Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Granada explained

Jurisdiction:Archdiocese
Granada
Latin:Archidioecesis Granatensis
Local:Archidiócesis de Granada
Country: Spain
Province:Granada
Area Km2:6,945
Population:860,898
Population As Of:2006
Catholics:743,530
Catholics Percent:86.9
Denomination:Roman Catholic
Established:3rd Century (As Diocese of Elvira)
10 December 1492 (As Archdiocese of Granada)
Cathedral:Cathedral of the Annunciation in Granada
Metro Archbishop:José María Gil Tamayo
Suffragans:Diocese of Almería
Diocese of Cartagena
Diocese of Guadix
Diocese of Jaén
Diocese of Málaga
Archdeacon:for one-->
Emeritus Bishops:Francisco Javier Martínez Fernández
Map:Provincia_eclesiástica_de_Granada.svg
Website:Website of the Archdiocese

The Archdiocese of Granada (Latin: archidioecesis Granatensis) is a Latin ecclesiastical province of the Catholic Church in Spain.[1] [2] Originally the Diocese of Elvira from the 3rd century through the 10th, it was re-founded in 1437 as the diocese of Granada and was elevated to the rank of a metropolitan archdiocese by Pope Alexander VI on 10 December 1492. Its suffragan sees are Almería, Cartagena, Guadix, Jaén and Málaga.

The archdiocese's mother church and thus seat of its archbishop is the Cathedral of the Incarnation in Granada also houses the Basilicas of San Juan de Dios and Nuestra Señora de las Angustias. The current archbishop of Granada is Francisco Martínez Fernández, appointed by Pope John Paul II on 15 March 2003.

Ordinaries

Bishops of Elvira

The following list is based on the Nomina defunctorum episcoporum Spalensis sedis uel Toletane atque Eliberritane sedis ("Names of the deceased bishops of the see of Seville and of the sees of Toledo and Elvira"), a necrology of bishops of those sees found in the Codex Emilianense, which was compiled between 962 and 994.[3]

Bishops of Granada

Archbishops of Granada

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. http://www.gcatholic.org/dioceses/diocese/gran0.htm "Metropolitan Archdiocese of Granada"
  2. http://www.catholic-hierarchy.org/diocese/dgrns.html "Archdiocese of Granada"
  3. , p. 111, citing Juan Gil (ed.), Corpus scriptorum Muzarabicorum (Instituto Antonio de Nebrija, 1973), vol. I, pp. xvii–xviii, n10.
  4. Not mentioned in the necrology. For his career, see .
  5. The necrology gives Caritonus, but an Orontius is cited among the attendees of the council of Tarragona (cf. Michael Kulikowski, Late Roman Spain and Its Cities (Johns Hopkins University Press, 2004), p. 420).
  6. Not in the necrology, either because he was still living in 994 or he was considered uncanonically elected (cf. Christys).
  7. http://www.catholic-hierarchy.org/bishop/btalavh.html Catholic Hierarchy: "Archbishop Hernando de Talavera, O.S.H."
  8. http://www.catholic-hierarchy.org/bishop/brojman.html Catholic Hierarchy: "Patriarch Antonio de Rojas Manrique"
  9. http://www.catholic-hierarchy.org/bishop/bporp.html "Archbishop Pedro Portocarrero"
  10. http://www.catholic-hierarchy.org/bishop/btarsis.html "Archbishop Felipe Tarsis de Acuña, O.S."
  11. http://www.gcatholic.org/dioceses/diocese/gran0.htm#19627 "Felipe Tarsis de Acuña, O.S."
  12. http://www.catholic-hierarchy.org/bishop/bcaral.html "Archbishop Martín Carrillo Alderete"
  13. http://www.catholic-hierarchy.org/bishop/bcalda.html "Father Antonio Calderón "
  14. http://www.catholic-hierarchy.org/bishop/bderios.html "Archbishop Alfonso Bernardo de los Ríos y Guzmán, O.SS.T."