Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Zaragoza


The Archdiocese of Saragossa is a Roman Catholic ecclesiastical territory located in north-eastern Spain, in the province of Zaragoza, part of the autonomous community of Aragón. The archdiocese heads the ecclesiastical province of Saragossa, having metropolitan authority over the suffragan dioceses of Barbastro-Monzón, Huesca, Tarazona, and Teruel and Albarracín.
The diocese was created in Roman times; Pope John XXII elevated it to an archdiocese in 1318.

Overview

In 1912 the diocese was bounded on the north by Navarre and Huesca; on the east by Huesca, Lerida, and Tarragona; on the south by Valencia and Teruel; on the west by Guadalajara and Soria. The episcopal city of Saragossa is situated on the river Ebro.
The cathedral is dedicated to the Saviour, as it had been before the Moorish invasion. It shares its rank with the Church of Nuestra Señora del Pilar, half of the chapter residing at each of the two churches, while the dean resides six months at each alternately. The building of the cathedral was begun by Pedro Tarrjao in the fourteenth century. In 1412 Antipope Benedict XIII caused a magnificent baldachinum to be erected, but one of its pillars fell down, and it was reduced to its present condition. In 1490 Archbishop Alonso of Aragón raised the two lateral naves, which had been lower, to an equal height with the central, and added two more; Ferdinand of Aragon added three other naves beyond the choir, to counterbalance the excessive width of the building, and thus, in 1550 was the Gothic edifice completed. The great chancel and choir were built by order of Archbishop Dalmau de Mury Cervellón. In the chapel of Saint Dominguito del Val are preserved the relics of that saint, a boy of seven who was allegedly crucified by the Jews in 1250. The façade of the cathedral is Renaissance, and beside it rises the tower, more modern than the body of the church, having been begun in 1790.
The Church of Nuestra Señora del Pilar is believed to have originated in a chapel built by the Apostle James. Bishop Pedro de Librana found it almost in ruins and appealed to the charity of all the faithful to rebuild it. At the close of the thirteenth century four bishops again stirred up the zeal of the faithful to repair the building, which was preserved until the end of the seventeenth century. In 1681 work was commenced on the new church, the first stone being laid by Archbishop Diego de Castrillo, 25 July 1685. This grandiose edifice, 140 metres in length, covers the capella angelica, where the celebrated image of the Blessed Virgin is venerated. Though the style of the building is not of the best period, attention is attracted by its exterior, its multitude of cupolas, which are reflected in the waters of the river Ebro, giving it a character all its own.
Saragossa possesses many very noteworthy churches. Among them is that of St. Engratia, built on the spot where the victims of Dacian were martyred. It was destroyed in the Spanish War of Independence, only the crypt and the doorway being left; it was rebuilt in the late 19th or early 20th century, and now serves as a parish church.
The University of Saragossa obtained from Charles I in 1542, the privileges accorded to others in Spain. Its importance was afterwards promoted by Pedro Cerbuna, Bishop of Tarazona; he gave it a building which lasted until it was blown up by the French in 1808. A separate building has been erected for the faculties of medicine and sciences.
The archiepiscopal palace is a splendid edifice erected by Archbishop Agustín de Lezo y Palomeque.
There are two ecclesiastical seminaries. That of Sts. Valerius and Braulius, founded by Archbishop Agustín de Lezo y Palomeque in 1788, was destroyed by an explosion and was rebuilt in 1824 by Archbishop Bernardo Francés Caballero; that of St. Charles Borromeo, formerly a Jesuit college, was converted into a seminary by King Charles III.

History

Before the Roman period the site of Saragossa appears to have been occupied by Salduba, a little village of Edetania, within the boundaries of Celtiberia.

