The Most Reverend Leonardo Marín-Saavedra, on June 15, 2003 Huntington Beach city, California, EEUU, His Excellency was consecrate bishop. He was named the First Traditional Missionary Anglican Bishop of the Americas and Caribbean Territories.

Apostolic Succession + Marin-Saavedra Leonardo 

Tables of Apostolic Succession for Bishop Leonardo Marin-Saavedra

Marin-Saavedra Leonardo Succession Archbishop Leonardo Marin-Saavedra Primate of the old Anglican Church IAL Canada/USA.

From Archbishop Jorge Enrique Rodriguez-Villa

Primate of the Old Catholic Church Orthodox Rite

(Principal Consecrator)

 [I] Antiochian Syro-Jacobite Succession:

1. St Peter the Apostle, who consecrated

2. St. Evodius, the Bishop and Patriarch of Antioch, who consecrated

3. St. Ignatius, Martyr, ca. 68 A.D., who consecrated

4. St. Aaron, ca. 107 A.D., who consecrated

5. St. Cornelius, 137 A.D., who consecrated

6. St. Eados, 142 A.D., who consecrated

7. St. Theophilus, 157 A.D., who consecrated

8. St. Maximin, 171 A.D., who consecrated

9. St. Seraphin, 179 A.D., who consecrated

10. St. Asclepiades, Martyr, 189 A.D., who consecrated

11. Philippe, 201 A.D., who consecrated

12. Zebinus, 219 A.D., who consecrated

13. Babylas, Martyr, 237 A.D., who consecrated

14. Fabius, 250 A.D., who consecrated

15. Demetrius, 251 A.D., who consecrated

16. Paul I, 259 A.D., who consecrated

17. Domnus I, 270 A.D., who consecrated

18. Timothy, 281 A.D., who consecrated

19. Cirilo, 291 A.D., who consecrated

20. Tyrantus, 296 A.D., who consecrated

21. Vitalius, 301 A.D., who consecrated

22. Philogone, 318 A.D., who consecrated

23. Eustachius, 323 A.D., who consecrated

24. Paulin, 338 A.D., who consecrate

25. Philabinus, 383 A.D., who consecrated

26. Evagrius, 386 A.D., who consecrated

27. Phosphorius, 416 A.D., who consecrated

28. Alexandre, 418 A.D., who consecrated

29. Jean I, 428 A.D., who consecrated

30. Theodotus, 431 A.D., who consecrated

31. Domnus II, 442 A.D., who consecrated

32. Maxime, 450 A.D., who consecrated

33. Accace, 454 A.D., who consecrated

34. Martyrius, 457 A.D., who consecrated

35. Peter II, 464 A.D., who consecrated

36. Philade, 500 A.D., who consecrated

37. Severius the Great, 509 A.D., who consecrated

38. Sergius, 544 A.D., who consecrated

39. Domnus III, 547 A.D., who consecrated

40. Anastase, 560 A.D., who consecrated

41. Gregory I, 564 A.D., who consecrated

42. Paul II, 567 A.D., who consecrated

43. Patra, 571 A.D., who consecrated

44. Domnus IV, 586 A.D., who consecrated

45. Julianus, 591 A.D., who consecrated

46. Athanasius I, the Chancellor, 595 A.D., who consecrated

47. John II, 636 A.D., who consecrated

48. Theodore I, 649 A.D., who consecrated

49. Severus, 668 A.D., who consecrated

50. Athanasius II, 684 A.D., who consecrated

51. Julian II, 687 A.D., who consecrated

52. Elie I, 709 A.D., who consecrated

53. Athanasius III, 724 A.D., who consecrated

54. Evanius I, 740 A.D., who consecrated

55. Servais I, 759 A.D., who consecrated

56. Joseph, 790 A.D., who consecrated

57. Ciriacus, 793 A.D., who consecrated

58. Dionysius I de Tal-Mahre, 818 A.D., who wrote a history of Syrians, who consecrated

59. Jean III, 847 A.D., who consecrated

. Ignace II, 877 A.D., who consecrated

61. Theodosius, 887 A.D., who consecrated

62. Dionysius II, 897 A.D., who consecrated

63. John IV, 910 A.D., who consecrated

64. Basile I, 922 A.D., who consecrated

65. John V, 936 A.D., who consecrated

66. Evanius II, 954 A.D., who consecrated

67. Dionysius III, 958 A.D., who consecrated

68. Abraham I, 962 A.D., who consecrated

69. John VI, 965 A.D., (who was imprisoned in Constantinople after the Fall of Antioch in 969 A.D., by the Greek Emperor, Nicephore Phocas), who consecrated

