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Archdiocese of Ljubljana

Archdiocese of Ljubljana
Archiodioecesis Labacensis
Nadškofija Ljubljana
NadskofijaStolnica-Ljubljana.JPG
Location
Country Slovenia
Statistics
Population
- Total
- Catholics
(as of 2013)
776,336
554,417 (71.4%)
Information
Rite Latin Rite
Established 6 December 1461
Cathedral St. Nicholas's Cathedral
Current leadership
Pope Francis
Metropolitan Archbishop Stanislav Zore OFM
Suffragans Diocese of Koper
Diocese of Novo Mesto
Auxiliary Bishops Anton Jamnik, Franc Šuštar
Emeritus Bishops

Franc Rode CM, Archbishop Emeritus (1997-2004), Cardinal Prefect Emeritus (2004-2011)

Alojzij Uran, Archbishop Emeritus (2004-2009)

Anton Stres CM, Archbishop Emeritus (2009-2013)
Website
Website of the Archdiocese

Franc Rode CM, Archbishop Emeritus (1997-2004), Cardinal Prefect Emeritus (2004-2011)

Alojzij Uran, Archbishop Emeritus (2004-2009)

The Roman Catholic Metropolitan Archdiocese of Ljubljana (Slovene: Nadškofija Ljubljana, Latin: Archidioecesis Labacensis) is an ecclesiastical territory or diocese of the Roman Catholic Church in Slovenia.

The archdiocese's motherchurch and thus seat of its archbishop is the Saint Nicholas Cathedral, Ljubljana; it also contains minor basilicas in Brezje and Stična. The See of Ljubljana had been vacant, its former archbishop was, until his 2013 resignation, Anton Stres, who was appointed Archbishop of Ljubljana, and thus Primate of Slovenia, by Pope Benedict XVI on 28 November 2009. On Saturday, 4 October 2014, Pope Francis appointed the Reverend Father Stane Zore, OFM, as Archbishop-elect of the Archdiocese of Ljubljana, who until then had been serving for a second time as Minister Provincial of his order and as Chairman of the Conference of Men and Women Religious in Slovenia (KORUS).

From 811, the territory of the Ljubljana Archdiocese was part of the ecclesiastical territory of the Patriarch of Aquileia. Frederick III, Holy Roman Emperor, erected on 6 December 1461 the Diocese of Laibach, which was confirmed six months later, on 6 September 1462, by Pope Pius II. Several days later, it was taken from the jurisprudence of the Aquileia and directly subjected to the Holy See. On 3 March 1787, it became an archdiocese and a metropolis, which it remained until 1807, when it was for political reasons degraded to a common diocese.


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