fbpx
Wikipedia

Roman Catholic Diocese of Banja Luka

The Roman Catholic Diocese of Banja Luka (Serbo-Croatian: Banjalučka biskupija, Latin: Dioecesis Bania Lucensisis) is a diocese of the Latin Rite of the Roman Catholic Church in western Bosnia. The diocese is centred in the city of Banja Luka, Bosnia and Herzegovina.

Diocese of Banja Luka

Dioecesis Banialucensis

Banjolučka biskupija
Coat of Arms of diocese of Banja Luka
Location
Country Bosnia and Herzegovina
Ecclesiastical provinceArchdiocese of Vrhbosna
Deaneries
  • Banja Luka
  • Livno
  • Jajce
  • Bihać
  • Prnjavor
  • Bosanska Gradiška
Statistics
Area16,457 km2 (6,354 sq mi)
Population
- Total
- Catholics (including non-members)
(as of 2015)
540,000[1]
34,361[1] (6.4%)
Parishes48[1]
Information
DenominationCatholic
Sui iuris churchLatin Church
RiteRoman Rite
Established5 July 1881
CathedralCathedral of Saint Bonaventure
Patron saintSaint Bonaventure
Secular priests34[2]
Current leadership
PopeFrancis
BishopFranjo Komarica
Metropolitan ArchbishopTomo Vukšić
Auxiliary BishopsMarko Semren
Vicar GeneralAnto Orlovac
Map
Website
biskupija-banjaluka.org

Erected on July 5, 1881, the diocese is a suffragan of the Archdiocese of Vrhbosna, as the Diocese of Banjaluka. In 1985, the name of the diocese was split to the current diocese of Banja Luka. Bishop Franjo Komarica is head of the diocese.

The original Cathedral of Saint Bonaventure in the city was built in 1887. However, an earthquake in 1969 levelled the church. Banja Luka's current cathedral was built in 1974.

The city of Banja Luka, and much of the territory that the diocese covers contains an Orthodox Christian majority. The Bosnian War greatly affected the diocese. Virtually all of the churches in the bishopric sustained some damage, and many were destroyed. Many Catholics were expelled from the region or fled, leaving only a fraction remaining. Bishop Komarica has been urging people to return, to mixed results.

History

Christianity arrived on the territory of present-day diocese of Banja Luka during the Roman rule in the first century AD. Christians and bishops from the area settled around two metropolitan seats, Salona and Sirmium. In this area there was at that time the seat of at least one diocese, Diocese of Baloie (probably near Šipovo), whose bishop participated in the church synod of Salona in 530.

 
Catholic churches and monasteries before the Ottoman conquest

After the barbaric invasion and after the settlement of Slavic tribes, these regions belonged to the surrounding dioceses: Split, Nin, Knin, Krbava and Bosnia, and the area of today's Banja Luka and the entire northern region was part of the Diocese of Zagreb. A rich life of the Catholic Church in this region before falling under Ottoman rule is testified by numerous churches from ancient and medieval times discovered on the territory of the Diocese. The highest concentration was in the Bihać Deanery area.

The Ottoman conquest that brought the demolition of Catholic churches and the islamization of the population, almost completely destroyed the presence of the Catholic Church in these areas, with the exception of southern regions around Livno. City of Bihać resisted the longest, until 1591. From the time of the Ottoman conquest, the pastoral clergy in these parts were almost exclusively Bosnian Franciscans. On the Livno area was recorded the presence of Glagolitic Catholic secular priests who celebrated the Slavic liturgy. The bishops did not dare to come to parts of their dioceses that fell under Turkish rule. That is why, in 1735, instead of the existing dioceses, the Holy See founded the Apostolic Vicariate in Ottoman Bosnia (Vicariatus Apostolicus Bosniae Othomanae). The Catholic church in Banja Luka was particularly hard hit during the War of the Holy League (1683-1699). In 1737 parish church in Banja Luka was burned and numerous believers migrated to the Habsburg possessions.