70. Athanasius IV, 987 A.D., who consecrated

71. Jean VII, 1004 A.D., who consecrated

72. Dionysius IV, 1032 A.D., who consecrated

73. Theodore II, 1042 A.D., who consecrated

74. Athanasius V, 1058 A.D., who consecrated

75. John VIII, 1064 A.D., who consecrated

76. Basilius II, 1074 A.D., who consecrated

77. Abdon, 1076 A.D., who consecrated

78. Dionysius V, 1077 A.D., who consecrated

79. Evanius III, 1080 A.D., who consecrated

80. Dionysius VI, 1088 A.D., who consecrated

81. Athanasius VI, 1091 A.D., who consecrated

82. John IX, 1131 A.D., who consecrated

83. Athanasius VII, 1139 A.D., who consecrated

84. Michael I, the Great, 1166 A.D., who consecrated

85. Athanasius VIII, 1200 A.D., who consecrated

86. Michael II, 1207 A.D., who consecrated

87. John X, 1208 A.D., who consecrated

88. Ignatius III, 1223 A.D., who consecrated

89. Dionysius VII, 1253 A.D., who consecrated

90. John XI, 1253 A.D., who consecrated

91. Ignatius IV, 1264 A.D., who consecrated

92. Philanus, 1283 A.D., who consecrated

93. Ignace Baruhid, 1293 A.D., who consecrated

94. Ignace Ismael, 1333 A.D., who consecrated

95. Ignace Basile III, 1366 A.D., who consecrated

96. Ignace Abraham II, 1382 A.D., who consecrated

97. Ignace Basile IV, 1412 A.D., who consecrated

98. Ignace Behanam I, 1415 A.D., who consecrated

99. Ignace Kalejhi, 1455 A.D., who consecrated

100. Ignace John XII, 1483 A.D., who consecrated

101. Ignace Noah, 1492 A.D., who consecrated

102. Ignace Jesus I, 1509 A.D., who consecrated

103. Ignace James I, 1510 A.D., who consecrated

104. Ignace David I, 1519 A.D., who consecrated

105. Ignace Abdullah I, 1520 A.D., who consecrated

106. Ignace Na Anathalak, 1557 A.D., who consecrated

107. Ignace David II, 1576 A.D., who consecrated

108. Ignace Thilathus, 1591 A.D., who consecrated

109. Ignace Abdullah II, 1597 A.D., who consecrated

110. Ignace Cadhai, 1598 A.D., who consecrated

111. Ignace Simeon, 1640 A.D., who consecrated

112. Ignace Jesus II, 1653 A.D., who consecrated

113. Ignace A. Messiah I, 1661 A.D., who consecrated

114. Ignace Cabeed, 1686 A.D., who consecrated

115. Ignace Gervais II, 1687 A.D., who consecrated

116. Ignace Isaac, 1708 A.D., who consecrated

117. Ignace Siccarablak, 1722 A.D., who consecrated

118. Ignace Gervais III, 1746 A.D., who consecrated

119. Ignace Gervais IV, 1766 A.D., who consecrated

120. Ignace Mathias, 1781 A.D., who consecrated

121. Ignace Behanam II, 1810 A.D., who consecrated

122. Ignace Jonas, 1817 A.D., who consecrated

123. Ignace Gervais V, 1818 A.D., who consecrated

124. Ignace Elie II, 1839 A.D., who consecrated

125. Ignace James II, 1847 A.D., who consecrated

126. Ignace Peter III, Patriarch of Antioch and Easter See, who consecrated

127. Mar Paul Athanasius, 1877 A.D., Syriac Bshop of Kotayan, who consecrated

128. Julius I, Antoine Francois Xavier Alvarez, 19 July 1889, Bishop of Ceylon, who consecrated

129. Mar Timotheus, J. Rene Vilatte, 29 May 1892, who consecrated

130. Paul, Paolo Miraglia, 6 May 1900, who consecrated

131. Julio, Julien Houssaye, 4 December 1904, who consecrated

132. Francois, Louis Francois Giraud, 21 July 1911, who consecrated

133. Jean II, Jean Bricaud, 12 July 1913, who consecrated

134. Targelius, Victor Blanchard, 5 May 1918, who consecrated

135. Eon II, Roger Menard, 7 January 1945, who consecrated

136. Jean III, alias Robert, Bishop of Samaria, Robert Ambelain, 10 June 1946, who consecrated

137. Andreas, Andre Mauer, 26 January 1958, second Patriarch of the Gnostic Apostolic Church, who consecrated

138. Tau Jean, Roger Pommery, consecrated by Robert Ambelain, on 26 May 1958, who consecrated

139. Tau Gillaume, Willer Vital-Herne, 16 September 1967, who consecrated

140. Tau Charles I, Roger Victor-Herard, 7 September 1970, Actual Former Primate of North America, who consecrated

141. Tau Johannes XIII, Jorge Enrique Rodriguez-Villa, 6 January 1985, who consecrated

142. Leonardo Marin-Saavedra, 15 June 2003.

 

[II] Roman Catholic - Old Succession (sic):

(1). St. Peter the Apostle.

(2). Linus, 67.

(3). Anacletus {Cletus}, 76.

(4) Clement, 88.

(5). Evaristus, 97.

(6). Alexander I, 105.

(7). Sixtus I, 115.

(8). Telesphorus, 125.

(9). Hygimus, 136.

(10). Pius I, 140.

(11). Anicetus, 155.

(12) Soter, 166.

(13). Eleutherius, 175.

(14). Victor I, 189.

(15). Zephyrinus, 199. 

(16). Callistus 1, 217.

(17). Urban I, 222.

(18). Pontian, 230.

(19). Anterus, 235.

(20). Fabian, 236.

(21) Cornelius, 251.

(22) Lucius I., 253.

(23) Stephen I, 254.

(24) Sixtus II, 257.

(25) Dionysins, 259.

(26) Felix I, 269.

(27) Eutychian, 275.

(28) Caius, 283.

(29) Marcellinus, 296.

(30) Marcellius I, 308.

(31) Eucebius, 309.

(32) Melchiades {Miltiades}, 311.

(33) Sylvester I, 314.

(34) Marcus, 336.

(35) Julius I, 337.

(36) Liberius, 352 [Liberius was expelled from Rome by the Arian Emperor Constantius.

During bis absence the See of Rome was held by Felix II who resigned upon the retum of Liberius from his two year exile.]

(37) Damasus I, 366.

(38) Siricius, 384.

(39) Anastasius I, 399.

(40) Innocent I, 401.

(41) Zosimus, 411.

(42) Boniface I, 418.

(43) Celestine I, 422.

(44) Sixtus III, 432.

(45) Leo I, 440.

(46) Hilary, 461.

(47) Simplicius, 468.

(48) Felix lII, 483.

(49) Gelasius I, 492.

(50) Anastasius II, 496.

(51) Symmachus, 498.

(52) Hormisdus, 514.

(53) John I, 523.

(54) Felix lV, 526.

(55) Boniface II, 530.

(56) John II, 535.

(57) Agapitus, 535.

(58) Sylverius, 536.

(59) Vigilus, 537.

(60) Pelagius I, 556.

(61) John IIII, 561.

(62) Benedict 1, 575.

(63) Pelagius II, 579.

(64) Gregory 1, 590.

(65) Sabinianus, 604.

(66) Boniface III, 607.

(67) Boniface IV, 608.

(68) Deusdedit {Adeodatus I}, 615.

(69) Boniface V, 619.

(70) Honorius, 625.

(71) Severinus, 640.

(72) John IV, 640.

(73) Theodore I, 642.

(74) Martin I, 649.

(75) Engene I, 654.

(76) Vitalian, 657.

(77) Adeodatus II, 672.

(78) Donus, 676.

(79) Agatho, 678.

(80) Leo II, 682.

(81) Benedict II, 684.

(82) John V, 685.

(83) Conon, 686.

(84) Sergius I, 687.

(85) John VI, 701.

(86) John VII, 705.

(87) Sisinnius, 708.

(88) Constantine, 708.

(89) Gregory II, 715.

(90) Gregory III, 731.

(91) Zachary, 741.

(92) Stephen lI, 752.

(93) Paul I, 757.

(94) Stephen III, 768.

(95) Adrian I, 772.

(96) Leo III, 795.

(97) Stephan IV, 816.

(98) Paschal I, 817.

(99) Engene II, 824.

(100) Valentine, 827.

(101) Gregory IV, 827.

(102) Sergius II, 844.

(103) Leo IV, 847.

(104) Benedict III, 855.

(105) Nicholas I, 858;.

(106) Adrian II, 867.

(107) John VIII, 872.

(108) Marinus I, 882.

(109) Adrian III, 884.

(110) Stephen V, 885.

(111) Formosus, 891.

(112) Boniface VI.

(113) Steven VI, 897.

(114) Romanus, 897.

(115) Theodore lI, 897.

(1l6) John IX, 898.

(117) Benedict IV, 900.

(118) Leo V, 903.

(119) Sergius 111,904.

(120) Anastasius III, 911.

(121) Landus, 913.

(122) John X, 914.

(123) Leo VI, 938.

(124) Stephen VII, 928.

(125) John XI, 931.

(126) Leo VII, 936.

(127) Stephen VIII, 939.

(128) Maginus II, 942.

(129) Agapitus II, 946.

(130) John XIII, 955.

(131) Leo VII, 963.

(132) Benedict V, 964.

(133) John XIV, 965/

(134) Benedict VI, 973.

(135) Benedict VII, 974.

(136) John XIV, 983.

(137) John XV, 985.

(138) Gregory V, 996.

(139) Sylvester II, 999.

(140) John XVII, 1003.

(141) John XVIII, 1004.

(142) Sergius IV, 1009.

(143) Benedict VIII, 1012.

(144) John XIX, 1024.

(145) Benedict lX, 1032.

(146) Sylvester III, 1045.

(241) James Coyon de Matignon, was consecrated by Jaques-Benigne Bossuet in 1693.

(242) Dominicus Marie Varlet, Consecrated in 1719 in Paris by Bishop de Matignon, assisted by both the Bishop of Quebec and the Bishop of Claremont.

