Roman Catholic Diocese of Ruvo


The diocese of Ruvo was a Roman Catholic ecclesiastical territory in Apulia, southern Italy, which existed until 1986, when it was united into the diocese of Molfetta-Ruvo-Giovinazzo-Terlizzi. From 1818 to 1982, it was united with the diocese of Bitonto, as the diocese of Ruvo and Bitonto.

History

has a late Apulian Romanesque cathedral dating to the 11th-12th centuries. Outside of the city are the ruins of a more ancient cathedral, possibly of the late fourth or early fifth century.
According to legend St. Peter appointed to the see as its first bishop Cletus, later pope. We read also of a St. Procopius, Bishop of Ruvo, of unknown date; Bishop Joannes, spoken of in 493, is the first prelate of the city known with certainty.
Others were:
In 1818 the Diocese of Ruvo, which comprised only the commune of Ruvo, was united æque principaliter to the See of Bitonto, which included only the commune of Bitonto.

Ordinaries

Diocese of Ruvo

Latin Name: Rubensis

Erected: 6th Century
Metropolitan: Archdiocese of Bari

Diocese of Ruvo e Bitonto

Latin Name: Rubensis et Bituntinus
United: 27 June 1818 with the Diocese of Bitonto

Metropolitan: Archdiocese of Bari
30 September 1986: United with and suppressed to the Diocese of Molfetta-Giovinazzo-Terlizzi''