 
St. Francis' Church in Mahovljani was built in 1902 for the newly arrived Italian Catholics

After Bosnia Vilayet came under the Austro-Hungarian rule in 1878, Pope Leo XIII restored the vilayet's church hierarchy. In Ex hac augusta, his 5 July 1881 apostolic letter, Leo established a four-diocese ecclesiastical province in Bosnia and Herzegovina and abolished the previous apostolic vicariates. Sarajevo, formerly Vrhbosna, became the archdiocesan and metropolitan seat. Its suffragan dioceses became the new dioceses of Banja Luka and Mostar and the existing Diocese of Trebinje-Mrkan.[3]

After the renewal of the regular hierarchy, the Diocese was governed by the apostolic nuncio in Vienna, and from 1883 to 1884, by the Archbishop of Vrhbosna, Josip Stadler, who served as an apostolic administrator of the Diocese.

At the time of its founding, the Diocese had some 36,000 believers. This number has accelerated rapidly with the arrival of the Austrian authorities. During the next decades, numerous Poles, Italians, Germans, Czechs and others moved in the area of the Diocese.

During the Second World War and after the war, the Diocese was catastrophically harmed.. One third of all the parishes (13) have completely perished, in 10 of parishes a number of parishioners dropped significantly, and all the others were seriously injured. With a large number of killed believers, the diocese suffered severe loss of priests. During the war and after the war, at least 30 priests were killed. The Holy See started the process of beatification of 4 of them on 21 December 2014: Juraj Gospodnetić, Waldemar Maximilian Nestor, Antun Dujlović and Krešimir Barišić.[4]

Ordinaries

Apostolic Administrators

Apostolic Administrators of Banja Luka
From Until Incumbent Notes
1882 1884 Josip Stadler Archbishop of Vrhbosna. Elected on 29 September 1881 and confirmed on 18 November 1881. Consecrated on 20 November 1881. Appointed Apostolic Administrator of Banja Luka on 18 November 1882. He held office until 24 March 1884.
1884 1912 Marijan Marković Franciscan friar. Appointed Apostolic Administrator of Banjaluka on 27 March 1884, consecrated on 4 May 1884. Died in office on 20 June 1912.
From 1912 until 1946 Josip Stjepan Garić served as Bishop of Banja Luka
1946 1951 Smiljan Franjo Čekada Franciscan friar. Appointed Apostolic Administrator of Banjaluka in 1946 after death of bishop Garić. Also served as Auxiliary Bishop of Vrhbosna (1939-1940), bishop of Skopje (1940-1967), Coadjutor Archbishop of Vrhbosna (1967-1970) and Archbishop of Vrhbosna (1970-1976).
1951 1958 Dragutin Čelik Appointed on 15 December 1951 and consecrated on 16 December 1951. Died in office on 11 August 1958.
Sources:[5][6][7][8]

Bishops

Bishops of Banja Luka
From Until Incumbent Notes
1881 1912 Sede vacante Office held by apostolic administrators.
1912 1946 Josip Stjepan Garić Franciscan friar. Appointed on 14 December 1912 and consecrated on 20 February 1913. Died in office on 30 June 1946.
1946 1958 Sede vacante Office held by apostolic administrators.
1959 1989 Alfred Pichler Appointed on 22 July 1959 and consecrated on 18 October 1959. Resigned on 15 May 1989 and died on 17 May 1992.
1989 present Franjo Komarica Appointed on 15 May 1989, previously consecrated on 6 January 1986 as Auxiliary Bishop of Banja Luka and Titular Bishop of Satafis.
Sources:[9][10][11]

Auxiliary Bishops

Auxiliary Bishops of Banja Luka
From Until Incumbent Notes
1985 1989 Franjo Komarica Appointed on 28 October 1985 and consecrated on 6 January 1986. Succeeded Bishop of Banja Luka on 15 May 1989.
2010 present Marko Semren Franciscan friar. Appointed on 15 July 2010 and consecrated on 18 September 2010.
Sources:[11][12]

Demographics

Diocese of Banja Luka has a population of 550,300. As of 2012, 35,428 (6.44% of the population) are Roman Catholics.

