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Eritrean Catholic Archeparchy of Asmara

The Eritrean Catholic Archeparchy of Asmara, officially the Archeparchy of Asmara (Latin: Archieparchia Asmarensis or Latin: Metropolitana Ecclesia Asmarensis[1]), more informally Asmara of the Eritreans,[2] is the metropolitan see of the Eritrean Catholic Church, a sui iuris Eastern Catholic Church whose territory corresponds to that of the State of Eritrea in the Horn of Africa.[1] It depends on the Roman Congregation for the Oriental Churches.

Archeparchy of Asmara

Archieparchia Asmarensis
Kidane Mehret Cathedral
Cathedral of the archeparchy
Location
Country Eritrea
Ecclesiastical provinceCentral
Statistics
Area53,183 km2 (20,534 sq mi)
Population
- Total
- Catholics
(as of 2012)
3,934,000
67,314 (1.7%)
Parishes58
Information
DenominationEritrean Catholic Church
RiteAlexandrian Rite
Established4 July 1930 (93 years ago)
CathedralKidane Mehret Cathedral
Current leadership
PopeFrancis
ArcheparchMenghesteab Tesfamariam, M.C.C.I.
Map

As head of an autonomous particular church, the Metropolitan Archeparch, currently Menghesteab Tesfamariam, is mentioned by name, after the Pope, in the liturgies celebrated within the suffragan eparchies of Barentu, Keren and Segheneyti.[3]

The Eritrean Catholic Church, like the Ethiopian Catholic Church, from which it was separated in 2015, uses in its liturgy the Ethiopic variant of the Alexandrian Rite in the Ge'ez language. It is the Eastern Catholic counterpart of the Eritrean Orthodox Tewahedo Church, which was granted autocephaly in 1993, and is headed by an Orthodox Patriarch, who also is based in the Eritrean capital. Since the Eritrean Catholic Church is a metropolitanate, not a patriarchal or major archiepiscopal Church, the power of its metropolitan and council of hierarchs is limited to its own territory, which covers all and only Eritrea, (East Africa or, more precisely, the Horn of Africa). Faithful outside of Eritrea are immediately subject to the Pope.[4][5][improper synthesis?]

The cathedral of the sui iuris metropolitan see is Kidane Mehret Cathedral in Asmara, the capital city of Eritrea.

Statistics edit

In 2015, the Archeparchy pastorally served 31,850 Catholics (1% of the 3,258,000 population) in 59 parishes, with 336 priests (20 diocesan, 316 religious), 2 permanent deacons, 602 men religious, 498 sisters and 206 seminarians.[6]

Metropolitan sui iuris Church edit

While patriarchal and major archiepiscopal Eastern Catholic Churches may be structured as provinces, each headed by a metropolitan – the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church has several, two of them in the United States and Canada – a metropolitan sui iuris Church, such as the Eritrean Catholic Church, has by definition only a single metropolitan of a fixed see.[7][8]

The Archeparchy of Asmara is the episcopal see of the single metropolitan of the Eritrean Catholic Church and has the following suffragan sees, all of which are daughter eparchies, having once been part of the then Eparchy of Asmara, which for a while covered the whole of Eritrea:

History edit

In 1839 Saint Giustino de Jacobis, an Italian Vincentian priest, arrived in the area that is now Eritrea and northern Ethiopia. He chose to use the local liturgy in Ge'ez, rather than the Roman Rite in Latin. Attracted by his learning and sanctity, many local clergy and laity entered into communion with the Catholic Church. They established an Ethiopic-Rite Catholic community under the care of the Apostolic Vicariate of Abyssinia (now Ethiopic Metropolitanate sui juris of Addis Abeba), which had its headquarters at Keren and was under the care of the Vincentian Fathers.

