Italo-Albanian Church
Latin Ecclesia Italo-Albanica , Italian Chiesa Cattolica Italo-Albanese Albanian Kisha Bizantine Arbëreshe |
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Basic data | ||
Jurisdiction status | sui iuris | |
rite | Byzantine rite | |
Liturgical language | Koine , Albanian , Italian | |
calendar | Gregorian calendar | |
Establishment date | June 2, 1784 | |
statistics | ||
Jurisdictions | 3 | |
Believers | 62,000 | |
Bishops | 2 | |
Parishes | 45 | |
Diocesan priest | 71 | |
Religious priest | 9 | |
Permanent deacons | 6th | |
Friars | 31 | |
Religious sisters | 168 | |
Stand 2013 |
The Italo-Albanian Church , formerly known as the Italo-Greek Church , is an association of three jurisdictions of the Roman Catholic Church in Italy . These differ from the other jurisdiction districts in Italy by the fact that in them liturgy after Byzantine rite is celebrated and as a liturgical language primarily the Greek and Albanian language be used.
organization
The Italo-Albanian Church consists of two Italo-Albanian dioceses ( eparchies ) and one Italian-Greek territorial abbey:
- the territorial abbey of Santa Maria di Grottaferrata south of Rome in the church region of Latium ,
- the eparchy Lungro in the ecclesiastical region of Calabria and
- the Eparchy Piana degli Albanesi in the ecclesiastical region of Sicily .
These jurisdictions are assigned to the church regions in which they are located. However, they are not subordinate to any church province , but immediately , i.e. H. subordinated directly to the Holy See . Together they form their own conference association . The bishops (Eparchen) of Lungro and Piana degli Albanese and the abbot (Archimandrite) of Grottaferrata also belong to the Italian Bishops 'Conference and the Bishops' Conference of their respective ecclesiastical region.
The Italo-Albanian Church is an integral part of the Roman Catholic Church . The monastery of Santa Maria di Grottaferrata was subordinate to the Pope in Rome before the Eastern Schism and remained so afterwards. The Albanians who immigrated to Italy entered into communion with the Roman Pope without a union ever being formally concluded. The two Italian-Albanian bishoprics were established by Rome in the 20th century.
There are 98,000 Byzantine Rite Catholics in Italy today. They follow the Gregorian calendar , and besides Greek, Albanian and Italian are liturgical languages today .
history
The oldest part of the Italo-Albanian church is the Santa Maria di Grottaferrata monastery. It was founded in 1004 by Nilus von Rossano , a Greek from what was then Byzantine Calabria . After the schism of 1054, the monastery remained subordinate to the Pope, but held on to the celebration of the liturgy in the Byzantine rite.
The Albanian communities of the Byzantine rite came into being when around 40,000 Albanian religious refugees settled in Italy at the end of the 15th century . They had fled Epirus and southern Albania before the Ottoman conquest and were given places in sparsely populated regions in southern Italy and Sicily , where they founded their own communities. There they form the Arbëresh ethnic group , whose members still speak Albanian today. The Albanians were also able to retain their church customs in their new homeland.
The Greeks, who descended from the ancient colonists or who settled there in the course of the Byzantine conquest of southern Italy and Sicily under Justinian I in the 6th century and who were still very numerous in the Middle Ages, received fewer immigrants from Epirus. They are therefore now almost entirely assimilated and, as far as church life is concerned, Latinized.
Initially, the parishes of the Byzantine rite were subordinate to the local Latin bishops. Occasionally a titular bishop of the Greek rite was appointed to look after the Albanians.
With his Bull Pastoralis etsi, issued in 1742, Pope Benedict XIV reorganized the situation of Christians of the Byzantine rite in Italy. Even then, the Roman Church attached great importance to the preservation of the Greco-Albanian communities; Latinization of the rites was not wanted. The Albanian minority's own ecclesiastical traditions in southern Italy have contributed significantly to preserving their identity, language and culture. But there are also a few Albanian-speaking parishes that have adopted the Roman rite over the centuries.
In 1919 the Albanian communities of the Byzantine rite were given their own diocese with the establishment of the Lungro Eparchy, which today includes 27 communities. In 1937, the Eparchy Piana degli Albanesi was established in Sicily as the second diocese with 15 parishes.
In 1940 the three jurisdictions of the Italo-Albanian Church held their first joint synod in the basilica of Grottaferrata, the second followed in 2004 in the same place.
Originally the Catholics of the Byzantine Rite were called Italo-Greeks because of their Greek liturgical language, nowadays the name Italo-Albanians is common because most of these Christians have Albanian roots.
See also
literature
- Liturgia delle ore italo-bizantina. Rito di Grottaferrata ; Introduction and translation into Italian by Stefano Parenti; Monumenta, studia, instrumenta liturgica, 12; Città del Vaticano 2001; ISBN 88-209-7125-9
- Antonio Bellusci: Origjina dhe zhvillimi historik i Eparkisë bizantine arbëreshe e Ungrës në Kalabri dhe mbrojtja e identitetit arbëresh (1439–1919) ; in: Nikë Ukgjini, Willy Kamsi, Romeo Gurakuqi (eds.): Krishterimi ndër Shqiptarë. Simpozium ndërkombëtar, Tiranë, 16-19 nëntor 1999 ; Shkodra 2000; ISBN 99927-690-0-9 ; Pp. 208-225.
- Ercole Lupinacci: Roli ekumenik i Kishës Katolike Arbëreshe ; in: Nikë Ukgjini, Willy Kamsi, Romeo Gurakuqi (eds.): Krishterimi ndër Shqiptarë. Simpozium ndërkombëtar, Tiranë, 16-19 nëntor 1999 ; Shkodra 2000; ISBN 99927-690-0-9 ; Pp. 494-497.
Web links
- The article "Italo-Greeks" in: Catholic Encyclopedia (1908 ff.) (English)
- Website of the Diocese of Lungro ( Memento of May 8, 2006 in the Internet Archive ) (Italian)
- Website of the Eparchy Piana degli Albanesi (Italian)
- Website of the Abbey of Santa Maria di Grottaferrata (Italian)
- Website of the Italo-Byzantine mission in New York (English)
- Entry on Italo-Albanian Church on gcatholic.org (English)
- Entry on Italo-Albanian Church at Pro Oriente
- Small representation of the Italo-Albanian Church at Damian Hungs OT
Individual evidence
- ^ The Eastern Catholic Churches 2013. Catholic Near East Welfare Association, accessed February 9, 2015 .