Roman Catholic Diocese of Newport and Menevia
Appearance
The Roman Catholic Diocese of Newport (and Menevia) was the Latin Catholic precursor (1840-1916) in Wales and southwest England of the present Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Cardiff, with see in Newport, Wales, and was revived as Latin titular see.
History
[edit]- Established in 1840 as Apostolic Vicariate of the Welsh District, on Anglo-Welsh territories (the whole of Wales and the English county of Herefordshire) canonically split off from the Apostolic Vicariate of the Western District.
- Elevated on 29 September 1850 as Diocese of Newport and Menevia, a suffragan in the ecclesiastical province of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Birmingham, having lost northern, English territory to establish the Roman Catholic Diocese of Shrewsbury. It had its pro-cathedral at Belmont Abbey in Herefordshire (England), built from 15 February 1854 by Francis Richard Wegg-Prosser, a landowner converted in 1852, followed by Benedictine monastic buildings from 1857, since 21 November 1859 a priory, on 4 September 1860 is consecrated as the cathedral priory [1][2] The abbey continues to be enlarged (chancel extended in 1865).[3]
- Renamed on 4 July 1895 as Diocese of Newport (Latin Neoportus), having lost further (Welsh) territory to establish the Apostolic Vicariate of Wales,[4] covering Glamorgan, Monmouth (both Welsh) and Herefordshire (England).
- Suppressed on 7 February 1916, its canonical territory being used to establish the Metropolitan Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Cardiff.
Episcopal ordinaries
[edit](all Roman Rite, both born in England)
- Apostolic Vicar of the Welsh District
- Thomas Joseph Brown, Benedictine Order (O.S.B.) (1840.06.05 – 1850.09.29 see below), Titular Bishop of Apollonia (1840.06.05 – 1850.09.29)
- Suffragan Bishops of Newport and Menevia
- Thomas Joseph Brown, O.S.B. (1850.09.29 – death 1880.04.12)
- John Cuthbert Hedley, O.S.B. (1881.02.18 – 1895 see below), succeeding as previous
Auxiliary Bishop of Newport and Menevia (1873.07.22 – 1881.02.18) and Titular Bishop of Cæsaropolis (1873.07.22 – 1881.02.18)
- Suffragan Bishops of Newport
- John Cuthbert Hedley, O.S.B. (see above 1895 – death 1915.11.11).
Titular see
[edit]The pre-Cardiff diocese was nominally restored in 1969 as Titular bishopric of Newport (Latin Neoportus).
It has had the following incumbents, of the fitting episcopal (lowest) rank, with an archiepiscopal exception :[5]
- Titular Archbishop Fulton John Sheen (1969.10.06 – death 1979.12.09), as emeritate; previously Titular Bishop of Cæsariana (1951.05.28 – 1966.10.21) as Auxiliary Bishop of New York (NY, USA) (1951.05.28 – 1966.10.21), Bishop of Rochester (USA) (1966.10.21 – retired 1969.10.06)
- Howard George Tripp (1979.12.20 – death 2022.10.03), as Auxiliary Bishop of Southwark (England) (1979.12.20 – emeritate 2004.01.07).[6]
References
[edit]- ^ Obituary from The Tablet retrieved 5 April 2014
- ^ History from Belmont Abbey, Herefordshire retrieved 5 April 2014
- ^ Historic England. "Details from listed building database (1411804)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 5 April 2014.
- ^ Catholic Province of Cardiff Wales and Herefordshire - Directory and Yearbook 2011 published December 2010 by authority of the Bishops of Wales - see page 8.
- ^ http://www.gcatholic.org/dioceses/former/t1255.htm GCatholic
- ^ "Death of Bishop Howard Tripp, former Auxiliary Bishop of Southwark - Archdiocese of Southwark". www.rcsouthwark.co.uk. Retrieved 2022-10-04.
Sources and external links
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