Roman Catholic Diocese of Monterey in California
Diocese of Monterey in California
Dioecesis Montereyensis in California
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Location | |
Country | United States |
Territory | Counties of Monterey, San Benito, San Luis Obispo, and Santa Cruz, California, Region XI, United States |
Ecclesiastical province | Archdiocese of Los Angeles |
Metropolitan | Monterey, California |
Population - Catholics |
190,000 (19.9%) |
Information | |
Denomination | Roman Catholic |
Rite | Roman Rite |
Established | April 27, 1840, reestablished October 6, 1967 |
Cathedral | Cathedral of San Carlos Borromeo |
Patron saint | Our Lady of Bethlehem Saint Charles Borromeo |
Current leadership | |
Pope | Francis |
Bishop | Richard John Garcia Bishop of Monterey in California |
Metropolitan Archbishop | José Gómez Archbishop of Los Angeles |
Emeritus Bishops | Sylvester Donovan Ryan |
Map | |
Website | |
dioceseofmonterey.org |
The Roman Catholic Diocese of Monterey in California (Latin: Dioecesis Montereyensis in California) is an ecclesiastical territory or diocese in the United States of the Latin Rite of the Roman Catholic Church in the Central Coast region of California. It comprises Monterey, San Benito, San Luis Obispo, and Santa Cruz counties.
The diocese is led by an ordinary bishop; the bishop's cathedra is located at the Cathedral of San Carlos Borromeo, the mother church of the diocese, in Monterey, California. The diocese serves close to 200,000 Catholics in 46 parishes and 18 schools.
Contents
History
The history of the Catholic Church in Monterey began with the establishment on the shores of Monterey Bay of Mission San Carlos Borromeo in 1770 by Father Junípero Serra, OFM. Father Serra moved the mission to Carmel the next year, which served as the headquarters of the chain of Spanish missions in California.
With the papal bull Apostolicam sollicitudinem of 27 April 1840, Pope Gregory XVI set up a new episcopal see, to which he gave the name of Diocese of California He assigned to it a vast territory taken from that of the Diocese of Sonora, now the Archdiocese of Hermosillo in Mexico. It included Alta California Territory (corresponding to the present-day states of California, Nevada, Arizona, Utah, western Colorado and southwestern Wyoming) and the Baja California Territory (the modern Mexican states of Baja California and Baja California Sur). He set the episcopal residence at San Diego and made the diocese a suffragan of the Archdiocese of Mexico City.[1]
The first bishop of the diocese was Francisco Garcia Diego y Moreno, OFM. Mission Santa Barbara served as the pro-cathedral.
In 1848 Alta California was ceded to the United States after the Mexican-American War, and the government of Mexico objected to a United States-based bishop having jurisdiction over parishes in Mexican Baja California. The Holy See divided the diocese into American and Mexican sections and, on 20 November 1849, with the episcopal residence moved to Monterey, a more central position for the new diocese, the American section became the Diocese of Monterey. The Royal Presidio Chapel in Monterey served as the pro-cathedral of the American diocese. In 1853 the diocese was split again, when Pope Pius IX created the Archdiocese of San Francisco, and Monterey was transferred to be a suffragan of the new archdiocese.
In 1859, the diocese's name was changed to the Diocese of Monterey-Los Angeles, due to the growth of the City of Los Angeles. The diocese was split in 1922 to form the Dioceses of Monterey-Fresno and Los Angeles-San Diego. In 1936 the diocese again changed metropolitan bishops, becoming a suffragan of the newly erected Archdiocese of Los Angeles. The latest territorial change for the diocese came in 1967, when it was split again, to form the present dioceses of Monterey and Fresno.
Ordinaries
The lists of Ordinaries and their years of service:
- Bishop of the Two Californias
- Francisco Garcia Diego y Moreno, OFM, 1840–1846
- José Maria González Rubio, OFM, 1846–1851 (apostolic administrator)
- Bishop of Monterey
- Joseph Sadoc Alemany, OP, 1850–1853.
- Thaddeus Amat y Brusi, CM, 1853–1859
- Bishop of Monterey-Los Angeles
- Thaddeus Amat y Brusi, CM, 1859–1878
- Francisco Mora y Borrell, 1878–1896
- George Thomas Montgomery, 1896–1902
- Thomas James Conaty, 1903–1915
- John Joseph Cantwell, 1917–1922
- Bishop of Monterey-Fresno
- John Bernard MacGinley, 1924–1932
- Philip George Scher, 1933–1953
- Aloysius Joseph Willinger, CSsR, 1953–1967
- Bishop of Monterey in California
- Harry Anselm Clinch, 1967–1982
- Thaddeus Anthony Shubsda, 1982–1991
- Sylvester Donovan Ryan, 1992– 2006
- Richard John Garcia, 2007
Parishes
Notable parishes in the diocese include the oldest stone building and the first cathedral in California, the Cathedral of San Carlos Borromeo [1].
- Mission Basilica San Carlos Borromeo de Carmelo
- Mission San Juan Bautista
- Mission Nuestra Señora de la Soledad
- Mission San Antonio de Padua
- Mission San Luis Obispo de Tolosa
- Mission San Miguel Arcangel
- Holy Cross Church (the former Mission Santa Cruz)
High schools
- Mission College Preparatory High School, San Luis Obispo
- Notre Dame High School, Salinas
- Palma High School, Salinas
- Saint Francis Central Coast Catholic High School, Watsonville
- Santa Catalina School, Monterey
See also
- Catholic Church by country
- Catholic Church hierarchy
- List of the Catholic dioceses of the United States
Sources
- History article from the Diocese's website
- Catholic Schools of the Monterey Diocese
- Catholic-Hierarchy.Org datasheet
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Churches in the Roman Catholic Diocese of Monterey in California. |
References
- ↑ The Papal Bull Apostolicam sollicitudinem, in Raffaele de Martinis, Iuris pontificii de propaganda fide. Pars prima, Tomus V, Romae 1890, pp. 233-235]
External links
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- Articles containing Latin-language text
- Commons category link is locally defined
- Roman Catholic Diocese of Monterey in California
- Monterey County, California
- San Benito County, California
- San Luis Obispo County, California
- Santa Cruz County, California
- Religious organizations established in 1840
- Roman Catholic dioceses and prelatures established in the 19th century
- Roman Catholic dioceses in the United States
- 1840 establishments in Mexico
- Roman Catholic Ecclesiastical Province of Los Angeles