Catholic Church in England and Wales | |
---|---|
Classification | Catholic |
Orientation | Latin |
Scripture | Bible |
Theology | Catholic theology |
Polity | Episcopal |
Governance | CBCEW |
Pope | Francis |
President | Vincent Nichols |
Apostolic Nuncio | Miguel Maury Buendía |
Region | England and Wales |
Language | English, Welsh, Latin |
Headquarters | London, England |
Founder | Augustine of Canterbury |
Origin | c. 200s: Christianity in Roman Britain c. 500s: Anglo-Saxon Christianity Britain, Roman Empire |
Separations | Church of England (1534/1559) |
Members | 5.2 million (baptised, 2009) |
Official website | cbcew.org.uk |
Part of a series on the |
Catholic Church by country |
---|
Catholicism portal |
The Catholic Church in England and Wales (Latin: Ecclesia Catholica in Anglia et Cambria; Welsh: Yr Eglwys Gatholig yng Nghymru a Lloegr) is part of the worldwide Catholic Church in full communion with the Holy See. Its origins date from the 6th century, when Pope Gregory I through a Roman missionary and Benedictine monk, Augustine, later Augustine of Canterbury, intensified the evangelization of the Kingdom of Kent,[1] linking it to the Holy See in 597 AD.
This unbroken communion with the Holy See lasted until King Henry VIII ended it in 1534.[2][3] Communion with Rome was restored by Queen Mary I in 1555 following the Second Statute of Repeal and eventually finally broken by Elizabeth I's 1559 Religious Settlement, which made "no significant concessions to Catholic opinion represented by the church hierarchy and much of the nobility."[4]
For 250 years, the government forced members of the pre-Reformation Catholic Church known as recusants to go underground and seek academic training in Catholic Europe, where exiled English clergy set up schools and seminaries for the sons of English recusant families.[5][6][7] The government also placed legislative restrictions on Catholics, some continuing into the 20th century, while the ban on Catholic worship lasted until the Catholic Relief Act 1791. The ban did not, however, affect foreign embassies in London, although serving priests could be hounded.[8] During this time, the English Catholic Church was divided between the upper classes, aristocracy and gentry, and the working class.[9][10][11][12]
In the 2001 United Kingdom census, there were 4.2 million Catholics in England and Wales, some 8% of the population. One hundred years earlier, in 1901, they represented only 4.8% of the population. In 1981, 8.7% of the population of England and Wales were Catholic.[13] In 2009, post the 2004 enlargement of the European Union, when thousands of Central Europeans (mainly heavily Catholic Poles, Lithuanians, Slovakians and Slovenians) came to England, an Ipsos Morioka poll found that 9.6%, or 5.2 million people, were Catholics in England and Wales.[14][15] In the 2021 census, the Christian population (of Catholic, Anglican, nonconformists, and unaffiliated Christians together) dropped to 46% (about 27.6 million people, the majority of whom were not of the established church).[16][17][18]
In North West England one in five are Catholic,[19] a result of large-scale Irish migration in the nineteenth century as well as the high number of English recusants in Lancashire.[20][21]
There are considerable regional variations, of course, Catholics being most widespread in London, Scotland and particularly the North-West (where one in five are Catholic)