Historical Roman Catholic population

The historical Roman Catholic population is given in the following chart:

Deaneries

Churches

Parish churches

This is a list of Parish churches by deanery:

Deanery of Banja Luka

  • Church of the Visitation of the Blessed Virgin Mary, Banja Luka
  • St. Vitus's Church, Barlovci
  • Church of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary, Ivanjska
  • Church of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary, Banja Luka
  • Saints Peter and Paul Church, Motike
  • Church of Saint Anthony of Padua, Banja Luka
  • Church of Saint Therese of the Child Jesus, Presnače
  • Saints Peter and Paul Church, Šimići
  • Saint Joseph's Church, Trn

Deanery of Bihać

  • Church of Saint Anthony of Padua, Bihać
  • Church of the Exaltation of the Holy Cross, Bosanska Dubica
  • Saint Joseph's Church, Bosanska Gradiška
  • Holy Trinity Church, Novi Grad
  • Saint Joseph's Church, Drvar
  • Church of Saint Leopold Mandić, Ljubija
  • Saint Joseph's Church, Prijedor
  • Saint John the Baptist Church, Ravska
  • Church of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary, Sanski Most
  • Church of the Nativity of the Blessed Virgin Mary, Sasina
  • Church of Saint Anthony the Hermit, Majdan
  • Church of Saint Anthony of Padua, Stratinska
  • Sacred Heart Church, Šurkovac

Deanery of Bosanska Gradiška

  • Church of Saint Roch, Gradiška
  • Saint John the Baptist Church, Bosanski Aleksandrovac
  • Church of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary, Dolina
  • St. Francis' Church, Mahovljani
  • Saint Joseph's Church, Nova Topola

Deanery of Jajce

Deanery of Livno

Deanery of Prnjavor

  • Church of Saint Anthony of Padua, Prnjavor
  • Church of Saint Leopold Mandić, Dragalovci
  • Church of the Nativity of the Blessed Virgin Mary, Kotor Varoš
  • Church of the Nativity of the Blessed Virgin Mary, Kulaši
  • Church of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary, Sokoline
  • St. Francis' Church, Vrbanjci

Religious orders

 
Mariastern Monastery (established in 1869)

The Diocese of Banja Luka is home to a small number of religious orders and congregations. While there are not as many today in 2013 as there were in 1950, they still make up a large population of the diocese.

In 1950, there were 71 religious priests, 4 male religious, 310 nuns and sisters ministering in the Diocese.

As of 2013, 47 priests of religious orders, 92 religious sisters and nuns minister in the diocese.

Male Religious Orders Currently in the Diocese

Female Religious Orders Currently in the Diocese

Saints, Blesseds & Venerables of Banja Luka

  • Blessed Ivan MerzBosnian-Croatian lay academic, beatified by Pope John Paul II on a visit at Banja Luka, Bosnia and Herzegovina on June 23, 2003. Ivan Merz promoted the liturgical movement in Croatia and together with Ivo Protulipac created a movement for the young people, "The Croatian union of the Eagles" ("Hrvatski orlovski savez"), inspired by the "Eucharistic Crusade," which he had encountered in France.

References

  1. ^ a b c "Diocese of Banja Luka". Catholic-Hierarchy.org. David M. Cheney. Retrieved 3 August 2018.
  2. ^ . Archived from the original on 2010-10-27.
  3. ^ Leo XIII, Ex hac augusta
  4. ^ "Pokrenuta beatifikacija četvorice svećenika iz BiH". hrt.hr. Croatian Radio and Television. Retrieved 1 August 2017.
  5. ^ "Archbishop Josef Stadler". Catholic-Hierarchy.org. David M. Cheney. Retrieved 21 January 2015.
  6. ^ "Bishop Marijan Marković, O.F.M." Catholic-Hierarchy.org. David M. Cheney. Retrieved 21 January 2015.
  7. ^ "Archbishop Smiljan Franjo Cekada". Catholic-Hierarchy.org. David M. Cheney. Retrieved 21 January 2015.
  8. ^ "Bishop Karel Celik". Catholic-Hierarchy.org. David M. Cheney. Retrieved 21 January 2015.
  9. ^ "Bishop Emmanuel Josip Stepan Garić, O.F.M." Catholic-Hierarchy.org. David M. Cheney. Retrieved 21 January 2015.
  10. ^ "Bishop Alfred Pichler". Catholic-Hierarchy.org. David M. Cheney. Retrieved 21 January 2015.
  11. ^ a b "Bishop Franjo Komarica". Catholic-Hierarchy.org. David M. Cheney. Retrieved 21 January 2015.
  12. ^ "Bishop Marko Semren, O.F.M." Catholic-Hierarchy.org. David M. Cheney. Retrieved 21 January 2015.

