)
- Algisio da Pirovano (1176–1185)
- Umberto II Crivelli (1185–1187)[7]
- Milone da Cardano (1187–1195)
- Umberto III da Terzago (1195–1196)
- Filippo I da Lampugnano (1196–1206)
- Umberto IV da Pirovano (1206–1211)
- Gerardo da Sessa (1211–1212)
- Enrico I da Settala (1213–1230)
- Guglielmo I da Rizolio (1230–1241)
- Leon da Perego (1241–1257)
- Ottone Visconti (1262–1295)
- Ruffino da Frisseto (1295–1296)
- Francesco I da Parma (1296–1308)
- Cassone della Torre (1308–1317)
- Aicardo da Intimiano (1317–1339)
- Giovanni II Visconti (1342–1354)
- Roberto Visconti (1354–1361)
- Guglielmo II della Pusterla (1361–1370)
- Simon da Borsano (1370–1380)
- Antonio de’ Saluzzi (1380–1401)
- Pietro II di Candia (1402–1410)
- Francesco II Crippa (1409–1414)
- Bartolommeo Capra (1414–1433)
- Francesco III Piccolpasso (1433–1443)
- Enrico II Rampini (1443–1450)
- Giovanni III Visconti (1450–1453)
- Nicolò Amidano (1453–1454)
- Timoteo Maffei (1454)
- Gabriele Sforza (1454–1457)
- Carlo I da Forlì (1457–1461)
- Cardinal Stefano Nardini (1461–1484)
- Cardinal Giovan IV Arcimboldi (1484–1488) (absentee)
- Guido Antonio Arcimboldi (1488–1497) (absentee)
- Ottaviano Arcimboldi (1497) (absentee)
- Cardinal Ippolito I d’Este (1497–1520) (absentee)
- Cardinal Ippolito II d’Este (1520–1550) (absentee)
- Giovanni Angelo Arcimboldi (1550–1555) (absentee)
- Cardinal Ippolito II d’Este (1555–1556) (absentee)
- Filippo II Archinto (1556–1558) (absentee)
- vacant
Modern Age[edit]
- Cardinal (St.) Carlo Borromeo (1564–1584)
- Cardinal Gaspare Visconti (1584–1595)
- Cardinal Federico I Borromeo (1595–1631)
- Cardinal Cesare Monti (1632–1650)
- Cardinal Alfonso Litta (1652–1679)
- Cardinal Federico II Visconti (1681–1693)
- Cardinal Federico III Caccia (1693–1699)
- Cardinal Giuseppe I Archinto (1699–1712)
- Cardinal Benedetto II Erba Odescalchi (1712–1737)
- Cardinal Carlo Gaetano Stampa (1737–1742)
- Cardinal Giuseppe II Pozzobonelli (1743–1783)
- Filippo Maria Visconti (1784–1801)
- Cardinal Giovanni Battista Caprara (1802–1810)
- vacant
- Cardinal Carlo Gaetano Gaisruck (1816–1846)
- Bartolomeo Carlo Romilli (1847–1859)
- Paolo Angelo Ballerini (1859–1867)
- Luigi Nazari di Calabiana (1867–1893)
- Cardinal (Bl.) Andrea Ferrari (May 21, 1894 – February 2, 1921)
- Cardinal Ambrogio Damiano Ratti (June 13, 1921–February 6, 1922), elected Pope Pius XI
- Cardinal Eugenio Tosi (1922–1929)
- Cardinal (Bl.) Ildefonso Schuster, OSB (June 26, 1929 – August 30, 1954)
- Cardinal (St.) Giovanni Battista Montini (November 1, 1954–June 19, 1963), elected Pope Paul VI
- Cardinal Giovanni Colombo (August 10, 1963 – December 29, 1979)
- Cardinal Carlo Maria Martini, SJ (December 29, 1979 – June 11, 2002)
- Cardinal Dionigi Tettamanzi (July 11, 2002 – June 28, 2011)
- Cardinal Angelo Scola (June 28, 2011 – July 7, 2017)
- Mario Delpini (September 9, 2017 – Present)[8]
Parishes[edit]
The 1,104 parishes all fall within the region of Lombardy. They are divided between the Province of Bergamo, the Province of Como, the Province of Lecco, the Province of Milan, the Province of Pavia, and the Province of Varese.[9]