Catholic Diocese of Duvno

Diocese of Duvno (Latin: Dioecesis Dumnensis or Dioecesis Dalminiensis) was a Latin Roman Catholic diocese in the area of present Bosnia and Herzegovina.

  Diocese of Duvno in the 15th century

History

The diocese was born in the area of the Roman province of Dalmatia with the bishop's seat in Delminium. During the rule of the Roman emperor Valerian, c. 257, saint Venantius of Salona was martyred in Delminium.[1] Pope Gregory I mentioned this diocese in his writings from 591.[2]

At the Church Councils of Split it was mentioned as an old emptied diocese. Pope Clement V restored it in the 14th century and since then it regularly had appointed bishops until 1663 [3] when its territory merged into the Diocese of Makarska. The last bishop, Mihalj Jahnn, the Czech Franciscan, found a devastated land and killed Christians.[3]

On 24 March 1846 the Apostolic Vicariate of Herzegovina was founded by separating from the Apostolic Vicariate of Bosnia and from the Diocese of Dubrovnik. The Vicariate encompassed area of the former Diocese of Duvno.

At the restoration of regular ecclesiastical hierarchy in Bosnia and Herzegovina in 1881, Duvno was located within the boundaries of the Mostar diocese, so the bishop of Mostar adopted the title of Bishop of Duvno, becoming the bishop of Mostar-Duvno to maintain the memory of Duvno Diocese.[4]

Episcopal ordinaries

Bishops of Duvno
From Until Incumbent Notes
24 March 1317 unknown John of Hoio, OCist
1337 1345 Madius
20 June 1345 unknown John, OCist
1347 unknown Guerino of Zadar
1355 1370 Stephen
1370 unknown Simon
c. 1383 1394 John
7 September 1394 unknown Peter Tilikonis, OFM
c. 1406 21 October 1412 George, OFM Translated to the Diocese of Hvar in 1412.
1412 1419 George
15 September 1419 unknown Blaise of Navarra, OFM
c. 1426 1433 Nicholas
27 July 1433 1439 Hugo Fornetus
22 April 1439 1459 Jeronim Trogiranin, OFM
2 January 1460 1464 Nikola Zadranin, OFM
1489 1495 Vid de Ruscis, OFM
26 January 1507 1514 Tomás de Córdoba, OESA
8 August 1514 12 October 1520 Alvaro Salas Sánchez, OESA
1520 unknown Andrija Klement de Turrecremata, OFM
after 1520 before 1536 Luca di Seriate Titular bishop of Duvno and suffragan of Cardinal Benedetto Accolti
14 July 1536 1551 Nikola de Berganicio
2 December 1551 1557 Daniel Vocatius, OFM Translated to the Diocese of Sigüenza in Spain probably in 1563.
unknown 1590 Daniel Vladimirović Neretvanin
1597 1606 Nikola Ugrinović
30 August 1610 6 October 1625 Alfonso de Requeséns Fenollet Also Bishop of Risano. Translated to the Diocese of Barbastro in 1625.
30 August 1627 unknown Vincenzo Zucconi Bishop of Risano.
31 July 1645 24 July 1647 Marijan Maravić, OFM Translated to the Diocese of Bosnia in 1647.
25 October 1655 1656 Pavao Posilović, OFM Also Bishop of Skradin (1642-1657)
14 January 1658 1665 Mihalj Jahnn, OFM
1665 1686 Marijan Lišnjić, OFM Apostolic administrator and bishop of Makarska
1740 14 February 1773 Pavao Dragičević, OFM
22 December 1800 1807 Silvestro Scarani Italian. Auxiliary Bishop of Ostia–Velletri
23 September 1816 7 October 1817 Francesco Maria Biordi Italian.
25 May 1818 3 May 1824 Joseph Chrysostomus Pauer Austrian. Military vicar of Austria, later served as Bishop of Sankt Pölten.
9 April 1827 6 February 1836 Franciszek Pawłowski Polish. Auxiliary Bishop of Warszawa, Coadjutor Bishop of Płock, and later Bishop of Płock.
6 April 1835 24 April 1848 Johann Aloys Hoffmann Austrian. Auxiliary Bishop of Salzburg.
20 May 1850 19 October 1868 Balthasar Schitter Austrian. Auxiliary Bishop of Salzburg.
1868 7 September 1874 Josip Mihalović Hungarian. Archbishop of Zagreb and later a cardinal.
7 September 1874 18 January 1884 Dominic Manucy American. Vicar Apostolic of Brownsville, later Bishop of Mobile and again Vicar Apostolic of Brownville, Titular Bishop of Maroneia.
24 March 1884 2 August 1897 Cyryl Lubowidzki Ukrainian. Auxiliary Bishop of Kyiv–Černihiv, later Bishop of Lutsk and Zytomierz and Apostolic Administrator of Kamyanets-Podilsky.
Sources:[5]

See also

References

  1. "Duvanjska biskupija". enciklopedija.hr. Miroslav Krleža Institute of Lexicography. Retrieved 3 August 2017.
  2. Gregorius I: Liber I., Epist. XXXVIII.
  3. "Duvanjska biskupija". Proleksis enciklopedija. Miroslav Krleža Institute of Lexicography. Retrieved 3 August 2017.
  4. Leo XIII, Ex hac augusta
  5. "Diocese of Mostar-Duvno". gcatholic.org. GCatholic.org. Retrieved 3 August 2017.

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