Paul Fridolin Kehr draws attention to a group of bishops who are attested between 649 and 769 and identified as bishops of Martirano in the Italia Sacra of Ferdinand Ughelli: Reparatus, Opportunus, Domnus and Bonus. Inspection of the evidence shows that these bishops belonged to the diocese of Manturano in Tuscany, not Martirano in Calabria. Francesco Lanzoni likewise rejects Reparatus as a bishop of Martirano. These bishops cannot be used to argue for an early establishment of the diocese. Ughelli also reports that Arnulphus was a bishop of Martirano, citing William of Tyre's story of his attempting to intrude himself into the Patriarchate of Jerusalem. But William of Tyre does not say that Arnulphus was Bishop of Martirano c. 1100; it is only a conjecture of Ughelli. Ughelli also reports the existence of a Bishop Rodulphus under Pope Calixtus II, but the documents on which the report is based are forgeries. It is said that the Diocese of Martirano was established in 1099. Louis Duchesne states that Martirano had been a suffragan of Salerno in 1058, and that Martirano may have replaced the Byzantine Greek diocese of Amantea. In 1638 a major earthquake struck Calabria. At Martirano the death toll was 517, and most of the town was destroyed. The cathedral could not be repaired, and Bishop Cellesio had to begin building a new one. The Cathedral was served by a Chapter, composed of four dignities and eight Canons. Bishop Pierbenedetti added six chaplains. All were required to be in priestly orders. In 1703 the number of Canons was twelve. Bishop Marino Pierbenedetti was also responsible for the building of the seminary in Martirano, in accordance with the decrees of the Council of Trent and the active encouragement of Bishop Gaspare del Fosso, Archbishop of Reggio and Metropolitan of Calabria. On 27 June 1818 the diocese of Martirano was suppressed and its territory was added to that of the Diocese of Nicastro, in accordance with the Bull In ultilori of Pope Pius VII. This was in conformity with the Concordat of 1818, between the Holy See and the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies. In 1968 the title "Bishop of Martirano", though not the institution of a diocese, was restored in the Titular Episcopal See of Martirano. It was used for auxiliary bishops in Brazil and the Philippines, but it is currently held by the President of the Pontifical Committee for International Eucharistic Congresses, Archbishop Piero Marini, who had once been Master of Pontifical Liturgical Celebrations for John Paul II and Benedict XVI.
Bishops of Martirano
to 1400
Michael
Philippus de Matera
Thomas, O.Cist.
Raynaldus
Robertus
Adam
Hugo
Senator de Marturano
Joannes de Bisignano
Jacobus de Itro
Jacobus Castellani, O.Min.
Nicolaus
Jacobus de Villani
Nicolaus
Petrus
Antonius Stamingo, O.Min.
1400 to 1600
Godfridus de Cola
Antonio Cola
Martinus
Angelo Greco
Aurelio Biennato
Angelo Pappacoda
Giacomo Antonio Ferduzi, O.F.M. Conv.
Tolomeo Gallio
Girolamo Federici
Gregorio Cruz, O.P.
Mariano Pierbenedetti
Roberto Phili
1600 to 1818
Francesco Monaco
Luca Cellesi
Felice Antonio Monaco
Giovanni Giacomo Palamolla
Michelangelo Veraldi
Nicolaus Righetti
Pietro Antonio Pietrasanta, B.
Saverio Ferrari
Nicolò Carmine Falcone
Bernardino Antonio Diego Bernardi, O.M.
Nicola Spedalieri
Giacomo Maria de Tarsia, O.M.
Francesco Antonio Grillo, O.F.M. Conv.
1818 June 27: Suppressed. See: Diocese of Nicastro
Books
Studies
Duchesne, Louis, "Les évèchés de Calabre,"
Kamp, Norbert. Kirche und Monarchie im staufischen Königreich Sizilien: München: Wilhelm Fink 1975.
Kehr, Paulus Fridolin. Italia pontificia. Regesta pontificum Romanorum. . Berlin: Weidmann.