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Archeparchy of Polotsk–Vitebsk (Ruthenian Uniate Church)

Eastern Catholic ecclesiastical territory in Poland-Lithuania (1596-1839) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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The Archeparchy of Polotsk-Vitebsk was an archeparchy of the Ruthenian Uniate Church that was situated in the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth. From 1596 to 1839, it was a suffragan eparchy of the Metropolis of Kiev, Galicia and all Ruthenia. The cathedral church of the archeparchy was Cathedral of Saint Sophia in the city of Polotsk.

History

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Eastern Catholic eparchies within the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth in 1772. The most northerly one, in brown, is the Archeparchy of Polotsk

Previously an Eastern Orthodox eparchy founded in 992 and headed by a suffragan bishop of the Kiev Metropolitan in Vilnius, in 1596 the eparchy of Polotsk, entered in full communion with the Catholic Church as a Greek Catholic Church through the Union of Brest. The eparchy was among the first that joined the union in 1596 along with eparchies of Kiev, Pinsk, Lutsk, Volodymyr and Kholm. Due to the Union of Brest, Belarus, the former Orthodox Church became known as the Ruthenian Uniate Church.

To the archeparchy of Polotsk were later added the territories of the eparchy of Mstislav (also of 13th-century origin) and the 10th-century eparchies of Orsha and Vitebsk.[1][2]

Due to its proximity to Vilnius, the eparchy played a key role in the church life and many of its bishops later became the Metropolitan bishops of Kiev, a hierarch of the Ruthenian Uniate Church. Those include Havryil Kolenda, Kyprian Zochovskyj, Lev Zalenskyj and many others.

In the 1800s, the archeparchy was classified by the Catholic Church as a Ruthenian jurisdiction.[3]

The Russian imperial government (re)united the archeparchy on 25 March 1839 to the Russian Orthodox Church after the Council of Polotsk.[4] It has no official Catholic successor (even if a new Belarusian Greek Catholic Church was founded, the current Apostolic administrator is Sergiusz Gajek).

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Episcopal ordinaries

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(Byzantine Rite)

Non-metropolitan Ruthenian Catholic Archeparchs of Polotsk(-Vitebsk) :[5][6]
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Catholic cathedral of St.Sophia, Polotsk
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See also

References

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