Misplaced Pages

Coptic Catholic Patriarchate of Alexandria

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
(Redirected from Alexandria of the Copts) Patriarchate of the Catholic Church in Egypt Not to be confused with Pope of the Coptic Orthodox Church.
Coptic Catholic Patriarchate of Alexandria
Catholic
Sidrak in 2014.
Coat of arms of the Coptic Catholic Patriarchate of AlexandriaCoat of arms
Incumbent:
Ibrahim Isaac Sidrak
elected 15 January, 2013
Location
HeadquartersCairo, Egypt
Information
First holderAthanasios
DenominationEastern Catholic
Established1824
CathedralOur Lady of Egypt
Website
www.cnewa.org
Part of a series on
Particular churches sui iuris
of the Catholic Church
Latin cross used in the Latin Church Patriarchal cross used in the Eastern traditionsLatin cross and Byzantine Patriarchal cross
Particular churches are grouped by liturgical rite
Alexandrian Rite
Armenian Rite
Byzantine Rite
East Syriac Rite
Latin liturgical rites
West Syriac Rite
Eastern Catholic Churches
Eastern Catholic liturgy
icon Catholicism portal
icon Christianity portal

The Coptic Catholic Patriarchate of Alexandria is the Patriarchal and only Metropolitan see of the head of the Eastern sui iuris Coptic Catholic Church, a particular Church in the Catholic Church in full communion with the Holy See, which follows the Alexandrian Rite in its own Coptic language. He is thus the superior of all Coptic dioceses, mostly in and around Egypt (where all its sees are), the word Copt(ic) being a corruption of the Greek word for Egypt(ian).

It has two cathedral archiepiscopal sees, both in Egypt: one dedicated to Our Lady of Egypt, in the national capital Cairo, the other dedicated to the Resurrection, in Ancient Alexandria.

History

It had three false starts, each failing to prove enduring.

In 1947 it was restored for good. It lost territories in Egypt repeatedly to establish suffragan sees of Alexandria as Metropolitan:

It enjoyed Papal visits from Pope John Paul II in February 2000 and from Pope Francis in April 2017.

Rank

The patriarchal see as such ranks third among all Catholic (arch)bishoprics of the world (only after the Apostolic See of Rome and the Catholic Patriarch of Constantinople), by the virtue of Canon Law (CCEO 58, 59.2).

Proper diocese

His proper (arch)eparchy is the Coptic Catholic Eparchy of Alexandria, which has no other Ordinary than the Patriarch. However, he may appoint an Auxiliary bishop for the eparchy, distinct from Auxiliaries for the Patriarchate, as was the case with:

As of 2014, it served 35,865 Eastern Catholics in 31 parishes with 73 priests (41 diocesan, 32 religious), 209 lay religious (65 brothers, 144 sisters) and 5 seminarians.

It enjoyed a Papal visit from Pope Francis in April 2017.

Bishops

Coptic Catholic Patriarchs of Alexandria and precursor Apostolic Vicars

Coptic Catholic Apostolic Vicars

Coptic Catholic Patriarchs of Alexandria

Patriarchate established in 1824 (by Pope Leo XII)

  • Maximos Jouwed, also known as Maximos Givaid (15 August 1824 – died 30 August 1831), Titular Bishop of Uthina (9 March 1824 – 15 August 1824)
  • Vacant (1831–1899)
    • Apostolic Administrator Théodore Abou-Karim (22 June 1832 – died 28 September 1855), Titular Bishop of Alia (22 June 1832 – 28 September 1855), no other prelature
    • Apostolic Administrator Athanase Khouzan (2 October 1855 – died 17 February 1864), Titular Bishop of Maronia (2 October 1855 – 17 February 1864), no other prelature
    • Apostolic Administrator Abraham Agabio Bsciai (27 February 1866 – 1878), Titular Bishop of Cariopolis (27 February 1866 – 20 February 1887), no other prelature
    • Apostolic Administrator Cyrillus Macaire = Kyrillos Makarios (18 March 1895 – 19 June 1899 see below), Titular Bishop of Cæsarea Paneas (15 March 1895 – 19 June 1899)
  • Kyrillos Makarios = Cyrillus Macaire (1899–1908) (resigned)
  • Vacant (1908–1947)
  • Markos II Khouzam (see above 10 August 1947 – died 2 February 1958)
  • Stéphanos I Sidarouss, Lazarists (C.M.) (10 May 1958 - retired 24 May 1986) (Cardinal in 1965), died 1987
    • Patriarchal Vicar: Athanasios Abadir (18 May 1976 – 17 December 1982), Titular Bishop of Appia (18 May 1976 – 17 December 1982); next Eparch (Bishop) of Ismayliah of the Copts (Egypt) (17 December 1982 – died 25 May 1992)
  • Stéphanos II Ghattas (23 June 1986 – retired 30 March 2006) (Cardinal in 2001), died 2009
    • Auxiliary Bishop: Youhanna Golta (27 July 1986 – 1997), Titular Bishop of Andropolis (27 July 1986 – present); next Bishop of Curia of the Copts (1997–2020)
    • Auxiliary Bishop: Andraos Salama (1 November 1988 – 1997), Titular Bishop of Barca (1 November 1988 – 21 March 2003); next Eparch (Bishop) of Guizeh of the Copts (Egypt) (21 March 2003 – died 6 December 2005)
  • Antonios I Naguib (7 April 2006 – retired 15 January 2013) (Cardinal in 2010), died 2022
  • Ibrahim Isaac Sidrak (18 January 2013 – present)

Curial bishops

See also

Sources and external links

Patriarchs of Alexandria
Patriarchs prior to the
Chalcedonian schism
(43–451)
Coptic Orthodox
Popes and Patriarchs

(451–present)
Greek Orthodox
Popes and Patriarchs

(451–present)
Latin Catholic
(1276–1954)
Melkite Catholic
(1724–present)
Coptic Catholic
(1824–present)
  • *Markianos is considered Mark II on the Greek side of the subsequent schism, hence this numbering of Mark III.
  • Category
  • Commons
Patriarchates in Christianity
Traditional ecclesiastical jurisdictions of primates in Christianity, sorted according to earliest apostolic legacy and branched where multiple denominational claimants:
bold blue = Catholic Church, light blue = Eastern Orthodox Church, bold/light green = Oriental Orthodoxy, italic blue = Nestorianism
Early
Christianity

(Antiquity)
(30–325/476)
Pentarchy
(five
apostolic
sees
)
Patriarch of Rome (1st cent.)
Patriarch of Constantinople
(451)
Patriarch of Antioch
(1st cent.)
Patriarch of Alexandria
(1st cent.)
Patriarch of Jerusalem (451)
Other
Patriarch of Carthage (2nd cent.–1076)
Patriarch of Seleucia-Ctesiphon
(280–1552)
Patriarch of Armenia (301)
Middle Ages
(476–1517)
Early Modern era
(1517–1789)
Late Modern era
(since 1789)
Related
Catholic Church in Egypt
Dioceses
Churches
Former dioceses
See also
Sui iuris particular churches of the Catholic Church
By ecclesiastical jurisdiction
Patriarchal churches
Ancient patriarchates
Junior patriarchates
Major archiepiscopal churches
Metropolitan churches
Other sui iuris churches
Categories: