PORTO
290
PORTO
Mary, an order founded in 1902 by Mgr. Correa Nery,
and composed of six priests under a superior.
The official organ of the diocese is the " Mensageiro Ecclesiastico", a monthly review of about 32 pages, whose present editor is Father Octavia Chagas de Miranda. There is besides another Catholic publica- tion, "O Estudo", issued by the College of San Jos^.
AnnwUre Po-itifical CalhoKque (Paris. 1911), s. v. Pouso-Alegre.
JuLi.\N MorenoLacalle.
Porto and Santa-Rufina, Diocese of (Porttjen- sis ET Sanct.e Rufin.b), formed from the union of two suburbicarian sees. Porto, now a wretched Ul- lage, was in ancient times the chief harbour of Rome. It owes its origin to the port built by Claudius on the right of the Tiber, opposite Ostia; Trajan enlarged the basin, and in a short time there grew around it a city which soon became independent of Ostia. It was near Porto that Julius Ncpos compelled Emperor Glvcerius to abdicate (474). During the Gothic War the town served the Goths (.'>37 and 549) and the Byzantines (.546-52) a.s a base of operations against Rome. In the ninth and tenth centuries it was sacked on several occasions by the Saracens. In 849 Leo IV fortified it and established there a colony of Corsicans for the defence of the coast and the neighbouring terri- tory; but the city continued to decay. Naturally Christianity was "early established there. Several mart>TS of Porto are known, including Herculanus, Hyacinthus, Martialis, SaturninusEpictetus, Maprilis and Felix. The place was also famous as the probable see of St. Hippolytus (q. v.). In 314 Gregorius was bishop. The great xenodochium, or hospice, of Pam- machius was built about 370. Among the other bish- ops should be mentioned Donatus (date uncertain), who built the basilica of St. Eutropius; Felix, a con- temporary of St. Gregory the Great; Joannes, legate to the Sixth General Council (680); Gregorius, who accompanied Pope Constant ine to Constantinople (710); Gregorius II (74.3-61); Citonatus, present at the consecration of the antipope Constantine (767); Radoaldus, who acted contrary to his instructions on the occasion of the difficulties -nith Photius at Con- stantinople (862), and who was deposed for having prevaricated in connexion with the divorce of Lothair II of Lorraine; Formosus, who became pope (891); Benedictus (963), who consecrated the antipope Leo VIII; Gregorio (c. 991), who built the irrigation sys- tem of the territory of the diocese; Benedict VIII and Benedict IX were jjishops of Porto; Mauritius (1097), sent by Paschal II to establish order in religious affairs in the'Holy Land; CalUstus II (1119-24), who united to the See of Porto the other suburbicarian See of Silva Candida or Santa Rufina.
Santa Rufina grew up aiound the basilica of the Holy Martyrs Sts. Rufina and Secunda on the Via AureUa, fourteen miles from Rome; the basilica is said to have been begun by Julius I, and was finished by Saint Dama- sus. In the ninth century this town was destroyed by the Saracens, and the efforts of Leo IV and Sergius III were unable to save it from total ruin: all that remains are the remnants of the ancient basilica and a chapel. The first notice of it as an episcopal see dates from the fifth century, when its bishop Adeodatus was present at the councils held by Pope Symmachus; its bishop St. Valentinus, Vicar of Rome during the absence of Vigilius, had his hands cut off by Totila. Among its other bishops mention should be made of Tiberius (.594), Ursus (680), Nicetas (710), Hildebrand (906), and Peter (1020), whose jurisdiction over the Leonine City, the Trastevere, and the Insula Tiberina (island in the Tiber) was confirmed. The residence of the bishops of Silva Candida wa-s on the Insula Tiberina beside the church of Sts. Adalbert and Paulinus, while that of the bishops of Porto was on the same island near the church of San Giovanni. The bi.shops of Silva Can<lida, moreover, enjoyed great prerogatives
in relation with the ceremonies of the basilica of St.
