For the present-day Lutheran diocese, see diocese of Nidaros. For the present-day Catholic area, see Roman Catholic Territorial Prelature of Trondheim.
1152–1537 (Diocese 1030–1152, Evangelical Lutheran diocese[1] since 1537)
Cathedral
Nidaros Cathedral
The Archdiocese of Nidaros (or Niðaróss) was the metropolitan see covering Norway in the later Middle Ages. The see was the Nidaros Cathedral, in the city of Nidaros (now Trondheim). The archdiocese existed from the middle of the twelfth century until the Protestant Reformation.
^Diocese of Nidaros
and 26 Related for: Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Nidaros information
Nidaros, Niðarós or Niðaróss (Old Norse pronunciation: [ˈniðɑˌroːsː]) was the medieval name of Trondheim when it was the capital of Norway's first Christian...
Nidaros Cathedral (Norwegian: Nidarosdomen / Nidaros Domkirke) is a Church of Norway cathedral located in the city of Trondheim in Trøndelag county. It...
Norway before the Archdiocese was established. Metropolitan ArchdioceseofNidaros (at Trondheim) The CatholicArchdioceseofNidaros (1152 - 1537) headed...
Rebuilding the archdioceseofNidaros: Etienne Djunkowsky and the North Pole Mission, c. 1855–1870 by Andrew G. Newby "Sigrid Undset: Catholic Viking" Bentz...
Metropolitan Archdioceseof Lund with its own ecclesiastical province, initially covering Denmark, Norway and Sweden. Norway got its own Archbishop ofNidaros in...
Cathedral ofNidaros. A week later, on Easter Sunday, 1 April 1537, the Archbishop left Nidaros with 60 followers. He took the archives of the archdiocese, including...
is the Roman Rite. The Latin rites were for many centuries no less numerous than the modern Eastern Catholic liturgical rites. The number of Latin rites...
churches in the Catholic Church has only one member, the Catholic Church itself (comprising Roman and Eastern Churches). Within the Catholic Church there...
seat of the CatholicArchdioceseofNidaros; it then became, and has remained, the seat of the Lutheran Diocese ofNidaros and the site of the Nidaros Cathedral...
the Archbishop of Bremen, until the Nordic Archdioceseof Lund was established in 1103. The separate Norwegian ArchdioceseofNidaros (in today's Trondheim)...
new world. In 1152 the diocese of Gardar was made a suffragan to the new ArchdioceseofNidaros in Norway. At the height of the settlement's extent, there...
The former RomanCatholic Diocese of the Faroe Islands existed from the 11th century to the Protestant Reformation. The Faroe Islands are now included...
establishment of a Norwegian archdiocese at Nidaros is dated 30 November 1154. Thirteenth-century runic inscriptions from the merchant town of Bergen in Norway...
Archbishop ofNidaros (Trondheim, Norway) Servant of God Ellen Aurora Sundström Amman (1870-1932), Married Layperson of the Archdioceseof Munich-Freising...
participated in ecumenical services at places that had been Catholic shrines before the Reformation: Nidaros Cathedral in Norway; near St. Olav's Church at Thingvellir...
patriarchs List ofCatholic dioceses (structured view) List ofCatholic dioceses (alphabetical) List ofRomanCatholicarchdioceses The Bishops and their...
and Shetland. The Isle of Man was included in with these southern isles. This diocese was a suffragan of the archdioceseofNidaros (Trondheim). Norway controlled...
possible attacks of Wimund on Bishop Gilla Aldan of Whithorn. From the 11th century until the creation of the ArchdioceseofNiðarós, Mann and the Isles...
sees in succession, but eventually (after 1152) subject to the archdioceseofNidaros (Tróndheim). There were probably 33 bishops in the Faroe Islands...
(1285–1286) was transferred to the archdioceseof Trondhjem. A provincial council was held in 1380. The last Catholic bishop, Mogens Lauritssøn (1513–1537)...
Research (CIMER). Christopher Cardone (b. 1957) Archbishop of the RomanCatholicArchdioceseof Honiara. Albertus Magnus College, New Haven, Connecticut...