Roman Catholic Diocese of Jaca


The Diocese of Jaca is an episcopal see in the northeastern Spanish province of Huesca, part of the autonomous community of Aragón. The diocese is subordinate to the Archdiocese of Pamplona y Tudela.
Jaca originally belonged to the diocese of Huesca, but after the Moorish conquest of Huesca in 713 its bishops,, moved to Aragon. The episcopal see was established in Jaca during 1063–96, then moved back to Huesca after king Pedro I of Aragon retook the city from the Moors in November 1096. The diocese of Jaca was created in 1572, carved out of the diocese of Huesca.
The city of Jaca, capital of the mountainous comarca of Jacetania, lies some 820 metres above sea-level on the left bank of the Aragon River, a tributary of the Ebro,.
Jaca cathedral is dedicated to . Consecrated in the late 11th century and altered in the 15th–18th centuries, it is Romanesque in its architectural style. The church of San Adrián de Sasabe, in Sasabe was an earlier diocesan cathedral.
A religious and civil festival is held on the first Friday of May, locally referred to as "Primer Viernes de Mayo", in memory of a victory said to have been won over the Moors in the 8th century by Count Aznar aided by the women of Jaca. It is celebrated with a solemn procession in which the entire cathedral chapter takes part.
There are many hermitages around Jaca, but none more interesting than that of San Juan de la Peña, ensconced within a cave in the Pyrenees. This shrine was also a monastery, royal mausoleum and -allegedly- one of the many hiding places of the Holy Grail in the middle ages. It continues to be a stop along the Camino de Santiago for many pilgrims and tourists. In another cave, dedicated to La Virgen de la Cueva, locals gather annually to pay homage to "Our Lade of the Cave", a venerated shrine where Garcí Ximénez was proclaimed first King of Sobrarbe in the 8th century.

History

Jaca was once the capital of the Iacetani, a tribe mentioned by Strabo. This territory was the scene of battles between Sertorius and Pompey and later between Pompey's son Sextus and Caesar's generals.

Itinerant bishops of Aragon (713–1063)

Ecclesiastically, Jaca originally belonged to the Diocese of Huesca.
When in 713 the town of Huesca was seized by the Moors, the bishop fled and the diocese was directed from Aragon by itinerant bishops, sometimes called bishops of Aragon, sometimes bishops of Huesca or Jaca, who lived either at Jaca or in the neighbouring monasteries of San Juan de la Peña, San Pedro de Siresa and San Adrián de Sasabe.
Among the itinerant bishops of Aragon were:
A council held at Jaca in 1063 determined anew the boundaries of the Diocese of Huesca, which thereafter included the present dioceses of Huesca, Jaca and Barbastro, as well as a part of the Diocese of Lérida. Jaca was then made the permanent seat of the diocese.
At the same time Sancho was appointed Bishop of Huesca and hastened to request the Pope Alexander II to confirm the decisions of the council. In the same year of 1063, however, King Sancho Ramirez of Aragon had won back from the Moors the city of Barbastro, and had granted it to the Bishop of Roda. García Ramírez, the new Bishop of Huesca and brother of the king, regarded this as an infringement of the rights of jurisdiction granted the Bishop of Jaca by the Council of Jaca. He therefore renewed his petition to the new pope to have the decisions of the council confirmed, which request the pope granted. As, however, Bishop Raimundo of Roda also obtained the confirmation of all his privileges from Gregory, a violent dispute arose between the Bishops of Huesca and Roda as to jurisdiction over the churches of Barbastro, Bielsa, Gistao and Alquezar, which in 1080 was decided by the king in favour of the Bishop of Roda.

The episcopal see returns to Huesca (1096–1572)

In November 1096, King Pedro I of Aragon took back Huesca from the Moors and restored the original see. Pope Urban II decreed that, instead of Jaca, Huesca should again be the seat of the bishop, as it had been until the year 713. But Jaca itself had a separate existence under a vicar-general, independent of the Bishop of Huesca. It also retained its own cathedral chapter, which originally followed the Rule of St. Augustine, but in 1270 both this chapter and that of Huesca were secularized.