After Italy took possession of Eritrea and declared it an Italian colony, the Holy See, in view of the changed situation, set up on 19 September 1894 a separate Apostolic Prefecture of Eritrea, which was entrusted to Italian Capuchins. In the following year, the governor of the colony expelled the remaining Vincentian priests, who were French, on the unfounded suspicion of having encouraged armed resistance.[9][10][11]

In 1911 the Apostolic Prefecture was promoted to the rank of Apostolic Vicariate, headed therefore by a titular bishop, and the headquarters were moved from Keren to Asmara.[12]

With the arrival of Italian immigrants, the Capuchins promoted the Roman Rite. Unrest among the Eritrean clergy led to the sending in 1927 of the future cardinal Alexis Lépicier as Apostolic Visitor to Eritrea. As a result of his report, Father Kidanè-Maryam Cassà was appointed at first Pro-Apostolic Vicar for the Ethiopic-Rite Catholics and then, on 4 July 1930, bishop in charge of an independent Ordinariate of Eritrea.[12][13][14][15] His official title was Ordinary for Ethiopic-Rite indigenous Catholics of Eritrea (Latin: Ordinarius pro catholicis indigenis Erythraeae aethiopici ritus).[16][17] Pope Pius XII elevated this ordinariate as the Apostolic Exarchate of Asmara on 31 October 1951.[18] On 20 February 1961, Pope John XXIII elevated it to an eparchy.[19] Although officially described in Latin as Asmaren(sis), the eparchy at first appeared in the Annuario Pontificio under the heading "Asmara of the Ethiopians", at a time when the entry for the Apostolic Vicariate for the Latins in Eritrea, officially described in Latin as Asmaren(sis) Latinorum, appeared under the simple name of "Asmara".[20] From the year 1976 onward, the eparchy appeared in that annual publication under the simple heading "Asmara", like the Apostolic Vicariate of Asmara.[21]

The eparchy lost territory on 21 December 1995, when the Eparchies of Barentu and Keren were established, and again in 2012, when the Eparchy of Segheneyti was established.[22][23]

In January 2015, Pope Francis erected the Metropolitan sui iuris Eritrean Catholic Church, elevating the Eparchy of Asmara to Metropolitan Archeparchy and making the three daughter eparchies its suffragans.[1]

Episcopal ordinaries edit

Ordinaries for Ethiopic-Rite indigenous Catholics of Eritrea
  • Kidanè-Maryam Cassà (4 July 1930 – 24 February 1951), Titular Bishop of Thibaris (1930.07.04 – death 1951.09.01)
  • Ghebre Jesus Jacob, Titular Bishop of Erythrum (1951.02.24 – death 1969.01.22) and Apostolic Administrator for Ethiopic-Rite faithful in Eritrea (24 February 1951 – 21 October 1951 see below)
Apostolic Exarchate of Asmara
  • Ghebre Jesus Jacob, Titular Bishop of Erythrum (1958.02.24 – death 1969.01.22) and ?Apostolic Administrator for Ethiopic-Rite faithful in Eritrea (1951.10.21 – ?), Ordaining bishop for the Ethiopic Rite in Rome (? – death 1969.01.22)[24]
  • Asrate Mariam Yemmeru, Titular Bishop of Urima and acting Apostolic Exarch of Asmara (3 February 1958 - 20 February 1961 see below),[25] and see below
Suffragan Eparchs of Asmara
  • Asrate Mariam Yemmeru, Titular Bishop of Urima and acting Eparch of Asmara (see above 1961.02.20 – 1961.04.09);[25] later Metropolitan of Addis Ababa (1961.04.09 – retired 1977.02.24), died 1990.08.10
  • François Abraha (9 April 1961 - retired 17 July 1984), died 2000.03.26
  • Zekarias Yohannes (17 July 1984 - retired 25 June 2001); died 2016.12.01; previously Titular Bishop of Barca and Auxiliary Bishop of Asmara (1981.01.29 – succession 1984.07.17)
  • Menghesteab Tesfamariam, M.C.C.I. (25 June 2001 – 19 January 2015 see below)
Metropolitan Archeparchs of Asmara
  • Menghesteab Tesfamariam, M.C.C.I. (see above 19 January 2015 – ...), President of Council of the Eritrean Church (2015.01.19 – ...).

