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Bishop of Aosta : ウィキペディア英語版
Roman Catholic Diocese of Aosta

The Italian Catholic Diocese of Aosta ((ラテン語:Dioecesis Augustana)) has existed in its modern form since 1817.〔.〕 It is a suffragan of the Archdiocese of Turin.
==History==

Although Ursus is sometimes said to have been the first bishop, this is controverted. The first certainly known bishop is St. Eustasius, whose name coupled with Aosta is signed to a letter sent to Pope Leo I by the second Synod of Milan in 451.〔 cites .〕 In the cathedral treasury is a consular diptych of Anicius Petronius Probus, Roman consul in 406, which shows the Emperor Honorius. (It was discovered in 1833.) From the ninth century the list of bishops is fairly complete. Bernard of Menthon (1008), Archdeacon of Aosta, founded the hospice on the Alps named after him, as a relief to pilgrims.
In the 10th and early 11th centuries, the bishops of Aosta ruled the surrounding country as its secular counts. The two titles were separated at or following the death of Bishop Anselm in 1026, owing to Conrad II's desire to strengthen his position near the important Little St Bernard Pass and distrust of Burchard, Anselm's successor and a relative of various nobles opposed to Conrad's claims in Burgundy. (Burchard would subsequently rise in a failed revolt; he was later translated to Lyons.) Anselm (1033-1109), Archbishop of Canterbury, was a native of Aosta and probably related to its dynasty of bishops; rather than remain in local service, however, he travelled to Bec Abbey in Normandy and ultimately became primate over Norman England instead.
The see was suppressed in 1802 and reëstablished in 1817.

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