Coordinates: 44°46′31″N 17°11′43″E / 44.775361°N 17.195144°E / 44.775361; 17.195144

roman, catholic, diocese, banja, luka, also, list, roman, catholic, dioceses, bosnia, herzegovina, franjo, komarica, marko, semren, other, uses, diocese, banja, luka, serbo, croatian, banjalučka, biskupija, latin, dioecesis, bania, lucensisis, diocese, latin, . See also List of Roman Catholic Dioceses in Bosnia Herzegovina Franjo Komarica and Marko Semren For other uses see Diocese of Banja Luka The Roman Catholic Diocese of Banja Luka Serbo Croatian Banjalucka biskupija Latin Dioecesis Bania Lucensisis is a diocese of the Latin Rite of the Roman Catholic Church in western Bosnia The diocese is centred in the city of Banja Luka Bosnia and Herzegovina Diocese of Banja LukaDioecesis BanialucensisBanjolucka biskupijaCoat of Arms of diocese of Banja LukaLocationCountry Bosnia and HerzegovinaEcclesiastical provinceArchdiocese of VrhbosnaDeaneriesBanja LukaLivnoJajceBihacPrnjavorBosanska GradiskaStatisticsArea16 457 km2 6 354 sq mi Population Total Catholics including non members as of 2015 540 000 1 34 361 1 6 4 Parishes48 1 InformationDenominationCatholicSui iuris churchLatin ChurchRiteRoman RiteEstablished5 July 1881CathedralCathedral of Saint BonaventurePatron saintSaint BonaventureSecular priests34 2 Current leadershipPopeFrancisBishopFranjo KomaricaMetropolitan ArchbishopTomo VuksicAuxiliary BishopsMarko SemrenVicar GeneralAnto OrlovacMapWebsitebiskupija banjaluka orgErected on July 5 1881 the diocese is a suffragan of the Archdiocese of Vrhbosna as the Diocese of Banjaluka In 1985 the name of the diocese was split to the current diocese of Banja Luka Bishop Franjo Komarica is head of the diocese The original Cathedral of Saint Bonaventure in the city was built in 1887 However an earthquake in 1969 levelled the church Banja Luka s current cathedral was built in 1974 The city of Banja Luka and much of the territory that the diocese covers contains an Orthodox Christian majority The Bosnian War greatly affected the diocese Virtually all of the churches in the bishopric sustained some damage and many were destroyed Many Catholics were expelled from the region or fled leaving only a fraction remaining Bishop Komarica has been urging people to return to mixed results Contents 1 History 2 Ordinaries 2 1 Apostolic Administrators 2 2 Bishops 2 3 Auxiliary Bishops 3 Demographics 3 1 Historical Roman Catholic population 4 Deaneries 5 Churches 5 1 Parish churches 5 1 1 Deanery of Banja Luka 5 1 2 Deanery of Bihac 5 1 3 Deanery of Bosanska Gradiska 5 1 4 Deanery of Jajce 5 1 5 Deanery of Livno 5 1 6 Deanery of Prnjavor 6 Religious orders 6 1 Male Religious Orders Currently in the Diocese 6 2 Female Religious Orders Currently in the Diocese 7 Saints Blesseds amp Venerables of Banja Luka 8 ReferencesHistory EditChristianity arrived on the territory of present day diocese of Banja Luka during the Roman rule in the first century AD Christians and bishops from the area settled around two metropolitan seats Salona and Sirmium In this area there was at that time the seat of at least one diocese Diocese of Baloie probably near Sipovo whose bishop participated in the church synod of Salona in 530 Catholic churches and monasteries before the Ottoman conquest After the barbaric invasion and after the settlement of Slavic tribes these regions belonged to the surrounding dioceses Split Nin Knin Krbava and Bosnia and the area of today s Banja Luka and the entire northern region was part of the Diocese of Zagreb A rich life of the Catholic Church in this region before falling under Ottoman rule is testified by numerous churches from ancient and medieval times discovered on the territory of the Diocese The highest concentration was in the Bihac Deanery area The Ottoman conquest that brought the