List of Catholic dioceses in Russia
The Catholic Church in Russia, united in the Episcopal Conference of Russia, comprises
- one Latin ecclesiastical province (the Metropolitan archdiocese of Moscow, with three Suffragan dioceses) and a missionary (hence exempt) apostolic prefecture.
- The Eastern Catholics have two proper jurisdictions, each belonging to a different particular church sui iuris and using a different rite.
There are no exempt Latin jurisdictions.
There is an Apostolic Nunciature as papal diplomatic representation (embassy-level) to the Russian Federation in the national capital Moscow.
Current Jurisdictions
editLatin Church
editEcclesiastical Province of Moscow
editExempt jurisdiction
edit(directly subject to the Holy See)
Eastern Catholic Particular Churches
editRussian Catholic Church
editArmenian Catholic Church
edit- Ordinariate for Armenian Catholics in Eastern Europe, jointly for Russia, Armenia, Georgia (country) and Ukraine
Defunct jurisdictions
editTitular sees
edit(all Latin)
- One non-metropolitan titular archbishopric
- Two Latin titular bishoprics
- Matrega, formerly Diocese of Matriga
- Latin Titular bishopric of Tanais, formerly of Tana, formerly Diocese of Tana
Other former dioceses
edit- Exclusing merely renamed/promoted predecessors of current jurisdictions
- Latin
- Roman Catholic Diocese of Cherson alias Tiraspol (partially in Moldova)
- Roman Catholic Diocese of Sambia (German Samland)
- Apostolic Vicariate of Siberia
- Roman Catholic Diocese of Smolensk
- Roman Catholic Diocese of Vladivostok
- Eastern Catholic
Crimea
editAfter the Crimea peninsula was unilaterally annexed by the Russian Federation in March 2014, the Catholic hierarchy was not subsequently changed. The Latin rite Catholics of Crimea belong to the diocese of Odesa-Simferopol which is a Suffragan of the archdiocese of Lviv[1] while the faithful of Byzantine rite have their own Ukrainian Catholic Archiepiscopal Exarchate of Krym which is directly subject to the Major Archbishop of Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church.
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ "Catholic Church in Ukraine [Catholic-Hierarchy]". www.catholic-hierarchy.org. Retrieved 2022-01-26.