Apostolic Succession Of ++++ Paul

The Roman Succession that led to: Antonio Barberini --

From Jesus Christ to the Apostles Peter, James, John, Andrew, Simon, Matthew, Jude,

Bartholomew, Phillip, James, Thomas, and their successors, the Bishops of the One, Holy,

Catholic and Apostolic Church 33 AD to 1566 A.D.

1. St. Peter the Apostle 38 to 64 A.D.

2. St. Linus 67 to 76

3. St. Anacletus 76 to 91

4. St. Clement I 91 to 101

5. St. Evaristus 100 to 109

6. St. Alexander I 109 to 116

7. St. Sixtus I 116 to 125

8. St. Telesphorus 125 to 136

9. St. Hyginus 138 to 140

10. St. Pius I 140 to 155

11. St. Anicetus 155 to 166

12. St. Soter 166 to 174

13. St. Eleutherius 174 to 189

14. St. Victor I 189 to 198

15. St. Zephyrinus 198 to 217

16. St. Callistus I 217 to 222

17. St. Urban I 222 to 230

18. St. Pontian 21 July 230 to 28 September 235

19. St. Anterus 21 November 235 to 20 January 236

20. St. Fabian 10 January 236 to 20 January 250

21. St. Cornelius Marrch 251 to June 253

22. St. Lucius I 25 June 253 to 5 March 254

23. St. Stephen I 12 May 254 to 2 August 257

24. St. Sixtus II 30 August 257 to 6 August 258

25. St. Dionysius 22 July 259 to 26 December 268

26. St. Felix I 5 January 269 to 30 December 274

27. St. Eutychian 4 January 275 to 7 December 283

28. St. Caius 17 December 283 to 25 April 296

29. St. Marcellinus 30 June 296 to 25 October 304

30. St. Marcellus I 27 May 306 to 16 January 308

31. St. Eusebius 18 April 310 to 17 August 310

32. St. Miltiades 2 July 311 to 11 January 314

33. St. Silvester 31 January 314 to 31 December 335

34. St. Mark 18 January 336 to 7 October 336

35. St. Julius I 6 February 337 to 12 April 352

36. St. Liberius 17 May 352 to 24 September 366

37. St. Damasus 1 October 366 to 11 December 384

38. St. Siricius December 384 to 26 November 399

39. St. Anastasius I 27 November 399 to 19 December 401

40. St. Innocent I 22 December 401 to 12 March 417

41. St. Zosimus 18 March, 417 to 26 December 418

42. St. Boniface I 28 December 418 to 4 September 422

43. St. Celestine I 10 September 422 to 27 July 432

44. St. Sixtus III 31 July 432 to 19 August 440

45. St. Leo I "The Great" 29 September 440 to 10 November 461

46. St. Hilarus 19 November 461 to 29 February 468

47. St. Simplicius 3 March 468 to 10 March 483

48. St. Felix III 13 March 483 to 1 March 492

49. St. Gelasius I 1 March 492 to 21 November 496

50. Anastasius II 24 November 496 to 19 November 498

51. St. Symmachus 22 November 498 to 19 July 514

52. St. Hormisdas 20 July 514 to 6 August 523

53. St. John I 13 August 523 to 18 May 526

54. St. Felix IV 12 July 526 to 22 September 530

55. Boniface II 22 September 530 to 17 October 532

56. St. John II 2 January 533 to 8 May 535

57. St. Agapitus I 13 May 535 to 22 April 536

58. St. Silverius 1 June 536 to 11 November 537

59. Vigilius 29 March 537 to 7 June 555

60. Pelagius I 16 April 556 to 4 March 561

61. John III 17 July 561 to 13 July 574

62. Benedict I 2 June 575 to 30 July 579

63. Pelagius II 26 November 579 to 7 February 590

64. St. Gregory I "The Great" 3 September 590 to 12 March 604

65. Sabinianus 13 September 604 to 22 February 606

66. Boniface III 19 February 606 to 12 November 607

67. St. Boniface IV 25 August 608 to 8 May 615

68. St. Adeodatus I (Deusdedit) 19 October 615 to 8 November 618

69. Boniface V 23 December 619 to 25 October 625

70. Honorius I 27 October 625 to 12 October 638

71. Severinus 28 May xxx to 2 August 640

72. John IV 24 December 640 to 12 October 642

73. Theodore I 24 November 642 to 16 September 16 649

74. St. Martin I July 649 to May 653

75. St. Eugenius I 10 August 654 to 2 June 657

76. St. Vitalian 30 July 657 to 27 January 672

77. Adeodatus II 11 April 672 to 17 June 676

78. Donus 2 November 676 to 11 April 678

79. St. Agatho 27 June 678 to 10 January 681

80. St. Leo II 17 August 682 to 3 July 683

81. St. Benedict II 26 June 684 to 8 May 685

