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Roman Catholic Diocese of Cork and Ross

Coordinates:51°54′16″N8°28′34″W / 51.90444°N 8.47611°W /51.90444; -8.47611
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Catholic diocese in Ireland

Diocese of Cork and Ross

Dioecesis Corcagiensis et Rossensis

Deoise Chorcaí agus Rosa
Location
CountryIreland
TerritoryCork city and part ofCounty Cork
Ecclesiastical provinceCashel and Emly
MetropolitanCashel and Emly
Statistics
Area3,342 km2 (1,290 sq mi)
Population
  • Total
  • Catholics
  • (as of 2021)
  • 267,000
  • 222,670 (83.0%)
Parishes67
Information
DenominationCatholic
Sui iuris churchLatin Church
RiteRoman Rite
Established1111 (as Diocese of Cork)
19 April 1958 (as Diocese of Cork and Ross)
CathedralSt Mary and St Anne,Cork
Co-cathedralSt Patrick's,Skibbereen
Patron saintCork:Finbarr
Ross:Fachtna
Secular priests107 (as of 2021)
Current leadership
PopeLeo XIV
BishopFintan Gavin,
Bishop of Cork and Ross
Metropolitan ArchbishopKieran O'Reilly,
Archbishop of Cashel and Emly
Vicar GeneralFr. Tom Hayes
Mgr. Aidan O'Driscoll
Bishops emeritusJohn Buckley,
Bishop of Cork and Ross
Website
corkandross.org
Arms of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Cork and Ross:Argent across pattéegules charged with acrosier in pale,enfiled with amitre labelledor.

TheDiocese of Cork and Ross (Irish:Deoise Chorcaí agus Rosa) is aLatindiocese of theCatholic Church in Ireland, one of sixsuffragan dioceses in theecclesiastical province ofCashel and Emly.

The cathedral church of the diocese isCathedral of St Mary and St Anne inCork city.

The incumbent bishop of the diocese isFintan Gavin.

History

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Diocese of Cork (1111-1429)

[edit]
Main article:Diocese of Cork

The original Diocese of Cork was established by theSynod of Ráth Breasail in 1111, but was reduced in size by the establishment of separate Dioceses ofCloyne andRoss at theSynod of Kells in 1152.

Diocese of Cork and Cloyne (1429–1748)

[edit]
Main article:Bishop of Cork and Cloyne

On petition ofKing Edward II,Pope John XXII issued apapal bull for the union of the Dioceses of Cork and Cloyne on 30 July 1326, with effect from the death of either bishop. The union should have taken effect on the death of Philip of Slane in 1327, but bishops were still appointed to both dioceses.

The dioceses were eventually united on the episcopal appointment of Jordan Purcell on 15 June 1429, following their impoverishment from the robbery of church property by the nobility.[1]

From 1693 to 1747, the Bishop of Cork and Cloyne was also theapostolic administrator of theDiocese of Ross.[1]

Diocese of Cork (1748–1958)

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Following a decree byPope Benedict XIV on 10 December 1747, the Diocese of Cork was reconstituted as a stand-alone entity, while the Diocese of Cloyne was united with Ross.[1]

Diocese of Cork and Ross (1958–present)

[edit]

The modern-day Diocese of Cork and Ross was formed by anex aequo principaliter union of the Dioceses of Cork and Ross on 19 April 1958.[1]

Geography

[edit]

The diocese is divided into 67 parishes, all of which are inCounty Cork. 56 parishes were part of the formerDiocese of Cork, while 11 were part of theDiocese of Ross. The diocesan boundary with the neighbouringDiocese of Cloyne roughly follows the course of theRiver Lee.[1]

The parishes are grouped into sixteen "families of parishes", twelve of which came into effect on 10 September 2022, in which each priest will be resident in one parish but ministering across the entire family of parishes, and greater opportunities will exist for lay participation and shared leadership.[2][3][4][5]

Aside from the cathedral city ofCork and the co-cathedral town ofSkibbereen, the main towns in the diocese areBandon,Carrigaline,Carrigtwohill,Clonakilty andKinsale.

Family NameParishes
Family 1
Family 2
Family 3
Family 4
Family 5
Family 6
Family 7
Family 8
Family 9
Family 10
Family 11
Family 12

The following parishes will be restructured into four Families of Parishes in 2023.[2]

Parishes

Ordinaries

[edit]
Main articles:Bishop of Cork and Cloyne,Bishop of Cork, andBishop of Cork and Ross

The following is a list of bishops since the unification of the Dioceses of Cork and Ross in 1958:[6]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^abcde"History".Diocese of Cork and Ross. Retrieved28 January 2023.
  2. ^ab"Bishop's statement on priests' appointments and the introduction of families of parishes".Diocese of Cork and Ross. 2 August 2022. Archived fromthe original on 3 August 2022. Retrieved28 January 2023.
  3. ^Collins, Tom (2 August 2022)."Priests in Cork & Ross will cover multiple parishes in new 'Family of Parishes' system".TheCork.ie. Retrieved28 January 2023.
  4. ^O'Brien, Tim (2 August 2022)."Catholic diocese of Cork and Ross devises scheme to operate with fewer priests".The Irish Times. Retrieved28 January 2023.
  5. ^O'Mahony, Kieran (2 August 2022)."New parish appointments announced for Diocese of Cork & Ross".The Southern Star. Retrieved28 January 2023.
  6. ^Fryde, E. B.; Greenway, D. E.; Porter, S.; Roy, I. (1986).Handbook of British Chronology (Third Edition, revised ed.). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. pp. 421–422.ISBN 0-521-56350-X.
  7. ^"Bishop Emeritus John Buckley".Diocese of Cork and Ross. Retrieved28 January 2023.
  8. ^"Bishop Fintan Gavin".Diocese of Cork and Ross. Retrieved28 January 2023.

Bibliography

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External links

[edit]
Dioceses
Catholic dioceses in Ireland
Bishops
Churches
See also

51°54′16″N8°28′34″W / 51.90444°N 8.47611°W /51.90444; -8.47611

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