Roman Catholic Diocese of California


The Diocese of California, Diocese of the Californias or Diocese of Two Californias, is a former Latin Church residential episcopal see that existed during 1840–1849, covering the Californias. After the Mexican–American War, the American portion became the Diocese of Monterey in California, while the Mexican portion was eventually reorganized into an apostolic administration, later a apostolic vicariate. In 1996, the title was revived as a titular see of the Catholic Church.

Residential see

Pope Gregory XVI set up the Diocese of California with the papal bull Apostolicam sollicitudinem of 27 April 1840. He assigned to the new diocese a vast territory taken from that of the Diocese of Sonora, now the Metropolitan Archdiocese of Hermosillo, in Mexico. It included Alta California and the Baja California Territory. He set the episcopal residence at San Diego and made the diocese a suffragan of the Archdiocese of Mexico City.
After the Mexican–American War, Alta California became United States territory and the Holy See divided the American diocese into US and Mexican sections.
On 20 November 1849, with the episcopal residence moved to Monterey, a more central position for the new diocese, the bishopric was formally suppressed, with two successor jurisdictions:
The Residential Ordinaries were:

Titular see

The diocese was nominally restored as Latin titular bishopric of California or Both Californias in English, Ambas Californias in Spanish, or Californiensis in Latin. It has had following incumbents, so far of the fitting episcopal rank :