82. John V 23 July 685 to 2 August 686

83. Conon 21 October 686 to 21 September 687

84. St. Sergius I 15 December 687 to 8 September 701

85. John VI 30 October 701 to 11 January 705

86. John VII 1 March 705 to 18 October 707

87. Sissinius 15 January 708 to 4 February 708

88. Constantine 25 March 708 to 9 April 715

89. St. Gregory II 19 May 715 to 11 February 731

90. St. Gregory III 18 March 731 to November 741

91. St. Zacharias 3 December 741 to 15 March 752

92. Stephen II 26 March 752 to April 26, 757

93. St. Paul I 29 May 757 to June 28, 767

94. Stephen III 1 August 768 to 24 January 772

95. Adrian I 1 February 772 to 25 December 795

96. St. Leo III 26 December 795 to 12 June 816

97. Stephen IV 22 June 816 to 24 January 817

98. St. Paschal I 25 January 817 to 11 February 824

99. Eugenius II February 824 to August 827

100. Valentine August 827 to September 827

101. Gregory IV 827 to January 844

102. Sergius II January 844 to 27 January 847

103. St. Leo IV January 847 to 17 July 855

104. Benedict III July 855 to 17 April 858

105. St. Nicholas I 24 April 858 to 13 November 867

106. Adrian II 14 December 867 to 14 December 872

107. John VIII 14 December 872 to 16 December 882

108. Marinus I 16 December 882 to 15 May 884

109. St. Adrian III 17 May 884 to September 885

110. Stephen V September 885 to 14 September 891

111. Formosus 6 October 891 to 4 April 896

112. Boniface VI April 896 to April 896

113. Stephen VI May 896 to August 897

114. Romanus August 897 to November 897

115. Theodore II December 897

116. John IX January 898 to January 900

117. Benedict IV January 900 to July 903

118. Leo V July 903 to September 903

119. Sergius III 29 January 904 to 14 April 911

120. Anastasius III April 911 to June 913

121. Lando July 913 to February 914

122. John X March 914 to May 928

123. Leo VI May 928 to December 928

124. Stephen VII December 928 to February 931

125. John XI February 931 to December 935

126. Leo VII January 936 to 13 July 939

127. Stephen VIII 14 July 939 to October 942

128. Marinus II 30 October 942 to May 946

129. Agapetus II 10 May 946 to December 955

130. John XII 16 December 955 to 14 May 964

131. Leo VIII 4 December 963 to 1 March 965

132. Benedict V 22 May 964 to 4 July 966

133. John XIII 1 October 965 to 6 September 972

134. Benedict VI 19 January 973 to June 974

135. Benedict VII October 974 to 10 July 983

136.John XIV December 983 to 20 August 984

137. John XV August 985 to March 996

138. Gregory V 3 May 996 to February 999

139. Sylvester II 2 April 999 to 12 May 1003

140. John XVII June 1003 to December 1003

141. John XVIII January 1004 to July 1009

142. Sergius IV 31 July 1009 to 12 May 1012

143. Benedict VIII 18 May 1012 to 9 April 1024

144. John XIX April 1024 to 1032

145. Benedict IX 1032 to 1044

146. Sylvester III 20 January 1045 to 10 February 1045

147. Gregory VI 5 May 1045 to February 1046

148. Clement II 24 December 24, 1046 to 9 October 1047

149. Damasus II 17 July 1048 to 9 August 1048

150. St. Leo IX 12 February 1049 to 19 April 1054

151. Victor II 16 April 1055 to 28 July 1057

152. Stephen IX 3 August 1057 to 29 March 1058

153. Nicholas II 24 January 1059 to 27 July 1061

154. Alexander II 1 October 1061 to April 1073

155. St. Gregory VII 22 April 1073 to 25 May 1085

156. Blessed Victor III 24 May 1086 to 16 September 1087

157. Blessed Urban II 12 March 1088 to 29 July 1099

158. Paschal II 13 August 1099 to 21 January 1118

159. Gelasiur II 24 January 1118 to 28 January 1119

160. Callistus II 2 February 1119 to 13 December 1124

161. Honorius II 21 December 1124 to 13 February 1130

162. Innocent II 14 February 1130 to 24 September 1143

163. Celestine II 26 September 1143 to 8 March 1144

164. Lucius II 12 March 1144 to 15 February 1145

165. Blessed Eugenius III 15 February 1145 to 8 July 1153

166. Anastasius IV 12 July 1153 to 3 December 1154

167. Adrian IV 4 December 1154 to 1 September 1159

