St. Joseph Cathedral, Liepāja

The St. Joseph Cathedral[1] (Latvian: Liepājas Svētā Jāzepa Romas katoļu katedrāle) is the cathedral church of the Diocese of Liepāja located in Liepāja,[2] Latvia.[3]

St. Joseph Cathedral
Liepājas Svētā Jāzepa Romas katoļu katedrāle
LocationLiepāja
CountryLatvia
DenominationRoman Catholic Church

History

Liepaja originally had a small wooden church built in 1508 and dedicated to Saint Ann. Around 1560 the church was converted to Lutheran worship. After the Reformation, the faithful of the Catholic Church had to travel to Lithuania to receive baptism and the other sacraments, because they did not have a place of Catholic worship available.

In 1747 a small stone church dedicated to St. Joseph was built in Liepāja. Religious services were conducted initially only on the third Sunday of each month. With the development of the city and the increased number of the faithful, the old church soon became too small. Intone carried out the construction of a new neo-Romanesque church, designed by architect Luis Melvil. It was completed and consecrated in 1911 in honor of St. Joseph.

On May 8, 1937 with the bull Aeterna salus animarum Pope Pius XI instituted the diocese of Liepaja and the church of St. Joseph was elevated to cathedral status.

See also

References

  1. gcatholic.org
  2. Jarvis, Howard; Oates, John (2011-05-02). DK Eyewitness Travel Guide: Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania: Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania. Penguin. ISBN 9780756684662.
  3. DK Eyewitness Travel Guide: Eastern and Central Europe. Penguin. 2015-08-04. ISBN 9781465445155.

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.