• Source: Lesvi
  • Lesvi is a Roman Catholic titular bishopric in the former Ecclesiastical province of Mauretania Sitifensis, suffragan of Sitifis, or Sétif, in modern Algeria. It is not, as is sometimes stated, the Island of Lesbos, which never was a titular bishopric, but possesses two titular archbishoprics: Mytilene and Methymna.
    The "Itinerarium Antonini" describes Lesvi as situated twenty-five miles from Tupusuctu or Tiklat and eighteen miles from Horrea Aninici (now Ain-Roua, south of Béjaïa). The town was therefore located on the Sava (Oued-Bou-Sellam). However, there are no archaeological remains.
    Two of its bishops are recorded: Romanus, a Donatist, present at the convention of Carthage, 411; Vadius, a Catholic exiled by the Vandal King Huneric in 484.
    The diocese was nominally restored as a Catholic titular bishopric.
    It had had the following incumbents, all of the fitting episcopal rank :

    Auguste-Jean-Gabriel Maurice (1 Aug 1908 – 27 Jul 1925)
    Denis O’Donaghue (26 Jul 1924 – 7 Nov 1925)
    Simone Chu Kai-min (2 Aug 1926 – 11 Apr 1946)
    Timothy Finbar Manning (3 Aug 1946 – 16 Oct 1967)
    José Tomás Sánchez (5 Feb 1968 – 13 Dec 1971)
    Leopoldo Sumaylo Tumulak (12 Jan 1987 – 28 Nov 1992)
    Juan María Leonardi Villasmil (27 Jan 1994 – 12 Jul 1997)
    Antoni Dziemianko (4 Jul 1998 – 3 May 2012)
    Bohdan Manyshyn (2014.04.02 – )


    References




    Sources


    Herbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). "Lesbi". Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company.
    Catholic hierarchy
    This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Herbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). "Lesbi". Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company.

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