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This is a list of Catholic seminaries in the world, including those that have been closed. According to the 2012 Pontifical Yearbook, the total number of candidates for the priesthood in the world was 118,990 at the end of the year 2010.
Pages in category "Catholic seminaries in the United States" The following 80 pages are in this category, out of 80 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
Malpan Seminary with University status in Kottapuram/ Pallipuram Established by Patriarch of Church of The East in AD 450 for Malabar, later seminary was shifted to Mananam and dissolved in St.Joseph's Seminary of Syro - Malabar Church CMI fathers
St. Joseph's Seminary - major seminary run by the Josephites, founded in 1888; later an independent academic seminary, but residential-only beginning in the early 1970s Epiphany Apostolic College - former minor seminary run by the Josephites; founded in Baltimore in 1889 and later moved near Newburgh in 1925; eventually closed for seminary ...
Roman Catholic St. Charles Borromeo Seminary: Wynnewood, Pennsylvania: Timothy Senior (Rector) 1970: Roman Catholic St. John Vianney Theological Seminary: Denver, Colorado: Michael Glenn (Rector) 2008: Roman Catholic St. John's Seminary (California) Camarillo, California: Craig Cox (Rector and President) 1976: Roman Catholic St. Joseph's ...
Manhattanville University (Purchase, New York) – ended affiliation with the Catholic Church in 1971; Marist College (Poughkeepsie, New York) – ownership transferred to a lay board of trustees in 1969 [4] Marymount Manhattan College (New York, New York) Maryville University (St. Louis, Missouri) – renounced affiliation with the Catholic ...
Pages in category "Catholic seminaries" The following 76 pages are in this category, out of 76 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. ...
Pope St. John XXIII National Seminary (formerly Blessed John XXIII National Seminary) is a Roman Catholic seminary in Weston, Massachusetts. It offers a graduate-level program designed for priesthood candidates aged 30 and above, often called "second-career vocations" or "delayed vocations".