168. Alexander III 7 September 1159 to 30 August 1181

169. Lucius III 1 September 1181 to 25 September 1185

170. Urban III 25 November 1185 to 20 October 1187

171. Gregory VIII 21 October 1187 to 17 December 1187

172. Clement III 19 December 1187 to March 1191

173. Celestine III 30 March 1191 to 8 January 1198

174. Innocent III 8 January 1198 to 16 July 1216

175. Honorius III 18 July 1216 to 18 March 1227

176. Gregory IX 19 March 1227 to 22 August 1241

177. Celestine IV 25 October 1241 to 10 November 1251

178. Innocent IV 25 June 1243 to 7 December 1254

179. Alexander IV 12 December 1254 to 25 May 1261

180. Urban IV 29 August 1261 to 2 October 1264

181. Clement IV 5 February 1265 to 29 November 1268

182. Blessed Gregory X 1 September 1271 to 10 January 1276

183. Blessed Innocent V 21 January 1276 to 22 June 1276

184. Adrian V 11 July 1276 to 18 August 1276

185. John XXI 8 September 1276 to 20 May 1277

186. Nicholas III 25 November 1277 to 22 August 1280

187. Martin IV 2 February 1281 to 28 March 1285

188. Honorius IV 2 April 1285 to 3 April 1287

189. Nicholas IV 22 February 1288 to 4 April 1292

190. St. Celestine V (resigned) 5 July 1294 to 13 December 1294

191. Boniface VIII 24 December 1294 to 11 October 1303

192. Blessed Benedict XI 22 October 1303 to 7 July 1304

193. Clement V 5 June 1305 to 20 April 1314

194. John XXII 7 August 1305 to 4 December 1334

195. Nicholas V 12 May 1328 to 5 August 1330

196. Benedict XII 20 December 1334 to 25 April 1342

197. Clement VI 7 May 1342 to 6 December 1352

198. Innocent VI 18 December 1352 to 12 September 1362

199. Blessed Urban V 28 September 1362 to 19 December 1370

200. Gregory XI 30 December 1370 to 26 March 1378

201. Urban VI 8 April 1378 to 15 October 1389

202. Boniface IX 2 November 1389 to 1 October 1404

203. Innocent VII 17 October 1404 to 6 November 1406

204. Gregory XII 30 November 1406 to 4 July 1415

205. Martin V 11 November 1417 to 20 February 1431

206. Eugenius IV 3 March 1431 to 23 February 1447

207. Nicholas V 6 March 1447 to 24 March 1455

208. Callistus III 8 April 1455 to 6 August 1458

209. Pius II 19 August 1458 to 15 August 1464

210. Paul II 30 August 1464 to 26 July 1471

211. Sixtus IV 9 August 1471 to 12 August 1484

212. Innocent VIII 29 August 1484 to 25 July 1492

213. Alexander VI 11 August 1492 to 18 August 1503

214. Pius III 22 September 1503 to 18 October 1503

215. Julius II 31 October 1503 to 21 February 1513

216. Leo X 9 March 1513 to 1 December 1521

217. Adrian VI 9 January 1522 to 14 September 1523

218. Clement VII 19 November 1523 to 25 September 1534

219. Paul III 13 October 1534 to 10 November 1549

220. Julius III 7 February 1550 to 23 March 1555

221. Marcellus II 9 April 1555 to 1 May 1555

222. Paul IV 23 May 1555 to 18 August 1559

223. Pius IV 25 December 1559 to 9 December 1565

224. St. Pius V 7 January 1566 to 1 May 1572

225. Gregory XIII 13 May 1572 to 10 April 1585

226. Sixtus V 24 April 1585 to 27 August 1590

227. Urban VII 15 September 1590 to 27 September 1590

228. Gregory XIV 5 December 1590 to 16 October 1591

229. Innocent IX 29 October 1591 to 30 December 1591

230. Clement VIII 30 January 1592 to 3 March 1605

231. Leo XI 1 April 1605 to 27 April 1605

232. Paul V 16 May 1605 to 27 April 1605

233. Gregory XV 9 February 1621 to 8 July 1623

233. Urban VIII 6 August 1623 to 29 July 1644

234. Innocent X 15 September 1644 to 7 January 1655

235. Alexander VII 7 April 1655 to 22 May 1667

237. Antonio Barberini (Note: Cardinal Antonio Barberini is the nephew of Pope ban VIII)

(appointed 24 October 1655 Cardinal Bishop of Frascati by Alexander VII; consecrated bishop

by Abp. Giovanni Battista Scanaroli [Scannaroli]) 11 October 1655

238. Charles-Maurice Le Tellier, 16 April 1673

239. Jacques Benigne Bossuet, Jacques-Bénigne Bossuet, famed orator "the Eagle of Meaux",

tutor to the Grand Dauphin, was consecrated Bishop of condom at Pontoise, Church of the

