Our Lady of the Rosary Cathedral
Catedral Nossa Senhora do Rosário
23°56′12.8″S 46°19′28.0″W / 23.936889°S 46.324444°W / -23.936889; -46.324444
LocationSantos
Country Brazil
DenominationRoman Catholic Church

The Our Lady of the Rosary Cathedral[1] (Portuguese: Catedral Nossa Senhora do Rosário) Also Santos Cathedral[2] Is a Catholic church in the city of Santos, in São Paulo State, Brazil. It is the headquarters of the Diocese of Santos[3] and the Parish of Our Lady of Rosario Aparecida, the oldest in the city.

The old church of Santos, predecessor of the present cathedral was demolished in 1907 by being in an advanced state of deterioration. In 1909, the construction of the new church - the current temple - began, according to the design of the German engineer Maximilian Emil Hehl, professor of the Polytechnic School of São Paulo. Hehl designed a neo-Gothic style church at that time, with a dome over the Renaissance style cruiser. In general, the project is similar to the Metropolitan Cathedral of São Paulo, designed by Hehl himself.

Inside the cathedral

The church, still unfinished, was temporarily opened in 1924, with a Mass celebrated by the metropolitan archbishop Duarte Leopoldo e Silva. In 1925 the Diocese of Saints was created by Pope Pius XI, and the temple was elevated to the category of cathedral. The works of the church would not be finished until 1967.

See also

References

  1. "Catedral Nossa Senhora do Rosário, Santos, São Paulo, Brazil | Cathedral of Our Lady of the Rosary". gcatholic.org. Retrieved 2016-12-05.
  2. Gerodetti, João Emilio; Cornejo, Carlos (2001-01-01). Lembranças de São Paulo: O litoral paulista nos cartões-postais e álbuns de lembranças (in Portuguese). Solaris Editorial. ISBN 9788590096320.
  3. "diocesedesantos.com.br - Santos". www.diocesedesantos.com.br. Archived from the original on 2017-04-09. Retrieved 2016-12-05.
Another View
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.