Varlet was named Coadjutor to the Roman Catholic Bishop of Babylon who died on 20 November 1717, and Bishop Varlet succeeded to the title.

After a period in Persia at Schamake, he was suspended from office for alleged technical irregularities, including the confirmation of 604 candidates in Holland, whom he had confirmed at the request of the Church in Amsterdam.

The Dutch Church had been without a bishop for 18 years as a punishment from Rome because the Dutch Church refused to cooperate in the persecution of the "Jansenists" in Holland.] Following the election of...

(243) Comelius Van Steenhoven to serve as Archbisbop of Utrecht, the Primatial See of Holland, Varlet agreed to perform the consecration, which he did on 15 October 1724, thus making Van Steenhoven the seventh Archbishop of Utrecht and canonical successor to Saint WllIibrord, the British missionary who had brought the Christian faith to Holland. In this consecratiou was born the succession of the Old Catholic Church.

(244) Johannes Van Slipinout, 1745. (245) Gaullhenis Michaci Van Niewenhuizen, 1786.

(246) Adrian Brockman, 1778. (247) Johannes Jacobus Van Rhijin, 1797.

(248) Gilbenus de Jong, 1805. (249) Wilibrordus Van Os, 1814.

(250) Jobanfles Bon, 1819. (251) Johannes Van Santen, 1825. (252) Flermanus Heukamp, 1854.

(253) Caspanis Johannes Rinkel, 1873. (254) Gerardus Gul, 1892.

(255) Arnold Harris Mathew was consecrated on 28 April 1908 by Archbishop Gul of Utrecht, assisted by Bishop J. J. Van Thiel of Haarlem, Bishop N. B. P. Spit of Deventer and Bishop J. Demmel of Bonn, Germany, to serve as the first Old Catholic Bishop of Britain.

(256) Fredrick Wiloughby, 1914.

(257) James Wedgewood, 1916.

(258) Irving Cooper, 1919.

(259) Charles Hampton, 1931. Hampton was Principal consecrator of...

(260) Herman A. Spruit, 1957.

(261) Roberto de La Caridad Toca y Medina, 1982.

(262) Jorge Enrique Rodriguez -Villa, 1985.

(263) Leonardo Marín-Saavedra, 2003.

The Russian Orthodox Succession:


1. St. Andrew the Apostle

2. Stachys

3. Onesimus

4. Polycarpus I

5. Plutarch

6. Sedecion

7. Diogenes

8. Eleutherius

9. Felix

10. Polycarpus II

11. Athendodorus

12. Euzois

13. Laurence

14. Alypius

15. Pertinax

16. Olympians

17. Mark I

18. Philadelphus

19. Ciriacus I

20. Castinus

21. Eugenius I

22. Titus

23. Dometius

24. Rufinus I

25. Probus

26. Metrophanes

27. Alexander

28. Paul I

29. Eusebius of Nicomedia

30. Macedonius I

31. Eudoxius of Antioch

32. Demophilus

33. Euagrius

34. Maximus

35. Gregory I

36. Nectarius

37. John Chrysostom

38. Arsacius of Tarsus

39. Atticus

40. Sisinius I

41. Nestorius

42. Maximianus

43. Proclus

44. Phlabianus

45. Anatolius

46. Gennadius I

47. Acacius

48. Phrabitas

49. Euphemius

50. Macedonus II

51. Timotheus I

52. John II

53. Epiphanius

54. Anthimus I 55. Menas

56. Eutychius

57. John III

58. John IV

59. Cyriacus

60. Thomas I

61. Sergius I

62. Pyrrhus I

63. Paul II

64. Peter

65. Thomas II

66. John V

67. Constantine I

68. Theodore I

69. George I

70. Paul III

71. Callinicus I

72. Cyrus

73. John VI

74. Germanus I

75. Anastasius

76. Constantine II

77. Nicetas

78. Paul IV

79. Tarasius

80. Nicephorus I

81. Theodotus I Cassiteras

82. Antony I

83. John VII

84. Methodius I

85. Ignatius I

86. Photius I

87. Stephanus I

88. Antony II

89. Nicholas I

90. Euthymius I

91. Stephanus II

92. Tryphon

93. Theophylactus

94. Polyeuctus

95. Basil I

96. Antony III

97. Nicholas II

98. Leo Michael

99. Leontius

100. John I

101. Theopemptus

102. Hilarion

103. George

104. John II

105. John III

106. Ephraim

107. Nicolas 1

08. Nicephorus I

109. Nicetas

110. Micahel II

111. Clement

112. Constantine

113. Theodore

114. John IV

115. Constantine II

116. Nicephorus II

117. Matthew

118. Cyril I

119. Joseph

120. Cyril II

121. Maximus

122. Peter

123. Theognostes

124. Alexis

125. Cyprian

126. Photius

127. Isodore

128. Jonah

129. Theodosius

130. Phillip I

131. Gerontius

132. Zosimus

133. Simon

134. Barlaam

135. Daniel

136. Joasaph

137. Macarius

138. Germanus

139. Phillip

140. Cyril III

141. Anthony

142. Dionysius

143. Job

144. Hermongenes

145. Philaret

146. Joasaph I

147. Joseph

148. Nicon

149. Joasaph II

150. Pitrim

151. Joachim

152. Adrian

153. Stephan

154. Nikon

155. M. M. Nevsky

156. E. B. M. Meschersky

157. Aftimios Ofiesh

158. Sophronios Bishara

159. John More-Moreno

160. P. N. Cedarholm

161. N. B. A. Persson

162. Francisco Pagtakhan

163. Paul Christian G. W. Schultz

164. Jorge Enrique Rodriguez-Villa

165. Leonardo Marin-Saavedra.


MARIN-SAAVEDRA Leonardo, APOSTOLIC SUCCESSION FROM JOHN FISHER AND THOMAS CRANMER

 THOMAS CRANMER


The Holy Apostles Peter and Paul, established the Church of Rome, and PETER consecrated the first Bishop of Rome. Both PETER and PAUL were martyred and buried at Rome.

The Church of Rome: The Apostolic Succession of the Bishops of Rome, who are the Primates of the one holy Catholic and Apostolic Church by virtue of their Succession from PETER and who bear the title of Pope, descending from Pope LINUS to Pope GREGORY the Great and unto the following men of God:


66 LINUS.
79 ANACLETUS.
91 CLEMENT.
100 EVARISTUS.
109 ALEXANDER.
116 SIXTUS I.
125 TELESPHORUS.
136 HYGINUS.
142 PIUS I.
155 ANICETUS.
166 SOTER.
174 ELEUTHERIUS.
189 VICTOR I.
198 ZEPHYRINUS.
217 CALLISTUS I.
222 URBAN I.
230 PONTIAN.
235 ANTERUS.
236 FABIAN.
250 CORNELIUS.
253 LUCIUS.
254 STEPHEN I.
257 SIXTUS II.
260 DIONYSIUS.
269 FELIX I.
275 EUTYCHIAN.
283 CAIUS.
296 MARCELLINUS.
306 MARCELLUS I.
319 EUSEBIUS.
311 MILTIADES.
314 SYLVESTER I.


In the Year of Our Lord 325, the Emperor Constantine summoned the First General, or Ecumenical, Council of the Bishops of the Catholic Church to condemn the Arian heresy and to settle authoritatively the true orthodox Christian Faith.


