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Tuguegarao Cathedral

Tuguegarao Cathedral
Saint Peter Metropolitan Cathedral
JC Tuguegarao 2.jpg
Tuguegarao Cathedral is located in Philippines
Tuguegarao Cathedral
Tuguegarao Cathedral
Location in the Philippines
17°36′49″N 121°43′50″E / 17.613592°N 121.730503°E / 17.613592; 121.730503Coordinates: 17°36′49″N 121°43′50″E / 17.613592°N 121.730503°E / 17.613592; 121.730503
Location Rizal St., Centro 8, Tuguegarao, Cagayan
Country Philippines
Denomination Roman Catholic
History
Dedicated 1761, 2014
Architecture
Functional status Active
Architect(s) Fr. Antonio Lobato, OP
Architectural type Cathedral
Style Baroque, Barn-style Baroque
Groundbreaking 1761
Completed 1768
Specifications
Materials Sand, gravel, cement, mortar, steel and bricks
Administration
Archdiocese Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Tuguegarao
Province Ecclesiastical Province of Tuguegarao
Clergy
Archbishop Most Reverend Father Sergio Lasam Utleg, DD
Priest(s) Msgr. Gerard Ariston Perez

The Saint Peter Metropolitan Cathedral, also known as the Tuguegarao Cathedral, is an 18th-century Baroque church located along Rizal Street, Barangay Centro 10, Tuguegarao, Cagayan, Philippines. The church, originally built by Dominican friars, is the seat of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Tuguegarao and is considered as one of the largest churches in the Cagayan Valley. A historical marker bearing a brief history of the church was installed in 1982 by the National Historical Institute, precursor of the National Historical Commission of the Philippines.

Tuguegarao was founded as a mission on May 9, 1604 by Dominican friars. Father Tomas Villa was assigned as its first vicar. Father Villa erected a temporary parochial structure made of light materials with Saint Peter and Saint Paul as patron saints. The current church is attributed to Father Antonio Lobato, OP who initiated the construction in 1761 and was completed in 1768.The reason why it is called "Cathedral" is because of the chair of the Archbishop The church sustained heavy damage during World War II and was subsequently rebuilt by Monsignor Bishop Constance Jurgens.

The cathedral’s façade is described as whimsical and playful. Most notable of all its features is the broken and crested pediment that is mirrored in other churches in the Cagayan Valley namely, the churches of Dupax del Sur and Bambang and Saint Dominic’s Cathedral in Nueva Vizcaya. Archival photos of the Calasiao Church in Pangasinan also showed that it once had the “Cagayan-style” pediment. Other notable architectural features of the church are consistently repeated on many of its parts and on the Ermita de San Jacinto, a Spanish-era brick chapel located on the opposite site of the Tuguegarao city proper.


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