Roman Catholic Diocese of Prince Albert
The Roman Catholic Diocese of Prince-Albert (Latin: Dioecesis Principis Albertensis), in Saskatchewan, is a Latin suffragan in the western Canadian ecclesiastical province of the Metropolitan Archdiocese of Regina.
Diocese of Prince Albert Dioecesis Principis Albertensis | |
---|---|
Location | |
Country | Canada |
Ecclesiastical province | Saskatchewan |
Population - Catholics (including non-members) | 40,700 (22.1%) |
Information | |
Denomination | Roman Catholic |
Rite | Roman Rite |
Established | 9 June 1933 |
Cathedral | Sacred Heart Cathedral |
Current leadership | |
Pope | Francis |
Bishop | Albert Privet Thévenot, M.Afr. |
Metropolitan Archbishop | Donald Bolen |
Bishops emeritus | Blaise-Ernest Morand |
Website | |
padiocese.ca |
Its cathedral episcopal see is Sacred Heart Cathedral, at Prince Albert, Saskatchewan. It also has the National Shrine of the Little Flower, in Wakaw, Saskatchewan.
History
- Established on 4 June 1891 as Apostolic Vicariate of Saskatchewan on territory slit off from the Metropolitan Archdiocese of Saint-Boniface.
- Promoted on 1907.12.02 as Diocese of Prince-Albert / Principis Alberten(sis) (Latin)
- Lost territory on 1910.03.04 to establish the Apostolic Vicariate of Keewatin.
- Renamed on 1921.04.30 as Diocese of Prince-Albert–Saskatoon.
- Lost territory on 1921.05.06 to establish the Territorial Abbacy of Saint Peter–Muenster.
- Renamed (back) on 1933.06.09 as Diocese of Prince-Albert, having gained territory from Apostolic Vicariate of Keewatin and lost territory to establish the Diocese of Saskatoon.
Statistics
As per 2014, it pastorally served 40,800 Catholics (20.5% of 198,600 total) on 118,834 km² in 80 parishes with 62 priests (47 diocesan, 15 religious), 1 deacon, 79 lay religious (15 brothers, 64 sisters) and 2 seminarians.)[2]
Bishops
(all Roman Rite, often members of Latin congregations)[3]
- Apostolic Vicar of Saskatchewan
- Albert Pascal, Missionary Oblates of Mary Immaculate (O.M.I.) (1891.06.02 – 1907.12.02 see below), Titular Bishop of Mosynopolis (1891.06.02 – 1907.12.02)
- Suffragan Bishop of Prince-Albert (first time)
- Albert Pascal, O.M.I. (see above 1907.12.02 – death 1920.07.12)
- Suffragan Bishop of Prince-Albert–Saskatoon
- Henri-Jean-Maria Prud'homme (1921.06.16 – 1933.06.09 see below)
- Suffragan Bishops of Prince-Albert (again)
- Henri-Jean-Maria Prud'homme (see above 1933.06.09 – retired 1937.01.29), emeritate as Titular Bishop of Saldæ (1937.01.29 – death 1952.01.05)
- Réginald Duprat, Dominican order (O.P.) (1938.03.17 – retired 1952.06.29), emeritate as Titular Bishop of Tremithus (1952.06.29 – death 1954.02.13)
- Léo Blais (1952.07.04 – 1959.02.28); next Titular Bishop of Hieron (1959.03.18 – death 1991.01.21), first as Auxiliary Bishop of Montréal (Quebec, Canada) (1959.03.18 – 1971.05.11), then on emeritate
- Laurent Morin (1959.02.28 – retired 1983.04.09), previously Titular Bishop of Arsamosata (1955.09.08 – 1959.02.28) as Auxiliary Bishop of Montréal (Quebec, Canada) (1955.09.08 – 1959.02.28); died 1996
- Blaise-Ernest Morand (1983.04.09 – retired 26 May 2008), succeeded as former Coadjutor Bishop of Prince-Albert (1981.04.22 – 1983.04.09)
- Albert Privet Thévenot, White Fathers (M. Afr.) (26 May 2008 - ...).
- Coadjutor bishop
- Blaise-Ernest Morand (1981-1983)
References
- "Diocese of Prince-Albert". Catholic-Hierarchy. Retrieved 2007-03-14.
- Morice, Adrian Gabriel (1911). Catholic Encyclopedia. 12. New York: Robert Appleton Company. . In Herbermann, Charles (ed.).
Sources and external links
- Roman Catholic Diocese of Prince Albert site
- GCatholic with Google map and - satellite photo - data for all sections
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