336 MARK.
337 JULIUS I.
352 LIBERIUS.
366 DAMASUS I.
384 SIRICIUS.
399 ANASTASIUS I.
401 INNOCENT I.


In the Year of Our Lord 410, the City of Rome was invaded and sacked by the northern tribes, called Barbarians by the Romans.


417 ZOSIMUS.
418 BONIFACE I.
422 CELESTINE I.
432 SIXTUS III.
440 LEO I.
461 HILARUS.
468 SIMPLICIUS.
483 FELIX II.
492 GELASIUS I.
496 ANASTASIUS II.
498 SYMMACHUS.
514 HORMISDAS.
523 JOHN I.
526 FELIX III.
530 BONIFACE II.
532 JOHN II.
535 AGAPITUS.
536 SILVERIUS.
537 VIGILIUS.
556 PELAGIUS I.
561 JOHN III.
575 BENEDICT I.
579 PELAGIUS II.
590 GREGORY I.


Pope GREGORY I consecrated AUGUSTINE and sent him to Britain as a missionary to and bishop for the people of the Isles.

In the Year of Our Lord 597, AUGUSTINE and a small band of monks arrived in Isles, landing on the Isle of Thanet.


After preaching the Gospel of Jesus Christ to the King and his earls, King Ethelbert was baptized by AUGUSTINE. Pope Gregory appointed AUGUSTINE the first Archbishop of Canterbury and the first Primate of the Church of England.


The Church of England


The Apostolic Succession of the Archbishops of Canterbury received from the Bishops of Rome and descending from AUGUSTINE to ETHELRED :


597 AUGUSTINE.
604 LAURENTIUS.
619 MELLITUS.
624 JUSTUS.
627 HONORIUS.
655 DEUSDEDIT.


In the Year of Our Lord 664, the Synod of Whitby was held whereat the ancient British Church and the Church of England are united together into one Church, the Celtic Christians agreeing to observe the date of Easter as it was observed throughout the rest of the Catholic Church.


668 THEODORE.
693 BRITHWALD.
731 TATWINE.
735 NOTHELM.
742 CUTHBERT.
759 BREGWINE.
763 LAMBRITH.
793 AETHELHARD.
804 WULFRED.
830 THEOLGILD.
833 CEOLNOTH.
870 ETHELRED.


In the Year of Our Lord 871, Alfred was crowned King. During the Reign of King Alfred the Great, all the Saxon kingdoms were united into one Kingdom of England.

The Archbishops of Canterbury

The Succession of the Bishops of Rome from Pope SABINIAN to Pope FORMOSUS:

604 SABINIAN.
607 BONIFACE III.
608 BONIFACE IV.
615 ADEODATUS I.
619 BONIFACE V.
625 HONORIUS I.
638 SEVERINUS.
640 JOHN IV.
642 THEODORE I.
649 MARTIN I.
654 EUGENE I.
657 VITALIAN.
672 ADEODATUS II.
676 DONUS.
678 AGATHO.
681 LEO II.
683 BENEDICT II.
685 JOHN V.
686 CONON.
687 SERGIUS I.
701 JOHN VI.
705 JOHN VII.
708 SISINNIUS.
709 CONSTANTINE.
715 GREGORY II.
731 GREGORY III.
741 ZACHARIUS.
752 STEPHEN II.
752 STEPHEN III.
757 PAUL I.
768 STEPHEN IV.
772 HADRIAN I.
795 LEO II.
816 STEPHEN V.
817 PASCHAL I.
824 EUGENE II.
827 VALENTINE.
827 GREGORY IV.
844 SERGIUS II.
847 LEO IV.
855 BENEDICT III.
858 NICHOLAS I.

In the Year of Our Lord 864, Pope NICHOLAS consecrated FORMOSUS Bishop of Porto.

867 HADRIAN II.
872 JOHN VIII.
882 MARINUS I.
884 HADRIAN III.
885 STEPHEN VI.
891 FORMOSUS.

In the Year of Our Lord 891, Pope FORMOSUS consecrated PHLEGMUND to be the Archbishop of Canterbury.

In the Year of Our Lord 909, PHLEGMUND consecrated ALTHELM to be the Bishop of Wells, and thereafter ATHELM succeeded PHLEGMUND as the Archbishop of Canterbury.

923 ATHELM.
928 WULFHELM.
941 ODO SEVERUS.
954 DUNSTAN.
988 AETHELGAR.
989 SIRICIUS.
996 AELFRIC.
1005 ALPHEGE.
1013 LEOVINGUS.
1020 AETHELNOT.
1038 EADSIGE.
1050 ROBERT de JUMIEGES.
1052 STIGAND.

In the Year of Our Lord 1066, the Normans invaded England, and Duke William of Normandy, known as William the Conqueror, was crowned the first Norman King of England at Westminster Abbey, London, on Christmas Day of that same year.

1070 LANFRANC.
1093 ANSELM.
1114 RODULPH d'ESCUTURES.
1122 WILLIAM CORBEUIL.
1138 THEOBALD.
1162 THOMAS à BECKET.
1171 RICHARD.
1184 BALDWIN.
1191 REGINALD FITZJOCELYN.
1193 HUBERT WALTER.
1207 STEPHEN LANGTON.
1229 ROBERT WETHERSHED.
1234 EDMUND RICH.
1245 BONIFACE of SAVOY.
1272 ROBERT KILWARBY.
1278 JOHN PECKHAM.
1294 ROBERT WINCHELSEY.

In the year of our Lord 1297, Sir William Wallace, Guardian of Scotland, won the battle of Stirling Bridge against the invading English. Wallace is executed in 1305. Robert the Bruce is coronated King Robert the First, King of Scots in 1306.

1313 WALTER REYNOLD.


In the year of our Lord 1316, Scotland is freed forever from foreign foes at the Battle of Bannockburn.


In the year of our Lord 1320, King Robert the Bruce calls the Scottish Parliament into session at Arbroath Abbey to hammer out a letter of protest to Pope John XXII in Avignon.


This letter becomes know as the Declaration of Arbroath, or the Scottish Declaration of Independence. They request independence from the English.


Additionally, they declare their obedience to the Pope, “ready to do your will in all things, as obedient sons to you as His Vicar: and to Him as the Supreme King and Judge.”


1328 ROBERT MEPEHAM.
1333 JOSEPH STRATFORD.


During the Years of Our Lord 1348 and 1349, the Black Death (which had come by ship to Europe from Asia) ravaged Britain and Europe.


1349 THOMAS BRADWARDINE.
1349 SIMON ISLIP.
1366 SIMON LANGHAM.
1386 WILLIAM WITTLESLY.
1375 SIMON SUDBURY.
1381 WILLIAM COURTNEY.
1396 THOMAS ARUNDLE.
1414 HENRY CHICHELEY.
1443 JOHN STAFFORD.
1452 JOSEPH KEMP.
1454 THOMAS BOUCHIER.
1486 JOHN MORTON.
1501 HENRY DEAN.
1503 WILLIAM WAREHAM.
1533 THOMAS CRANMER.

In the Year of Our Lord 1535, King Henry the Eighth renounced Papal jurisdiction over the English Church. In the Year of Our Lord 1547, King Henry the Eighth died, and his young son Edward acceded to the English throne as King Edward the Sixth.

