Revision as of 15:42, 10 April 2005 edit80.53.132.100 (talk)No edit summary← Previous edit | Revision as of 17:26, 10 April 2005 edit undo80.53.132.100 (talk)No edit summaryNext edit → | ||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
'''The Autocephalous Church of Poland''' (AKA The Polish Orthodox Church) is one of the independent ]. The church was established in 1924 to accommodate Orthodox Christians in the districts of ] and ] acquired by ] after ]. This was in the beginning protested against by the Patriarch of ]. After ] the vast majority of these territories was returned to the ]. Only a small number of Church members remained in Polish lands. In 1948 the Church was granted a new charter of autocephaly by the Russian Patriarchate. | '''The Autocephalous Church of Poland''' (AKA The Polish Orthodox Church) is one of the independent ]. The church was established in 1924 to accommodate Orthodox Christians in the districts of ] and ] acquired by ] after ]. This was in the beginning protested against by the Patriarch of ]. After ] the vast majority of these territories was returned to the ]. Only a small number of Church members remained in Polish lands. In 1948 the Church was granted a new charter of autocephaly by the Russian Patriarchate. | ||
The church is headed by the Metropolitan of ]. It is divided into |
The church is headed by the Metropolitan of ]. It is divided into six dioceses: Warsaw and ], ] and ], ] and ], ] and ], ] and ], ] and ]. It has approximately three-quarters of a million adherents. | ||
Revision as of 17:26, 10 April 2005
The Autocephalous Church of Poland (AKA The Polish Orthodox Church) is one of the independent Orthodox churches. The church was established in 1924 to accommodate Orthodox Christians in the districts of Ukraine and Belarus acquired by Poland after WW1. This was in the beginning protested against by the Patriarch of Russia. After WW2 the vast majority of these territories was returned to the Soviet Union. Only a small number of Church members remained in Polish lands. In 1948 the Church was granted a new charter of autocephaly by the Russian Patriarchate.
The church is headed by the Metropolitan of Warsaw. It is divided into six dioceses: Warsaw and Bielsk, Bialystok and Gdansk, Lódz and Poznan, Wroclaw and Szczecin, Lublin and Chelm, Przemysl and Nowy Sacz. It has approximately three-quarters of a million adherents.
Categories: