Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Pondicherry and Cuddalore








































































Archdiocese of Pondicherry and Cuddalore


Archidioecesis Pondicheriensis et Cuddalorensis

புதுவை கடலூர் உயர் மறைமாவட்டம்


Immaculate Conception Cathedral, The Mother Church of the Archdiocese

Immaculate Conception Cathedral, The Mother Church of the Archdiocese

Location
Country India
Ecclesiastical province Pondicherry and Cuddalore
Statistics
Area 11,348 km2 (4,381 sq mi)
Population
- Total
- Catholics
(as of 2010)
11,32,398
3,79,984
Parishes 101
Information
Denomination Catholic
Rite Latin Rite
Established 1776
Cathedral Immaculate Conception Cathedral, Pondicherry
Patron saint Our Lady of the Immaculate Conception
Secular priests 256
Current leadership
Pope Francis
Metropolitan Archbishop Antony Anandarayar
Vicar General A. Arulanandam
Map
Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Pondicherry Cuddalore.jpg
Website
Website of the Archdiocese

The Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Pondicherry and Cuddalore Latin: Pondicherien(sis) et Cuddaloren(sis) is an archdiocese located in the cities of Pondicherry and Cuddalore in India.




Contents






  • 1 History


    • 1.1 The Mission of The Jesuits And The Capuchins


    • 1.2 The Boundaries Of the Carnatic Mission


    • 1.3 Jesuits Replaced By Foreign Mission Fathers


    • 1.4 The First Vicar Apostolic And The First Archbishop


    • 1.5 The Final Formation




  • 2 Leadership


    • 2.1 Superior of Karnatic Mission / Pondicherry


    • 2.2 Vicars Apostolic


    • 2.3 Archbishops




  • 3 Bishops and Cardinals from this Archdiocese


    • 3.1 Bishops


    • 3.2 Cardinal




  • 4 Suffragan dioceses


  • 5 See also


  • 6 References


  • 7 External links





History


With a land area of 11,348 square kilometers, the Archdiocese of Pondicherry-Cuddalore extends over the Pondicherry and Karaikal civil districts of Puducherry union territory and the civil districts of Cuddalore and Viluppuram of Tamil Nadu state. In 2001, the total population of the area was 6,151,891. Ethnic groups in the territory include the Tamils and French.



The Mission of The Jesuits And The Capuchins


The great ancestor of this Archdiocese is the Carnatic Mission, which was started around the year 1700 as Mission sui iuris. This Carnatic Mission was known as Missions of the Coromandel Coast and also as the Malabar Mission.


Before the establishment of the Carnatic Mission in 1700, the Jesuit Fathers of the Madurai Mission, especially John de Britto, entered the Gingee kingdom after 1660, and preached the Gospel up to the Palar River, south of Madras. Members of various religious orders, looked after the spiritual needs of the European communities in their trading centres along the coastal areas, including Cuddalore and Porto Novo. The French Capuchins first settled in Pondicherry in 1674 and the French Jesuits, expelled from Siam also took refuge in Pondicherry in 1688. But, in 1693, the Dutch chased away all the religious groups from Pondicherry, and they were only able to return in 1699. While the Capuchins were looking after the Europeans in Pondicherry, the French Jesuits organized the Carnatic Mission for the Indian people.



The Boundaries Of the Carnatic Mission


The boundaries of the Carnatic mission were as follows:



  • To the south and west, the Pennaiyar River, beyond which were the Madurai and Mysore missions

  • To the east, the Bay of Bengal

  • To the north, Kurnool, including the Krishna and Godavari areas near the coast.



Jesuits Replaced By Foreign Mission Fathers


The continual wars in the 18th century, the ruin of Pondicherry town in 1761 and the suppression of the Society of Jesus in 1773, badly hit the vast Carnatic Mission.


In 1776, the French Jesuit fathers were replaced at the order of Rome by the foreign Mission French Fathers. Although the Bishop of these new missionaries had all the power of jurisdiction, he was not given the title “Vicar Apostolic”, but instead called the “Superior of the Mission of the Coromandel Coast.” Rome successively gave him the jurisdiction over the Madurai, Coimbatore and Mysore areas, affected by the suppression of the Society of Jesus. By 1800, the extent of the Carnatic Mission was immense, but the labourers were very few.



The First Vicar Apostolic And The First Archbishop


The Carnatic Mission was reorganized when new apostolic vicariates were created: Madras in 1832, Madurai in 1836, and the vicariates of Visakhapatnam, Mysore and Coimbatore in 1845.


Pondicherry became an apostolic vicariate of the Coromandel coast, on 1 September 1836, with Mgr. Bonnand as its first vicar apostolic. This apostolic vicariate was raised to an archbishopric on 1 September 1886, with Mgr. Laouenan as the first archbishop.


Subsequently, subdivisions of the archdiocese took place, creating the new dioceses of Kumbakonam in 1899 and Salem in 1930. In 1928 a great part of the present diocese of Vellore was separated from Pondicherry and attached to the archdiocese of Madras and Mylapore. On a reorganisation of the archdiocese by Rome in 1969, the Madurantagam taluk of Kanchipuram district was transferred to Madras, and Tiruvannamalai taluk to Vellore .



The Final Formation


As the archdiocese of Pondicherry extended over the Pondicherry union territory and the South Arcot district of Madras State, on 7 August 1953 it was given a new title by Rome: the "Archdiocese of Pondicherry and Cuddalore".


Originally, the archdiocese included the former French settlements of Pondicherry, Karaikal, Chandannagar, Mahe, and Yanam. Another ex-French settlement was also looked after by the MSFS Fathers in Visakhapatnam. Chandannagar was re-allocated to the archdiocese of Calcutta, now Kolkata, and Mahé to the Kerala diocese of Calicut, now Kozhikode, in 1949.


The present archdiocese of Pondicherry and Cuddalore extends over the Pondicherry and Karaikal districts of Puducherry and the Cuddalore (excluding Chidambaram and Kattumannarkoil taluks) and Viluppuram districts of Tamil Nadu.



Leadership



Superior of Karnatic Mission / Pondicherry




  • Pierre Brigot (1776–1791)


  • Nicolas Champenois (1791–1801)



Vicars Apostolic




  • Louis-Charles-Auguste Hébert (1810–1835)


  • Clément Bonnand, M.E.P. (3 April 1850 – 21 March 1861)


  • Joseph-Isidore Godelle, M.E.P. (21 March 1861 - 15 July 1867)


  • François-Jean-Marie Laouënan, M.E.P. (24 July 1868 - 29 September 1892)



Archbishops




  • Joseph-Adolphe Gandy, M.E.P. (September 29, 1892 - March 25, 1909)


  • Elie-Jean-Joseph Morel, M.E.P. (May 11, 1909 - August 16, 1929)


  • Auguste-Siméon Colas, M.E.P. (June 24, 1930 - October 28, 1955)


  • Ambrose Rayappan (November 28, 1955 - March 17, 1973)


  • Venmani S. Selvanather (March 17, 1973 - 18 February 1992)


  • Michael Augustine (February 18, 1992 - June 10, 2004 )


  • Antony Anandarayar (From June 10, 2004)



Bishops and Cardinals from this Archdiocese



Bishops


The following bishops were ordained to priesthood for Archdiocese of Pondicherry and Cuddalore and later were appointed as Bishops of various dioceses.[1] They are:




  • Ubagarasamy Bernadeth, Bishop of Coimbatore (1940)


  • Joseph Mark Gopu, Auxiliary Bishop of Pondicherry (1948), Archbishop of Hyderabad (1953)


  • Joseph S. Thumma, Bishop of Vijayawada (1970)


  • Michael Duraisamy, Bishop of Salem (1974)


  • Archbishop Michael Augustine, Auxiliary Bishop of Madras-Mylapore (1978), Bishop of Vellore (1981) and Archbishop of Pondicherry (1992)


  • Yvon Ambrose, Bishop of Tuticorin (2005)


  • Peter Abir Antonisamy, Bishop of Sultanpet (2013)



Cardinal



  • Duraisamy Simon Lourdusamy (b.1985 - d.2014)


Suffragan dioceses


Suffragan dioceses under this archdiocese are:



  • Dharmapuri

  • Kumbakonam

  • Salem

  • Tanjore



See also


  • Apostolic Prefecture of French Colonies in India


References




  1. ^ Archdiocese Official Website



External links



  • GCatholic.org


  • Archdiocese of Pondicherry and Cuddalore at Catholic Hierarchy [self-published]

  • Archdiocese official website










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