Roman Catholic Diocese of Nkongsamba

Coordinates: 4°57′15″N 9°55′50″E / 4.9541°N 9.9305°E / 4.9541; 9.9305
Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

The Roman Catholic Diocese of Nkongsamba (

.

Its

.

Statistics

As of 2014, it pastorally served 148,062 Catholics (42.4% of 349,270 total) on 4,057 km2 in 505 parishes, 3 missions with 80 priests (67 diocesan, 13 religious), 130 lay religious (41 brothers, 89 sisters) and 40 seminarians.

History

Established on April 28, 1914, as

Apostolic Vicariate of Khartoum, in the then Anglo-Egyptian Sudan
.

Renamed on June 11, 1923, as Apostolic Prefecture of Foumban, after its see F(o)umban.

Promoted on May 28, 1934, as

Apostolic Vicariate
of Foumban, hence entitled to a (titular) bishop.

It lost territory repeatedly :

  • on May 28, 1940, to establish the
    Apostolic Prefecture of Berbérati
    (now a bishopric in Central African Republic)
  • April 28, 1942, to establish the then
    Apostolic Prefecture of Niamey
    (in Niger)
  • January 9, 1947, to establish the
    Apostolic Prefecture of Fort-Lamy
    (Chad)

On September 14, 1955, it was promoted and renamed as Diocese of Nkongsamba after its present see.

Bishops

Ordinaries

(all

Roman rite
)

Apostolic Prefects of Adamaua
  • Father Gerhard Lennartz, Dehonians (S.C.I.) (April 29, 1914 – 1919)
  • Fr. Joseph Donatien Plissonneau, S.C.I. (February 7, 1920 – June 11, 1923 see below)
Apostolic Prefects of Foumban
  • Fr. Joseph Donatien Plissonneau, S.C.I. (see above June 11, 1923 – 1930)
  • Fr. Paul Bouque, S.C.I. (October 28, 1930 – May 28, 1934 see below)
Apostolic Vicar of Foumban
  • Paul Bouque, S.C.I. (see above May 28, 1934 – September 14, 1955 see below),
    Vagada
Suffragan Bishops of Nkongsamba

Other priest of this diocese who became bishop

See also

  • Roman Catholicism in Cameroon

References

External links

4°57′15″N 9°55′50″E / 4.9541°N 9.9305°E / 4.9541; 9.9305