In the Year of Our Lord 1555, King Edward the Sixth died, and his half-sister Mary acceded to the English throne as Queen Mary the First. Queen Mary restored the Papal jurisdiction over the English Church, and appointed her kinsman REGINALD POLE as the Archbishop of Canterbury. Under Queen Mary, the Church of England was reconciled with to the Papacy, the Latin Mass was restored, and the Inquisition was brought to England.

The new Archbishop of Canterbury had been made a Cardinal of the Roman Church and was appointed the agent for the reconciliation of the English Church and nation with the Pope of Rome.

In the Year of Our Lord 1556, the deposed Archbishop of Canterbury, and translator and reviser of the Liturgy of the English Church, THOMAS CRANMER, was tried for heresy by the Inquisition and burned at the stake by order of the Queen.

1556 REGINALD POLE.

In the Year of Our Lord 1558, Queen Mary died, and her half-sister Elizabeth acceded to the English throne as Queen Elizabeth the First. Queen Elizabeth renounced all Papal jurisdictions over the Church of England, and restored the reformed English Liturgy.

The Queen appointed MATTHEW PARKER as the new Archbishop of Canterbury, the See having been left vacant by the death of REGINALD POLE who died on the same day as his cousin Queen Mary. MATTHEW PARKER was consecrated Archbishop of Canterbury by authority of the mandate of Queen Elizabeth on the morning of the 17th December 1559 by the four loyal Bishops WILLIAM BARLOWE, JOHN SCORY, MILES COVERDALE, and JOHN HODGEKYN, at Lambeth Palace.

1559 MATTHEW PARKER.

1575 EDMUND GRINDAL.

1583 JOHN WITGIFT.

In the Year of Our Lord 1603, Queen Elizabeth the First died, and the son of her first cousin, Mary, Queen of Scots, acceded to the English and Scottish thrones as King James the First of England and Sixth of Scotland. 1604 RICHARD BANCROFT.

In the Year of Our Lord 1611, King James the First authorized a new translation of the Holy Scriptures into the English language, and the Authorized Version, commonly called the King James Version, of the English Bible was given to the English-speaking peoples.

In 1607 the first English settlers arrive in Virginia at a small island that will be named for their King. The settlement is named Jamestown. They found the first permanent English settlement in the New World. Shortly after their arrival they celebrate the first Holy Communion in Virginia on June 21, 1607, the Twenty-first Sunday after Trinity.

They shade themselves from the hot sun by erecting a sail from the ship. Their altar is a split tree trunk placed upon two cut saplings. Of the one-hundred and three souls who arrived most perished before spring including the Rev. Robert Hunt. With this first Holy Communion the settlers began the Anglican Faith of Virginia and of the New World.

The survivers would be joined by others and found the first democratic assembly in the New World. Their faith and vision would spark the torch of democracy and freedom for all the entire world to see.

1611 GEORGE ABBOT. In the Year of Our Lord 1625, King James the First died, and his son Charles acceded to the English and Scottish thrones as King Charles the First. 1633 WILLIAM LAUD. WILLIAM LAUD had as one of his Consecrators MARC ANTONY De DOMINIS, the Roman Catholic Archbishop of Spolatro, thus adding another recognized line of the Roman Catholic Succession to the Apostolic Succession of the Bishops of the Church of England and the Episcopal Church of Scotland.

He would regularize Holy Services and direct the Altars be placed against the East wall of the Church Building in order that the Priest would celebrate with the people facing Jerusalem. He would restore Catholicity to the worship but not to rejoin the Roman Church.

In the Year of Our Lord 1645, during the Civil War fought between the forces of the King Charles the First and the Church and the forces of the Puritans, the Archbishop of Canterbury, WILLIAM LAUD, was imprisoned and executed by the Puritans for defending the Catholic Faith and the settled establishment of the Church of England.

In the Year of Our Lord 1649, the Puritans declared England a republic and the King to be a traitor. On the 30th January 1649, the Puritans executed King Charles the First. The leader of the Puritan forces, Oliver Cromwell, was declared Lord Protector of England by the House of Commons, and England suffered under Puritan tyranny during the Protectorate of Cromwell. During the time of the Interregnum, the See of Canterbury was vacant for fifteen Years.

In the Year of Our Lord 1660, the Kingdom was restored, and the exiled Heir of the martyred King acceded to the throne as King Charles the Second. King Charles the Second appointed WILLIAM JUXON to the See of Canterbury.

1660 WILLIAM JUXON

In the Year of Our Lord 1661, King Charles the Second had the Book of Common Prayer revised, and in the Year of Our Lord 1662 the revised Prayer Book was published and ordered by both the King and the Convocations of Canterbury and York to be used throughout England and Wales.

1663 GILBERT SHELDON. 1678 WILLIAM SANCROFT.

In the Year of Our Lord 1685, King Charles the Second died, and his brother acceded to the English and Scottish thrones as King James the Second of England and Seventh of Scotland.

The King was received into the communion of the Church of Rome. In the Year of Our Lord 1688, the Queen was delivered of a Prince, and the nation feared that a Roman Catholic would accede to the English throne and undermine the settlement of religion established by Queen Elizabeth the First.

The King and Queen with the infant Prince fled England for France, and Parliament invited the daughter of the King by his first Queen, The Princess Mary, and her Dutch husband, Prince William of Orange, to come to England and to reign conjointly as Queen Mary the Second and King William the Third.

Many of the Clergy and a number of Bishops, including the Archbishop of Canterbury, having already taken an Oath of Allegiance to King James the Second, refused to take the Oath of Allegiance to the new Sovereigns. The Archbishop of Canterbury, and a great number of Bishops and Clergy, are deposed and deprived of their Sees and Benefices.

These Bishops and Clergy became known as Non-Jurors, and they continued to worship privately until the death of King James the Second, and many of these Non-Jurors went to Scotland and there became Bishops and Clergy of the Episcopal Church of Scotland.

The Non-Juring line of the Episcopal succession of the Scottish Episcopal Church would later be transmitted to the Bishops of the Protestant Episcopal Church in the United States of America through its first Bishop, SAMUEL SEABURY.

1691 JOHN TILOTSON.

1694 THOMAS TENISON. In the Year of Our Lord 1694, Queen Mary the Second died. In the Year of Our Lord 1702, King William the Third died, and his sister-in-law and daughter of King James the Second acceded to the British throne as Queen Anne.

Queen Anne richly endowed the Church upon her death in 1714, which has since come to be known as Queen Anne's Bounty.

In the Year of Our Lord 1706, the Kingdoms of England and Scotland were united together as the United Kingdom of Great Britain.

In the Year of Our Lord 1714, upon the death of The Queen, Parliament enacted the Act of Settlement, and asked the Protestant descendant of King James the First, Prince George of Hanover, to accept the throne of Great Britain. Prince George of Hanover acceded to the throne as King George the First of Great Britain.

1715 WILLIAM WAKE. In the Year of Our Lord 1727, King George the First died, and his son acceded to the British throne as King George the Second.

1737 JOHN POTTER.

1747 THOMAS HERRING.

1757 MATTHEW HUTTON. 1758 THOMAS SECKER. In the Year of Our Lord 1760, King George the Second died, and his son acceded to the British throne as King George the Third.

1768 FREDERICK CORNWALLIS.

In the Year of Our Lord 1776, thirteen British colonies seceded from the British Empire and united to form the United States of America. The authority of The King was rejected in favor of an elected President and Congress.