Peter. The most famous of these prelates was Car-
dinal Humbertus, who accompanied Leo IX from
Burgundy to Rome; he was appointed Bishop of
Sicily by that pope, but, having been prevented by the
Normans from landing on the island, he received the
See of Silva Candida, and later was sent to Constanti-
nople to settle the controversies aroused by Michael
Caerularius. He wrote against the errors of the
Greeks and against Berengarius (1051-63). The la.st
Bishop was iSIainardus. Historically, therefore, the
Bishop of Porto became the second cardinal, Ostia
being the first, and officiated on Mondays in the
Lateran Basilica; he obtained, moreover, the other
rights of the Bishop of Santa Rufina, but lost jurisdic-
tion over the Leonine City and its environs, when they
were united to the city of Rome. Among its better
known cardinal-bishops are: Peter (1119), a partisan
of Anacletus II; Theodevinus (1133), a German, sent
on many missions to Germany and to the Holy Land ;
Bemardus (1159), who exerted himself to bring about
peace between Adrian IV and Barbarossa ; Theodinus
(1177), who examined the cause of St. Thomas h
Becket; Cencio SavelU (1219); Conrad (1219), a Cis-
tercian; Romano Bonaventura (1227), who obtained
the confirmation of all the rights of his see; Ottone
Candido (1243), of the house of the marches! di Mon-
ferrato, sent on several occasions as legate by Innocent
IV to Frederick II; Robert KUwardly, formerly Arch-
bishop of Canterbury, poisoned at Viterbo (1280);
Matteo da Acquasparta (1290), a former general of the
Franciscans and a renowned theologian; Giovanni
Minio (1302), a general of the Franciscans; Giacomo
Arnaldo d'Euse (1312), who became Pope John XXII;
Pietro Corsini (1374), who adhered, later, to the West-
ern Schism; Louis, Duke of Berrj% created in 1412 by
John XXIII.
During the incumbency of Francesco Condulmer, Nicholas V separated the sees of Porto and Silva Can- dida, and gave the latter to John Kemp, Archbishop of Canterburj-, at whose death (1445) the sees were reunited. Then came Guillaume d'Estoute\'iIle(1455) ; Rodrigo Borgia (1476), who became Pope Alexander VI; Raffaele Riario (1.508); Gian Pietro Carafa (1553), who became Pope Paul IV; Giovanni Morone (1565); Cristoforo Madruzzi (1570); Alessandro Far- nese (1578); Fuh'io Corneo (1580); Francesco M. Brancati (1666); Ulderico Carpegna (1675), who left a legacv to defray the expenses of quadrennial mis- sions; Carlo Rossetti (1680); Alderano Cibo (1683); Pietro Ottoboni (1687), who became Pope Alexander VIII; FlaN'io Chigi (1693), who enlarged the cathedral and richly furnished it; Nicol6 Acciaiuolo (1700); Vicenzo M. Orsini (1715), who became Pope Benedict XIII; Giulio della Somaglia (1818); Bartolommeo Pacca (1821). In 1826, Ci\'itavccchia was separated from the Diocese of Viterbo and Toscanella and united with that of Porto, but in 1S54, with Corneto, it was made an independent see. Mention should be made of the Cardinal Bishop of Porto Luigi, Lambruscliini (1847), who restored the cathedral and the episcopal palace. From the sixteenth century, the incumbency of prelates of this see was, as a rule, of short duration, because most of the cardinal-bishops preferred the See of Ostia and Velletri, which they exchanged for their own as soon as possible. The Diocese of Csere, now Cervetri, has been united with that of Porto since the twelfth century. Ca!re was an ancient city, called at first Agylla, where the sanctuaries of Rome and the Vestals were hidden during the invasion of the Gauls; the Etruscan tombs scattered about its territory are important archieologically. Cervetri had bishops of its own until the eleventh century; the first was Adeodatus (499), assuming that he was not the Adeo- datus who signed himself Bishop of Silva-Candida in the third synod of Pope Symmachus (.501). The last known was Benedictus, referred to in 1015 and 1029.