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roman+catholic+archdiocese+of+esztergom+“budapest Latitude and Longitude:

47°47â€Č56″N 18°44â€Č11″E / 47.7989°N 18.7364°E / 47.7989; 18.7364
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Archdiocese of Esztergom-Budapest

Archidioecesis Strigoniensis-Budapestinensis

Esztergom–Budapesti FƑegyházmegye
Location
Country  Hungary
Territory Esztergom- Budapest
Ecclesiastical provinceEsztergom-Budapest
Statistics
Area1,543 km2 (596 sq mi)
Population
- Total
- Catholics
(as of 2016)
Decrease2,078,000
Decrease1,249,000 (Steady60.1%)
Parishes188
Information
Denomination Catholic Church
Sui iuris church Latin Church
Rite Roman Rite
Established10th century
(Archdiocese of Esztergom)
31 May 1993
(As Archdiocese of Esztergom–Budapest)
CathedralPrimatial Cathedral Basilica of the Assumption of Mary and St Adalbert ( Esztergom Basilica)
Co-cathedral St. Stephen's Basilica
Patron saint Saint Stephen I
Current leadership
Pope Francis
Metropolitan Archbishop Cardinal PĂ©ter ErdƑ
Suffragans Diocese of GyƑr, Diocese of SzĂ©kesfehĂ©rvĂĄr
Auxiliary BishopsMartos Levente BalĂĄzs
GĂĄbor Mohos,
Kornél Fåbry
Bishops emeritus GĂĄspĂĄr Ladocsi
Map
Map of the Archdiocese
Map of the Archdiocese
Website
esztergomi-ersekseg.hu

The Archdiocese of Esztergom–Budapest ( Latin: Archidioecesis Strigoniensis–Budapestinensis) is a Latin Church archdiocese and primatial seat of the Catholic Church in Hungary and the metropolitan see of one of Hungary's four Latin Church ecclesiastical provinces.

The archdiocese's archbishop retains the title of " Primate", which gives this see precedence over all other Latin Hungarian dioceses, including the fellow Metropolitan Archbishops of Eger, Kalocsa–KecskemĂ©t and VeszprĂ©m, but the incumbent may be individually (and temporarily) outranked if one of them holds a (higher) cardinalate. Its current Archbishop is PĂ©ter ErdƑ.

Duality and special churches

Its double name reflects that it has (co-)cathedral sees in two major Hungarian cities, the old primatial archiepiscopal seat Esztergom and the present national capital Budapest. These two prominent cities fall under the tutelage of one archdiocese due to Hungary's early history wherein Esztergom was one of the former capitals of the Kingdom of Hungary (much larger than the present republic – roughly the eastern half of the Habsburg monarchy).

The archiepiscopal Cathedral and primatial see is Nagyboldogasszony Ă©s Szent Adalbert fƑszĂ©kesegyhĂĄz, in Esztergom-VĂĄr.

The co-cathedral, a minor basilica and World Heritage Site, is St. Stephen's Basilica in Budapest-SzentistvĂĄnvĂĄros.

The archdiocese has a second minor basilica, Kisboldogasszony-templom, Måriaremete, at Székesfehérvår, in Fejér county.

Statistics

As of 2016, it pastorally served 1,249,000 Catholics (60.1% of 2,078,000 population) covering 1,543 km2 in 188 parishes and 28 missions with (in 2014) 435 priests (254 diocesan, 181 religious), 23 deacons, 725 lay religious (266 brothers, 459 sisters) and 38 seminarians.

Ecclesiastical province

The Metropolitan's suffragan sees are the Latin bishops of:

The former Roman Catholic Diocese of HajdĂșdorog, until then also its suffragan, was elevated in 2015 to Hungarian Greek Catholic Archeparchy of HajdĂșdorog (Eastern Catholic archdiocese), now the Metropolitan (with two suffragans in his own province) in chief of the Hungarian Greek Catholic Church, of Byzantine Rite.