References edit

  1. ^ a b c [1]Apostolic Constitution (papal bull) Multum fructum of 19 January 2015
  2. ^ "Metropolitanate of Asmara, Eritrea (Eritrean Rite)". GCatholic. Retrieved 2020-02-12.
  3. ^ Code of Canons of the Eastern Churches, canon 161
  4. ^ Code of Canons of the Eastern Churches, canon 157 §2
  5. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2017-08-20. Retrieved 2017-07-09.
  6. ^ The Hierarchy of the Catholic Church
  7. ^ Code of Canons of the Eastern Churches, canon 155 §1
  8. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2017-08-20. Retrieved 2017-07-09.
  9. ^ Dan Connell, Tom Killion, Historical Dictionary of Eritrea, (Scarecrow Press 2010 ISBN 978-0-81087505-0), pp. 140–142.
  10. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2017-02-26. Retrieved 2017-02-26.
  11. ^ Annales de la Congrégation de la Mission (Lazaristes) et de la Compagnie des Filles de la Charité, 1895, pp. 247–255
  12. ^ a b Brief History of the Catholic Eparchy of Keren
  13. ^ Gsbriele M. Roschini, "La vita e l'opera del cardinale Alessio M. Lépicier, O.S.M."
  14. ^ Annuario Pontificio 1964, p. 40
  15. ^ Emmanuel Kwaku Akyeampong, Henry Louis Gates, Dictionary of African Biography (Oxford University Press 2012), vol. 8, pp. 368–369
  16. ^ Acta Apostolicae Sedis 1930, p. 356
  17. ^ Revue d'histoire ecclésiastique, Volume 100, Issues 3-4. Université Catholique de Louvain. 2005. p. 1010. Retrieved 25 February 2017.
  18. ^ Acta Apostolicae Sedis 1952, pp. 206–209
  19. ^ Acta Apostolicae Sedis 1964, pp. 648–649
  20. ^ Annuario Pontificio 1964, pp. 40 and 741
  21. ^ Annuario Pontificio 1976, pp. 47 and 872
  22. ^ "Eparchy of Asmara (Ethiopian)". Catholic-Hierarchy. Retrieved 2013-06-18.
  23. ^ "Ethiopic Diocese of Asmara". GCatholic.org. Retrieved 2013-06-18.
  24. ^ Acta Apostolicae Sedis 1958, p. 283; Annuario Pontificio 1964, p. 581; Annuario Pontificio 1969, p. 612; Annuario Pontificio 1970, p. 1407
  25. ^ a b Annuario Pontificio 1964, p. 16

Sources and external links edit

  • GCatholic, with Google map and satellite photo - data for all sections
  • local language archdiocesan website

