Suburbicarian diocese

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

The seven suburbicarian dioceses are

cardinal-patriarchs were added). Pope Francis has, in addition, co-opted five cardinals of the Latin Church
to join the ranks of the Cardinal-Bishops.

Seven suburbicarian sees

The suburbicarian dioceses have varied slightly over time and nowadays consist of:

The see of Ostia is conferred on the Dean of the College of Cardinals in addition to the see he already had. (Until 1914, the dean received the see of Ostia and Velletri in place of the see he had earlier. The sees of Ostia and Velletri were separated in 1914.) The cardinal-dean used to be the longest-serving cardinal bishop, but is now chosen by the six cardinal bishops with the approval of the Pope.

Incumbents

See Incumbent Appointed
Ostia Giovanni Battista Re 2020
Sabina–Poggio Mirteto 2002
Velletri–Segni Francis Arinze 2005
Porto–Santa Rufina Beniamino Stella 2020
Frascati Tarcisio Bertone 2008
Palestrina José Saraiva Martins 2009
Albano Vacant

Diocesan administration

The increasing involvement of the cardinal bishops in the administration of the papal curia resulted in a detachment from their dioceses. Therefore, some of them, in particular the cardinal-bishops of Sabina and Velletri, have for centuries had auxiliary bishops and in 1910 Pope Pius X's apostolic constitution Apostolicae Romanorum made this practice obligatory for all suburbicarian dioceses.[1]

In 1962,

Cardinal Vicar of Rome
. Though the diocesan bishops exercise all episcopal administrative functions, the cardinal bishops still formally take possession of their titular dioceses.

See also

References

  1. ^ Catholic Encyclopedia, "Suburbicarian Dioceses", 1913.
  2. ^ Pope John XXIII (9 April 1962). "Suburbicariis sedibus" (in Latin). Libreria Editrice Vaticana. Retrieved 2 November 2017.