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Lipa Cathedral

Coordinates: 13°56′27″N 121°09′48″E / 13.940951°N 121.163254°E / 13.940951; 121.163254
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Lipa Cathedral
Metropolitan Cathedral of San Sebastian
Katedral ng Lipa
Facade of Lipa Cathedral
Lipa Cathedral is located in Philippines
Lipa Cathedral
Lipa Cathedral
Location in the Philippines
13°56′27″N 121°09′48″E / 13.940951°N 121.163254°E / 13.940951; 121.163254
LocationLipa, Batangas
CountryPhilippines
DenominationRoman Catholic
History
StatusParish church
DedicationSaint Sebastian
Architecture
Functional statusActive
Architectural typeChurch building
StyleRomanesque
Administration
ArchdioceseLipa
Clergy
ArchbishopRamon Arguelles
Priest in chargeRev. Fr. Cecilio M. Arce
Assistant priest(s)Rev. Fr. Bartolome E. Villafranca
Rev. Fr. Emmanuel M. Vergara
Rev. Fr. Froilan Carreon

The Metropolitan Cathedral of Saint Sebastian, commonly known as the Lipa Cathedral, is a Romanesque church in Lipa, Batangas, Philippines. The cathedral serves as the seat of the Archdiocese of Lipa. The Cathedral was chosen as the seat of the then Diocese of the Lipa in 1910. Detached from the Archdiocese of Manila and canonically erected by Pope St. Pius X, it comprised what are today the provinces of Batangas, Quezon, Aurora, Laguna, Marinduque, Occidental Mindoro, Oriental Mindoro, and part of the Camarines area.[1]

History

Earlier churches

Lipa was originally located close to the Laguna de Bombon, present-day Taal Lake. The Augustinian Chapter accepted Lipa under the name of "Convento de San Sebastian de Comintang"[2] with Fr, Gabriel Rodriguez as first prior. In 1608, it was made a vicariate directly under the father province. In 1610, it was given the right to vote in the provincial chapters.

In 1754, Lipa was submerged after the eruption of Taal Volcano. To avoid a similar occurrence, the town was transferred to its present site. A new church was began by Fr. Ignacio Pallares in 1779 and by Fr. Manuel Galiana in 1787, and was completed in 1790. In 1865, Fr. Maueal Diez Gonzalez completed the spacious transept.

Fr. Benito Baras, completed the construction of the church in 1865 and later built a bridge linking Lipa to Tanauan. On September 17, 1902, shortly after the Philippine Revolution of 1898, Pope Leo XIII issued the Apostolic Constitution Quae Mari Sinico mandating reorganization of the Church in the Philippines. His successor, Pius X, by papal declaration “Novas Erigere Ecclesias,” erected five new ecclesiastical jurisdictions in the Philippines: the Dioceses of Lipa, Calbayog, Tuguegarao and Zamboanga, and the Prelature of Puerto Princesa.[1]

In 1944, the Cathedral was heavily damaged. It was later rebuilt by Msgr. Alejandro Olalla and Fr. Vergara, adding two side aisles, and completed on December 14, 1957.[3]

References

  1. ^ a b "History". www.romanarchlipa.org. Retrieved 13 December 2014.
  2. ^ Galende O.S.A., Pedro (1987). Angels in Stone (1st ed.). G.A. Formoso. pp. 92–97. {{cite book}}: |access-date= requires |url= (help)
  3. ^ "Biyahero Philippines Travel Portal". Retrieved 13 December 2014.