15°20′28″N 38°56′12″E / 15.340987°N 38.936711°E / 15.340987; 38.936711

eritrean, catholic, archeparchy, asmara, officially, archeparchy, asmara, latin, archieparchia, asmarensis, latin, metropolitana, ecclesia, asmarensis, more, informally, asmara, eritreans, metropolitan, eritrean, catholic, church, iuris, eastern, catholic, chu. The Eritrean Catholic Archeparchy of Asmara officially the Archeparchy of Asmara Latin Archieparchia Asmarensis or Latin Metropolitana Ecclesia Asmarensis 1 more informally Asmara of the Eritreans 2 is the metropolitan see of the Eritrean Catholic Church a sui iuris Eastern Catholic Church whose territory corresponds to that of the State of Eritrea in the Horn of Africa 1 It depends on the Roman Congregation for the Oriental Churches Archeparchy of AsmaraArchieparchia AsmarensisKidane Mehret CathedralCathedral of the archeparchyLocationCountry EritreaEcclesiastical provinceCentralStatisticsArea53 183 km2 20 534 sq mi Population Total Catholics as of 2012 3 934 00067 314 1 7 Parishes58InformationDenominationEritrean Catholic ChurchRiteAlexandrian RiteEstablished4 July 1930 93 years ago CathedralKidane Mehret CathedralCurrent leadershipPopeFrancisArcheparchMenghesteab Tesfamariam M C C I MapAs head of an autonomous particular church the Metropolitan Archeparch currently Menghesteab Tesfamariam is mentioned by name after the Pope in the liturgies celebrated within the suffragan eparchies of Barentu Keren and Segheneyti 3 The Eritrean Catholic Church like the Ethiopian Catholic Church from which it was separated in 2015 uses in its liturgy the Ethiopic variant of the Alexandrian Rite in the Ge ez language It is the Eastern Catholic counterpart of the Eritrean Orthodox Tewahedo Church which was granted autocephaly in 1993 and is headed by an Orthodox Patriarch who also is based in the Eritrean capital Since the Eritrean Catholic Church is a metropolitanate not a patriarchal or major archiepiscopal Church the power of its metropolitan and council of hierarchs is limited to its own territory which covers all and only Eritrea East Africa or more precisely the Horn of Africa Faithful outside of Eritrea are immediately subject to the Pope 4 5 improper synthesis The cathedral of the sui iuris metropolitan see is Kidane Mehret Cathedral in Asmara the capital city of Eritrea Contents 1 Statistics 2 Metropolitan sui iuris Church 3 History 4 Episcopal ordinaries 5 References 6 Sources and external linksStatistics editIn 2015 the Archeparchy pastorally served 31 850 Catholics 1 of the 3 258 000 population in 59 parishes with 336 priests 20 diocesan 316 religious 2 permanent deacons 602 men religious 498 sisters and 206 seminarians 6 Metropolitan sui iuris Church editWhile patriarchal and major archiepiscopal Eastern Catholic Churches may be structured as provinces each headed by a metropolitan the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church has several two of them in the United States and Canada a metropolitan sui iuris Church such as the Eritrean Catholic Church has by definition only a single metropolitan of a fixed see 7 8 The Archeparchy of Asmara is the episcopal see of the single metropolitan of the Eritrean Catholic Church and has the following suffragan sees all of which are daughter eparchies having once been part of the then Eparchy of Asmara which for a while covered the whole of Eritrea Eritrean Catholic Eparchy of Barentu 1995 Eritrean Catholic Eparchy of Keren 1995 Eritrean Catholic Eparchy of Segheneyti 2012 History editIn 1839 Saint Giustino de Jacobis an Italian Vincentian priest arrived in the area that is now Eritrea and northern Ethiopia He chose to use the local liturgy in Ge ez rather than the Roman Rite in Latin Attracted by his learning and sanctity many local clergy and laity entered into communion with the Catholic Church They established an Ethiopic Rite Catholic community under the care of the Apostolic Vicariate of Abyssinia now Ethiopic Metropolitanate sui juris of Addis Abeba which had its headquarters at Keren and was under the care of the Vincentian Fathers After Italy took possession of Eritrea and declared it an Italian colony the Holy See in view of the changed situation set up on 19 September 1894 a separate Apostolic Prefecture of Eritrea which was entrusted to Italian Capuchins In the following year the governor of the colony expelled the remaining Vincentian priests who were French on the unfounded suspicion of having encouraged armed resistance 9 10 11 In 1911 the Apostolic Prefecture was promoted to the rank of Apostolic Vicariate headed therefore by a titular bishop and the headquarters were moved from Keren to Asmara 12 With the arrival of Italian immigrants the Capuchins promoted the Roman Rite Unrest among the Eritrean clergy led to the sending in 1927 of the future cardinal Alexis Lepicier as Apostolic Visitor to Eritrea As a result of his report Father Kidane Maryam Cassa was appointed at first Pro Apostolic Vicar for the Ethiopic Rite Catholics and then on 4 July 1930 bishop in charge of an independent Ordinariate of Eritrea 12 