The Diocese of Atri (Latin: Dioecesis Hatriensis seu Atriensis) was a Roman Catholic diocese located in the town of Atri in the modern civil Province of Teramo in the Abruzzo region of Italy. It was created in 1252 by order of Pope Innocent IV, and immediately united with the Diocese of Penne to form the Diocese of Penne e Atri. One single bishop held both dioceses, aeque personaliter, at the same time.[1][2] The two dioceses were separated by order of Pope Pius XII on 1 July 1949. Atri was united, aeque principaliter, with the diocese of Teramo, and a new bishop of Teramo e Atri was appointed on 12 December 1949.[3] The diocese was abolished completely on 30 September 1986, and its territory became part of the diocese of Teramo.

Co-cathedral of the Assumption, Atri

History

After the death of King Roger II of Sicily in 1154, Atri was laid waste by Robert III, Count of Loritello and Count of Bassavilla, whose family then controlled the territory until the end of the 12th century. They were followed by the popes, the Hohenstaufen, and the Angevins. By 1195, power in Atri was in the hands of the Acquaviva family.[4]

Cardinal Petrus Collemezzo, suburbicarian Bishop of Albano,[5] acting on a mandate of Pope Innocent IV, made the decision that the place called Adria (Hadria, Hatria) should be raised to the status of a city, and that the church of S. Maria in Adria should become a cathedral; he then established the diocese of Atri.[6] His acts were confirmed by Pope Innocent on 15 March 1252.[7] In a letter to Bishop Beroaldus of Penne of 2 April 1252, Pope Innocent informed him that he was also bishop of the new diocese of Atri, and that he should treat the diocese of Adria as his spouse.[8]

Chapter and cathedral

The cathedral of Atri is dedicated to the Assumption of the body of the Virgin Mary into heaven.[9] The church that became the cathedral was already in existence in 1102.[10] IT was consecrated as a cathedral in 1285.[11]

After the diocese of Atri was established in 1252, the cathedral of Atri was staffed and administered by a corporation called the Chapter, composed of four dignities (the Archdeacon, the Archpriest, and two Primicerii) and sixteen other canons, with the addition of six minor canons called "Canonici S. Gregorii".[12]

In electing a new bishop, the two Chapters of Canons of Penne and of Atri were to vote together as one body. The number of electors from each Chapter was to be the same, even if one Chapter had more members than the other. For the first round of voting, they could meet in one or the other cathedral, or in some mutually agreed upon place; in subsequent votes they were to meet alternately in Atri and Penne.[13]

Following the death of Bishop Leonardus (1285–1302) at Atri, the Chapter of Atri sent notifications and special messengers several times to the Chapter of Penne and its individual members to assemble with them at a convenient place to elect a new bishop. Contrary to the statutes, the Chapter of Penne refused to meet with their colleagues, but proceeded to an election of their own, choosing Master John of Pontecorvo, a papal scriptor and chaplain of Cardinal Matteo Orsini. The Canons of Atri then gave notice that they would proceed to an election on an announced day, and when they met, they elected, by a vote of 19 to 1, Canon Bernardus of S. Pierre in Angers. When the electoral certificate was presented to the pope for confirmation, Canon Bernardus resigned the election into the hands of Pope Boniface VIII, who accepted the resignation. The pope then provided (appointed) Canon Bernardus the bishop of Penne and Atri, and ordered the Cardinal Bishop of Tusculum, Giovanni Boccamazzzi, to carry out the episcopal consecration.[14]

Suffragan of Chieti

Both Penne and Atri were directly subject to the Holy See, until the establishment of the ecclesiastical province of Chieti in 1526 by Pope Clement VII (Medici). However, on 18 July 1539, Pope Paul III (Farnese), whose great-grandson Ottavio Farnese had become Duke of Penne, issued the bull "Inter Caetera", reversing the arrangement of Clement VII and making the diocese of Penne ed Atri again directly dependent upon the Holy See.[15]

When a general reorganization of the dioceses of the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies took place in June 1818, the diocese of Penne ed Atri remained unchanged, directly subject to the papacy.[16]

20th century changes

By the mid-20th century, demographic changes had taken place in the Abruzzi which could not be ignored. Better transportation and increasing industrialization had lured people out of the inland valleys, with agriculture and animal husbandry as major occupations, to the cities. Pescara, a distance of 30 km (18 miles) from Penne, had become the largest city in the province, and the Italian Republic moved the provincial capital to the coastal town of Pescara. The Vatican took note, and felt obliged to follow suit by having the seat of a bishop in the capital of the province.[17] Pescara presented a problem, however, since the city had been created out of two towns in two different dioceses, Chieti and Penne, while Atri's territory was within the boundaries of the civil province of Teramo.[18] The diocese of Atri was therefore removed from the union with Penne, and transferred to the diocese of Teramo, aeque principaliter, that is, the bishop of Teramo was at the same time also bishop of Atri, and was to be called episcopus Theramensis et Hatriensis.[19] The episcopal seat of the diocese of Penne was transferred to the new diocese of Pescara; the diocese was to be called Penne-Pescara.[20]

