Marijan Lišnjić

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Appointed11 February 1664
PredecessorPetar Kačić

Marijan Lišnjić

Bishop of Makarska and Apostolic Administrator of Duvno and Skradin
ChurchCatholic Church
DioceseMakarska
Duvno
Skradin
Appointed11 February 1664
PredecessorPetar Kačić
SuccessorNikola Bijanković
Orders
Ordination1634
Consecration1664
Personal details
Born(1609-05-14)14 May 1609
Died5 March 1686(1686-03-05) (aged 76)
Makarska, Republic of Venice
BuriedMakarska, Croatia
DenominationCatholic

Marijan Lišnjić OFM (14 May 1609  7 March 1686) was a Croatian and Bosnian-Herzegovinian prelate of the Catholic Church who served as the bishop of Makarska from 1664 and apostolic administrator of Duvno from 1667 to his death in 1686. Both of his dioceses were under the Ottoman occupation, and the population suffered from both the war between the Republic of Venice and the Ottomans and the treatment from both, with Venetians enslaving and selling Christians to the Turks, and Ottomans oppressing their faith.

Lišnjić was the first to introduce secular clergy to Bosnia Eyalet after it fell to the Ottomans in the 15th century, the region where the pastoral care was given to the Franciscans.

Lišnjić was born either in Sovići or Gorica near Grude in Herzegovina, at the time part of the Ottoman Empire.[1] He became a Franciscan friar in the local friary in 1630.[2] He was a member of the Franciscan Province of Bosnia.[3] In 1634 he was ordained as a priest in Zaostrog.[1][2] Afterwards, he studied philosophy in Lucca and theology Milan from 1634 to 1642.[1] After finishing his studies, he served as an educator[1] in the Fojnica friary in Bosnia for several years and then in Zaostrog.[2] In 1659, he went to Rome to sell grains donated by the Spanish king to the Bosnian Province, which became an affair. He reported the secretary of the Congregation for the Propagation of the Faith, but due to his being poorly informed, the reports were undefined and incorrect.[1]

After the death of the bishop of Bosnia Marijan Maravić, Lišnjić was a candidate for his succession. However, due to the opposition from the Austrian Emperor and the Bosnian Franciscan clergy, he wasn't appointed to the office.[1][2] Instead, the Bosnian Franciscans accused him of withholding the money from the grains, which led him to be imprisoned in 1662 in Rome. He was acquitted in 1664.[1]

Episcopate

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