demolition of Catholic churches and the islamization of the population almost completely destroyed the presence of the Catholic Church in these areas with the exception of southern regions around Livno City of Bihac resisted the longest until 1591 From the time of the Ottoman conquest the pastoral clergy in these parts were almost exclusively Bosnian Franciscans On the Livno area was recorded the presence of Glagolitic Catholic secular priests who celebrated the Slavic liturgy The bishops did not dare to come to parts of their dioceses that fell under Turkish rule That is why in 1735 instead of the existing dioceses the Holy See founded the Apostolic Vicariate in Ottoman Bosnia Vicariatus Apostolicus Bosniae Othomanae The Catholic church in Banja Luka was particularly hard hit during the War of the Holy League 1683 1699 In 1737 parish church in Banja Luka was burned and numerous believers migrated to the Habsburg possessions St Francis Church in Mahovljani was built in 1902 for the newly arrived Italian Catholics After Bosnia Vilayet came under the Austro Hungarian rule in 1878 Pope Leo XIII restored the vilayet s church hierarchy In Ex hac augusta his 5 July 1881 apostolic letter Leo established a four diocese ecclesiastical province in Bosnia and Herzegovina and abolished the previous apostolic vicariates Sarajevo formerly Vrhbosna became the archdiocesan and metropolitan seat Its suffragan dioceses became the new dioceses of Banja Luka and Mostar and the existing Diocese of Trebinje Mrkan 3 After the renewal of the regular hierarchy the Diocese was governed by the apostolic nuncio in Vienna and from 1883 to 1884 by the Archbishop of Vrhbosna Josip Stadler who served as an apostolic administrator of the Diocese At the time of its founding the Diocese had some 36 000 believers This number has accelerated rapidly with the arrival of the Austrian authorities During the next decades numerous Poles Italians Germans Czechs and others moved in the area of the Diocese During the Second World War and after the war the Diocese was catastrophically harmed One third of all the parishes 13 have completely perished in 10 of parishes a number of parishioners dropped significantly and all the others were seriously injured With a large number of killed believers the diocese suffered severe loss of priests During the war and after the war at least 30 priests were killed The Holy See started the process of beatification of 4 of them on 21 December 2014 Juraj Gospodnetic Waldemar Maximilian Nestor Antun Dujlovic and Kresimir Barisic 4 Ordinaries EditApostolic Administrators Edit Apostolic Administrators of Banja LukaFrom Until Incumbent Notes1882 1884 Josip Stadler Archbishop of Vrhbosna Elected on 29 September 1881 and confirmed on 18 November 1881 Consecrated on 20 November 1881 Appointed Apostolic Administrator of Banja Luka on 18 November 1882 He held office until 24 March 1884 1884 1912 Marijan Markovic Franciscan friar Appointed Apostolic Administrator of Banjaluka on 27 March 1884 consecrated on 4 May 1884 Died in office on 20 June 1912 From 1912 until 1946 Josip Stjepan Garic served as Bishop of Banja Luka1946 1951 Smiljan Franjo Cekada Franciscan friar Appointed Apostolic Administrator of Banjaluka in 1946 after death of bishop Garic Also served as Auxiliary Bishop of Vrhbosna 1939 1940 bishop of Skopje 1940 1967 Coadjutor Archbishop of Vrhbosna 1967 1970 and Archbishop of Vrhbosna 1970 1976 1951 1958 Dragutin Celik Appointed on 15 December 1951 and consecrated on 16 December 1951 Died in office on 11 August 1958 Sources 5 6 7 8 Bishops Edit Bishops of Banja LukaFrom Until Incumbent Notes1881 1912 Sede vacante Office held by apostolic administrators 1912 1946 Josip Stjepan Garic Franciscan friar Appointed on 14 December 1912 and consecrated on 20 February 1913 Died