Category
page 14th-century bishops in Gaul
Martin of Tours
Christian saint
Hilary of Poitiers
Bishop of Poitiers (c. 310 – c. 367)
Saint Servatius
Armenian saint and bishop of Maastricht (Netherlands)
Liborius of Le Mans
Bishop of La Mans
Donatian of Reims
French bishop and saint
Amator of Auxerre
Amator Amadour or Amatre was bishop of Auxerre from 388 until his death on 1 May 418 and venerated as a saint in the Catholic Church. Amator's feast day is celebrated on 1 May.
Mansuy of Toul
bishop of Toul
Reticius
Saint Reticius (or Rheticus, Rheticius) () (early 4th century) was a bishop of Autun, the first one known to history, according to the Catholic Encyclopedia. He was a Gallo-Roman, and an ecclesiastical writer, and served as bishop of this see from around 310 to 334 AD.
Just of Lyon
Bishop of Lyon and gallic hermit in Egipt
Mellonius
Saint Mellonius (229-314) was an early 4th-century Bishop of Rotomagus (now Rouen) in the Roman province of Secunda Provincia Lugdunensis (now Normandy in France). He is known only from a 17th-century 'Life' of little historical value, meaning the historicity of his existence is uncertain.
Phoebadius of Agen
4th-century Catholic bishop
Patiens
Patiens was the fourth Bishop of Metz, later being made patron of the city. He died in the fourth century.
Maternien
thumb|Exterior view of the Reims Cathedralchevet.
Florus
Sanctinus
bishop of Verdun
Urban of Langres
Gallo-Roman saint and bishop, patron saint of wine growers, gardeners and coopers
Helladius of Auxerre
French bishop
Sylvius of Toulouse
Bishop of Toulouse
Marcellinus of Gaul
bishop of Embrun and saint
Avit of Rouen
Avitus of Rouen (died 325), also known as Avitien or Avidien was the third Bishop of Rouen. He is venerated as a Saint in the Catholic Church.
Rufus
bishop of Metz
Florent
bishop of Vienne