Roman period (1st to 5th centuries)

In 24 BC Emperor Octavius Augustus, then in his seventh consulate, founded the colony of Caesar Augusta, giving it the Italian franchise and making it the capital of a juridical conventus. Geographer Pomponius Mela called it "the most illustrious of the inland cities of Hispania Tarraconensis."
The diocese is one of the oldest in Spain, for its origin dates back to the coming of the Apostle James — a fact of which there had never been any doubt until Caesar Baronius, influenced by a fabulous story of García de Loaisa, called it in question. Pope Urban VIII ordered the old lesson in the Breviary dealing with this point to be restored.
Closely involved with the tradition of St. James's coming to Spain, and of the founding of the church of Saragossa, are those of Our Lady of the Pillar and of Sts. Athanasius and Theodore, disciples of St. James, who are supposed to have been the first bishops of Saragossa.
About the year 256 there appears as bishop of this diocese Felix Caesaraugustanus, who defended true discipline in the case of Basilides and Martial, Bishops, respectively, of Astorga and Mérida.
St. Valerius, who assisted at the Council of Iliberis, was bishop from 290 to 315 and, together with his disciple and deacon St. Vincent, suffered martyrdom in the persecution of Dacian.
It is believed that there had been martyrs at Saragossa in previous persecutions as Prudentius seems to affirm; but no certain record is to be found of any before this time, when, too, St. Engratia and the "numberless saints", as they are called, gained their crowns.
It is said that Dacian, to detect and so make an end of all the faithful of Saragossa, ordered that liberty to practice their religion should be promised them on condition that they all went out of the city at a certain fixed time and by certain designated gates. As soon as they had thus gone forth, he ordered them to be put to the sword and their corpses burned. Their ashes were mixed with those of criminals, so that no veneration might be paid them. But a shower of rain fell and washed the ashes apart, forming those of the martyrs into certain white masses. These, known as the "holy masses" were deposited in the crypt of the church dedicated to St. Engratia, where they are still preserved.
St. Vincent was taken to Valencia, where he suffered a long and terrible martyrdom. St. Valerius was exiled to a place called Enet, near Barbastro, where he died, and whence his relics were translated first to Roda, the head and arm being brought thence to Saragossa when that city had been reconquered.
Before the Moorish invasion three national councils were held at Saragossa. The First Council of Saragossa was held in 380, earlier than those of Toledo, when Valerius II was bishop, and had for its object the extirpation of Priscillianism.

Visigoth period (5th to 7th centuries)

In 452, Saragossa fell under the power of the Suevian king Reciarius; in 466, under that of the Visigoth king Euric. St. Isidore extolled it as one of the best cities of Spain in the Gothic period, and Pacensis called it "the most ancient and most flourishing."
In 542, when the Franks laid siege to Saragossa to take vengeance for the wrongs of the Catholic princess, Clotilde, the besieged went forth in procession and delivered to the enemy, as the price of their raising the siege, a portion of the blood-stained stole of St. Vincent, the deacon.
From 592 to 619 the bishop was Maximus, who assisted at the Councils of Barcelona and Egara. Under his episcopate the Second Council of Zaragoza was held in 592 against Arianism. Maximus' name, combined with that of the monk Marcus, has been used to form an alleged Marcus Maximus, the apocryphal continuator of Flavius Dexter.
The See of Saragossa was occupied during the Gothic period by two illustrious bishops: St. Braulius, who assisted at the Fourth, Fifth, and Sixth Councils of Toledo; and Taius , famous for his own writings and for having discovered at Rome the third part of St. Gregory's "Morals."
The Third Council of Saragossa was held in 691 under Bishop Valderedus, and provided that queens, when widowed, should retire to some monastery for their security and for the sake of decorum.

Moorish period (714–1118)

During the Moorish occupation Catholic worship did not cease in this city; the churches of the Virgin and of St. Engratia were maintained, while that of the Saviour was turned into a mosque.
Of the bishops of this period the names are preserved of Senior, who visited St. Eulogius at Cordoba, and of Eleca, who in 890 was driven from the city by the Muslims and took refuge at Oviedo.
Paternus was sent by king Sancho the Great to Cluny to introduce the Cluniac reform into Spain in the monasteries of San Juan de la Peña and San Salvador de Leyre, and was afterwards appointed Bishop of Saragossa.

Christian period (1118–1318)

King Alfonso I the Battler of Aragon reconquered the city on 18 December 1118, and named as bishop Pedro de Librana, whose appointment was confirmed by Pope Gelasius II.
López, in his Historia de Zaragoza, says that Pedro de Librana first resided at the Church of the Pillar, and on 6 January 1119, purified the great mosque, which he dedicated to the Saviour, and there established his episcopal see. Hence the controversy which began in 1135, in the episcopate of García Guerra de Majones, between the canons of the Pillar and those of St. Saviour as to the title of cathedral.

