Calapan Cathedral Explained

Calapan Cathedral
Fullname:Santo Niño Cathedral
Pushpin Map:Luzon#Philippines
Pushpin Label Position:right
Map Caption:Location in Luzon##Location in the Philippines
Coordinates:13.4147°N 121.1803°W
Location:Calapan, Oriental Mindoro
Country:Philippines
Denomination:Roman Catholic
Founded Date:1679
Dedication:Santo Niño
Dedicated Date:1679
Status:Cathedral
Functional Status:Active
Architectural Type:Church building
Style:Modern
Completed Date:1887, 1962
Demolished Date:1881
Parish:Santo Niño
Deanery:Santo Niño
Archdiocese:Lipa
Metropolis:Lipa
Diocese:Roman Catholic Apostolic Vicariate of Calapan
Province:Directly Exempt to the Holy See
Archbishop:Gilbert Armea Garcera
Bishop:Moises Magpantay Cuevas
Rector:Andy Peter Lubi

Santo Niño Cathedral, commonly known as the Calapan Cathedral, is a Roman Catholic cathedral in Calapan, Oriental Mindoro, Philippines, dedicated to the Santo Niño. It is the episcopal seat of the Apostolic Vicariate of Calapan[1] and is a marked historical structure by the National Commission for Culture and the Arts.[2]

History

The church and parish mission of Calapan was founded in 1679 by the priest Diego de la Madre de Dios, an Augustinian Recollect. Under de la Madre de Dios, the church was fortified with stone walls. Due to frequent Moro raids in the island, two watchtowers and twenty cannons were also installed in the church and its environs. In another Moro raid on October 23, 1754, Andres de Jesus y Maria, then the parish priest of Calapan, and many people taking refuge in the church, were taken as hostages and were brought to Mindanao. In August 1881, the church was burned, and was reconstructed in 1887. Revolutionists in 1898 prior to the Philippine-American War occupied the church. In 1936, the Apostolic Prefecture of Mindoro, then comprising the present-day provinces of Oriental Mindoro, Occidental Mindoro and Romblon, was carved from the territories of the dioceses of Jaro and Lipa. Towards the end of the World War II in 1945, the church this time was occupied by the Americans and was turned over the Filipinos in the same year. In 1951, the apostolic prefecture was elevated to the Apostolic Vicariate of Calapan. In 1962, the present cathedral was finished. The Calapan Vicariate subsequently lost territories to establish the Diocese of Romblon in 1974 and the Apostolic Vicariate of San Jose in Mindoro in 1983.[1] [3] [4]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Cathedral of Santo Niño Calapan City, MINDORO ORIENTAL, MIMAROPA, Philippines . March 9, 2021 . GCatholic.
  2. Web site: The Philippine Registry of Cultural Property (PRECUP) . March 9, 2021 . National Commission for Culture and the Arts.
  3. Web site: Calapan Cathedral Marker . Wikimedia Commons.
  4. Web site: Apostolic Vicariate of Calapan . March 9, 2021 . Union of Catholic Asian News.