Archdiocese of Mérida Archidioecesis Emeritensis in Venetiola | |
---|---|
Location | |
Country | Venezuela |
Statistics | |
Area | 8,109 km2 (3,131 sq mi) |
Population - Total - Catholics | (as of 2004) 603,464 543,118 (90.0%) |
Information | |
Rite | Latin Rite |
Established | 16 February 1778 (245 years ago) |
Cathedral | Catedral Basílica Menor de la Inmaculada Concepción de Mérida |
Current leadership | |
Pope | Francis |
Metropolitan Archbishop | Helizandro Terán Bermúdez |
Auxiliary Bishops | Luis Enrique Rojas Ruiz |
Bishops emeritus | Luis Alfonso Márquez Molina, C.I.M. |
Map | |
The Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Mérida (Latin: Archidioecesis Emeritensis in Venetiola) is a Latin Rite Metropolitan Archdiocese in western Venezuela.
Its cathedral archiepiscopal see is Catedral Basílica Menor de la Inmaculada Concepción de Mérida, a minor basilica located in the city of Mérida. It also has the Minor Basilica of Santa Lucía, in Timotes town, Miranda, Mérida municipality.
History
- On 16 February 1778 Pope Pius VI established the Diocese of Mérida, on territories split off from the then Diocese of Caracas and Metropolitan Archdiocese of Santafé en Nueva Granada in Colombia.
- It lost territory repeatedly : on 1863.03.07 to establish the Dioceses of Barquisimeto (now a Metropolitan) and Calabozo; on 1897.07.28 to establish Diocese of Zulia; on 1922.10.12 to establish its suffragan Diocese of San Cristóbal de Venezuela
- Pope Pius IX elevated the diocese to Metropolitan Archdiocese of Mérida on 11 June 11, 1923.
- It lost more territory to establish two more suffragans : on 1957.06.04 Trujillo, on 1965.07.23 Barinas
- It enjoyed a Papal visit from Pope John Paul II in January 1985.
- On 1994.07.07 it lost territory to establish the Diocese of El Vigía–San Carlos del Zulia
- On 3 December 2015 it was assigned another suffragan see, the newly created Diocese of Guasdualito
Statistics
As per 2014, it pastorally served 566,519 Catholics (85.0% of 666,491 total) on 8,109 km² in 62 parishes and 14 missions with 133 priests (98 diocesan, 35 religious), 21 deacons, 277 lay religious (59 brothers, 218 sisters) and 46 seminarians.
Leadership
Bishops of Merida
- Juan Manuel Antonio Ramos Lora, O.F.M. (1782–1790)
- Cándido Manuel de Torrijos Riguerra, O.P. (1791–1794)
- Antonio Ramón de Espinosa (y Lorenzo), O.P. (1795–1800)
- Santiago Hernández Milanés (1801–1812)
- Rafael Lasso de la Vega (1816–1828), appointed Bishop of Quito
- José Buenaventura Arias Bergara (1828–1831)
- José Vicente de Unda (1836–1840)
- Juan Hilario Bosset (1842–1873)
- Thomas Zerpa (1876), did not take effect
- Román Lovera (1880–1892)
- Antonio Ramón Silva (1894–1923)
Archbishops of Mérida
- Antonio Ramón Silva (1923–1927)
- Acacio Chacón Guerra (1927–1966)
- José Rafael Pulido Méndez (1966–1972)
- Angel Pérez Cisneros (1972–1979)
- Miguel Antonio Salas Salas, C.I.M. (1979–1991)
- Baltazar Enrique Porras Cardozo (1991–2023) (elevated to cardinal in 2016)
- Helizandro Terán Bermúdez (2023–present)
Coadjutor Archbishops
- Acacio Chacón Guerra (1926-1927)
- José Humberto Quintero Parra (1953-1960), did not succeed to see; appointed Archbishop of Caracas, Santiago de Venezuela (cardinal in 1961)
- José Rafael Pulido Méndez (1961-1966)
- Angel Pérez Cisneros (1969-1972)
- Helizandro Terán Bermúdez (2022–2023)
Auxiliary Bishops
- Jose Buenaventura Arias Bergara (1827–1829)
- Juan María Leonardi Villasmil (1994–1997), appointed Bishop of Punto Fijo
- Luis Alfonso Márquez Molina, C.I.M. (2001–2013)
- Alfredo Enrique Torres Rondón (2013–2016), appointed Bishop of San Fernando de Apure
- Luis Enrique Rojas Ruiz (2017–present)
Other priest of this diocese who became bishop
- Juan de Dios Peña Rojas, appointed Bishop of El Vigia-San Carlos del Zulia in 2015
Ecclesiastical province
The Metropolitan's ecclesiastical province comprises his own archbishopric and the following Suffragan sees :
See also
Sources and external links
- GCatholic.org - data for all sections
- Diocese website
- Catholic Hierarchy [self-published]
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.