Diocese of Durham | |
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old map of the bishopric of Durham
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Location | |
Ecclesiastical province | York |
Archdeaconries | Auckland, Durham, Sunderland |
Statistics | |
Parishes | 249 |
Churches | 292 |
Information | |
Cathedral | Durham Cathedral |
Current leadership | |
Bishop | Paul Butler, Bishop of Durham |
Suffragans | Mark Bryant, Bishop of Jarrow |
Archdeacons |
Ian Jagger, Archdeacon of Durham Rick Simpson, Archdeacon of Auckland Bob Cooper, Archdeacon-designate of Sunderland |
Website | |
durham.anglican.org |
Coordinates: 54°43′01″N 1°35′38″W / 54.717°N 1.594°W
The Diocese of Durham is a Church of England diocese, based in Durham, and covering the historic County Durham (and therefore including the part of Tyne and Wear south of the River Tyne, and excluding southern Teesdale). It was created in AD 635 as the Diocese of Lindisfarne. The cathedral is Durham Cathedral and the bishop is the Bishop of Durham who used to live at Auckland Castle, Bishop Auckland, and still has his office there. The diocese's administrative centre, the Diocesan Office, is located at Cuthbert House, Stonebridge just outside Durham City. This was opened in 2015.
The line of bishops of Durham stretches back to the 10th century, when Aldhun, Bishop of Lindisfarne (995–1018), transferred his see to Durham around 995. The diocese was founded, with its See at Lindisfarne, in 635; until the See was removed from there around 875 and translated to Chester-le-Street (Cuncacestre) in around 882.