Roman Catholic Diocese of Oca


Oca is a former bishopric in the province of Burgos, Castile and León region, the predecessor of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Burgos, and presently a Latin titular see of the Catholic Church. Its Latin adjective is Aucen.

Visigothic see

It was established at Oca, what is now Villafranca Montes de Oca, no later than 589, when its bishop Asterius attended the Third Council of Toledo, but vaguer notices may trace it back as early as the 3rd century. Monastic life flourished there during the Visigothic Kingdom of Toledo.
However, in the 8th century, Arab Muslim invaders destroyed Oca, rendering its bishops errant, quoted by sources at Amaya, Valpuesta, Muñó, Sasamón, Oña, Gamonal, only to have their 'see' formally suppressed to restore definitively the Diocese of Burgos in 1075, confirmed by Pope Urban II in 1095.
;Suffragan Bishops of Oca
  1. Asterius
  2. Amanungus
  3. Litorius
  4. Stercorius
  5. Constantine.

    Titular see

The diocese was nominally restored in 1969 as titular bishopric of Auca rank :
  1. Daniel Llorente y Federico, 11 December 1969 – death 27 February 1971, bishop emeritus of Segovia , previously Titular Bishop of Daphnusia as Auxiliary Bishop of Burgos
  2. Hernando Rojas Ramirez, Coadjutor bishop of Espinal, 26 April 1972 – 12 December 1974; later succeeded as Bishop of Espinal, next Bishop of Neiva , died 2002
  3. Theodor Hubrich, as auxiliary bishop in the diocese of Magdeburg, 5 December 1975 – resigned 26 March 1992; later Apostolic Administrator of Schwerin
  4. Jorge Mario Bergoglio, Jesuits as auxiliary bishop of Buenos Aires, 20 May 1992 – 3 June 1997; later Coadjutor Archbishop of Buenos Aires, succeeding as Metropolitan Archbishop of Buenos Aires, also Ordinary of Argentina of the Eastern Rite, created Cardinal-Priest of S. Roberto Bellarmino, President of Episcopal Conference of Argentina, elected Supreme Pontiff Pope Francis
  5. Mieczysław Cisło, as auxiliary bishop of Lublin, no previous prelature.