Cordeliers, by Charles Maurice Le Tellier, Titular Archbishop of Nazianzus and Coadjutor

Archbishop of Reims, assisted by Armand de Monchy d`Hocquincourt, Bishop of Verdun, and

Gabriel de Roquette, Bishop of Autun. Pope Clement X transferred him to the See of Meaux in

1671. Bossuet was a Roman Catholic predecessor of the future Old Catholic Church because

he taught that the Roman Pontiff could err temporarily, but not fall into permanent error. 21

September 1670

240. Bp. Jacques de Goyon de Matigon, son of Count De Thorigny, was consecrated at Paris,

Church of the Carthusians, by Jacques Bénigne Bossuet, Bishop emeritus of Condom, assisted

by Gui de Sève de Rochechouart, Bishop of Arras, and Louis Marie Armand de Simiane de

Gorde, Bishop of Langres. He was Doyen of Lisieux and Abbe Commendataire De St. Victor,

Paris. 16 April 1673

241. Dominicus Marie Varlet (alt spelling: Dominique-Marie Varlet), was consecrated Roman

Catholic Bishop of Ascalon in partibus, and coadjutor to the Most Reverend Pidou of St. Odon,

Bishop of Babylon, Persia (Baghdad) in February 1719 at Paris, in the lower chapel of the

Seminary of the Missions Étrangères, by Jacques de Goyon de Matignon, Bishop emeritus of

Condom, assisted by Louis François Duplessis de Mornay, O.F.M., Titular Bishop of Eumenia,

(aka Bishop of Quebec) and Jean Baptiste Massillon, Bishop of Clermont. Bishop Varlet

consecrated four Archbishops of the Old Catholics at Utrecht (Oud Katholicke Kerk van

Nederland), three of whom died without consecrating successors. 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 conformation 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

Cornelius Van Steenoven to serve as Archbishop of Utrecht, the Primatial See of Holland, Varlet

agreed to perform the Consecration, which he did on October 15, 1724, thus making Van

Steenoven the seventh Archbishop of Utrecht and canonical successor to Saint Willibrord, the

British missionary who had brought the faith to Holland. In this consecration was born the

Old Catholic Church. In response to the appeals of the Chapter of the Old Catholic Church of

Utrecht, Varlet, consecrated bishop from Holland. 19 February 1719 to 14 May 1742

242. Petrus Johannes Meindaerts, Old Catholic Bishop of Haarlem, 18 October

1739 to 1767

243. Johannes Van Stiphout 1745 to 1777

244. Walter Van Nieuwenhuisen 7 February 1768 to 1797

245. Adrian Broekman 1778 to 28 November 1800

246. Johannes Jacobus Van Rhijn 5 July 1797 to 24 June 1808

247. Gijsbert De Jong 7 November 1805 to 1824

248. Willibrord Van Os 24 April 1814 to 1825

249. Johannes Bon, Old Catholic Bishop of Haarlem. Bishop Bon was the first Bishop of the

autocephalous Dutch succession not to be excommunicated by Rome. In 1827 the King of the

Netherlands to the See of Bruges nominated him without objection from Rome.

13 November 1824

250. Johannes Van Santen 3 November 1825 to 1858

251. Herman Heykamp 1853 to 1874

252. Gaspard Johannes Rinkel 11 August 1873 to 1906

253. Gerardus Gul – 11 May 1892 to 1920 (Note: Archbishop Gerardus Gul of

Utrecht, Holland, was the first of the Old Catholic Church line of succession.)

254. Arnold Harris Mathew – 28 April 1908 to 20 December 1919 (Note: Archbishop Arnold H.

Mathew's archdiocese was in London, England and became autocephallous.)

255. De Landes Berghes – 29 June 1913 to 17 November 1920

256. Carmel Henry Carfora – 4 October 1916 to 11 January 1958 (Note: Archbishop Carfora

had received two ordinations to the episcopal level -- the Arnold Harris Mathew succession

through the Old Catholic Church and the Joseph R. Villatte line of succession through the See

of Antioch.)