History

It was founded in 1001 by Stephen I of Hungary, as the Metropolitan Archdiocese of Esztergom, on Hungarian territories split off from the dioceses of Nitra, Passau and Regensburg (the latter two with sees in Bavaria, southern Germany). It had a uniquely prominent status, giving the archbishop the title of prince primate, and the privilege of crowning the kings of Hungary. [1]

The Cathedral of Saint Adalbert was consecrated in 1010. [1] The archdiocese lost territory in 1227 to establish the Diocese of Milcovia, but in 1542 gained territory back from the suppressed Diocese of Milcovia.

The archbishop and chaplaincy relocated to Nagyszombat in 1543 before Esztergom fell to the Ottoman Empire. Saint Nicolas Church served as the cathedral. Ottoman occupation of the archdiocese made pastoral care difficult and Protestant teachings spread. Archbishop MiklĂłs OlĂĄh re-established the Esztergom cathedral school at Nagyszombat, and in 1561 invited the Jesuits to administer it. [1]

In 1619, Primate PĂ©ter PĂĄzmĂĄny founded the PĂĄzmĂĄneum in Vienna as a seminary to train Hungarian candidates for the priesthood. [2] in 1776, the archdiocese was split to establish the suffragan sees of BanskĂĄ Bystrica, RoĆŸĆˆava and SpiĆĄ. In 1820, the episcopal see returned to Esztergom. Work began to restore the cathedral in 1822. The upper church was consecrated in 1856 and saw the premier of Franz Liszt's Missa solennis.

In June 1912, the archdiocese lost territory with the establishment of the Eparchy of HajdĂșdorog (as its suffragan; now a Byzantine rite Metropolitan Archeparchy) and in May 1922 to establish the Apostolic Administration of Trnava. In 1938 the 34th International Eucharistic Congress was held in Budapest. In 1948 Cardinal JĂłzsef Mindszenty was arrested and imprisoned by the government. Freed during the short-lived Hungarian Revolution of 1956, Mindszenty was granted political asylum at the United States embassy in Budapest when the Russians invaded.

In August 1991, the archdiocese received a papal visit from Pope John Paul II. Diocesan boundaries were redrawn in 1993 and the Archdiovese renamed the Metropolitan Archdiocese of Esztergom–Budapest, having gained territory from Diocese of SzĂ©kesfehĂ©rvĂĄr (which became its suffragan) and Diocese of VĂĄc. St. Stephen's Basilica was named co-cathedral.

List of archbishops

Metropolitan Archbishops of Esztergom–Budapest
  • LĂĄszlĂł Paskai (see above 3 March 1987 – 7 December 2002) (As Archbishop of Esztergom until 1993)
    • Auxiliary Bishop: Imre Asztrik VĂĄrszegi, O.S.B. (1988.12.23 – 1991.03.18)
    • Auxiliary Bishop: Vilmos DĂ©kĂĄny, Sch. P. (1988.12.23 – 2000.05.19)
    • Auxiliary Bishop: Archbishop Csaba TernyĂĄk (later Archbishop) (1992.12.24 – 1997.12.11)
    • Auxiliary Bishop: Antal SpĂĄnyi (1998.02.13 – 2003.04.04)
    • Auxiliary Bishop: MiklĂłs Beer (2000.04.08 – 2003.05.27)
    • Auxiliary Bishop: GĂĄspĂĄr Ladocsi (2001.11.28 – 2010.11.26)
  • PĂ©ter ErdĂ” (7 December 2002 – ...), created Cardinal-Priest of S. Maria Nuova (2003.10.21 [2004.03.09] – ...), also President of Hungarian Episcopal Conference (2005.09 – 2015.09.02), President of Council of European Bishops' Conferences (2006.10.08 – 2016.10.08); previously Titular Bishop of Puppi (1999.11.05 – 2002.12.07) as Auxiliary Bishop of SzĂ©kesfehĂ©rvĂĄr (Hungary) (1999.11.05 – 2002.12.07)
    • Auxiliary Bishop: LĂĄszlĂł Kiss-RigĂł (2004.01.24 – 2006.06.20)
    • Auxiliary Bishop: György Udvardy (2004.01.24 – 2011.04.09)
    • Auxiliary Bishop: JĂĄnos SzĂ©kely (2007.11.14 – 2017.06.18)
    • Auxiliary bishop Ferenc CserhĂĄti (2007.06.15 – ...), Titular Bishop of Centuria (2007.06.15 – ...)
    • Auxiliary bishop György Snell (2014.10.20 – 2021.02.26), Titular Bishop of Pudentiana (2014.10.20 – 2021.02.26)

