Gilbert de Nîmes was a prelate of the Roman Catholic Church in France during the Dark Ages,[1][2][3] and the sixteenth known bishop of Nimes, 870–890.[4]
During his Bishopric, from 876, he led a process that retrieved the village of Bizac (now part of the municipality of Calvisson) to the diocese of Nîmes as it had been usurped by the Lord Genesis, in 892.[5]
Later, with the help of John VIII, he captured the Abbey of Saint-Gilles which had been with the Abbé Léon. They begged the help of John VIII, who then convened a synod. It ordered Gilbert to surrender his property to Father Leo.[6]
References
- ↑ The antiquity of Marseille Church and the succession of its bishops, Henri François-Xavier de Belsunce Castelmoron-, Brebion, 1747.
- ↑ Liste des évêques de Nîmes.
- ↑ Alexandre Germain, History of Nimes church, (Debécourt), 1838.
- ↑ List of the Bishops of Nimes in French.
- ↑ Gilbert de Nimes Archived 2014-12-22 at the Wayback Machine.
- ↑ Le dictionnaire des papes [archive], Ivan Gobry, Pygmalion, 2013.
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