in office on 30 June 1946 1946 1958 Sede vacante Office held by apostolic administrators 1959 1989 Alfred Pichler Appointed on 22 July 1959 and consecrated on 18 October 1959 Resigned on 15 May 1989 and died on 17 May 1992 1989 present Franjo Komarica Appointed on 15 May 1989 previously consecrated on 6 January 1986 as Auxiliary Bishop of Banja Luka and Titular Bishop of Satafis Sources 9 10 11 Auxiliary Bishops Edit Auxiliary Bishops of Banja LukaFrom Until Incumbent Notes1985 1989 Franjo Komarica Appointed on 28 October 1985 and consecrated on 6 January 1986 Succeeded Bishop of Banja Luka on 15 May 1989 2010 present Marko Semren Franciscan friar Appointed on 15 July 2010 and consecrated on 18 September 2010 Sources 11 12 Demographics EditDiocese of Banja Luka has a population of 550 300 As of 2012 35 428 6 44 of the population are Roman Catholics Historical Roman Catholic population Edit The historical Roman Catholic population is given in the following chart Deaneries EditDeanery Dean ParishesBanja LukaBanjolucki dekanat Ivo Orlovac O F M Banja Luka Barlovci Budzak Ivanjska Marija Zvijezda Motike Petricevac Presnace Simici TrnBihacBihacki dekanat Rev Iljo Arlovic Bihac Bosanska Dubica Bosanska Kostajnica Bosanska Novi Drvar Ljubija Prijedor Ravska Sanski Most Sasina Stara Rijeka Stratinska SurkovacBosanska GradiskaBosansko gradiski dekanat Msgr Vlado Lukenda Bosanski Aleksandrovac Bosanska Gradiska Dolina Mahovljani Nova Topola Deanery Dean ParishesJajceJajacki dekanat Niko Petonjic O F M Jajce Kljuc Liskovica Mrkonjic GradLivno Livanjski dekanat The Very Rev Adolf Visaticki Bila Bosansko Grahovo Cuklic Glamoc Listani Livno Ljubuncic Odzak Caic Podhum VidosiPrnjavorPrnjavorski dekanat Msgr Vlado Lukenda Dragalovci Kotor Varos Kulasi Prnjavor Sokoline VrbanjciChurches EditParish churches Edit This is a list of Parish churches by deanery Deanery of Banja Luka Edit Church of the Visitation of the Blessed Virgin Mary Banja Luka St Vitus s Church Barlovci Church of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary Ivanjska Church of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary Banja Luka Saints Peter and Paul Church Motike Church of Saint Anthony of Padua Banja Luka Church of Saint Therese of the Child Jesus Presnace Saints Peter and Paul Church Simici Saint Joseph s Church TrnDeanery of Bihac Edit Church of Saint Anthony of Padua Bihac Church of the Exaltation of the Holy Cross Bosanska Dubica Saint Joseph s Church Bosanska Gradiska Holy Trinity Church Novi Grad Saint Joseph s Church Drvar Church of Saint Leopold Mandic Ljubija Saint Joseph s Church Prijedor Saint John the Baptist Church Ravska Church of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary Sanski Most Church of the Nativity of the Blessed Virgin Mary Sasina Church of Saint Anthony the Hermit Majdan Church of Saint Anthony of Padua Stratinska Sacred Heart Church SurkovacDeanery of Bosanska Gradiska Edit Church of Saint Roch Gradiska Saint John the Baptist Church Bosanski Aleksandrovac Church of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary Dolina St Francis Church Mahovljani Saint Joseph s Church Nova TopolaDeanery of Jajce Edit Church of the Assumption Jajce Saints Philip and James Church Mrkonjic Grad Church of the Nativity of the Blessed Virgin Mary Kljuc Church of Saint Elias LiskovicaDeanery of Livno Edit Church of Saint Elias Glamoc All Saints Church Livno Immaculate Conception Church Vidosi Saints Peter and Paul Church Livno Saint John the Baptist Church Livno St Michael s Church Livno St Francis Church Bila Church of Saint Elias Bosansko Grahovo Church of Saint Anthony of Padua Cuklic Saint Joseph s Church Listani Church of the Nativity of the Blessed Virgin Mary LjubuncicDeanery of Prnjavor Edit Church of Saint Anthony of Padua Prnjavor Church of