CANADA
150
OAKA&Y
ECCLESIASTICAL STATISTICS-Continued
Vicariates Apostolic
Archdioceses, Dioceses,
)ric
)ric
>nc
Montreal {B^P^-
St. Hyacinthe
Sherbrooke ,
Valleyfield
Joliette ,
n**««ro (Bishopric
^^^^^JArchbishopric
Pembroke
Haileybury
Mt. Laurier
Ontario, Northern, Pref. Ap
Toronto{Bj|i°Fi^„p-
Hamilton
London
KingstonjaSp,
Peterborough
Alexandria
Sault Sainte Marie. . .
Charlottetown
St. John
Antieonish
Chatnam ,
St. Boniface {Bjf^i^opVu Keewatin, Vicar. Ap
Vancouver {Bj^^fetpric- :::::::
("Bishopric
Victoria j Archbishopric
[Bishopric
Yukon and Prince Rupert, Vic. Ap
^^K^^SrchSV^^^
Prince Albert
Winnipeg
Edmonton, Archbishopric
Calgary
Athabfiiska, Vic. Ap
Mackenzie, Vic. Ap
)ric
)ric
1836}
18865
1852
1874
1892
1904
1847?
1886]
1898
1915
1913
1919
1841?
1870J
1856
1855
1826?
1889)
1882
1890
1904
1842?
1852J
1829
1842
1844
1852
1847?
18713
1910
1890?
1908
1847'
1903
1908
1916
1910?
1915J
1907
1915
1912
1912
1862
1901
g
Ofri
IS
is
6"s
633,538
120,254
100,000
61,366
64,500
137,900
38,500 41,179 38,826 10,000
85,000
65,000 70,000
43,000
27,000 21,000 45,000
55,000
50,000 65,000 87,000 75,249
35,000
5,100
38,000
10,000
7,100
72,500
32,000 40,000 40,526 30,000 12,000 4,500
530
219
123
96
130
154
58 54 52
8
113
45
88
57
33
22 31
70
60
57
103
73
61
2
20
14
12
72
28 39 33 23 1
358
23
18 12 19
175
4
11
8
46
25 38
1
» » •
33 24
« •
26
ft • •
43 56 15 35
10
43
48 20 84 15 25 18
5
4 2
• •
3
11
• • 1 3 1
1
1 1
1
1
3
6
1
1
1
5
1 3 7
1 1 1
6|
6^
13
4 6 6 8
19
4 5 7 2
6
3 6
1
2
4
3
3
5
8
14
3
14
11
11
12
6
2
1
8
IS
h
a a
II
ij
II
191
76 85 39 45
91
37
40
39
8
80
56 79
41
22 17 40
37
38 45 72 58
43
11
29
11
76
54 35 55 25 16
138
72 91 41 53
105
54
40
49
8
112
50 86
69
50 23 87
86
50 100
70 107
103
33
122
23
27
76
129 90
110 61 16 12
188
64 22 19 23
21
7 11 17
4
10
19 16
10
6
5
16
9 11 20 13
18
3
19
13
11
19
7
7
4
92
10 4 4
14
12
2 5
8
5 3
2
1 3
2
2
10
6
6
1
6
5
3
12
3
^g
10
1
2 1 1
1
2
1
1
1
1
2
Canary Islands (cf. C. E., III-243b) .— The Canary
Islands, with an area of 3342 square miles, consist
of the following: Teneriffe, 919 square miles; Grand
Canary, 631 square miles; Palma, 318 square miles;
Lanzarote, 380; Gomera, 172; Fuereventura, 788;
Hierro, 122. The population in 1914 was esti-
mated at 478,500, including about 300 British in
Las Palmas. The chief towns are Santa Cruz
(population 61,000), the capital of the Canaries, San
dristobal de la Laguna (population 16,000), Las
Palmas (population 60,000), the chief commercial
town and the judicial capital of the archipelago,
and Arucas (population about 9500), the chief
center of the cochineal and sugar industries. For
administrative purposes the (Zlanary Islands are
treated as a province of Spain, under a governor
who resides at Teneriffe.
The Diocese of Canaries (Canaribnsis), com- prises the whole archipelago of the Canary Islands, IS suffrasan of the archdiocese of Seville, and was erected by the anti-pope, Benedict XIII in 1404,
with the episcopal residence at Lanzarote. Two
years later, 1406, the true pope, Innocent VII,
erected the see, and in 1435 changed the residence
to Las Palmas, but the change did not become
effective until 1485. From 1353 until 1485 there was
a Bishop of Rubicond (Lanzarote), but this series
is independent of the Bishops of Las Palmas. The
diocese comprises the islands of Grand Canary,
Fuerta-Ventura, and Lanzarote, a territoiy of
2465 square miles. The patroness of the diocese
is Nuestra Senora del Pino, and the church at Las
Palmas, dedicated to her, was raised to a minor
basilica, 13 January, 1916.
On 22 April, 1919, took place the first diocesan synod held here for two hundred years, at which time the Pope sent a message of approval to the bishop and recommended to him the full applica- tion of all canonical rights, as far as the present circumstances of the diocese would permit. This synod was held under the present incumbent^ Rt. Rev. Angelo Marquina Corrales, who was appomted