(Redirected from Archbishop of Besançon)
The 'Archbishopric of Besançon' is coextensive with the ''
départements'' of
Doubs,
Haute-Saône, and the
district of Belfort. Formerly it also was a
prince-bishopric, an
ecclesiastical state in the
Holy Roman Empire. Comprising only a tiny area around the city of
Besançon in the
Franche-Comté, the Archbishopric became an enclave when Franche-Comté was annexed by France in
1678. In
1792 it was annexed by revolutionary France.
History
Local legends attribute the evangelization of Besançon to
St. Ferréol and
St. Ferjeux, sent thither by
St. Irenaeus,
Bishop of Lyon.
Louis Duchesne proved that these legends belong to a chain of narratives forged in the first half of the 6th century and of which the "passion" of
St. Benignus of Dijon was the initial link.
The catalogue of the earliest bishops of Besançon is to be read with caution. The first bishop known to history is
Celidonius (c. 445); other incumbents of the see were
St. Rothadius, a monk at
Luxeuil and organizer of the monastic life;
St. Donatus;
St. Hugh I (1031-1067), prince of the empire, the real founder of the city whose markets, commerce, and schools he established;
Cardinal de Granvelle (1584-1586), the famous minister of
Philip II, who built the palace of Besançon;
Antoine-Pierre de Grammont (1662-1698), who strenuously opposed
Jansenism and the
Reformation, strove to uplift the clergy, and, in 1691, transferred to Besançon the
University of Dôle;
Le Coz (1802-1815), former constitutional bishop whose personality provoked in the diocese no little opposition to the
Concordat;
Cardinal de Rohan-Chabot (1828-1833);
Cardinal Mathieu (1834-1875), who distinguished himself by his defence of the temporal power, and was a member of the "Opposition" at the
Vatican council. He opposed strenuously in his diocese the "simultaneous churches" which sprang up throughout the district of
Montbéliard where
Protestants are numerous.
The
monastery of Luxeuil, founded by
St. Columbanus (d. 615), gave to the diocese of Besançon a series of saints. First came the direct successors of St. Columbanus; the Abbot
St. Eustasius who founded a celebrated school in this monastery; the Abbot
St. Valbert who sent monks to found the Abbeys of St. -Valéry, St. -Omer, and St. -Bertin, and died in 665; the Abbot
St. Ingofroid;
St. Donatus, who became Bishop of Besançon; and
St. Ansegisus, author of a celebrated collection of capitularies.
The
Abbey of Lure was founded at the beginning of the 7th century by
St. Déicole (Deicolus), or Desle, disciple of St. Columbanus; later its abbots were
princes of the Holy Empire. The
Abbey of Baume les Dames, founded in the 5th century and in which
Gontram,
King of Burgundy, was buried, was the school where
St. Odo, afterwards
Abbot of Cluny, studied in the tenth century; at the end of the eighth century there was built near it an abbey for Benedictine nuns, members of the nobility. During the French Revolution, the superb church of this abbey was laid waste.
Among the other saints of the Diocese of Besançon may be mentioned the hermit
St. Aldegrin (10th century), and
St. Peter Fourier (1565-1640), one of those who, in the 17th century, inaugurated systematic education for girls.
During the Middle Ages several popes visited Besançon, among them
pope Leo IX who consecrated the altar of the old Cathedral of St. Etienne in 1050, and
Eugenius III, who in 1148 consecrated the church of St. Jean, the new cathedral.
A council was held at Besançon in 1162, presided over by Holy Roman Emperor
Frederick Barbarossa, in the interest of the
Antipope Victor IV against
Pope Alexander III.
Guido of Burgundy who was pope from 1119 to 1123 under the name of
Calixtus II, and the Jesuit Nonnotte (1711-93), an adversary of Voltaire, were natives of Besançon.
The miracle wrought through the Sacred Host of Faverney, during a fire in the year 1608, is annually commemorated by elaborate ceremonies. The places of pilgrimage are: Notre Dame du Chêne at Scey; Notre Dame d'Aigremont; the pilgrimage of
St. Pierre of Tarentaise at Cirey-les-Bellevaux, where St. Pierre de Tarentaise died in 1174; Notre Dame des Jacobins at Besançon; and Notre Dame de la Motte at Vesoul. Parts of the Cathedral of St. Jean at Besançon were erected as early as the eleventh century.
Few nineteenth-century dioceses have undergone similar territorial changes. The Concordat of 1802 gave the Diocese of Besançon all those districts which, in 1822, constituted the
Diocese of St.-Claude. In 1806, Besançon was given jurisdiction over the three parishes of the