257. Bp. Frederick Samuel Willoughby [Old Catholic Bishop for Britain] 28 October 1914

258. Bp. James Bartholomew Banks of Windsor (Mar James I, Patriarch of the Old Catholic

Orthodox Church) 9 July 1922

259. Bp. Matthew Cooper of Greenwich 1924

260. Abp. Ignatius Charles Brearley of Danum (Bishop. Of Yorkshire) 31 January 1954

261. Abp. André Barbeau of Quebec (as Patriarch André I of the Catholic Charismatic Church of

Canada) 14 May 1968

262. Abp. John Peter Walzer of the Diocese of Connecticut of the Catholic Charismatic Church

(Old Catholic Succession) [Patriarch André Barbeau as Chief Consecrator with Archbishop

André Letellier and Archbishop Michael Boucher as co-consecrators]. 21 April

1990

The below data is included as it explains Abp. André Barbeau’s (as well as some relevant data)

as it does tie in with the Catholic Charismatic Church of Canada. Possibly Abp. Walzer could be

included in with Abp Heyward Ewart’s (Patriarch Paul) line of Apostolic Succession.

On 1 May 1991 Archbishop Walzer was installed as Archbishop for the Archdiocese of Saint

Mary, CCC, in the historic St. Peter's Roman Catholic Church in Hartford, CT. He succeeded

Patriarch Robert (who had succeeded Patriarch Michael, Patriarch Andre's successor) as

Patriarch of the Catholic Charismatic Church (Old Catholic Succession) on 30 June 2010

assuming the style as Patriarch Augustine.

Oxford History of The Christian Church Brearley had been consecrated by Bp. Matthew Cooper,

who had been consecrated by Bp. James Bartholomew Banks, who had been consecrated by

Bp. Frederick Samuel Willoughby who had been consecrated by Abp. Mathew.

Eduoard Cardinal Gagnon (15 January 1918 - 25 August 2007) was a Canadian who became a

Roman Catholic Cardinal on 25 May 1985 (by Pope John-Paul II). He served as President of the

Pontifical Council for the Family from1974 to 1990.

In 2002, Cardinal Gagnon was invited to investigate documentation relating to the episcopal

orders received by Bishop André Letellier, with a view to commenting on the validity of his

consecration.

Letellier had been consecrated on 23 May 1968 by the late Archbishop André Leon Zotique

Barbeau of the Catholic Charismatic Church of Canada Archbishop Barbeau had in turn been

consecrated by Archbishop Charles (Ignatius Carolus) Brearley, an English Old Catholic bishop

based in Sheffield, United Kingdom.

Cardinal Gagnon's letter reads as follows:

"To Whom It May Concern: After having studied the documentation of Mgr. André LeTellier and

his predecessors in episcopal succession, I am convinced that he has been validly consecrated

a bishop. It is not my intention to rule on the reports of the organization, incorporated under the

name of Catholic Charismatic Church of Canada with the Conference of Catholic Bishops of

Canada and of Québec. But nothing allows me to doubt the validity of episcopal ordination of

Mgr André Letellier by Archbishop André Barbeau and that of Archbishop Barbeau by

Archbishop Ignatius Charles Brearley, Primate of the Church of the "Old Catholics" having its

seat in England. The ordinations of the "Old Catholics" are generally considered to be the same

as those of Orthodox bishops. I have known Archbishop Barbeau for more than 60 years since

our time at the Grand Seminary of Montreal. I have had little contact with him thereafter, having

exercised my ministry far from here. But he has always been known to me as a man of prayer, a

mystic. And I think that his disciples are also, above all, men of prayer. + Edouard Cardinal

Gagnon, p.s.s. Montreal, 6 May 2002" [Italics added.] For further details, and a copy of the

statement, see http://www.thedegree.org/cardgagnon.html

299. C. R. McCarthy, who on 25 September 1977 consecrated:

300. C. David Luther, who on 17 June 1984 consecrated:

301. Archbishop Michael F. Hembree, who with Archbishop Allard, consecrated:

302: Bishop Donald Locke, who on April 29, 1989, with Barbeau and Letellier consecrated:

303. Bishop John Paul Boucher, who on February 25th, with Bishop Joseph Nathan Allee

consecrated:

304. Edward Lee Haynes, who on May 15, 2022, with Archbishop Edward Vaughn and Bishop Lon Eilders consecrated:

305. Gretchen Hillis, who on October 7, 2022, with Archbishop Edward Vaughan and Bishop Lon Eilders, consecrated:

306. Shane Simpson