Latin Patriarch of Antioch

The Latin Patriarch of Antioch was officially established after the First Crusade by Bohemund of Taranto, the first Prince of Antioch. The city had been an Orthodox patriarch, who was driven out and fled to Constantinople Opel. The Byzantine Empire was working on his reinstatement as a single patriarch, either for both faiths or of the Orthodox Church alone. The Treaty of Devol of 1108 translated the Greek Patriarch nominally again, the provision was never implemented.

Under Manuel I. It was just a common patriarchy when Antioch fell under Byzantine rule, mostly however, there was only one Latin Patriarch until the principality was conquered by the Mamelukes in 1268. All the while, however, was at least appointed by Konstantin Opel a Greek patriarch.

The title was retained until its abolition in 1964.

Latin Patriarch of Antioch

  • Bernard of Valence (1100-1135)
  • Ralf ( I) of Domfront ( 1135-1140 )
  • Aimerich of Limoges (1140-1193)
  • Ralf II (1193-1196)
  • Peter of Angoulême (1196-1208)
  • Peter of Ivrea (1209-1217) (previously Abbot of Locedio )
  • Pietro Capuano (April 25, 1219- October 1219 )
  • Rainier (1219-1225)
  • Alberto da Reggio ( 1229 -? ) (Previously Bishop of Brescia)
  • Albert Rezzato (1226-1245)
  • Opizo Fieschi (1247-1292), from 1268 only nominally
  • Isnard (1311-1320) (also Archbishop of Thebes )
  • Vacancy (1320-1342)
  • Gérald Othon (1342-1348)
  • Pere Clasquerí (also Archbishop of Tarragona)
  • Raymond de Salgues (? 1364-1374 ) (also Bishop of Agen )
  • Séguin d' Anton (1380-1395) (also Archbishop of Tours)
  • Wenzel Gerard of Burenitz (1397-1409)
  • John (1415-1426)
  • Denis du Moulin (1439-1447) (also Bishop of Paris)
  • Jacques Juvenal des Ursins (1449-1457)
  • Guillaume de la Tour (1457-1470) (also Bishop of Rodez)
  • Guilelmus (14 October 1471-1471 )
  • Gérard de Crussol (1471-1472)
  • Lorenzo Zane (1473-1485) (also Bishop of Brescia)
  • Gaetano Giordano (1485-1496)
  • Sebastian ( 1495 -? 1502? )
  • Alfonso Caraffa (1505-1534) (also Bishop of Lucera )
  • Ignatius (1529 -? )
  • Fernando de Loaces, O.P. (1566-1568)
  • Saint Juan de Ribera (1568-1611) (also Bishop of Valencia)
  • Tommaso d' Avalos de Aragona (1611-1622? )
  • Luigi Caetani (1622-1626)
  • Giovanni Battista Pamphili (1626-1629)
  • Cesare Monti (1629-1633) (also Archbishop of Milan )
  • Fabio della Leonessa (1634-1667? )
  • Alessandro Crescenzi (1675-1688)
  • Altoviti Giacomo (1667-1693)
  • Michelangelo Mattei (1693-1699)
  • Charles Thomas Maillard de Tournon (1701-1710)
  • Giberto Bartolomeo Borromeo (1711-1714? )
  • Filippo Anastasi (1724-1735)
  • Joaquín Fernández Portocarrero (1735-1743)
  • Francesco Maria Pallavicini (1743-1749)
  • Lodovico Calini (1751-1766)
  • Domenico Giordani (1766-1781)
  • Carlo Camuzi (1781-1788)
  • Giulio Maria della Somaglia (1788-1795)
  • Giovanni di Francesco Guidi of Bagno - Talenti (1795-1799)
  • Antonio Despuig y Dameto (1799-1803)
  • Vacancy?
  • Lorenzo Girolamo Mattei (1822-1833)
  • Antonio Piatti (1837-1841)
  • Giovanni Nicola Tanari (1845-1853)
  • Albertus Barbolani di Mont Car (1856-1857)
  • Josephus Melquiades Ferlisi (1858-1860)
  • Carolus Belgrado (1862-1866)
  • Paul Brunoni (1868-1877)
  • Peter De Villanova (1879-1881)
  • Placidus Ralli (1882-1884)
  • Vencentius Tizzani (1886-1892)
  • Francesco di Paola Cassetta (1895-1899)
  • Carlo Nocella (1899-1901), † 1903, was Latin Patriarch of Constantinople Opel
  • Lorenzo Passarini (1901-1915)
  • Ladislaus Zaleski (1916-1925)
  • Roberto Vicentini (1925-1953)
  • Vacancy (1953-1964)
  • Repealed in 1964
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