Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Halifax-Yarmouth
Archdiocese of Halifax-Yarmouth Archidioecesis Halifaxiensis-Yarmuthensis | |
---|---|
Coat of Arms of the Archdiocese of Halifax | |
Location | |
Country | Canada |
Territory | Central Nova Scotia |
Ecclesiastical province | Halifax-Yarmouth |
Metropolitan | Halifax, Nova Scotia |
Statistics | |
Area | 21,770 km2 (8,410 sq mi) |
Population - Total - Catholics |
(as of 2010) 733,300 207,900 (28.4%) |
Parishes | 71 |
Information | |
Denomination | Roman Catholic |
Rite | Roman Rite |
Established | February 15, 1842 |
Cathedral | St. Mary's Basilica, Halifax |
Current leadership | |
Pope | Francis |
Archbishop | Anthony Mancini |
Website | |
halifaxyarmouth.org/ |
The Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Halifax-Yarmouth (Latin: Archidioecesis Halifaxiensis-Yarmuthensis) is a Roman Catholic archdiocese that includes part of the Province of Nova Scotia.
Its cathedral episcopal see is a Minor Basilica: St. Mary’s Cathedral Basilica, Halifax, Nova Scotia. Its headquarters are at Chancery Office, P.O. Box 1527, 1531 Grafton St., Halifax, NS B3J 2Y3, Canada. Its current diocesan ordinary is Archbishop Anthony Mancini.
History
On territory originally a part of the Diocese of Quebec, including the whole of Nova Scotia, the future diocese of Halifax, was established on 4 September 1817 as the Apostolic Vicariate of Nova Scotia, a pre-diocesan jurisdiction entitled to a titular bishop and exempt, i.e. direcrly subject to the Hole See, not part of any ecclesiastical province.
It was promoted to bishopric on February 15, 1842 and on 22 September 1844 lost territory to establish the Roman Catholic Diocese of Arichat, now its suffragan.
In 1852, Halifax was elevated to an archdiocese.[1]
It lost territory twice more: on 19 February 1953 to establish the Apostolic Prefecture of Bermuda Islands and on 6 July 1953 to establish the Roman Catholic Diocese of Yarmouth.
It enjoyed a papal visit from Pope John Paul II in September 1984.
In December 2011, the Diocese of Yarmouth was merged back into the Archdiocese of Halifax, creating the Archdiocese of Halifax-Yarmouth.,[2] which was renamed by absorbing its title. The former cathedral became the St. Ambrose Co-Cathedral, in Yarmouth, Nova Scotia.
Extent and province
The Archdiocese of Halifax covers 21,770 square kilometers. As of 2006, the archdiocese contained 53 parishes, 64 active diocesan priests, 16 religious priests, and 161,125 Catholics. It also had 243 Women Religious, 17 Religious Brothers, and 28 permanent deacons.[3]
The Metropolitan Archbishop heads an ecclesiastical province which includes the suffragan dioceses of Antigonish and Charlottetown.
Ordinaries
(all Roman Rite)
- Apostolic Vicars of Nova Scotia
- Edmund Burke (1817.07.04 – 1820.11.29), Titular Bishop of Sion (1817.07.04 – 1820.11.29)
- Denis Lyons (1824.08.24 – 1824.10.19 not possessed), Titular Bishop of Tanis (1824.08.24 – 1824.10.19 not possessed)
- William Fraser (1825.06.03 – 1842.02.15 see below), Titular Bishop of Tanis (1825.06.03 – 1842.02.15)
- Suffragan Bishops of Halifax
- William Fraser (1842.02.15 – 1844.09.27), later Bishop of Arichat (Canada) (1844.09.27 – 1851.10.04)
- William Walsh (1844.09.21 – 1852.05.04), previously Titular Bishop of Maximianopolis (1842.02.15 – 1844.09.21) & Coadjutor Bishop of Halifax (Canada) (1842.02.15 – 1844.09.21 'see below); promoted the first Metropolitan Archbishop of Halifax (Canada) (1852.05.04 – 1858.08.10)
- Metropolitan Archbishops of Halifax
- William Walsh ( see above 1852.05.04 – death 1858.08.10)
- Thomas Louis Connolly, Friars Minor (O.F.M.) (1859.04.08 – death 1876.07.27), previously Bishop of Saint John in America (Canada) (1852.05.04 – 1859.04.08)
- Michael Hannan (1877.02.16 – death 1882.04.17)
- Cornelius O'Brien (1882.12.01 – death 1906.03.09)
- Edward Joseph McCarthy (1906.06.27 – death 1931.01.26)
- Thomas O'Donnell (archbishop) (1931.01.26 – death 1936.01.13), previously Bishop of Victoria (Canada) (1923.12.23 – 1929.05.27), Titular Archbishop of Methymna (1929.05.27 – 1931.01.26), Coadjutor Archbishop of Halifax (Canada) (1929.05.27 – 1931.01.26)
- ? Henry James Neary (1933 - 1986) (oldest priest in the Archdiocese of Halifax)
- John Thomas McNally (1937.02.17 – death 1952.11.18), previously Bishop of Calgary (Canada) (1913.04.04 – 1924.08.12), Bishop of Hamilton (Canada) (1924.08.12 – 1937.02.17)
- Joseph Gerald Berry (1953.11.28 – 1967.05.12), President of the Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops (1960 – 1964); previously Bishop of Peterborough (Canada) (1945.04.07 – 1953.11.28)
- James Martin Hayes (1967.06.22 – 1990.11.06), President of the Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops (1987 – 1989); previously Titular Bishop of Reperi (1965.02.05 – 1967.06.22) & Auxiliary Bishop of Halifax (1965.02.05 – 1967.06.22)
- Austin-Emile Burke (1991.07.08 – 1998.01.13), previously Bishop of Yarmouth (Canada) (1968.02.01 – 1991.07.08)
- Terrence Thomas Prendergast, Jesuits (S.J.) (1998.06.30 – 2007.05.14), previously Titular Bishop of Sléibhte (1995.02.22 – 1998.06.30) & Auxiliary Bishop of Toronto (Canada) (1995.02.22 – 1998.06.30); also Apostolic Administrator of Yarmouth (Canada) (2002.01.24 – 2007.05.14); later Metropolitan Archbishop of Ottawa (Canada) (2007.05.14 – ...)
- Apostolic Administrator Claude Champagne, Missionary Oblates of Mary Immaculate (O.M.I.) (2007.07.13 – 2007.10.18)
- Anthony Mancini (2007.10.18 – 2009.10.22 see below), also Apostolic Administrator of Yarmouth (Canada) (2007.10.18 – 2009.10.22), Apostolic Administrator of Antigonish (Canada) (2009.09.26 – 2009.11.21) ; previously Titular Bishop of Natchitoches (1999.02.18 – 2007.10.18) & Auxiliary Bishop of Montréal (Canada) (1999.02.18 – 2007.10.18)
- Metropolitan Archbishops of Halifax
- Anthony Mancini (see above 2009.10.22 – ...)
References
- ↑ Kevin Knight (2009). "Archdiocese of Halifax". NewAdvent.org. Retrieved 2011-05-10.
- ↑ Diocese of Yarmouth joined with Archdiocese of Halifax
- ↑ David Cheney (14 March 2011). Archdiocese of Halifax page at catholichierarchy.org "Archdiocese of Halifax" Check
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value (help). CatholicHierarchy.org. Retrieved 2011-05-10.
Sources and External links
Coordinates: 44°38′40″N 63°34′24″W / 44.6444°N 63.5733°W