Archdiocese of Saragossa (1318–present)

In 1318 the See of Saragossa was made metropolitan by a grant of Pope John XXII, Pedro López de Luna being bishop.
In the factions which followed upon the death of King Martin I, Archbishop García Fernández de Heredia was assassinated in 1411 by Antonio de Luna, a partisan of the Count James II of Urgell.
For more than a century princes of the royal blood occupied the see:
On 15 September 1485, Pedro Arbués, canon of the Cathedral of Zaragoza and one of the driving forces behind the Tribunal of the Inquisition, was attacked in the cathedral by some relapsed Jews who were led by Juan de la Abadia and died two days later. In response to the assassination, hundreds were arrested and between one and two hundred were put to death, including the assailants.

Bishops of Saragossa

  1. 1318–1345 : Pedro López de Luna
  2. 1345–1347 : Pedro de Jugie
  3. 1347–1350 : Guillermo de Aigrefeuille
  4. 1351 – c.1380 Lope Fernández de Luna
  5. 1383–1411 : García Fernández de Heredia
  6. * 1411–1415 : See vacant
  7. 1415–1419 : Francisco Clemente Pérez Capera -
  8. 1419–1429 : Alfonso de Argüello
  9. * 1429–1430 : Francisco Clemente Pérez Capera -
  10. 1431–1456 : Dalmacio de Mur y de Cervelló
  11. 1458–1475 : Juan de Aragón, natural son of king John II of Aragon.
  12. 1474–1478 : Ausias Despuig
  13. 1478–1520 : Alonso of Aragón, illegitimate son of Ferdinand the Catholic and also Archbishop of Valencia in 1512–1520.
  14. 1520–1530 : Juan de Aragón
  15. 1532–1539 : Fadrique de Portugal
  16. 1539–1577 : Fernando de Aragón y Gurrea
  17. 1577–1578 : Bernardo Alvarado de Fresneda
  18. 1579–1585 : Andrés Santos de Sampedro
  19. 1586–1592 : Andrés de Bobadilla
  20. 1593–1602 : Alonso de Gregorio
  21. 1603–1610 : Tomás de Borja y Castro
  22. 1611–1615 : Pedro Manrique de Lara
  23. 1616–1623 : Pedro González de Mendoza
  24. 1624–1629 : Juan Martínez de Peralta
  25. 1630–1631 : Martín Terrer de Valenzuela
  26. 1633–1634 : Juan Guzmán
  27. 1635–1643 : Pedro Apaolaza Ramírez
  28. 1644–1662 : Juan Cebrián Pedro
  29. 1663–1674 : Francisco de Gamboa
  30. 1676–1686 : Diego de Castrillo
  31. 1687–1710 : Antonio Ibáñez de la Riva Herrera
  32. 1714–1726 : Manuel Pérez de Araciel y Rada
  33. 1727–1742 : Tomás Crespo Agüero
  34. 1742–1764 : Francisco Añoa Busto
  35. 1764–1767 : Luis García Mañero
  36. 1768–1777 : Juan Sáenz de Buruaga
  37. 1779–1782 : Bernardo Velarde
  38. 1783–1796 : Agustín de Lezo y Palomeque
  39. 1797–1800 : Joaquín Company Soler
  40. 1800–1816 : Ramón José de Arce
  41. 1816–1823 : Manuel Vicente Martínez Jiménez
  42. 1824–1843 : Bernardo Francés Caballero
  43. 1847–1858 : Manuel María Gómez de las Rivas
  44. 1858–1881 : Manuel García Gil
  45. 1881–1895 : Francisco de Paula Benavides y Navarrete
  46. 1895–1901 : Vicente Alda Sancho
  47. * 1901 : Antonio María Cascajares y Azara
  48. 1902–1923 : Juan Soldevilla y Romero
  49. 1924–1955 : Rigoberto Doménech Valls
  50. 1955–1964 : Casimiro Morcillo González
  51. 1964–1977 : Pedro Cantero Cuadrado
  52. 1977–2005 : Elías Yanes Álvarez
  53. 2005–2014 : Manuel Ureña Pastor
  54. 2014–present: Vicente Jiménez Zamora

    Suffragan Diocese

DioceseNotesCathedral PhotoCo Cathedral Photo
Zaragoza
Barbastro-Monzón Cathedral..
Huesca
Tarazona
Roman Catholic Diocese of Teruel and Albarracín.Cathedral.