- Diocese of Glasgow and Galloway
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Coordinates: 55°49′34″N 4°19′12″W / 55.826°N 4.320°W
This article is about the diocese of the Scottish Episcopal Church. For the Catholic dioceses, see Archdiocese of Glasgow and Diocese of GallowayDiocese of Glasgow and Galloway Location Ecclesiastical province Scotland Statistics Congregations 65 Information Cathedral St. Mary's Cathedral, Glasgow Current leadership Bishop Bishop of Glasgow and Galloway Website glasgow.anglican.org The Diocese of Glasgow and Galloway is one of the seven dioceses of the Scottish Episcopal Church. It covers Dumfries and Galloway, Ayrshire, Lanarkshire (including Glasgow), Dunbartonshire, Renfrewshire and west Stirlingshire (south of the River Forth). The diocesan centre is St. Mary's Cathedral, Glasgow.
Contents
History
The Diocese of Glasgow and Galloway is a union of two of the oldest dioceses in Scotland. The Diocese of Galloway (also known as Candida Casa or Whithorn) is thought to have been founded by Saint Ninian in the 5th century. The Diocese of Glasgow is thought to have been founded by Saint Mungo (or Kentigern) around 550. On 9 January 1492, the Diocese of Glasgow was raised in rank to be an archdiocese. During the Scottish Reformation, the heritage and jurisdiction of the church passed into the hands of Church of Scotland. However, the small Scottish Episcopal Church continued the line of bishops of both diocese, even though, in the 16th century, many of them held the office in title alone. In 1697, the Diocese of Galloway was united with the Diocese of Edinburgh. In 1708 the episcopal line experienced a hiatus before continuing with Alexander Duncan, in 1731, as Bishop (rather than Archbishop) of Glasgow. However, when Duncan died two years after his appointment as bishop, the see fell vacant once more. In 1787, William Abernethy Drummond became Bishop of Edinburgh and Galloway and Bishop of Brechin in a temporary personal union of the dioceses. To this he added the then vacant see of Glasgow in union with Edinburgh and Galloway. Within a year, Drummond gave way to John Strachan as the newly appointed Bishop of Brechin, and, in 1805, resigned from the united see of Edinburgh and Galloway (to Daniel Sandford) to focus on ministry in Glasgow. Drummond continued as Bishop of Glasgow until his death in 1809, when the see was reunited with Edinburgh and Galloway. In 1837, James Walker, bishop of the triple see and Primus, gave way to Michael Russell to be the first modern Bishop of Glasgow and Galloway. In 1878, the Roman Catholic Church formed a new, rival Archdiocese of Glasgow and Diocese of Galloway in its modern structures. In 1888, the counties of Selkirkshire, Peeblesshire and Roxburghshire, which were historically part of the Diocese of Galloway, were transferred from the Episcopalian Diocese of Glasgow and Galloway back to Edinburgh.
Gregor Duncan was elected the fourteenth bishop of the diocese on 16 January 2010.[1] He was consecrated and enthroned as bishop on 23 April 2010.[2]
Companion Dioceses
The Diocese of Glasgow and Galloway has companion links with the Episcopal Diocese of Byumba (Rwanda), the Episcopal Diocese of Kentucky (ECUSA) and the Lutheran Diocese of Gothenburg, Sweden.
See also
- Presbytery of Glasgow (Church of Scotland)
- Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Glasgow
References
- ^ "The Very Rev Dr Gregor Duncan elected as Bishop". 16 January 2010. http://www.glasgow.anglican.org/index.php/news/entry/the_very_rev_dr_gregor_duncan_elected_as_bishop/. Retrieved 30 January 2010.
- ^ Scottish Episcopal Church Website item, April 23, 2010
Province of Scotland Aberdeen & Orkney • Argyll & The Isles • Brechin • Edinburgh • Glasgow & Galloway • Moray, Ross & Caithness • St Andrews, Dunkeld & Dunblane
Categories:- Dioceses of the Scottish Episcopal Church
- Christianity in Glasgow
- Christianity in Dumfries and Galloway
- Christianity in Renfrewshire
- Christianity in South Ayrshire
- Christianity in North Lanarkshire
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