Aggius
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Bortigiadas
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Calangianus
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Luogosanto
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Luras
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Nuchis
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Olbia
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Tempio
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The rural churches
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Tempio Pausania
The town of Tempio Pausania - perhaps of Roman origin - is documented
since 1173 as a villa of the parish of Gemini of the Kingdom or Giudicato of Gallura in fact
ended in 1288 with the occupation of Pisa.
Later it was probably the temporary seat of the bishop of Civita, at least since 1346-50,
when we noted a "Gavino rectore de Templo cum suis annexis civitatensis diocesis”. With
the aragonese conquest of 1324 Tempio went to the kingdom of Sardinia, and was perhaps enfeoffed
to Berengar Arnaldo de Aglesola in 1329; and on June 18, 1349 was bought by John of Bas Serra,
brother of Mariano IV, king of the Giudicato of Arborea, was then requisitioned by the latter at
the end of that year, remaining Arborea - except for a brief period between 1388 and 1391 - until 1420,
when he returned to the Kingdom of Sardinia. The feud came to the Carròs family, as the heirs
of John of Arborea, thus through Beatrice Carròs of Arborea, went to her husband Peter Maça de Liçana,
lord of Moixent in the Kingdom of Valencia. After the extinction of this dynasty in 1546, Tempio
went to the bastard John Cascant, and, after a long litigation and various divisions, in 1579 went
to Anna Portugal and, finally, to Peter Ladron.
From that moment began the progressive development of the city center, which continued until the
beginning of the contemporary age. In 1543 the Franciscan Monastery was built with attached the
renaissance church, in 1621 the parish of St. Peter's got an erection in collegiate, in 1665 settled
the Piarists and in 1687 Capuchin nuns. In 1720, following the War of Spanish Succession that took
part in the noble families of Tempio Pes and Valentino, the Kingdom of Sardinia came in federal
aggregation with the Principality of Piedmont, the Duchy of Savoy and the County of Nice,
members of the House of Savoy.
In 1737 Tempio was visited by the Viceroy Carlo Amedeo Baptist of St. Martin, marquis of Agliè
and Rivarolo, to take some measures of agricultural nature, then resulted with the importation
by Paul Altea of the mulberry from the Philippines. In 1807 it became the seat of the prefecture;
on November 15, 1836 obtained the title of city; in 1838 became the capital of the district and in
1839 it's collegiate was erected as a cathedral with the transfer of the headquarters of the
medieval church of San Simplicio located on the outskirts of Olbia.
Connected files
1. Masses are celebrated in the churches of the Diocese of Civita, 14.10.1745
2. Festivals that are celebrated in churches dependent of Tempio Collegiate, 14.10.1745
3. Churches of Tempio, 14.10.1745
10. Beginning his pastoral visit at the collegiate of Tempio, 14.10.1745
55. Order of the priests present for the visit, 07.12.1745
66. Beginning of the third pastoral visit, 28.10.1750
106. Arrival of Bishop in Tempio, 24.04.1763
117. Edict with various provisions, 04.05.1763
154. List of Diocesan Priests, 14.10.1745
155. List of confessors and preachers, 20.10.1750
156. List of authorized confession, 15.01.1751
157. List of diocesan assistant parish priests, 19.01.1751
158. List of priests of the city, apr-giu 1763
159. List of tonsured, 14.10.1763
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St. Peter the Apostle
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Purgatory
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Rosary
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St. Cross
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Pilar
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St. Antony
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Lost Child
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St. Francis Xavier
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Oratory Riccio
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