Ancient Diocese of Bazas
The Diocese of Bazas, centred on Bazas in Aquitaine, covered the Bazadais region, known under the Romans as the Vasatensis pagus after the ancient occupants, the Vasates. In the 2nd century it was part of the Novempopulania, one of the seventeen provinces of Gaul. The diocese must have been created between the first and the third centuries, but because of the large numbers of invaders that passed through this region - Arians, Saracens, Normans - the list of bishops is much reduced during the first millennium. The first bishop of this diocese is mentioned, without a name, by Gregory of Tours in his De gloria martyrum.
The diocese of Bazas, the seat of which was the cathedral of Saint-Jean-Baptiste de Bazas, was bordered on the north by the diocese of Périgueux, on the east by the diocese of Agen and the diocese of Condom, on the south by the diocese of Aire and the diocese of Dax, and on the west by the archdiocese of Bordeaux. It was divided into three archdeaconries.
It was suppressed during the French Revolution by the Legislative Assembly, under the Civil Constitution of the Clergy. By the Concordat of 1801 its territory was unequally divided between the dioceses of Aire, Agen and Bordeaux. The title of the diocese of Bazas was preserved and assigned to the Archdiocese of Bordeaux-Bazas.Bishops of Bazas
to 1300
- after 406: bishop, name unknown, mentioned by Gregory of Tours
- 506 and 511: Sextilius
- 585: Orestes
- 614: Gudualdus
- 673-675: Gundulfus
- 977-980: Gombaud, bishop of Gascony
- 1000- c. 1012: Hugues
- c. 1025- c. 1059: Raimond 'Vetulus'
- 1059-1084: Raimond the Younger
- 1084 - c. 1103: Étienne de Sentes
- 1104-1126: Bertrand de Baslade
- 1126 - c. 1134: Geoffroy or Godefroy
- 1134-1143 or 1144: Fortis Guarini de Pellegrue
- 1144-1146: Raimond
- 1146- c. 1165: Guillaume Arnaud de Tontoulon
- c. 1165-1186: Garsias de Benquet
- 1186-1213 or 1214: Gaillard de la Mothe
- 1214-1219: Guillaume II
- 1219-1242: Arnaud I de Pins
- 1242-1265: Raimond IV de Castillon
- 1265-1277: Guillaume III de Pins
- 1277-1294 or 1296: Hugues II de Rochefort
- 1294 ou 1296-1299: Guillaume IV Geoffroy
- 1299-1302: Arnaud Falquet, Fouquet, Foucaud or Foulques
since 1300
- 1302-1313 and 1319: Guillaume V Arnaud de La Mothe
- 1313-1318: Theobald de Castillon
- 1318-1319: Guillaume de La Mothe
- 1319–1325 Guillaume
- 1325-1334: Pictavin de Montesquiou
- 1334-1348: Gaillard de Fargues or de la Trave or de Préchac
- 1348-1357: Raimond Arnaud de la Mothe
- 1358-1360: Géraud or Gérald du Puy or du Puch
- 1360: Pierre
- 1361-1368: Guillaume VII
- 1371-1374: Guillaume IX de Montlaur
- Allegiance to Avignon
- 1374-1394: Jean I de Caseton, O.Min.
- 1395-1397: Guillaume X d'Ortholan
- 1397-1417: Pierre II Saupin
- Allegiance to Rome
- 1393: Maurice Usk, O.P.
- 1396 - c. 1411 or 1412: Jean de Heremo, O.E.S.A.
Return to unity
- 1421- c. 1430: Bernard d'Yvon
- 1433-1446: Henri François de Cavier
- 1447-1450: Bernard Yvest de Roserge
- 1450-1457: Raimond de Tulle
- 1457-1485: Raimond du Treuil, O.Min.
- 1486-1504: Jean de Bonald
- 1504-1520: Cardinal Amanieu d'Albret
- 1521-1528: Symphorien Bullioud
- 1528-1531: Foucauld de Bonnevald
- 1531-1544: Jean IV de Plats or Plas
- 1544-1554: Annet de Plas
- 1555-1558 or 1561: Jean Baptiste Alamanni
- 1563-1564: Jean de Balaguier
- 1564-1572: François de Balaguier
- 1572-1605: Arnaud de Pontac
- 1605-1631: Jean Jaubert de Barrault de Blaignac
- 1631-1633: Nicolas de Grillié, Grillet or Grilles
- 1633-1645: Henri II Listolfi Maroni
- 1646-1667: Samuel Martineau de Turé
- 1668-1684: Guillaume de Boissonade d'Orty
- 1685-1724: Jacques-Joseph de Gourgue
- 1724-1746: Edme Mongin, occupied Seat 26 of the Académie française
- 1746-1792: Jean Baptiste II Amédée de Grégoire de Saint-Sauveur
Studies
- Dupuy, Jérôme-Géraud, Chronique de Bazas, in: , pp. 1–67.