Archbishop of Canterbury | Archbishop | Archbishop of York | archbishop | Santa Maria Capua Vetere | Archbishop of Dublin | Capua | Archbishop of Cashel | Archbishop of Glasgow | Archbishop of Armagh | Archbishop of Cologne | Archbishop of Tuam | The Archbishop Lanfranc School | Archbishop of Santiago | Archbishop of Uppsala | Archbishop of Melbourne | Archbishop of Dublin (Roman Catholic) | William Temple (archbishop) | Pandulf II of Capua | Joscius, Archbishop of Tyre | Death Comes for the Archbishop | Archbishop of Westminster | Archbishop of Dublin (Church of Ireland) | Archbishop of Bremen | Archbishop of Birmingham | Ado (archbishop) | Roberta Capua | Richard Palmer (archbishop) | Poppo (Archbishop of Trier) | Pandulf IV of Capua |
Alfonso Capecelatro (Marseille, 5 February 1824 – 14 November 1912) was an Italian Archbishop of Capua, ecclesiastical writer, Vatican librarian, and Cardinal.
In 1014, at the Castro Argento, also on Gaetan soil, Emilia and the Bishop Bernard, her brother-in-law, hosted several local leaders: Daufer of Traetto, Pandulf II of Capua, Sergius IV of Naples, Atenulf of Montecassino, and the archbishop of Capua.