词条 | Hugh of Die |
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|name = Hugh of Die |image = |church = Roman Catholic Church |ordination= (Priest) |consecration = March 9, 1074 (Bishop) |consecrated_by=Pope Gregory VII |appointed= October 19, 1073 |ended= October 7, 1106 |successor= |birth_date = c.1040 |birth_place = Romans-sur-Isère |death_date = {{death date and age|1106|10|7|1040|df=y}} |death_place = Susa }} Hugh of Die ({{circa}} 1040 – October 7, 1106) was a French Catholic bishop. BiographyPrior of the monastery of Saint-Marcel in Chalon-sur-Saône, on October 19, 1073, Hugh became bishop of Die, Drôme and on March 9, 1074 received his episcopal consecration in Rome from the hands of Pope Gregory VII and was transferred to the metropolitan office of Archbishop of Lyon from 1081 to 1106. He was a nephew of Hugh I, Duke of Burgundy. He was a strong supporter of the Gregorian reform and was a papal legate. He was excommunicated on August 29, 1087 at the Council of Benevento, for his criticisms of Pope Victor III's election and because he was close to the Emperor Henry IV. Victor's successor Pope Urban II revoked the provision and reinstated him in his offices, make him legate again in 1094; Hugh in turn excommunicated Philip I of France for having irregularly married Bertrade de Montfort.[1] He presided a synod in Autun that issued measures against nicolaism and simony. He participated in the Crusade of 1101 as part of the army of Stephen of Blois. Bibliography
References1. ^treccani.it External links
8 : Bishops of Die|Archbishops of Lyon|Christians of the First Crusade|11th-century Roman Catholic archbishops|People temporarily excommunicated by the Roman Catholic Church|People from Romans-sur-Isère|1040s births|1106 deaths |
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