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The Metropolitan Cathedral of the Most Holy Trinity (Spanish: Catedral Metropolitana de la Santísima Trinidad), is a Roman Catholic Cathedral in Buenos Aires, the capital city of Argentina. [3] It is located in the city center, overlooking Plaza de Mayo, on the corner of San Martín and Rivadavia streets, in the San Nicolás neighbourhood.
Annunciation Cathedral in Buenos Aires (Russian Orthodox) [2] Cathedral of the Resurrection in Buenos Aires (Russian Orthodox Church Outside Russia) [3] Cathedral of the Dormition of the Theotokos in Buenos Aires (Greek Orthodox Patriarchate of Constantinople) [4] St. George Antiochian Orthodox Cathedral, Buenos Aires
The Metropolitan Cathedral (Spanish: Catedral Metropolitana de Buenos Aires) is the main Catholic church in Buenos Aires. It is located in the city centre, overlooking Plaza de Mayo, on the corner of San Martín and Rivadavia streets, in the San Nicolás neighbourhood.
Buenos Aires Metropolitan Cathedral; Cathedral of La Plata; Córdoba Cathedral, Argentina; Cathedral Basilica of Our Lady of the Rosary; San Isidro Cathedral; Basilicas
At the beginning of the twentieth century, Buenos Aires was the second largest Catholic city in the world after Paris. [5] [6] In 2014 the Archdiocese pastorally served 2,721,000 Catholics (91.6% of 2,971,000 total) in an area of 205 km 2 in 186 parishes and 183 missions with 783 priests (456 diocesan, 327 religious), 11 deacons, 1,915 lay religious (477 brothers, 1,438 sisters) and 53 ...
Buenos Aires Metropolitan Cathedral; C. Cathedral of the Most Holy Trinity, Buenos Aires; O. Our Lady of Narek Cathedral, Buenos Aires; S. St. George Antiochian ...
An archbishop of Buenos Aires, Cardinal Jorge Bergoglio (now Pope Francis), SJ, was elected as pope on 13 March 2013. Buenos Aires Metropolitan Cathedral, the seat of the archbishop, also houses the remains of General José de San Martín in a mausoleum. [8]
Not to be confused with the metropolitan cathedral of Latin rite of the Holy Trinity, the cathedral of the military bishopric also of Latin rite or the Armenian Catholic Cathedral of Our Lady of Narek, all in the city of Buenos Aires. In its beginnings, in 1905, the temple was a chapel next to a school. Its current building was inaugurated in 2001.