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Bishop of Ostia - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Bishop of Ostia is the ecclesiastical head of the diocese of Ostia, one of the seven suburbicarian sees of Rome. The position is now attached to the post of Dean of the College of Cardinals, as it...
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Doctor of the Church, Cardinal-Bishop of Ostia, b. at Ravenna "five years after the death of the Emperor Otto III," 1007; For a long time he resisted the offer, but was finally forced, under threat of excommunication, to accept, and was consecrated Cardinal-Bishop of Ostia on 30 Nov.,
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Nicholas I died (Nov. 13, 867). Adrian II (867-72), his successor, answered Ignatius'sappeal for legates to attend a synod that should examine the whole matter by sending Donatus, Bishop of Ostia, Stephen, Bishop of Nepi, and a deacon, Marinus.
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Alberic of Ostia (1080 – 1147) was a Benedictine monk, and Cardinal Bishop of Ostia from 1138-1147. He was born at Beauvais in France. He entered the monastery of Cluny and became its sub-prior and, later, prior of St. Martin-des-Champs, but was recalled (1126) to Cluny by Peter the Venerable, to...
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The Bishop of Ostia is the ecclesiastical head of the Catholic diocese of Ostia, one of the seven suburbicarian sees of Rome. Alberic of Ostia was a Benedictine monk, and Cardinal Bishop of Ostia from 1138-47. ... Lucius III, né Ubaldo Allucingoli (1097 – November 25, 1185), was pope from September 1,
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Britannica online encyclopedia article on Henry of Susa:...famous and influential of the decretalists were Tancred (d. c. 1234), archdeacon of Bologna, best known for his work on church marriage law and his manual of ecclesiastical procedural law; Henry of Susa (d. 1271), cardinal bishop of Ostia, known as the “king of...
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In 1464 the Papal Legate Teodoro Lelli, Bishop of Treviso, accompanied the Lord Bishop of Ostia on a mission to the court of Louis XI of France. There the Legate was sketched by the court artist,...
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Urban II (born Odo of Lagery, c. 1042–99) Pope (1088–99). A Cluniac monk, he was made Bishop of Ostia near Rome in 1078 and then a car...
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but the first bishop of Ostia of whom we have any certain knowledge dates from A.D. 313. The see still continues, and is indeed held by the dean of the sacred college of cardinals.
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The diocese of Ostia was established in the III Century. Its episcopal series starts in 229 and its bishops have the right to consecrate the new Pope according to a tradition dating to 336. In 1150, Pope Eugenius III gave its bishop the deanship of the Sacred College of Cardinals.
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