Roman Catholic diocese in Ukraine
The Roman Catholic Diocese of Lutsk was first established in the 13th century as the diocese of Luceoria (Latin) or Łuck (Polish). After the victory of Napoleon, the diocese was joined with the diocese of Zhytomyr, forming the diocese of Lutzk-Zhitomir-Kamenetz.[1] In 1925, the diocese of Lutsk was restored and the Diocese of Zhytomyr became separate.[2][3]
Ordinaries
- Izydor (1375–1380, bishop of Volodymyr
- Hynek (Hynko) Zając z Hasenburga (1371–1388)
- Rugan (1380–1400, bishop of Volodymyr
- Mikołaj (ca. 1388/1390–1400)
- Grzegorz z Buczkowa (1400–ca.1424), bishop of Volodymyr
- Świętosław (1404–1409)
- Andrzej Spławski (1425–ca.1459), moved from Volodymyr to Lutsk
- Wacław Raczkowicz (1459–1460/1462)
- Jan Łosowicz (1463–1468)
- Marcin Kreszowski (1468–?)
- Stanisław Stawski (1483–ca.1488)
- Jan Andruszewicz Pudełko (1493–1499)
- Wojciech Radziwiłł (1500–1507)
- Paweł Algimunt Holszański (1507–1535)
- Jerzy Chwalczewski (1535–1547)
- Walerian Protasewicz (1547–1555)
- Jan Andruszewicz (1563–1579)
- Wiktoryn Wierzbicki (1579–1588)
- Bernard Maciejowski (1590–1600)
- Stanisław Gomoliński (1600–1604)
- Marcin Szyszkowski (1604–1607)
- Paweł Wołłowicz (1607–1608)
- Paweł Wołucki (1608–1616)
- Henryk Firlej (1616–1618)
- Andrzej Lipski (1618–1622)
- Stanisław Lubieński (1624–1627)
- Achacy Grochowski (1627–1633)
- Bogusław Radoszewski (1633–1638)
- Andrzej Gembicki (1638–1655)
- Jan Zamoyski (1655)
- Jan Stefan Wydżga (1655–1659)
- Mikołaj Prażmowski (1659–1666)
- Tomasz Łaszeński (1667–1675))
- Stanisław Dąmbski (1675–1680)
- Stanisław Witwicki (1680–1688)
- Bogusław Leszczyński (1688–1691)
- Franciszek Michał Prażmowski (1691–1701)
- Aleksander Wyhowski (1703–1714)
- Joachim Przebendowski (1714–1721)
- Stefan Bogusław Rupniewski (1721–1731)
- Jan Aleksander Lipski (1731–1736)
- Andrzej Stanisław Załuski (1736–1739)
- Franciszek Antoni Kobielski (1739–1755)
- Antoni Erazm Wołłowicz (1755–1769)
- Feliks Paweł Turski (1769–1790)
- Adam Stanisław Naruszewicz (1790–1798)
- Kasper Cieciszowski (1798–1827)
- Michał Piwnicki (1827–1845)
- Kacper Borowski (1848–1871)
- Szymon Marcin Kozłowski (1883–1898)
- Cyryl Lubowidzki (1897–1898)
- Bolesław Hieronim Kłopotowski (1899–1901)[4]
- Karol Antoni Niedziałkowski (1901–1911)
- Ignacy Dubowski (1916–1925)
- Adolf Szelążek (1926–1950)
- Vacant (1951–1998)
- Markijan Trofimiak (1998–2012)
- Vacant (2012–2014)
- Vitaliy Skomarovskyi (2014–present)
Auxiliary bishops
References
External links
- Official site
- GCatholic.org