A further change in the status of Atri was made in 1986, in order to conform to Italian civil law which was embodied in the Concordat between the Vatican and the Italian Republic of 18 February 1984.[21] After extensive consultations, Pope John Paul II decreed that the status of the bishop governing several dioceses aeque personaliter was abolished, as was the case with Teramo and Atri; and that the diocese of Atri was therefore merged with the diocese of Teramo to form a single diocese. The changes were embodied in a decree of the Sacred Congregation of Bishops in the Roman Curia, promulgated on 30 September 1986.[22] The seat of the merged dioceses was to be in Teramo, and the official name of the diocese was to be "Dioecesis Aprutina-Hatriensis".[23] The diocesan offices (curia) was to be in Teramo, as was the diocesan tribunal, the diocesan seminary, the College of Consultors, and the Priests' Council, unless otherwise directed by the bishop. The cathedral in Atri was renamed a co-cathedral.[24]

See also

References

  1. "Diocese of Atri" Catholic-Hierarchy.org. David M. Cheney. Retrieved May 1, 2016
  2. "Diocese of Atri" GCatholic.org. Gabriel Chow. Retrieved May 1, 2016.
  3. Acta Apostolicae Sedis 42 (Rome: Tip. Vaticana 1950), pp. 135-137. AAS 41 (1949), p. 584.
  4. Bindi (1889), p. 136.
  5. Eubel, Hierarchia catholica Vol. I, p. 7 no. 1.
  6. Bindi, Monumenti, p. 168, dates the establishment by the cardinal in 1251.
  7. Eubel I, p. 394, note 1. Élie Berger, Les registres d'Innocent IV Vol. III (Paris: A. Fontemoing 1897), p. 30, no. 5596.
  8. Berger, Les registres d'Innocent IV Vol. III, p. 32, nos. 5602 and 5603. Cappelletti XXI, p. 446.
  9. Cappelletti XXI, pp. 445-446.
  10. Sorricchio (1897), "Notizie storiche," p. 2.
  11. Bindi, "Memorie", p. 169.
  12. Ughelli I, p. 1112. Ritzler & Sefrin, Hierarchia catholica V, p. 310, note 1; Vi, p. 332, note 1. Atri had a population of c. 6,000 persons in 1698; in 1755, the population was estimated at 5,000 persons.
  13. Ughelli, Italia sacra Vol 1, p. 1139.
  14. Bindi, Monumenti, p. 168. note 1. Georges Digard, Les registres de Boniface VIII Tome III (Paris: Fontemoing 1906), (in Latin), p. 473. no. 4653.
  15. Ughelli, Italia sacra VI, pp. 756-758.
  16. Bullarii Romani continuatio, Summorum Pontificum Clementis XIII, Clementis XIV, Pii VI, Pii VII, Leonis XII Gregorii XVI constitutiones... (in Latin). Vol. 15 (Tomus decimus quintus). Rome: typographia Reverendae Camerae Apostolicae. 1853. p. 59 § 30.: "Episcopales autem ecclesiae Aversasa, Militensis , Valvensis et Sulamonensis, Pennensis et Atriensis , Melphiensis et Rappollensis invicem respective unitae, Trojana, Neritonensis, Triventina, ac Marsorum seu Marsicana in eo quo ad praesens reperiuntur statu etiam in posterum permanebunt."
  17. Acta Apostolicae Sedis Vol. 42 (Rome: Tip. Vaticana 1950), p. 135: "Hisce namque novissimis temporibus Piscaría urbs dioecesis Pinnensis, quae ad maris Adriatici oras iacet, tale incrementum sumpsit, ut, magni facta nominis civitas, merito eiusdem nominis Provinciae caput evaserit."
  18. "Praeterea Hatriensis dioecesis, usque nunc Pinnensi Ecclesiae aeque principaliter canonice unita, tota in Provincia civili Theramensi sita est."
  19. Acta Apostolicae Sedis Vol. 42, p. 136, no. 10: "Cum autem dioecesis Hatriensis, aeque principaliter cathedrali Ecclesiae Pinnensi hucusque unita, tota in Provincia civili Theramensi, ut diximus, exstet, eam a dioecesi Pinnensi seiungimus et Theramensi aeque principaliter unimus, ita ut unus idemque Antistes utrique praesit Ecclesiae et Episcopus Theramensis et Hatriensis posthac censeatur et sit."
  20. Acta Apostolicae Sedis Vol. 42, p. 136, no. 3: "Dioecesis sic constituta eiusque pro tempore Episcopus in posterum Pinnensis-Piscariensis appellabuntur, qui, ut antea, Apostolicae Sedi immediate subiecti erunt."
  21. Agreement between the Holy See and the Italian Republic: Modifications to the Lateran Concordat; signed by the Italian Republic and the Holy See on 18 February 1984; ratified by the Italian Parliament on 25 March 1985.
  22. Acta Apostolicae Sedis 79 (Rome 1987), pp. 645-647.
  23. AAS, p. 646, no. 2.
  24. AAS, p. 646, no. 5.

Sources



This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.