Diocese of Montauban
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The French Catholic diocese of Montauban is coextensive with Tarn-et-Garonne. It is suffragan of the archdiocese of Toulouse. Its see is Montauban Cathedral.
Suppressed under the Concordat of 1802 and divided between the three neighbouring dioceses of Toulouse, Agen, and Cahors, Montauban was re-established by imperial decree of 1809, but this measure was not approved by the Holy See. Re-established by the Concordat of 1817, it was filled only in 1824.
[edit] History
In 820 the Benedictine monks had founded the Abbey of Montauriol under the patronage of St. Martin; subsequently it adopted the name of its abbot St. Theodard, Archbishop of Narbonne, who died at the abbey in 893. The Count of Toulouse, Alphonse Jourdan, took from the abbey in 1144 its lands on the heights overlooking the right bank of the Tarn, and founded there the city of Montauban; a certain number of inhabitants of Montauriol and serfs of the abbey formed the nucleus of the population. The monks protested, and in 1149 a satisfactory agreement was concluded.
Notwithstanding the sufferings of Montauban during the Albigensian wars, it grew rapidly. Pope John XXII, by the Bull Salvator (25 June, 1317), separated from the ecclesiastical province of Narbonne, the see of Toulouse, made it an archiepiscopal see, and gave it as suffragans four dioceses created within its territory: Montauban, the diocese of St.-Papoul, diocese of Rieux, and diocese of Lombez. Bertrand de Puy, abbot at Montauriol, was first bishop of Montauban.
Montauban counts among its bishops: Cardinal Georges d'Amboise (1484-1491), minister of Louis XII, and Jean de Lettes (1539-1556), who married and became a Protestant. Despite the resistance of Jacques des Prés-Montpezat (1556-1589), a nephew of Jean de Lettes who succeeded him as bishop, the Calvinists became masters of the city; in 1561 they interdicted Catholic worship; the destruction of the churches, and even of the cathedral, was begun and carried on until 1567. In 1570 Montauban became one of the four strongholds granted the Protestants and in 1578, 1579, and 1584 harboured the synods held by the députés of the Reformed Churches of France.
For a short time, in 1600, Catholic worship was re-established but was soon suppressed; Bishop Anne Carrion de Murviel (1600-1652) withdrew to Montech during the greater part of his reign and administered thence the Church of Montauban. In spite of the unsuccessful siege of Montauban by Louis XIII (August-November, 1621), the fall of La Rochelle (1629) entailed the submission of the city, and Richelieu entered it on 20 August, 1629. Other bishops of note were: Le Tonnellier de Breteuil (1762-1794), who died during theReign of Terror in the prison of Rouen, after converting the philosopher La Harpe to Catholicism; the future Cardinal de Cheverus, 1824-26.
The Church of Moissac has portal built in 1107 which is a veritable museum of Romanesque sculpture; its cloister (1100-1108) is one of the most remarkable in France. Legend attributes to Clovis the foundation of the Abbey of Moissac in 506, but St. Amand (594-675) seems to have been the first abbot. The abbey grew, and in a few years its possessions extended to the gates of Toulouse.
The threats and incursions of the Saracens, Hungarians, and Northmen brought the monks of Moissac to elect "knight abbots" who were laymen, and whose mission was to defend them. From the tenth to the thirteenth century several of the counts of Toulouse were knight-abbots of Moissac; the death of Alfonso II (1271) made the King of France the legitimate successor of the counts of Toulouse, and in this way the abbey came to depend directly on the kings of France, henceforth its "knight-abbots". Some of the abbots were saints: St. Ausbert (663-678); St. Léotadius (678-691); St. Paternus (691-718); St. Amarandus (718-720). The union of Moissac with Cluny was begun by Abbot Stephen as early as 1047, and completed in 1063 under Abbot Durand. Four filial abbeys and numerous priories depended on the Abbey of Moissac. Among the commendatory abbots were Louis of Lorraine, Cardinal de Guise (1556-1578); Charles of Lorraine, the Cardinal de Vaudemont (1578-1590). In 1618 Moissac was transformed into a collegiate church which had, among other titulars, Cardinal Mazarin (1644-1661), and Cardinal de Loménie de Brienne, minister of Louis XVI (1775-1788).