Auxiliary episcopate

    • Auxiliary Bishop: IstvĂĄn Bagi (1979.03.31 – 1986.01.31)
    • Auxiliary Bishop: IvĂĄn PĂĄlos (1975.01.07 – 1987.03.28)
    • Auxiliary Bishop: György ZemplĂ©n (1969.01.10 – 1973.03.29)
    • Auxiliary Bishop: MihĂĄly Endrey-Eipel (1957–1972)
    • Auxiliary Bishop: Imre SzabĂł (1951.03.11 – 1976.05.21)
    • Auxiliary Bishop: Blessed ZoltĂĄn Lajos MeszlĂ©nyi (1937.09.22 – 1953.01.11)
    • Auxiliary Bishop: Stefano Breyer (1929.04.05 – 1933.12.13)
    • Auxiliary Bishop: Lajos Rajner (1906.06.14 – 1920.03.27)
    • Auxiliary Bishop: Josef Medard Kohl, O.S.B. (1900.12.17 – 1928.01.15)
    • Auxiliary Bishop: Paulus PalĂĄsthy (1886.05.04 – 1899.09.24)
    • Auxiliary Bishop: JĂłzsef BoltizĂĄr (1875.08.24 – 1905.05.17)
    • Auxiliary Bishop: Joseph SzabĂł (1868.06.22 – 1884.04.27)
    • Auxiliary Bishop: Giuseppe Durguth (1865.09.25 – ?)
    • Auxiliary Bishop: Emerico TĂłth (1857.09.25 – 1865.01.06)
    • Auxiliary Bishop: Jozef Viber (1856.06.19 – 1866.01.15)
    • Auxiliary Bishop: Joseph Krautmann (1852.03.15 – 1855)
    • Auxiliary Bishop: Peter de ÜrmĂ©nyi (1820.08.28 – 1839.11.15)
    • Auxiliary Bishop: Giovanni Benyovszky (1820.08.28 – 1827?)
    • Auxiliary Bishop: Istvan Gosztonyi (1815.12.18 – 1817)
    • Auxiliary Bishop: Karol PerĂ©nyl (1808.07.11 – 1819.03.15)
    • Auxiliary Bishop: Nikolaus Rauscher (1808.03.16 – 1815)
    • Auxiliary Bishop: JĂłzsef KirĂĄly (1807.09.18 – 1808.01.11)
    • Auxiliary Bishop: MĂĄrton Görgey (1804.09.24 – 1807.08.01)
    • Auxiliary Bishop: Ladislaus Luzenszky (1779.12.13 – 1792)
    • Auxiliary Bishop: Stephanus Nagy (1776.12.16 – 1804)
    • Auxiliary Bishop: Georgius Richvaldszky (1776.12.16 – 1779.08.07)
    • Auxiliary Bishop: Anton RĂ©vay (1754.05.20 – 1776.09.16)
    • Auxiliary Bishop: Paulus de RĂ©vay (1753.03.12 – 1776)
    • Auxiliary Bishop: Ferenc Zichy (1742.09.24 – 1744.03.16)
    • Auxiliary Bishop: Giorgio Trivulzio, B. (1678.11.07 – 1689)

See also

References

Sources and external links

  • GCatholic.org with Google map – data for all sections
  • Archdiocese of Esztergom–Budapest website (only in Hungarian)
  • Catholic Hierarchy
  • History of the Archdiocese (only in Hungarian)
  • Herbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). "Archdiocese of Gran" . Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company.

