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The Diocese of Baguio (Latin: Dioecesis Baghiopolitana) is a Latin Church suffragan diocese of the Catholic Church in the Philippines comprising the city of Baguio and the province of Benguet on Luzon island in the Philippines. Its see is the Our Lady of Atonement Cathedral in Baguio, Benguet, Cordillera Administrative Region.
During the Second World War, the cathedral served as an evacuation center, and was the only building in Baguio that withstood the carpet-bombing of the city by American forces during liberation on March 15, 1945. Former Baguio mayor Virginia de Guia, recalled that refugees "packed the church like sardines when the airplanes came". [2]
Metropolitan Cathedral of the Conversion of Saint Paul the Apostle: Conversion of Saint Paul: August 14, 1595 (429 years, 121 days) Minor Basilica of Saint Nicholas of Tolentino and Shrine of El Santo Cristo Milagroso: none: 42 parishes and 1 mission station Diocese of Baguio Dioecesis Baghiopolitana: Rafael T. Cruz (87 days) Benguet and Baguio ...
Saint Augustine Parish Church (Baliwag) Barasoain Church; Diocesan Shrine and Parish of Nuestra Señora de la Asuncion; Guiguinto Church; Immaculate Conception Parish Church (Santa Maria)
Cathedral of St. James the Greater Santiago, Isabela Church building founded: 1924 Episcopal jurisdiction: All parishes and missions within the southern territory of the Province of Isabela. Diocese of Northern Isabela (DioNI) Alvin V. Valera Cathedral of St. Joseph the Worker San Jose, Delfin Albano, Isabela Church building founded: 1924
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After a lull for almost a decade, a group of Belgian CICM missionaries led by Constance Jurgens and Jules Sepulchre arrived in Bontoc in time to celebrate a midnight mass on 24 December 1907 On 10 June 1948, Pope Pius XII established the Apostolic Vicariate of the Mountain Province, formerly known as the Apostolic Prefecture of the Montañosa .
In January 1905, the National Cathedral was inaugurated and blessed. Also known as the Tondo Cathedral, the church stood on a 2,000-square-meter lot at 227 (formerly 111) Calle Azcarraga (now Claro M. Recto Avenue), but was totally destroyed on February 6, 1945, through the indiscriminate bombing by American forces during World War II. Felix de ...