13 14 15 His official title was Ordinary for Ethiopic Rite indigenous Catholics of Eritrea Latin Ordinarius pro catholicis indigenis Erythraeae aethiopici ritus 16 17 Pope Pius XII elevated this ordinariate as the Apostolic Exarchate of Asmara on 31 October 1951 18 On 20 February 1961 Pope John XXIII elevated it to an eparchy 19 Although officially described in Latin as Asmaren sis the eparchy at first appeared in the Annuario Pontificio under the heading Asmara of the Ethiopians at a time when the entry for the Apostolic Vicariate for the Latins in Eritrea officially described in Latin as Asmaren sis Latinorum appeared under the simple name of Asmara 20 From the year 1976 onward the eparchy appeared in that annual publication under the simple heading Asmara like the Apostolic Vicariate of Asmara 21 The eparchy lost territory on 21 December 1995 when the Eparchies of Barentu and Keren were established and again in 2012 when the Eparchy of Segheneyti was established 22 23 In January 2015 Pope Francis erected the Metropolitan sui iuris Eritrean Catholic Church elevating the Eparchy of Asmara to Metropolitan Archeparchy and making the three daughter eparchies its suffragans 1 Episcopal ordinaries editOrdinaries for Ethiopic Rite indigenous Catholics of EritreaKidane Maryam Cassa 4 July 1930 24 February 1951 Titular Bishop of Thibaris 1930 07 04 death 1951 09 01 Ghebre Jesus Jacob Titular Bishop of Erythrum 1951 02 24 death 1969 01 22 and Apostolic Administrator for Ethiopic Rite faithful in Eritrea 24 February 1951 21 October 1951 see below Apostolic Exarchate of AsmaraGhebre Jesus Jacob Titular Bishop of Erythrum 1958 02 24 death 1969 01 22 and Apostolic Administrator for Ethiopic Rite faithful in Eritrea 1951 10 21 Ordaining bishop for the Ethiopic Rite in Rome death 1969 01 22 24 Asrate Mariam Yemmeru Titular Bishop of Urima and acting Apostolic Exarch of Asmara 3 February 1958 20 February 1961 see below 25 and see belowSuffragan Eparchs of AsmaraAsrate Mariam Yemmeru Titular Bishop of Urima and acting Eparch of Asmara see above 1961 02 20 1961 04 09 25 later Metropolitan of Addis Ababa 1961 04 09 retired 1977 02 24 died 1990 08 10 Francois Abraha 9 April 1961 retired 17 July 1984 died 2000 03 26 Zekarias Yohannes 17 July 1984 retired 25 June 2001 died 2016 12 01 previously Titular Bishop of Barca and Auxiliary Bishop of Asmara 1981 01 29 succession 1984 07 17 Menghesteab Tesfamariam M C C I 25 June 2001 19 January 2015 see below Metropolitan Archeparchs of AsmaraMenghesteab Tesfamariam M C C I see above 19 January 2015 President of Council of the Eritrean Church 2015 01 19 References edit a b c 1 Apostolic Constitution papal bull Multum fructumof 19 January 2015 Metropolitanate of Asmara Eritrea Eritrean Rite GCatholic Retrieved 2020 02 12 Code of Canons of the Eastern Churches canon 161 Code of Canons of the Eastern Churches canon 157 2 John D Faris The Eastern Catholic Churches Constitution and Governance Saint Maron Publications New York 1992 p 380 PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2017 08 20 Retrieved 2017 07 09 The Hierarchy of the Catholic Church Code of Canons of the Eastern Churches canon 155 1 John D Faris The Eastern Catholic Churches Constitution and Governance Saint Maron Publications New York 1992 p 376 PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2017 08 20 Retrieved 2017 07 09 Dan Connell Tom Killion Historical Dictionary of Eritrea Scarecrow Press 2010 ISBN 978 0 81087505 0 pp 140 142 A Billot La France et l Italie Histoire des annees troubles 1881 1899 Paris 1905 pp 231 236 PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2017 02 26 Retrieved 2017 02 26 Annales de la Congregation de la Mission Lazaristes et de la Compagnie des Filles de la Charite 1895 pp 247 255 a b Brief History of the Catholic Eparchy of Keren Gsbriele M Roschini La vita e l opera del cardinale Alessio M Lepicier O S M Annuario Pontificio 1964 p 40 Emmanuel Kwaku Akyeampong Henry Louis Gates Dictionary of African Biography Oxford University Press 2012 vol 8 pp 368 369 Acta Apostolicae Sedis 1930 p 356 Revue d histoire ecclesiastique Volume 100 Issues 3 4 Universite Catholique de Louvain 2005 p 1010 Retrieved 25 February 2017 Acta Apostolicae Sedis 1952 pp 206 209 Acta Apostolicae Sedis 1964 pp 648 649 Annuario Pontificio 1964 pp 40 and 741 Annuario Pontificio 1976 pp 47 and 872 Eparchy of Asmara Ethiopian Catholic Hierarchy Retrieved 2013 06 18 Ethiopic Diocese of Asmara GCatholic org Retrieved 2013 06 18 Acta Apostolicae Sedis 1958 p 283 Annuario Pontificio 1964 p 581 Annuario Pontificio 1969 p 612 Annuario Pontificio 1970 p 1407 a b Annuario Pontificio 1964 p 16Sources and external links editGCatholic with Google map and satellite photo data for all sections local language archdiocesan website 15 20 28 N 38 56 12 E 15 340987 N 38 936711 E 15 340987 38 936711 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Eritrean Catholic Archeparchy of Asmara amp oldid 1159676549 History, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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