47°47â€Č56″N 18°44â€Č11″E / 47.7989°N 18.7364°E / 47.7989; 18.7364


roman+catholic+archdiocese+of+esztergom+“budapest Latitude and Longitude:

47°47â€Č56″N 18°44â€Č11″E / 47.7989°N 18.7364°E / 47.7989; 18.7364
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Archdiocese of Esztergom-Budapest

Archidioecesis Strigoniensis-Budapestinensis

Esztergom–Budapesti FƑegyházmegye
Location
Country  Hungary
Territory Esztergom- Budapest
Ecclesiastical provinceEsztergom-Budapest
Statistics
Area1,543 km2 (596 sq mi)
Population
- Total
- Catholics
(as of 2016)
Decrease2,078,000
Decrease1,249,000 (Steady60.1%)
Parishes188
Information
Denomination Catholic Church
Sui iuris church Latin Church
Rite Roman Rite
Established10th century
(Archdiocese of Esztergom)
31 May 1993
(As Archdiocese of Esztergom–Budapest)
CathedralPrimatial Cathedral Basilica of the Assumption of Mary and St Adalbert ( Esztergom Basilica)
Co-cathedral St. Stephen's Basilica
Patron saint Saint Stephen I
Current leadership
Pope Francis
Metropolitan Archbishop Cardinal PĂ©ter ErdƑ
Suffragans Diocese of GyƑr, Diocese of SzĂ©kesfehĂ©rvĂĄr
Auxiliary BishopsMartos Levente BalĂĄzs
GĂĄbor Mohos,
Kornél Fåbry
Bishops emeritus GĂĄspĂĄr Ladocsi
Map
Map of the Archdiocese
Map of the Archdiocese
Website
esztergomi-ersekseg.hu

The Archdiocese of Esztergom–Budapest ( Latin: Archidioecesis Strigoniensis–Budapestinensis) is a Latin Church archdiocese and primatial seat of the Catholic Church in Hungary and the metropolitan see of one of Hungary's four Latin Church ecclesiastical provinces.

The archdiocese's archbishop retains the title of " Primate", which gives this see precedence over all other Latin Hungarian dioceses, including the fellow Metropolitan Archbishops of Eger, Kalocsa–KecskemĂ©t and VeszprĂ©m, but the incumbent may be individually (and temporarily) outranked if one of them holds a (higher) cardinalate. Its current Archbishop is PĂ©ter ErdƑ.

Duality and special churches

Its double name reflects that it has (co-)cathedral sees in two major Hungarian cities, the old primatial archiepiscopal seat Esztergom and the present national capital Budapest. These two prominent cities fall under the tutelage of one archdiocese due to Hungary's early history wherein Esztergom was one of the former capitals of the Kingdom of Hungary (much larger than the present republic – roughly the eastern half of the Habsburg monarchy).

The archiepiscopal Cathedral and primatial see is Nagyboldogasszony Ă©s Szent Adalbert fƑszĂ©kesegyhĂĄz, in Esztergom-VĂĄr.

The co-cathedral, a minor basilica and World Heritage Site, is St. Stephen's Basilica in Budapest-SzentistvĂĄnvĂĄros.

The archdiocese has a second minor basilica, Kisboldogasszony-templom, Måriaremete, at Székesfehérvår, in Fejér county.

Statistics

As of 2016, it pastorally served 1,249,000 Catholics (60.1% of 2,078,000 population) covering 1,543 km2 in 188 parishes and 28 missions with (in 2014) 435 priests (254 diocesan, 181 religious), 23 deacons, 725 lay religious (266 brothers, 459 sisters) and 38 seminarians.

Ecclesiastical province

The Metropolitan's suffragan sees are the Latin bishops of:

The former Roman Catholic Diocese of HajdĂșdorog, until then also its suffragan, was elevated in 2015 to Hungarian Greek Catholic Archeparchy of HajdĂșdorog (Eastern Catholic archdiocese), now the Metropolitan (with two suffragans in his own province) in chief of the Hungarian Greek Catholic Church, of Byzantine Rite.