Diocese of Jaca (1572 to the present)

Jaca was again erected into a separate diocese and was made suffragan to the Metropolitan See of Zaragoza by a Bull of Pope Pius V, which decision was carried into effect on February 26, 1572. The first bishop was Pedro del Frago.
According to the diocesan statistics of 1907 Jaca possessed 73,659 inhabitants, 151 parishes, 151 parish churches, 239 public and 10 private oratories, 236 secular priests, 30 regulars and 54 sisters. The religious institutes in the diocese are:
  1. 1572–1577: Pedro del Frago
  2. * 1577: Juan Pérez de Arneda
  3. 1578–1583: Gaspar Juan de la Figuera
  4. 1584–1592: Pedro de Aragón
  5. 1592–1594: Diego de Monreal
  6. 1594–1606: Malaquías de Aso
  7. 1607–1614: Tomás Cortés de Sangüesa
  8. 1614–1615: Diego Ordóñez
  9. 1615–1616: Pedro Fernández Zorrilla
  10. 1616–1617: Felipe Guimerán
  11. 1617–1622: Luis Díez Aux de Armendáriz
  12. 1623–1626: Juan Estelrich
  13. 1627: José Palafox Palafox
  14. 1628–1631: Álvaro de Mendoza
  15. 1631–1635: Vicente Domec
  16. 1635–1646: Mauro de Villarroel
  17. 1647–1648: Juan Domingo Briz de Trujillo
  18. 1649–1652: Jerónimo de Ipenza
  19. 1655–1671: Bartolomé de Fontcalda
  20. 1671–1673: Andrés Aznar Navés
  21. 1673–1674: José de Santolaria
  22. 1677–1683: Bernardo Mateo Sánchez de Castellar
  23. 1683–1704: Miguel de Frías Espintel
  24. 1705–1717: Mateo Foncillos Mozárabe
  25. 1717–1720: Francisco Polanco
  26. 1721–1727: Miguel Estela
  27. 1728: Antonio Sarmiento
  28. 1728–1733: Pedro Espinosa de los Monteros
  29. 1734–1738: Ramón Nogués
  30. 1739–1750: Juan Domingo Manzano Carvajal
  31. 1751–1755: Esteban Vilanova Colomer
  32. 1756–1776: Pascual López Estaún
  33. 1777–1779: Andrés Pérez Bermúdez
  34. 1780–1784: Julián Gascueña
  35. 1785–1802: José Antonio López Gil
  36. 1803–1814: Lorenzo Algüero Ribera
  37. 1815–1822: Cristóbal Pérez Viala
  38. 1824–1828: Leonardo Santander Villavicencio
  39. 1829–1831: Pedro Rodríguez Miranda
  40. 1832–1847: Manuel María Gómez de las Rivas
  41. 1848–1851: Miguel García Cuesta
  42. 1852–1856: Juan José Biec Belio
  43. 1857–1870: Pedro Lucas Asensio Poves
  44. 1874–1890: Ramón Fernández Lafita
  45. 1891–1899: José López Mendoza y García
  46. 1900–1904: Francisco Javier Valdés Noriega
  47. 1904–1913: Antolín López Peláez
  48. 1913–1920: Manuel de Castro Alonso
  49. 1920–1925: Francisco Frutos Valiente
  50. 1926–1943: Juan Villar Sanz
  51. 1946–1950: José Bueno y Monreal
  52. 1950–1978: Ángel Hidalgo Ibáñez
  53. 1978–1983: Juan Angel Belda Dardiñá
  54. 1984–1989: Rosendo Álvarez Gastón
  55. 1990–2001: José María Conget Arizaleta
  56. * 2001–2003: Juan José Omella Omella
  57. 2003–2009: Jesús Sanz Montes
  58. 2010–: Julián Ruiz Martorell