On 25 July, 1523, fifteen inhabitants of Moissac, after they had made a pilgrimage to Compostella, grouped themselves into a confraternity "à l'honneur de Dieu, de Notre Dame et Monseigneur Saint Jacques". This confraternity, reorganized in 1615 by letters patent of Louis XIII, existed for many years. As late as 1830 "pilgrims" were still seen in the Moissac processions. In fact Moissac and Spain were long closely united; a monk of Moissac, St. Gérault, was Archbishop of Braga from 1095 to 1109. The general synod of the Reformers held at Montpellier, in May, 1598, decided on the creation of an academy at Montauban; it was opened in 1600, was exclusively Protestant, and gathered students from other countries of Europe. In 1632 the Jesuits established themselves at Montauban, but in 1659 transferred the Academy to Puylaurens. In 1808 a faculty of Protestant theology was created at Montauban and still exists.
The principal pilgrimages of the diocese are: Notre Dame de Livron or de la Déliverance, visited by Blanche of Castille and Louis XIII; Notre Dame de Lorm, at Castelferrus, dating from the fifteenth century; Notre Dame de la Peyrouse, near Lafrançaise. Among the congregations of women which originated in the diocese were: Sisters of Mercy, hospitallers and teachers, founded in 1804 (mother-house at Moissac); Sisters of the Guardian Angel, hospitallers and teachers, founded in 1839 at Quillan in the diocese of Carcassonne by Père Deshayes, Superior of the Daughters of Wisdom, whose mother-house was transferred to the château of La Molle, near Montauban in 1858.
[edit] Bishops
- 1317 : Bertrand I du Puy
- 1317 - 1355 : Guillaume de Cardaillac
- 1355 - 1359 : Jacques I de Daux
- 1359 : Bernard I
- 1359 - 1361 : Bertrand II de Cardaillac
- 1361 - 1368 : Arnaud Bernard du Pouget, administrator
- 1368 - 1379 : Pierre I de Chalais
- 1379 - 1403 : Bertrand III Robert de Saint-Jal
- 1403 - 1405 : Géraud du Puy
- 1405 - 1424 : Raymond de Bar
- 1424 - 1426 : Gérard de Faidit
- 1426 - 1427 : Pierre II de Cottines
- 1427 - 1444 : Bernard II de la Roche Fontenilles
- 1444 - 1450 : Aymery de Roquemaurel
- 1450 - 1451 : Bernard III de Rousergues
- 1451 - 1453 : Guillaume II d'Estampes
- 1453 - 1470 : Jean de Batut de Montrosier
- 1470 - 1484 : Jean II de Montalembert
- 1484 : Georges de Viguerie
- 1484 - 1491 : Georges d'Amboise
- 1491 - 1519 : Jean d'Auriolle
- 1519 - 1539 : Jean des Prés-Montpezat
- 1539 - 1556 : Jean de Lettes-Montpezat
- 1556 - 1589 : Jacques II des Prés-Montpezat
- 1589 - 1600 : Claude de Champaigne, administrator
- 1600 - 1652 : Anne Carrion de Murviel
- 1652 - 1674 : Pierre III de Bertier
- 1674 - 1687 : Jean-Baptiste Michel de Colbert
- 1687 - 1703 : Henri de Nesmond
- 1703 - 1728 : François d'Haussonville de Nettancourt Vaubecourt
- 1728 - 1763 : Michel de Verthamon de Chavagnac
- 1763 - 1790 : Anne-François Victor le Tonnelier de Breteuil
- 1790 - 1817 : Vacant
- 1817 - 1826 : Jean-Armand Chaudru de Trélissac, administrator
- 1823 -1826 : Jean-Louis Lefebvre de Cheverus
- 1826 - 1833 : Louis-Guillaume-Valentin Dubourg
- 1833 - 1844 : Jean-Armand Chaudru de Trelissac
- 1844 - 1871 : Jean-Marie Doney
- 1871 - 1882 : Théodore Legain
- 1882 - 1908 : Adolphe-Josué-Frédéric Fiard
- 1908 - 1929 : Pierre-Eugène-Alexandre Marty
- 1929 - 1935 : Clément Émile Roques
- 1935 - 1940 : Elie-Antoine Durand
- 1940 - 1947 : Pierre-Marie Théas
- 1947 - 1970 : Louis de Courrèges d'Ustou
- 1970 - 1975 : Roger Tort
- 1975 - 1996 : Jacques de Saint-Blanquat
- 1996 - 2007 : Bernard Housset
- 2007- present : Bernard Ginoux
[edit] External links
- "Diocese of Montauban". Catholic Encyclopedia. (1913). New York: Robert Appleton Company.
This article incorporates text from the entry Diocese of Montauban in the public-domain Catholic Encyclopedia of 1913.