The Church of England in the newly-formed United States of America was re-named the Protestant Episcopal Church in the United States of America, and the Protestant Episcopal Church was disestablished under the terms of the new Constitution.

1783 JOHN MOORE.

The Protestant Episcopal Church: The Apostolic Succession of the Protestant Episcopal Church in the United States of America received from the Bishops of the Scottish Episcopal Church and the Archbishops of Canterbury:

1784 Samuel Seabury.

In the Year of Our Lord 1784, SAMUEL SEABURY was consecrated the first Bishop of the Protestant Episcopal Church by Bishops KILGOUR, PETRIE, and SKINNER, of the Scottish Episcopal Church.

1787 Samuel Provoost.

In the Year of Our Lord 1787, SAMUEL PROVOOST was consecrated Bishop of the Protestant Episcopal Church by the Archbishop of Canterbury, JOHN MOORE, assisted by the Archbishop of York, and the Bishops of Peterborough and Bath and Wells.

1787 William White. In the Year of Our Lord 1787, WILLIAM WHITE was consecrated Bishop of the Protestant Episcopal Church by the Archbishop of Canterbury, JOHN MOORE, and the Bishops of Peterborough and Bath and Wells.

1790 James Madison. In the Year of Our Lord 1790, JAMES MADISON was consecrated Bishop of Protestant Episcopal Church by the Archbishop of Canterbury, JOHN MOORE, assisted by the Bishops of London and Rochester.

1792 Thomas John Clagett.

In the Year of Our Lord 1792, Bishops SAMUEL SEABURY, SAMUEL PROVOOST, WILLIAM WHITE, and JAMES MADISON, consecrated THOMAS JOHN CLAGETT Bishop of the Protestant Episcopal Church.

1819 Thomas Brownell.

THOMAS JOHN CLAGETT assisted in consecrating EDWARD BASS, who in turn assisted in consecrating BENJAMIN MOORE, who in turn assisted in consecrating JOHN HENRY HOBART and ALEXANDER GRISWOLD. WILLIAM WHITE, JOHN HENRY THOMAS and ALEXANDER GRISWOLD consecrated THOMAS BROWNELL in the Year of Our Lord 1819.

Thus through THOMAS BROWNELL the lines of Apostolic Succession descending from the Archbishops of Canterbury, the Archbishops of York, the Bishops of London, the Bishops of Peterborough, the Bishops of Bath and Wells, and the Bishops of Rochester, as well as from the Non-Juring lines of succession of the Scottish Church, were joined together and were transmitted.

Anglican: Moore - White - Hopkins - Chechemian - Crow - Newman - Maxey - Wadle - Spruit - Toca - Jorge Enrique Rodriguez-Villa - Leonardo Marin-Saavedra.

Non-Juring Bishops of England: Montaigne - Seabury - Richardson - Newman - Maxey - Wadle - Spruit - Toca - Jorge Enrique Rodriguez-Villa - Leonardo Marin-Saavedra. 

Additional Apostolic Succession Marin-Saavedra:


* Additional Apostolic Succession of the Church of Antioch Through Co-Consecrating Patriarch Roberto C. Toca for Archbishop Jorge Rodriguez-Villa

[III] Roman Catholic-Old Catholic: St. Peter - Gul - Mathew - Wedgewood - Hampton -Spruit - Toca - Rodriguez-Villa – Marin-Saavedra.

[IV] Syrian Antiochene: St. Peter - Alvarez - Vilatte - Lloyd - Raleigh - Spruit - Toca - Rodriguez-Villa - Marin-Saavedra

[V] Syrian Gallican: derived from a French branch of the same line as above and conveyed through Newman - Palatine - Holler - Spruit - Toca - Rodriguez-Villa - Marin-Saavedra.

[VI] Armenian Uniate: Chorchurian - Chechemian - Crow - Newman - Maxey - Wadle - Spruit - Toca - Rodriguez-Villa - Marin-Saavedra.

[VII] Syro-Chaldean: St. Thomas - Shimon XVIII - Antony - Bartlett - Newman - Maxey - Wadle - Spruit - Toca - Rodriguez-Villa - Marin-Saavedra.

[VIII] Chaldean Uniate: Brooks - Newman - Palatine - Hoeller - Spruit - Toca - Rodriguez-Villa - Marin-Saavedra.

[ IX] Coptic Orthodox: St. Peter - St. Mark - Patriarchal See of Alexandria - Newman - Maxey - Wadle - Spruit - Toca - Rodriguez-Villa - Marin-Saavedra.

[X] Order of Corporate Reunion: Lee - Secombe - Crow - Newman - Maxey - Wadle - Spruit - Toca - Rodriguez-Villa - Marin-Saavedra.

[XI] Anglican: Moore - White - Hopkins - Chechemian - Crow - Newman - Maxey - Wadle - Spruit - Toca - Rodriguez-Villa - Marin-Saavedra.

[XII] Greek Melchite: Cyril VI - Savoya - Aneed - Toca - Rodriguez-Villa - Marin-Saavedra.

[XIII] Orthodox Patriarchate (Constantinople): Sergius - Kleefish - Aneed - Wadle - Spruit - Toca - Rodriguez-Villa - Marin-Saavedra.

[XIV] Russian Orthodox: Nikon - Makarius - Ortinsky - Kleefish - Aneed - Wadle - Spruit - Toca - Rodriguez-Villa - Marin-Saavedra.

[XV] Polish National Catholic: Kaminsky - Vilatte - Wadle - Spruit - Toca - Rodriguez-Villa - Marin-Saavedra.

[ XVI] Albanian: Pedrovski - Zeiger - Roebke - Spruit - Toca - Rodriguez-Villa - Marin-Saavedra.

[XVII] Welsh Succession: Field - Laud - Richardson - Chechemian - Crow - Newman - Maxey - Wadle - Spruit - Toca - Rodriguez-Villa - Marin-Saavedra.

[XVIII] Non-Juring Bishops of England: Montaigne - Seabury - Richardson - Newman - Maxey - Wadle - Spruit - Toca - Rodriguez-Villa - Marin-Saavedra.

[XIX] Irish Succession: Hampton, Archbishop of Armagh - Howson - Laud - Maxey - Wadle - Spruit - Toca - Rodriguez-Villa - Marin-Saavedra.

* Additional Apostolic Succession of the Philippine Independent Catholic Church through Consecrating Bishop Paul Christian Schultz for Archbishop Jorge Rodriguez-Villa


[XX] On 15 August 1954 +Esteban Mayer Corradi-Sacrella, assisted by +Carlos Duarte Costa, consecrated sub conditione +Emile Federico Rodriguez y Durand (Fairfield), (b) who on 20 March 1977 consecrated sub conditione +Paul Christian G. W. Schultz, (c) who on 1 August 1992 consecrated sub conditione +Jorge Rodriguez-Villa, who on 15 June 2003 consecrated Leonardo Marin-Saavedra.

* Additional Apostolic Succession Marin-Saavedra, of the Gallican Catholic Church of Canada and the Catholic National Gallican Church of French through Consecrating Archbishop Gilles Tremblay for Archbishop Leonardo Marin-Saavedra.


[XXI] On 21 July 2005 (Montreal, Quebec, Canada) + Archbishop Gilles Tremblay, assisted by + Archbishop Gaston Morneau and + Bishop Patrick Leone, consecrated Interchange Apostolic Linage (Transition) for + Leonardo Marin-Saavedra.