History

It was founded in 1001 by Stephen I of Hungary, as the Metropolitan Archdiocese of Esztergom, on Hungarian territories split off from the dioceses of Nitra, Passau and Regensburg (the latter two with sees in Bavaria, southern Germany). It had a uniquely prominent status, giving the archbishop the title of prince primate, and the privilege of crowning the kings of Hungary. [1]

The Cathedral of Saint Adalbert was consecrated in 1010. [1] The archdiocese lost territory in 1227 to establish the Diocese of Milcovia, but in 1542 gained territory back from the suppressed Diocese of Milcovia.

The archbishop and chaplaincy relocated to Nagyszombat in 1543 before Esztergom fell to the Ottoman Empire. Saint Nicolas Church served as the cathedral. Ottoman occupation of the archdiocese made pastoral care difficult and Protestant teachings spread. Archbishop MiklĂłs OlĂĄh re-established the Esztergom cathedral school at Nagyszombat, and in 1561 invited the Jesuits to administer it. [1]

In 1619, Primate PĂ©ter PĂĄzmĂĄny founded the PĂĄzmĂĄneum in Vienna as a seminary to train Hungarian candidates for the priesthood. [2] in 1776, the archdiocese was split to establish the suffragan sees of BanskĂĄ Bystrica, RoĆŸĆˆava and SpiĆĄ. In 1820, the episcopal see returned to Esztergom. Work began to restore the cathedral in 1822. The upper church was consecrated in 1856 and saw the premier of Franz Liszt's Missa solennis.

In June 1912, the archdiocese lost territory with the establishment of the Eparchy of HajdĂșdorog (as its suffragan; now a Byzantine rite Metropolitan Archeparchy) and in May 1922 to establish the Apostolic Administration of Trnava. In 1938 the 34th International Eucharistic Congress was held in Budapest. In 1948 Cardinal JĂłzsef Mindszenty was arrested and imprisoned by the government. Freed during the short-lived Hungarian Revolution of 1956, Mindszenty was granted political asylum at the United States embassy in Budapest when the Russians invaded.

In August 1991, the archdiocese received a papal visit from Pope John Paul II. Diocesan boundaries were redrawn in 1993 and the Archdiovese renamed the Metropolitan Archdiocese of Esztergom–Budapest, having gained territory from Diocese of SzĂ©kesfehĂ©rvĂĄr (which became its suffragan) and Diocese of VĂĄc. St. Stephen's Basilica was named co-cathedral.

List of archbishops

Metropolitan Archbishops of Esztergom–Budapest
  • LĂĄszlĂł Paskai (see above 3 March 1987 – 7 December 2002) (As Archbishop of Esztergom until 1993)
    • Auxiliary Bishop: Imre Asztrik VĂĄrszegi, O.S.B. (1988.12.23 – 1991.03.18)
    • Auxiliary Bishop: Vilmos DĂ©kĂĄny, Sch. P. (1988.12.23 – 2000.05.19)
    • Auxiliary Bishop: Archbishop Csaba TernyĂĄk (later Archbishop) (1992.12.24 – 1997.12.11)
    • Auxiliary Bishop: Antal SpĂĄnyi (1998.02.13 – 2003.04.04)
    • Auxiliary Bishop: MiklĂłs Beer (2000.04.08 – 2003.05.27)
    • Auxiliary Bishop: GĂĄspĂĄr Ladocsi (2001.11.28 – 2010.11.26)
  • PĂ©ter ErdĂ” (7 December 2002 – ...), created Cardinal-Priest of S. Maria Nuova (2003.10.21 [2004.03.09] – ...), also President of Hungarian Episcopal Conference (2005.09 – 2015.09.02), President of Council of European Bishops' Conferences (2006.10.08 – 2016.10.08); previously Titular Bishop of Puppi (1999.11.05 – 2002.12.07) as Auxiliary Bishop of SzĂ©kesfehĂ©rvĂĄr (Hungary) (1999.11.05 – 2002.12.07)
    • Auxiliary Bishop: LĂĄszlĂł Kiss-RigĂł (2004.01.24 – 2006.06.20)
    • Auxiliary Bishop: György Udvardy (2004.01.24 – 2011.04.09)
    • Auxiliary Bishop: JĂĄnos SzĂ©kely (2007.11.14 – 2017.06.18)
    • Auxiliary bishop Ferenc CserhĂĄti (2007.06.15 – ...), Titular Bishop of Centuria (2007.06.15 – ...)
    • Auxiliary bishop György Snell (2014.10.20 – 2021.02.26), Titular Bishop of Pudentiana (2014.10.20 – 2021.02.26)

