The Archdiocese of Mexico () is a Latin Church ecclesiastical territory or archdiocese of the Catholic Church that is situated in Mexico City, Mexico. It was erected as a diocese on 2 September 1530 and elevated to an archdiocese on 12 February 1546. The archdiocese is one of the largest in the world, with over four million Catholics, surpassed only by Kinshasa, Guadalajara, São Paulo, Puebla de los ÃÂngeles, Santiago de Guatemala, and Milan.
Prior to 2019, the archdiocese was the largest in the world, with nearly 8 million Catholics. In September 2019, Pope Francis approved the division of the archdiocese, erecting three new suffragan dioceses from its territory: Azcapotzalco, Iztapalapa, and Xochimilco. These are the only three suffragans within the ecclesiastical province of which the archdiocese is the metropolitan see. Today, the archdiocese's territory comprises most of Mexico City, with the exception of the three new dioceses, each of which is coextensive with its eponymous borough.
The cathedra of the archdiocese is found within the Metropolitan Cathedral in Mexico City.
Bishops
Ordinaries
Ordinaries who became Cardinals:
Coadjutor archbishop
Current auxiliary bishops
Former auxiliary bishops
- Juan Manuel de Irrizarri y Peralta (27 April 1840 â 27 March 1849)
- Maximino Ruiz y Flores (8 March 1920 â 11 May 1949)
- Francisco Orozco LomelÃÂn (19 March 1952 â 17 October 1990)
- José Villalón Mercado (1 April 1952 â 12 September 1977)
- Alfredo Torres Romero (30 December 1967 â 4 January 1975), appointed Coadjutor Bishop of Aguascalientes
- Luis Mena Arroyo (13 July 1961 â 1 September 1964), appointed Coadjutor Archbishop of Chihuahua; returned here as Auxiliary Bishop (27 July 1979 â 9 September 1995), with personal title of Archbishop
- Jorge MartÃÂnez MartÃÂnez (5 June 1971 â 1 August 1994)
- Javier Lozano Barragán (5 June 1979 â 28 October 1984), appointed Bishop of Zacatecas; future Cardinal
- Francisco MarÃÂa Aguilera González (5 June 1979 â 12 January 1996)
- Carlos Talavera RamÃÂrez (15 January 1980 â 14 March 1984), appointed Bishop of Coatzacoalcos, Veracruz
- Genaro Alamilla Arteaga (26 January 1980 â 10 October 1989)
- Ricardo Watty Urquidi, M.Sp.S. (27 May 1980 â 6 November 1989), appointed Bishop of Nuevo Laredo, Tamaulipas
- Abelardo Alvarado Alcántara (26 April 1985 â 22 July 2008)
- José de Jesús MartÃÂnez Zepeda (11 March 1997 â 3 January 2004), appointed Bishop of Irapuato, Guanajuato
- Marcelino Hernández RodrÃÂguez (5 January 1998 â 23 February 2008), appointed Bishop of Orizaba, Veracruz
- José Luis Fletes Santana (29 January 2000 â 31 May 2003)
- Guillermo Rodrigo Teodoro Ortiz Mondragón (29 January 2000 â 19 October 2005), appointed Bishop of Cuautitlán, México
- Rogelio Esquivel Medina (27 June 2001 â 27 June 2008)
- Felipe Tejeda GarcÃÂa, M.Sp.S. (29 January 2000 â 30 July 2010)
- Jonás Guerrero Corona (27 June 2001 â 18 March 2011), appointed Bishop of Culiacán, Sinaloa
- Francisco Clavel Gil (27 June 2001 â 28 May 2013)
- Antonio Ortega Franco, C.O. (11 February 2004 â 16 February 2019)
- José VÃÂctor Manuel ValentÃÂn Sánchez Espinosa (2 March 2004 â 5 February 2009), appointed Archbishop of Puebla de los ÃÂngeles, Puebla
- Carlos Briseño Arch, O.A.R. (20 May 2006 â 12 November 2018), appointed Bishop of Veracruz
- Florencio Armando ColÃÂn Cruz (27 November 2008 â 16 February 2019), appointed Bishop of Puerto Escondido, Oaxaca
- Jesús Antonio Lerma Nolasco (7 May 2009 â 28 September 2019), appointed Bishop of Iztapalapa
- Crispin Ojeda Márquez (4 June 2011 â 27 July 2018), appointed Bishop of Tehuantepec, Oaxaca
- Jorge Estrada Solórzano (28 May 2013 â 11 May 2019), appointed Bishop of Gómez Palacio, Durango
- Francisco Daniel Rivera Sánchez, M.Sp.S. (25 January 2020 â died 18 January 2021)
- Carlos Enrique Samaniego López (16 February 2019 â 21 August 2025), appointed Bishop of Texcoco
- Salvador González Morales (16 February 2019 â 6 December 2025)
Other priests of the archdiocese who became bishops
Territorial losses
Education
Colleges, universities, and seminaries
Secondary schools
Former colleges, universities, and seminaries
References
External links and references