Eglise Catholique Traditionnelle, Succession d"Utrecht Première succession apostolique.


PREMIÈRE SUCCESSION APOSTOLIQUE ISSUE DE Monseigneur Dominique Marie Varlet Pour qu’un évêque soit validement consacré, il faut qu’il reçoive l’imposition des mains d’un autre évêque dont la succession remonte sans interruption jusqu’à un Apôtre institué par Jésus-Christ.

Le présent tableau part de 1655.

La période antérieure peut être consultée aux archives du Vatican, mais ne pose pas de problème puisqu’elle remonte aux Apôtres par la lignée des papes et évêques de l’Église Catholique Romaine.

La période antérieure peut être consultée aux archives du Vatican. De nouvelles recherches font maintenant remonter cette succession jusqu’en 1541 ou jusqu’au Cardinal Scipione REBIBA (1541) ;

consécrateur de monseigneur Giulio Antonio Cardinal Santorio (1566) ;

consécrateur de monseigneur Girolamo Cardinal Bernerio (1586) ;

consécrateur de monseigneur Galeazzo Sanvitale (1604) ;

consécrateur de Monseigneur Ludovico Cardinal Ludovisi (1621) ;

consécrateur de monseigneur Luigi Cardinal Caetani (1622) ; c

consécrateur de monseigneur Giovanni Battista Scanaroli (1622)


1. Le Cardinal Antonio Barberini, né en 1607, était le neveu du Pape Urbain VIII. Le 30 août 1627, le Pape le nomme Grand Prieur de l’Ordre des Chevaliers de Malte et Cardinal de l’Église Romaine, au titre de Sainte Marie en Acquiro.

En 1628, il devint Légat à Avignon. En 1655, il fut consacré Évêque de Frascati, à Rome.

Le Prélat consécrateur était Monseigneur Scannaroli, Évêque de Sidonie, assisté de l’Évêque Bottini, prélat du Pape, et de l’Évêque Laurenzio Gravotti, de Vintimilia.

Le 22 décembre 1667, le Cardinal Barberini devint Archevêque de Reims.

En 1668, il consacra comme coadjuteur, avec droit de Succession Mgr Charles Maurice Le Tellier. Il mourut, le 3 août 1671, au Château de Nemi, à quelques miles de Rome.

2. Le Cardinal Antonio Barberini consacre Charles Maurice Le Tellier comme évêque coadjuteur avec droit de succession. Cette consécration a lieu dans l’Église de la Sorbonne à Paris, le 12 novembre 1668.

3. Monseigneur Le Tellier devenu archevêque de Reims consacre Jacques-Bénigne Bossuet comme évêque de Condom. Cette consécration a lieu en l’Église des Cordeliers à Pontoise, le 21 septembre 1670.

4. Monseigneur Jacques-Bénigne Bossuet, devenu évêque de Meaux, consacre à Paris Jacques Goyon de Matignon comme évêque de Condom. La consécration a lieu en l’Eglise de la Chartreuse en 1693.

5. Monseigneur Jacques Goyon de Matignon consacre à Paris Dominique-Marie Varlet comme évêque in partibus d’Ascalon et coadjuteur de monseigneur Pidou de Saint Olon. Cette consécration a lieu en l’Église des Missions étrangères à Paris, le 12 février 1719.

6. Monseigneur Dominique-Marie Varlet, Évêque in partibus d’Ascalon et coadjuteur de Mgr Pidou, de St. Olon, consacre Pierre Jean Maindaarts, le 17 octobre 1739.

7. Monseigneur Pierre Jean Maindaarts, Archevêque d’Utrecht consacre Jean Van Stiphou, le 11 juillet 1745. C’est la naissance de la lignée Vieille-catholique d’Utrecht.

8. Monseigneur Jean Van Stiphou consacre Walter Michel Van Nieumenhuienz, qui consacre, le 7 février 1768.

9. Monseigneur Walter Michel Van Nieumenhuienz consacre Adrien Brockman, le 21 juin 1778.

10. Monseigneur Adrien Brockman consacre Jean Jacques Van Rhijn, le 5 juillet 1797.

11. Monseigneur Jean Jacques Van Rhijn consacre Gilbert Cornelius De Jong, le 7 novembre 1805.

12. Monseigneur Gilbert Cornelius De Jong consacre Willibrordus Van Os, le 24 avril 1814.

13. Monseigneur Willibrordus Van Os consacre Jean Bon, qui consacre, le 12 avril 1819.

14. Mgr Jean Bon consacre Jean Van Santen, le 13 novembre 1825.

15. Monseigneur Jean Van Santen consacre Hermanus Keykamp, le 17 juillet 1853.

16. Monseigneur Hermanus Keykamp consacre Gaspard Jean Rinkel, le 11 août 1873.

17. Monseigneur Gaspard Jean Rinkel qui consacre, le 11 mai 1892.

18. Monseigneur Gérard Gul, Archevêque d’Utrecht (assisté de Mgr Van Thiel, P. Spit et J. Demmel) consacre Arnold-Harris Mathew, le 28 avril 1908, en la Cathédrale Sainte Gertrude à Utrecht.

19. Monseigneur Arnold-Harris Mathew, Archevêque de l’Église Vieille Catholique Romaine d’Angleterre, qui s’est soumis à l’Obédience Romaine le 31 décembre 1915 consacre Francis E. de Landas Berghe de Rache, le 29 juin 1913.

20. Monseigneur Francis E. de Landas Berghe de Rache, Prince d’Autriche, comme Archevêque de l’Église Vieille Catholique des États-Unis d’Amérique (+ 1920) consacre Henry-Carmel CARFORA, le 4 octobre 1916.

21. Monseigneur Henry-Carmel CARFORA consacre Edwin-Wallace Hunter, le 10 février 1924.

22. Monseigneur Edwin-Wallace Hunter consacre Wallace de Ortega-Maxey, le 24 mars 1929.

23. Monseigneur Wallace de Ortega-Maxey se joignit à l’obédience de Mgr Willmott-Newman, sous le titre de Mar David, Patriarche de Malaga, Catholicos et Primat d’Hérie de l’Église Catholique Orthodoxe d’Occident. Il consacre Hugues-Georges De Villmott-Newman, le 6 juin 1946.

24. Monseigneur Hugues-Georges De Villmott-Newman consacre Harold-Percival Nicholson, le 27 mai 1950.

25. Monseigneur Harold-Percival Nicholson consacre Philip Charles Stuart Singer, le 14 avril 1952.

26. Monseigneur Philip Charles Stuart Singer, consacre Charles E. Brearly, le 14 novembre 1954.

27. Monseigneur Charles E. Brearley consacre André Barbeau, le 14 mai 1968.

28. Monseigneur André Barbeau consacre Gilles Tremblay, le 4 juin 1989, fête du Sacré-Cœur.

29. Monseigneur Gilles Tremblay consacre Nicolas Accrombessi SEDOTE, le 8 juin 2003. Leonardo MARIN-SAAVEDRA, le 15 mai 2005.


