The Diocese of WÃ
ÂocÃ
Âawek () is a Latin Church ecclesiastical territory or diocese of the Catholic Church in Poland. It is a suffragan in the ecclesiastical province of the Metropolitan Archdiocese of Gniezno. Until the 20th century, it was known as the Diocese of Kujawy.
The bishops' seat is WÃ
ÂocÃ
Âawek Cathedral, also a minor basilica: in the city of WÃ
ÂocÃ
Âawek, in Kujawsko-Pomorskie. <br>The diocese has two more Minor Basilicas:
The diocese is currently headed by Bishop Krzysztof Jakub WÃÂtkowski, appointed in 2021.
History
- We disregard the presumably merely-legendary precursor(?) Diocese of Kruszwica (966âÂÂ1156)
- Established in 1015 as Diocese of KujawyâÂÂPomorze (i.e. KujawyâÂÂPomerania) / Kruszwicka (Polish) / CuiaviaâÂÂPomerania (Curiate Italian), on territory split off from the suppressed Diocese of Kolberg (KoÃ
Âobrzeg)
- Renamed in 1148 as Diocese of KujawyâÂÂPomorze / CuiaviaâÂÂPomerania (Italiano) / since ca. 1124/26 called WÃ
ÂocÃ
Âawek after its see
- Theological seminary in WÃ
ÂocÃ
Âawek founded in 1569 by Bishop StanisÃ
Âaw Karnkowski as one of the oldest seminaries in Poland.
- Gained territory in 1633 from the Diocese of PÃ
Âock
- Renamed on 30 June 1818 as Diocese of KujawyâÂÂKaliska / CuiaviaâÂÂKalisz (Italiano), having lost territories to its Metropolitan the Archdiocese of Gniezno, to Diocese of PoznaÃ
Â, to Diocese of WrocÃ
Âaw and to Diocese of PÃ
Âock.
- Renamed on 28 Oct 1925 after its see as Diocese of WÃ
ÂocÃ
Âawek / Wladislavia / Vladislavien(sis) (Latin adjective)
- During the German occupation of Poland (World War II), the Germans murdered 249 priests from the Diocese of WÃ
ÂocÃ
Âawek, including the Auxiliary Bishop of WÃ
ÂocÃ
Âawek MichaÃ
 Kozal, closed down the cathedral, and robbed the precious historical collections of the diocese of WÃ
ÂocÃ
Âawek.
- Lost territory on 25 March 1992 to establish the Diocese of Kalisz.
- It enjoyed Papal visits from the Polish Pope John Paul II in June 1991 and June 1999.
- In 2018 the WÃ
ÂocÃ
Âawek Cathedral was listed by the President of Poland as a Historic Monument of Poland.
Statistics
As of 2022, it pastorally served 748,506 Catholics (98.7% of 758,348 total) on 8,824 kmò in 233 parishes and 126 missions with 566 priests (460 diocesan, 106 religious), 463 lay religious (148 brothers, 315 sisters) and 24 seminarians.
Episcopal ordinaries
Imported from List of bishops of Kujawy (WÃ
ÂocÃ
Âawek) and amended; sources contradict often, notably in the first centuries:
Suffragan Bishops of KujawyâÂÂPomorze
:(KujawyâÂÂPomerania, WÃ
ÂocÃ
Âawek; 1133âÂÂ1818)
Suffragan Bishops of KujawyâÂÂKaliska
Suffragan Bishops of WÃ
ÂocÃ
Âawek
Auxiliary bishops
- 1514âÂÂ? â Aleksander Myszczynski
- 1581âÂÂ1585 â Maciej Wielicki
- 1597âÂÂ1617 â Franciszek Lanczki
- 1617âÂÂ1632 â Balthasar Miaskowski
- 1634âÂÂ1638 â Krzysztof Charbicki
- 1639âÂÂ1643 â Wenceslaus Paprocki
- 1643âÂÂ1652 â Piotr Mieszkowski (starszy)
- 1652âÂÂ? â Walerian Wilczogórski
- 1653âÂÂ1677 â StanisÃ
Âaw Domaniewski
- 1678âÂÂ1696 â Piotr Mieszkowski (mÃ
Âodszy)
- 1695âÂÂ? â Andreas Albinowski
- 1709âÂÂ1723 â Wojciech Ignacy BardziÃ
Âski
- 1725âÂÂ1736 â Franciszek Antoni Kobielski
- 1737âÂÂ1739 â Aleksander DziaÃ
ÂyÃ
Âski
- 1740âÂÂ1759 â Franciszek Kanigowski
- 1759âÂÂ1788 â Jan Dembowski
- 1766âÂÂ1775 â Cyprian Kazimierz von Wolicki
- 1775âÂÂ1781 â Maciej Grzegorz Garnysz
- 1781âÂÂ1799 â Ludwik StanisÃ
Âaw Górski
- 1789âÂÂ1793 â Marcin Chyczewski
- 1794âÂÂ1819 â Feliks Ã
Âukasz LewiÃ
Âski
- 1819âÂÂ1825 â Józef Marcelin DziÃÂcielski
- 1838âÂÂ1844 â Józef Joachim Goldtmann
- 1844âÂÂ1861 â Taddeo Ã
ÂubieÃ
Âski
- 1884âÂÂ1898 â Carlo Pollner
- 1884âÂÂ1889 â Henryk Piotr Kossowski
- 1918âÂÂ1938 â Wojciech StanisÃ
Âaw Owczarek
- 1918âÂÂ1927 â WÃ
ÂadysÃ
Âaw PaweÃ
 Krynicki, Appointed Bishop of WÃ
ÂocÃ
Âawek
- 1939âÂÂ1943 â Bl. Michaël Kozal
- 1962âÂÂ1979 â Kazimierz Jan MajdaÃ
Âski
- 1946âÂÂ1972 â Franciszek Salezy KorszyÃ
Âski
- 1963âÂÂ1969 â Jan Zareba, Appointed Bishop of WÃ
ÂocÃ
Âawek
- 1973âÂÂ1997 â Czeslaw Lewandowski
- 1981âÂÂ2003 â Roman Andrzejewski
- 1999âÂÂ2020 â StanisÃ
Âaw GÃÂbicki
See also
References
Sources and external links