Auxiliary episcopate

    • Auxiliary Bishop: IstvĂĄn Bagi (1979.03.31 – 1986.01.31)
    • Auxiliary Bishop: IvĂĄn PĂĄlos (1975.01.07 – 1987.03.28)
    • Auxiliary Bishop: György ZemplĂ©n (1969.01.10 – 1973.03.29)
    • Auxiliary Bishop: MihĂĄly Endrey-Eipel (1957–1972)
    • Auxiliary Bishop: Imre SzabĂł (1951.03.11 – 1976.05.21)
    • Auxiliary Bishop: Blessed ZoltĂĄn Lajos MeszlĂ©nyi (1937.09.22 – 1953.01.11)
    • Auxiliary Bishop: Stefano Breyer (1929.04.05 – 1933.12.13)
    • Auxiliary Bishop: Lajos Rajner (1906.06.14 – 1920.03.27)
    • Auxiliary Bishop: Josef Medard Kohl, O.S.B. (1900.12.17 – 1928.01.15)
    • Auxiliary Bishop: Paulus PalĂĄsthy (1886.05.04 – 1899.09.24)
    • Auxiliary Bishop: JĂłzsef BoltizĂĄr (1875.08.24 – 1905.05.17)
    • Auxiliary Bishop: Joseph SzabĂł (1868.06.22 – 1884.04.27)
    • Auxiliary Bishop: Giuseppe Durguth (1865.09.25 – ?)
    • Auxiliary Bishop: Emerico TĂłth (1857.09.25 – 1865.01.06)
    • Auxiliary Bishop: Jozef Viber (1856.06.19 – 1866.01.15)
    • Auxiliary Bishop: Joseph Krautmann (1852.03.15 – 1855)
    • Auxiliary Bishop: Peter de ÜrmĂ©nyi (1820.08.28 – 1839.11.15)
    • Auxiliary Bishop: Giovanni Benyovszky (1820.08.28 – 1827?)
    • Auxiliary Bishop: Istvan Gosztonyi (1815.12.18 – 1817)
    • Auxiliary Bishop: Karol PerĂ©nyl (1808.07.11 – 1819.03.15)
    • Auxiliary Bishop: Nikolaus Rauscher (1808.03.16 – 1815)
    • Auxiliary Bishop: JĂłzsef KirĂĄly (1807.09.18 – 1808.01.11)
    • Auxiliary Bishop: MĂĄrton Görgey (1804.09.24 – 1807.08.01)
    • Auxiliary Bishop: Ladislaus Luzenszky (1779.12.13 – 1792)
    • Auxiliary Bishop: Stephanus Nagy (1776.12.16 – 1804)
    • Auxiliary Bishop: Georgius Richvaldszky (1776.12.16 – 1779.08.07)
    • Auxiliary Bishop: Anton RĂ©vay (1754.05.20 – 1776.09.16)
    • Auxiliary Bishop: Paulus de RĂ©vay (1753.03.12 – 1776)
    • Auxiliary Bishop: Ferenc Zichy (1742.09.24 – 1744.03.16)
    • Auxiliary Bishop: Giorgio Trivulzio, B. (1678.11.07 – 1689)

See also

References

Sources and external links

  • GCatholic.org with Google map – data for all sections
  • Archdiocese of Esztergom–Budapest website (only in Hungarian)
  • Catholic Hierarchy
  • History of the Archdiocese (only in Hungarian)
  • Herbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). "Archdiocese of Gran" . Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company.

47°47â€Č56″N 18°44â€Č11″E / 47.7989°N 18.7364°E / 47.7989; 18.7364


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