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The (Roman Catholic) Diocese of Metz is an territorial subdivision of the catholic church in France.

History


Originally the diocese was under metropolitan of Trier. After the French Revolution, the last prince bishop, Cardinal Louis de Montmorency-Laval (1761-1802) fled and the old organization of the diocese was broken up. With the Concordat of 1801 the diocese was re-established covering the departments of Moselle, Ardennes, and Forêts, and was put under the Archdiocese of Besançon. In 1817 the parts of the diocese which became Prussian territory were slip off. In 1871 the whole diocese became part of Germany, and in 1874 became Immediately Subject to the Holy See. After World War I it was returned to France.

Bishops


According to the tradional list of bishops, the current bishop Pierre René Ferdinand Raffin is already the 105th bishop of Metz. According to this list, the first bishop was Saint Clement, allegedly sent by Petrus himself to Metz. The first fully authenticated bishop however is Sperus or Hesperus, who was bishop in 535. Many of the bishops were declared holy or blessed, like Saint Arnulf (611-627), Saint Chrodegang (742-766) or Saint Agilram (768-791).

Bishops since 1900

External links


Metz | Roman Catholic dioceses in France | Bistum Metz | Diocèse de Metz

 

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the "Diocese of Metz".

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