Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Paris
The Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Paris is one of twenty-three archdioceses of the Catholic Church in France. The original diocese is traditionally thought to have been created in the 3rd century by St. Denis and corresponded with the Civitas Parisiorum; it was elevated to an archdiocese on October 20, 1622. Before that date the bishops were suffragan to the archbishops of Sens.
History
Its suffragan dioceses, created in 1966 and encompassing the Île-de-France region, are in Créteil, Évry-Corbeil-Essonnes, Meaux, Nanterre, Pontoise, Saint-Denis, and Versailles. Its liturgical centre is at Notre-Dame Cathedral in Paris. The archbishop resides on rue Barbet de Jouy in the 6th arrondissement, but there are diocesan offices in rue de la Ville-Eveque, rue St. Bernard and in other areas of the city. The archbishop is ordinary for Eastern Catholics in France.The title of Duc de Saint-Cloud was created in 1674 for the archbishops.
Prior to 1790 the diocese was divided into three archdeaconries: France, Hurepoix, Brie.
Until the creation of new dioceses in 1966 there were two archdeaconries: Madeleine and St. Séverin.
The churches of the current diocese can be divided into several categories:
i) Latin Church parishes. These are grouped into deaneries and subject to vicars-general who often coincide with auxiliary bishops.
ii) Churches belonging to religious communities.
iii) Chapels for various foreign communities using various languages.
iv) Eastern-Church parishes and communities throughout France dependent on the Archbishop as Ordinary of the Ordinariate of France, Faithful of Eastern Rites.
Bishops of Paris
To 1000
- ?–c. 250: Denis, believed to be the first bishop of Paris
- Prudentius
- 360–436: Marcellus/Marcellinus 9th Bishop of Paris
- c. 550: Eusebius
- 555–576: Germanus
- 606–621: Ceraunus/Ceran
- -650: Audobertus
- 650–661: Landry
- 666–680: Agilbert
- 722–730: Hugues/Hugh of Champagne
- 757-775: Déodefroi
- 775–795: Eschenradus
- Eucade
- Hilduin
- 858–870: Aeneas
- 884–886: Goslin
- c.890: Anscharic
- ?–941: Walter
- c. 954?: Constantius
- 950–977: Albert of Flanders
- 991–1017: Renaud of Vendôme
1000 to 1300
- 1061–1095: Godfrey
- 1096–1101: Guillaume de Montfort
- 1104–1116: Galo/Walo
- 1116–1123: Guibert
- c.1123–1141: Stephen of Senlis
- c.1143–1159: Theobald
- 1159–1160: Peter Lombard
- 1160–1196: Maurice de Sully
- 1196–1208: Odo de Sully
- 1208–1219: Pierre de La Chapelle
- 1220–1223: William of Seignelay, Guillaume de Seignelay
- 1224–1227: Barthélmy
- 1228–1249: William of Auvergne
- 1249–1249: Walter de Château-Thierry
- 1250–1268: Renaud Mignon de Corbeil
- 1268–1279: Étienne Tempier
- 1280–1280: Jean de Allodio
- 1280–1288: Renaud de Hombliéres
- c.1289: Adenolfus de Anagnia
- 1290–1304: Simon Matifort
1300 to 1500
- 1304–1319: Guillaume de Baufet
- 1319–1325: Etienne de Bouret
- 1325–1332: Hugues Michel
- 1332–1342: Guillaume de Chanac
- 1342–1349: Foulques de Chanac
- 1349–1350: Audoin-Aubert
- 1350–1352: Pierre de Lafôret
- 1353–1363: Jean de Meulent
- 1362–1373: Etienne de Poissy
- 1373–1384: Aimery de Magnac
- 1384–1409: Pierre d'Orgemont, translated from bishop of Thérouanne
- 1409–1420: Gérard de Montaigu, translated from Poitiers
- 1420–1421: Jean Courtecuisse
- 1421–1422: Jean de La Rochetaillée, translated to Rouen
- 1423–1426: Jean IV de Nant, translated from Vienne
- 1427–1438: Jacques du Chastelier
- 1439–1447: Denis du Moulin
- 1447–1472: Guillaume Chartier
- 1473–1492: Louis de Beaumont de la Forêt
- 1492?–1492/1493?: Gérard Gobaille
- 1492–1502: Jean-Simon de Champigny
From 1500
- 1503–1519: Étienne de Poncher
- 1519–1532: François Poncher
- 1532–1541: Jean du Bellay
- 1551–1563: Eustache du Bellay
- 1564–1568: Guillaume Viole
- 1573–1598: Pierre de Gondi
- 1598–1622: Henri de Gondi
Archbishops of Paris
- 1622–1654: Jean-François de Gondi
- 1654–1662: Jean François Paul de Gondi, cardinal de Retz
- 1662–1664: Pierre de Marca
- 1664–1671: Hardouin de Péréfixe de Beaumont
- 1671–1695: François de Harlay de Champvallon
- 1695–1729: Louis-Antoine de Noailles
- 1729–1746: Charles-Gaspard-Guillaume de Vintimille du Luc
- 1746: Jacques Bonne-Gigault de Bellefonds
- 1746–1781: Christophe de Beaumont
- 1781–1802: Antoine-Eléonore-Léon Le Clerc de Juigné
- * 1791–1794: Jean-Baptiste-Joseph Gobel
- temporarily abolished during the French Revolution
- 1802–1808: Jean Baptiste de Belloy-Morangle
- 1810–1817: Jean-Sifrein Maury
- 1817–1821: Alexandre-Angélique Talleyrand de Périgord
- 1821–1839: Hyacinthe-Louis De Quelen
- 1840–1848: Denis Auguste Affre
- 1848–1857: Marie Dominique Auguste Sibour
- 1857–1862: François-Nicholas-Madeleine Morlot
- 1863–1871: Georges Darboy
- 1871–1886: Joseph Hippolyte Guibert
- 1886–1908: François-Marie-Benjamin Richard
- 1908–1920: Léon-Adolphe Amette
- 1920–1929: Louis-Ernest Dubois
- 1929–1940: Jean Verdier
- 1940–1949: Emmanuel Célestin Suhard
- 1949–1966: Maurice Feltin
- 1966–1968: Pierre Veuillot
- 1968–1981: François Marty
- 1981–2005: Jean-Marie Lustiger
- 2005–2017: André Vingt-Trois
- 2017–current: Michel Aupetit
Auxiliary bishops
- 1986–1997: Claude Frikart
Studies