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This is a dynamic list and may never be able to satisfy particular standards for completeness. You can help by adding missing items with reliable sources. This is a timeline of Argentine history, comprising important legal and territorial changes and political events in Argentina and its predecessor states. To read about the background to these events, see History of Argentina. See also the ...
Interior area only for the upper church / upper floor. [47] Cathedral of La Plata: 6,968 [citation needed] 1884–1932 La Plata Argentina: Catholic Largest church in Argentina [citation needed] Saint Joseph's Oratory: 6,825 [citation needed] 1904–1967 Montreal Canada: Catholic The largest church in Canada Shrine of St. Paulina: 6,740 [48 ...
In 2023, The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints claims 474,985 followers in Argentina (their seventh-largest congregation in the world). [ 36 ] According to the World Christian Database in 2022, Argentines are 88.77% Christian, 6.9% agnostic, 2% Muslim, 0.4% Jewish, and 0.9% atheist, with no other category exceeding 0.3%.
Metropolitan Cathedral of the Most Holy Trinity: Buenos Aires — Buenos Aires — 1620: Cathedral of Our Lady of the Rosary: Cafayate Salta: Cafayate: Salta 1969: Cathedral of Saint Florentina: Campana Buenos Aires: Zárate-Campana: Mercedes-Luján 1976: Cathedral of Our Lady of Mercy: Chascomús Buenos Aires: Chascomús: La Plata: 1980 ...
On the same day that the martyr Hector Valdivielso Sáez – the first Argentine saint – gave his life on October 9, the International Eucharistic Congress of 1934 began that marked a revival of Argentine Catholicism, a milestone from which a new life of the Church in Argentina, the dioceses increased, vocations grew, new parishes were built ...
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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 ...