Cappelletti, p. 531: Varie sono le opinione circa l'autenticità degli atti del suo martirio, immedesimati con quelli de' santi Faustino e Giovita. Fedele Savio, "La legende des SS. Faustin et Jovite," Analecta bollandiana (in French). Vol. Tomus XV. Bruxelles: Société des Bollandistes. 1896. pp. 5–72. Francesco Lanzoni Le diocese d'Italia dalle origini al principio del secolo VII (An. 604) (Faenza: F. Lega 1927), p. 841: "e un romanzo ciclico".
Oberto was not yet a priest when elected bishop of Albenga. He was ordained and consecrated by Archbishop Otto of Genoa on 5 March and 10 March 1216. Rossi, p. 147, places these acts in 1216; Semeria places them in 1217 (but his dates are regularly wrong by one year, including that of the IV Lateran Council, which he puts in 1216). Bishop Oberto participated in the provincial synod of Milan, held immediately after Archbishop Otto's return from Rome, which affirmed the decrees of the Lateran Council of 1215. He reached a formal understanding with the Podestà of Albenga which was notarized on 29 (?) February 1225 (1224). Pietro Gioffredo (1839). Storia delle Alpi marittime (in Italian). Vol. II. Torino: Stamp. Reale. p. 247. Semeria, II, pp. 376-377.
Fieschi became Auditor causarum contradictarum (judge) in the Roman Curia on 14 November 1226; became Vice-Chancellor of the Holy Roman Church on 31 May 1227, and was named a cardinal in September 1227. He was elected pope on 25 June 1243. Eubel, I, p. 6 no. 4; p. 7. Philippe Levillain (2002). The Papacy. Vol. 2: Gaius-Proxies. Psychology Press. pp. 790–791. ISBN978-0-415-92230-2. Frank Northen Magill; Alison Aves (1998). Dictionary of World Biography: The Middle Ages. Vol. 2. New York: Routledge. p. 514. ISBN978-1-57958-041-4.
Faschino was appointed bishop of Albenga by Pope Nicholas IV on 28 January 1292. Ughelli (p. 917) states that he died in 1306, as does Rossi. Accame, p. 440, reports that the Vicar Capitular imposed a fine on two Canons in February 1306, during the sede vacante. Lucas Waddingus (1733). Joseph Maria Fonseca (ed.). Annales Minorum Seu Trium Ordinum A S. Francisco Institutorum (in Latin). Vol. Tomus Quintus (secunda ed.). Roma: Typis Rochi Bernabò. pp. 300–301. Rossi, pp. 155-157. Gams, p. 810; Eubel, I, p. 81.
A priest of the diocese of Genoa, Marini was appointed a Referendary (judge)of the Tribune of the Two Signatures (Justice and Mercy). He was named Bishop of Albenga on 11 April 1611 by Pope Paul V. He was transferred to the diocese of Genoa on 18 July 1616. On 15 November 1627 he was named titular Latin Patriarch of Jerusalem by Pope Urban VIII and appointed governor of the City of Rome. He died in 1635. Giuseppe Banchero (1855). Il Duomo di Genova (in Italian). Genoa: Tip. di T. Ferrando. p. 88. Semeria, I, pp. 257-258. Gauchat, Hierarchia catholica IV, pp. 75 with note 2; 203 with note 5; and 207.
Born at Costa Bacelega (Albenga) in 1812, Siboni held the degrees of doctor of theology, and Doctor in utroque iure (Civil and Canon Law). He had been a parish priest in the diocese of Albenga, then Canon of the Cathedral Chapter. He was teacher of dogmatic theology in the diocesan seminary. He was Vicar Capitular, when he was named Bishop of Albenga on 27 October 1871. He was consecrated a bishop in Rome on 5 November by Cardinal Costantino Patrizi Nara. He died on 23 June 1877. "Il" Genio cattolico: Periodico religioso-scientifico-letterario-politico (in Italian). Vol. Anno IV. Reggio Emilia: Bondavalli. 1871. p. 548. Ritzler-Sefrin, VIII, p. 86.
Cattarossi was appointed Bishop of Albenga on 11 April 1911, and transferred to the diocese of Belluno and Feltre on 21 November 1913. Virgilio Tiziani, Giosuè Cattarossi vescovo e conte di Feltre e Belluno, 1863-1944(Venezia : Tipografia libreria Emiliana, 1944). Guido Caviola (1985). Giosuè Cattarossi: vescovo di Feltre e di Belluno (in Italian). Feltre.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
Oliveeri was born in Campo-Ligure (diocese of Acqui) in 1944. He studied at the seminary of Acqui and the seminary of Torino, and, after his ordination in 1968, at the Lateran University in Rome, where he took a degree in canon law. He studied at the Pontifical Ecclesiastical Academy and became a papal diplomat in Dakar., then in Great Britain, in France, and in Italy. He was named Bishop of Albenga on 6 October 1990. His resignation was accepted on 1 September 2016, since he had reached the canonical age for retirement. Diocesi di Albenga-Imperia, "Biografia, Vescovo emerito": retrieved: 2018-06-11. (in Italian) On the resignation: McKenna, Josephine (September 2, 2016). "Bishop in scandal-ridden Italian diocese resigns". cruxnow.com. The Boston Globe. Retrieved September 3, 2016.
diocesidialbengaimperia.it
Oliveeri was born in Campo-Ligure (diocese of Acqui) in 1944. He studied at the seminary of Acqui and the seminary of Torino, and, after his ordination in 1968, at the Lateran University in Rome, where he took a degree in canon law. He studied at the Pontifical Ecclesiastical Academy and became a papal diplomat in Dakar., then in Great Britain, in France, and in Italy. He was named Bishop of Albenga on 6 October 1990. His resignation was accepted on 1 September 2016, since he had reached the canonical age for retirement. Diocesi di Albenga-Imperia, "Biografia, Vescovo emerito": retrieved: 2018-06-11. (in Italian) On the resignation: McKenna, Josephine (September 2, 2016). "Bishop in scandal-ridden Italian diocese resigns". cruxnow.com. The Boston Globe. Retrieved September 3, 2016.
J. D. Mansi, L. Petit, and G. B. Martin (ed.), Sacrorum conciliorum nova et amplissima collectioTomus trigesimus sextusbis (Paris: Hubert Welter 1913), pp. 265-266.
J. D. Mansi, L. Petit, and G. B. Martin (ed.), Sacrorum conciliorum nova et amplissima collectioTomus trigesimus sextuster (Paris: Hubert Welter 1913), p. 29
Acta Apostolicae Sedis Vol. LXVI (Vatican City: Typis polyglottis Vaticanis 1974), pp. 27-28 (in Latin). The change was made, the decree notes, since Imperia had become the capital of a civil administrative province.