Eglise Catholique Traditionnelle, Succession d"Utrecht Deuxième Succession Apostolique. DEUXIÈME SUCCESSION APOSTOLIQUE ISSUE DE Monseigneur Dom Carlos De Costa De Duarte:


1. Le Cardinal Scipione Rebiba, le 12 mars 1566, consacre Giulio Antonio Santorio

2. Le Cardinal Giulio Antonio Santorio consacre Girolamo Bernerio, le 7 septembre 1586

3. Le Cardinal Girolamo Bernerio consacre Galeazzo Sanvitale, le 4 avril 1604

4. Monseigneur Galeazzo Sanvitale consacre Ludovico Ludovisi, le 2 mai 1621

5. Le Cardinal Ludovico Ludovisi consacre Luigi Caetani, le 12 juin 1622

6. Le Cardinal Luigi Caetani consacre Ulderico Carpegna, le 7 octobre 1630

7. Le Cardinal Ulderico Carpegna consacre Paluzzo Paluzzi Altieri Degli Albertoni, le 2 mai 1666

8. Le Cardinal Paluzzo Paluzzi Altieri Degli Albertoni consacre Pietro Francesco (Vincenzo Maria Orsini de Gravina, O.P), future Benoît XIII, le 16 juillet 1724

9. Le Pape Benoît XIII, Pietro Francesco (Vincenzo Maria Orsini de Gravina, O.P) consacre Prospero Lorenzo Lambertini (futur Benoît XIV), le 16 juillet 1724

10. Le Pape Benoît XIV, Prospero Lorenzo Lambertini consacre Carlo della Torre Rezzinico (futur Clément XIII), le 19 mars 1743

11. Le Pape Clément XIII, Carlo della Torre Rezzinico consacre Bernado Giraud, le 26 avril 1767

12. Le Cardinal Bernardo Giraud consacre Alessandro Mattei, le 23 février 1777

13. Le Cardinal Alessandro Mattei consacre Pietro Francesco Galleffi, le 12 septembre 1819

14. Le Cardinal Pietro Francesco Galleffi consacre Giacomo Filippo Fransoni, le 8 décembre 1822

15. Le Cardinal Giacomo Filippo Fransoni consacre Carlo Sacconi, le 8 juin 1851

16. Le Cardinal Carlo Sacconi consacre Edouard Howard, le 30 juin 1872

17. Le Cardinal Edouard Howard consacre Mariano Rampolla Del Tindaro, le 8 décembre 1882 18. Le Cardinal Mariano Rampolla Del Tindaro consacre Joachino Arcoverde de Albuquerque-Cavalcanti, le 26 octobre 1891

19. Le Cardinal Joachino Arcoverde de Albuquerque-Cavalcanti consacre Sebastiao Leme Da Silveira Cintra, le 24 juin 1911

20. Le Cardinal Sebastiao Leme Da Silveira Cintra consacre Dom Carlos De Costa De Duarte, le 8 décembre 1924

21. Monseigneur Dom Carlos De Costa De Duarte consacre Salomeo Ferraz, le 15 août 1945

22. Monseigneur Salomeo Ferraz consacre Manuel Ceja Laranjeira, le 29 juin 1951

23. Monseigneur Manuel Ceja Laranjeira consacre Benedeto Pereira Lima, le 15 août 1965

24. Monseigneur Benedeto Pereira Lima consacre Don Jose Marcolino Machado, le 15 août 1966

25. Monseigneur Don Jose Marcolino Machado consacre Don Oscar Cairoli Osvaldo Fernandez, le 2 décembre 1967

26. Monseigneur Don Oscar Cairoli Osvaldo Fernandez consacre Michael Staffiero, le 29 mai 1973

27. Monseigneur Michael Staffiero consacre Roger Pierre Phoebus Stephanos Caro, le 29 juillet 1975

28. Monseigneur Roger Pierre Phoebus Stephanos Caro consacre Georges Jacques de Aurata Pellis Bellemare, le 7 juillet 1975.

29. Monseigneur Georges Jacques de Aurata Pellis Bellemare consacre sub conditione André Barbeau, le 12 décembre 1976.

30. Monseigneur André Barbeau consacre Gilles Tremblay, le 4 juin 1989, fête du Sacré-Cœur.

31. Monseigneur Gilles Tremblay consacre Nicolas Accrombessi SEDOTE, le 8 juin 2003.

32. Monseigneur Gilles Tremblay transmet sa succession apostolique par l’imposition des mains à Leonardo MARIN-SAAVEDRA, le 15 mai 2005.


Bishops was consecrated by The Most Rev. Leonardo Marin-Saavedra (IAL):

Gilles Tremblay (Montreal - 2005). Gaston Morneau (Quebec - 2005). Patrick Leone (Montreal - 2005). Omar Rojas-Gonzalez (Bogota - 2006). Jorge Perez-Benitez (Ciudad Azteca - 2006). Jorge Ismael Perez-Gonzalez (Ecatepec - 2007). Alonso Alvarez-Pachon (Antioquia - 2008). Roger Alexandre Hurtubise (Toronto - 2006). Sabino Pillco-Gomez (Peru - 2007). Luis Bolivar Lara-Velasco (Quito - 2007). Orli Mesias Haro-Carranza (Quito - 2007). Alonso Davila Alvarado (USA - 2009). Enrique Jose Albornoz (Ciudad Ojeda - 2008). Jon Jen Siu-Garcia (Cabimas - 2008). Alexis Jose Bertis-Vargas (El Zulia - 2008). German Fernando Sotres-Cervantes (Distrito Federal - 2009).



Others IAL Bishops was Elects:


The very Rev. Ivan Rene Riascos-Montenegro (Pasto). The Very Rev. Plutarco Dediego-Quesada (Valledupar). The Very Rev. Simon Jose Alvarado-Espina (Maracaibo). The Very Rev. Jose Luis Dimas (Distrito Federal). The Very Rev. Harry Sotres-Cervantes (Mexico).



IAL First was Elected Bishops (2005):

The Very Rev. Diego Vergara-Garzon (Medelllin). The Very Rev. Fernando Sanchez Alarcon (Barranquilla). The Very Rev. Enrique Coronado (Antioquia). The Very Rev. Jaime Diaz-Ochoa (La Estrella). The Very Rev. Josue Lopez-Colorado (Distrito Federal).The Very Rev. Ricardo Lorite de Lima (Rio de Janeiro). The Very Rev. Luis Giraldo-Moncada (Puerto Colombia). The Very Rev. Said E-Chavez-Ochoa (Cucuta).

Bishops was consecrated by The Most Rev. Leonardo Marin-Saavedra (IAL):


Gilles Tremblay (Montreal - 2005). Gaston Morneau (Quebec - 2005). Patrick Leone (Montreal - 2005). Omar Rojas-Gonzalez (Bogota - 2006). Jorge Perez-Benitez (Ciudad Azteca - 2006). Jorge Ismael Perez-Gonzalez (Ecatepec - 2007). Alonso Alvarez-Pachon (Antioquia - 2008). Roger Alexandre Hurtubise (Toronto - 2006). Sabino Pillco-Gomez (Peru - 2007). Luis Bolivar Lara-Velasco (Quito - 2007). Orli Mesias Haro-Carranza (Quito - 2007). Alonso Davila Alvarado (USA - 2009). Enrique Jose Albornoz (Ciudad Ojeda - 2008). Jon Jen Siu-Garcia (Cabimas - 2008). Alexis Jose Bertis-Vargas (El Zulia - 2008). German Fernando Sotres-Cervantes (Distrito Federal - 2009).



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