Saint Leopold Mandic Dragalovci Church of the Nativity of the Blessed Virgin Mary Kotor Varos Church of the Nativity of the Blessed Virgin Mary Kulasi Church of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary Sokoline St Francis Church VrbanjciRoman Catholic churches in Diocese of Banja Luka Church of Saint Therese of the Child Jesus in Presnace All Saints Church in Livno Church of Saint Elias in Glamoc Saints Philip and James Church in Mrkonjic Grad Church of the Visitation of the Blessed Virgin Mary in Banja Luka Church of the Assumption in Jajce Saints Peter and Paul Church in Livno Immaculate Conception Church in Vidosi Church of Saint Anthony of Padua in Banja Luka Saint John the Baptist Church in Podhum Church of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary and Mariastern Abbey in Banja Luka Saint Joseph s Church in Nova Topola Church of the Nativity of the Blessed Virgin Mary in Kotor Varos Church of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary in Ivanjska Church of Saint Elias in Bosansko GrahovoReligious orders Edit Mariastern Monastery established in 1869 The Diocese of Banja Luka is home to a small number of religious orders and congregations While there are not as many today in 2013 as there were in 1950 they still make up a large population of the diocese In 1950 there were 71 religious priests 4 male religious 310 nuns and sisters ministering in the Diocese As of 2013 47 priests of religious orders 92 religious sisters and nuns minister in the diocese Male Religious Orders Currently in the Diocese Edit Franciscan Friars of Bosna Srebrena Order of Cistercians of the Strict Observance Trappists CarmelitesFemale Religious Orders Currently in the Diocese Edit Daughters of Charity of Saint Vincent de Paul Servants of the Infant Jesus Province of Split established by Josip Stadler archbishop of Vrhbosna School Sisters of St Francis Bosnian Croatian Province of Immaculate Heart of Mary Adorers of the Blood of Christ Missionaries of CharitySaints Blesseds amp Venerables of Banja Luka EditBlessed Ivan Merz Bosnian Croatian lay academic beatified by Pope John Paul II on a visit at Banja Luka Bosnia and Herzegovina on June 23 2003 Ivan Merz promoted the liturgical movement in Croatia and together with Ivo Protulipac created a movement for the young people The Croatian union of the Eagles Hrvatski orlovski savez inspired by the Eucharistic Crusade which he had encountered in France References Edit a b c Diocese of Banja Luka Catholic Hierarchy org David M Cheney Retrieved 3 August 2018 BANJOLUCKA BISKUPIJA Archived from the original on 2010 10 27 Leo XIII Ex hac augusta Pokrenuta beatifikacija cetvorice svecenika iz BiH hrt hr Croatian Radio and Television Retrieved 1 August 2017 Archbishop Josef Stadler Catholic Hierarchy org David M Cheney Retrieved 21 January 2015 Bishop Marijan Markovic O F M Catholic Hierarchy org David M Cheney Retrieved 21 January 2015 Archbishop Smiljan Franjo Cekada Catholic Hierarchy org David M Cheney Retrieved 21 January 2015 Bishop Karel Celik Catholic Hierarchy org David M Cheney Retrieved 21 January 2015 Bishop Emmanuel Josip Stepan Garic O F M Catholic Hierarchy org David M Cheney Retrieved 21 January 2015 Bishop Alfred Pichler Catholic Hierarchy org David M Cheney Retrieved 21 January 2015 a b Bishop Franjo Komarica Catholic Hierarchy org David M Cheney Retrieved 21 January 2015 Bishop Marko Semren O F M Catholic Hierarchy org David M Cheney Retrieved 21 January 2015 Wikisource has the text of the 1913 Catholic Encyclopedia article Diocese of Banjaluka Coordinates 44 46 31 N 17 11 43 E 44 775361 N 17 195144 E 44 775361 17 195144 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Roman Catholic Diocese of Banja Luka amp oldid 1130058699, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.