Keuskupan Agung Clermont: Perbedaan antara revisi

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Baris 156:
<!-- Missing image removed: [[Image:Guillaume du Prat.jpg|right|150 px|thumb|Guillaume Duprat]] -->
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* [[Jacques d'Amboise (bishopuskup)|Jacques d'Amboise]]<ref>Bishop Charles de Bourbon died on 22 February 1504/5. Jacques d'Amboise was the brother of Cardinal Georges d'Amboise, Archbishop of Rouen. He was elected by the Chapter of Clermont on 15 March 1505, and his bulls were approved on 23 May 1505. He died on 27 December 1516, and was buried at Cluny, where he had also been the Abbot. ''Gallia christiana'' X, pp. 205-206. Eubel, III, p. 169 with note 4.</ref> (1505–1516)
* [[Thomas Duprat]]<ref>Bishop Thomas Duprat, a native of Issoire, was the brother of Antoine Duprat, Chancellor of France. He opened a new university at Issoire in the diocese of Clermont in 1519, but it was forced to close in 1520 because of pressure from the University of Paris and Charles, Duc de Bourbon. M.G. des Devises du Dezert, "L'enseignement secondaire et supérieur à Clermont-Ferrand," {{cite book|author=Association française pour l'avancement des sciences|title=Clermont-Ferrand et le Puy-de-Dôme: Congres de l'Association française pour l'avancement des sciences, 1908|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=gO9NAAAAMAAJ&pg=PA286|year=1908|publisher=Société anonyme du "Moniteur du Puy-de-Dome" et des imprimeries G. Mont-Louis|language=French|page=287}} Duprat died at Modena in 1528, where he had been sent as Ambassador Extraordinary to conduct Renée of France, daughter of Louis XII, to her marriage to the Duke of Ferrara.</ref> (1517–1528)
* [[Guillaume Duprat]]<ref>Guillaume Duprat was a nephew of Bishop Thomas Duprat and Cardinal Antoine Duprat, Chancellor of France. {{cite book|author=Stéphane Gomis|title=Les "enfants prêtres" des paroisses d'Auvergne, XVIe-XVIIIe siècles|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=CGeckYC2DZIC&pg=PA25|year=2006|publisher=Presses Univ Blaise Pascal|location=Clermont-Ferrand|language=French|isbn=978-2-84516-290-7|pages=25–29}}</ref> (1529–1560)
* [[Bernardo Salviati]] (1561–1567)
* [[Antoine de Saint-Nectaire]] (1567–1584)
* [[François de La Rochefoucauld (cardinalkardinal)|François de La Rochefoucauld]] (1585–1609) (alsojuga [[Bishop ofUskup Senlis]])
* [[Antoine Rose]]<ref>A Doctor of theology (Paris), nephew of Bishop Guillaume Rose and an ardent member of the Catholic League, Rose had been Bishop of Senlis (1601-1610). Rose's bulls were granted on 1 March 1610. He died in January 1614. Gauchat, ''Hierarchia catholica'' IV, p. 153 with note 2; 316 with n. 2.</ref> (1610–1614)
* [[Joachim d'Estaing]]<ref>D' Estaing, the nephew of Cardinal de la Rochefoucauld, was approved by [[Pope Paul V]] on 12 January 1615. He died on 11 September 1650. ''Gallia christiana'' X, pp. 299-300.</ref> (1615–1650)
Baris 170:
* [[François-Marie Le Maistre de La Garlaye]]<ref>Le Maistre was born in the Château de la Garlaye (Nantes), and was Doctor in theology and Licenciate in Civil and Canon Law (Valence). He was Canon and a Vicar General of Lyon, as well as a royal Aumonier. He was nominated to the diocese of Clermont by [[King Louis XV]] on 30 October 1742, and preconized (approved) by [[Pope Benedict XIV]] on 28 January 1743. He died on 5 June 1776. Gonod (1833), p. 54. Jean, p. 108. Ritzler, ''Hierarchia catholica'' VI, p. 169 with note 2.</ref> (1743–1775)
* [[François de Bonnal]]<ref>Bonnal was born at the Château de Bonnal in the diocese of Agen, and held a doctorate in theology (Besançon). He was named Abbot Commendatory of Saint-Ambroix (Bourges). He was Archdeacon Major, with a canonry and prebend, in the Church of Châlons-sur-Saône, and was a Vicar-General of the diocese. He was nominated by [[King Louis XVI]] on 23 June 1776, and preconized by [[Pope Pius VI]] on 16 September 1776. He refused to take the Oath to the Constitution, and emigrated. He was arrested by advancing French armies in Holland in 1795 and imprisoned at Altona. He died in exile in Munich on 3 September 1800 at the age of 66. Gonod (1833), pp. 54-59. Jean, p. 108. Ritzler, p. 169 with note 3.</ref> (1776–1800)
** [[Jean-François Périer]], Orat. (1791–1793; 1796–1802) (ConstitutionalUskup Bishop ofKonstitusional Puy-de-Dôme)<ref>Gonod, p. 58-59. In 1802 Périer was named to the diocese of Avignon.</ref>
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