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Odoric Cheng Hede

Cheng Hede (; 22 July 1873 - 14 November 1928) was a Chinese Roman Catholic Bishop of Roman Catholic Diocese of Hubei, China.

Biography

Cheng was born in Laohekou, Hubei, in 1873. Cheng primarily studied at Chayuangou Catholic Church ().

As a child, Cheng traveled to Italy with his family and joined the Franciscans.

In 1903 he returned to China. Cheng worked as a seminary administrator and professor. In 1903, he became vice president of Chayuangou Catholic Church, where he worked there for 14 years. He wrote piety books and historical works, translated Saint Francis of Assisi's rule from Italian to Chinese, and wrote an Italian grammar book intended for Chinese readers.

In 1923, Celso Benigno Luigi Costantini appointed Cheng as apostolic prefect in Puqi.

In 1926, he and five other Chinese priests (Philippus Zhao Huaiyi, Simon Zhu Kaimin, Joseph Hu Ruoshan, Melchior Sun De-zhen, and Aloysius Chen Guodi) were consecrated in Rome and became the first Chinese Catholic Bishops in modern times. The Holy See framed these consecrations as an important moment for indigenizing the Catholic Church. After leaving Rome, the new bishops toured Italy, France, Belgium, and Holland where crowds of local European Catholics greeted them.

Cheng returned to China in 1927. He served as Bishop in Puqi until his death.

He died in Hengyang, Hunan, on November 13, 1928. He was buried in Puqi.

References