Diocese of Leicester | |
---|---|
Location | |
Ecclesiastical province | Canterbury |
Archdeaconries | Leicester, Loughborough |
Statistics | |
Parishes | 234 |
Churches | 324 |
Information | |
Cathedral | Leicester Cathedral, 680–c. 870 & 1927–present |
Current leadership | |
Bishop | Martyn Snow, Bishop of Leicester |
Suffragan | Christopher Boyle, Assistant Bishop of Leicester |
Archdeacons |
David Newman, Archdeacon of Loughborough Tim Stratford, Archdeacon of Leicester |
Website | |
leicester.anglican.org |
The Diocese of Leicester is a Church of England diocese based in Leicester and including the current county of Leicestershire. The cathedral is Leicester Cathedral, where the Bishop of Leicester has his episcopal chair.
The diocese is divided into two archdeaconries, the Archdeaconry of Leicester in the east of the county and the Archdeaconry of Loughborough in the west. The former is divided into the rural deaneries of City of Leicester; Framland (Melton Mowbray); Gartree First and Second; and Goscote. The latter is divided into the rural deaneries of Akeley East, South and West; Guthlaxton; and Sparkenhoe East and West.
The diocese owns a retreat house at Launde Abbey near East Norton.
The Middle Angles first had a bishopric in 680 and the Anglo-Saxon cathedral was probably located close to (if not on the site of) the present cathedral. The original diocese fell victim to the invasion by the Danes around 870 and after the establishment of the Danelaw in 886 the diocese's seat was moved to Oxfordshire and, taking over the existing Diocese of Lindine (created in 678), became the Diocese of Dorchester. From Dorchester, Oxfordshire, the see was later moved to Lincoln in 1072 under King William I, the diocese then becoming the Diocese of Lincoln. Henry VIII divided the larger dioceses at the time of the English Reformation and the Diocese of Lincoln was divided in three. Leicestershire was included in the new Diocese of Peterborough. In 1539 a new cathedral was being erected,((cn)) but it was never completed and Peterborough was chosen as the seat of the new diocese and Peterborough Abbey as the cathedral.