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Diocese of Monmouth

 
British History: diocese of Monmouth

The diocese was created out of the ancient see of Llandaff in 1921, and is virtually conterminous with the county of Gwent. It is the smallest in the Church in Wales, few parishes being more than 25 miles from the cathedral. When the diocese was formed, there was no obvious choice for a cathedral. In the event, the parish church of St Woolo in Newport, the most populous town, was chosen.

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Wikipedia: Diocese of Monmouth
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Monmouth
Arms of Monmouth
Province Wales
Bishop Bishop of Monmouth
Cathedral Newport Cathedral
Archdeaconries Monmouth, Newport
Parishes
Membership
Website http://www.churchinwales.org.uk/monmouth/

The Diocese of Monmouth is a diocese of the Church in Wales. Despite the name, its cathedral is located not in Monmouth but in Newport — the Cathedral Church of St Woolos. Reasons for not choosing the title of Newport included the existence of a Catholic Bishop of Newport until 1916. This apparent anomaly arose in 1921 when the diocese was created (from the eastern part of the Diocese of Llandaff) with no location for the cathedral yet chosen. Various options were being considered, such as restoring Tintern Abbey, building from scratch on Ridgeway Hill in Newport, and (the eventual choice) upgrading St. Woolos, then a parish church; in the meantime the new diocese, as it covers more or less the territory of the county of Monmouth, was named the "Diocese of Monmouth". Prior to 1921 the area had been the archdeaconry of Monmouth.

It is headed by the Bishop of Monmouth, at present the Rt Revd Dominic Walker OGS (elected in 2003).

In its own words, the diocese "covers the south east corner of Wales, from Monmouth south to Chepstow, westwards along the 'M4 corridor' to Newport and the outskirts of Cardiff, northwards into the south eastern valleys and east into the rural areas around Usk, Raglan, Abergavenny and the Herefordshire border".

In local government terms, the territory of the diocese covers the City of Newport, Monmouthshire, the county borough of Torfaen, part of the county boroughs of Blaenau Gwent and Caerphilly, part of the City of Cardiff, and a small part of Herefordshire.

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British History. A Dictionary of British History. Copyright © 2001, 2004 by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Diocese of Monmouth" Read more