Urdaneta Cathedral
History
Prior to the founding of Urdaneta as a municipality, its present-day Poblacion was initially settled by residents and families from Villasis, Santa Barbara and Manaoag by the close of the 17th century. Migrants from Ilocos and La Union from the north also resettled in the area. By mid-19th century, the continuous population growth prompted the residents to establish a new pueblo (municipality) which comprised parts of Asingan, Binalonan, Malasiqui, Manaoag, Mangaldan, Santa Barbara and Villasis. The new municipality was named Urdaneta and was formally founded in 1858, the same year of establishment of Urdaneta as a visita. Tomas Manzano from Santa served as Urdaneta's first cabeza de barangay while Fr. Nicolas Manrique y Alonzo was tasked to serve as the towns's first pastor. The parish priest of Binalonan served the community of Urdaneta prior to Fr. Manrique's term at the latter.
The visita's first church was a lean-to structure. In 1863, Urdaneta's visita was promoted to a parish by the Dominicans. A stone church was then built but was not finished due to its massive size and the town being relatively young. Aside from being Urdaneta's parish priest, Fr. Manrique also laid plans for the municipality and ordered the transfer of an old camarin which would serve as a house of worship, to the site where the first church of Urdaneta was later built. Fr. Rafael Cano spearheaded the construction of the church on March 4, 1884. On its inauguration, the church was 77.10 metres (253 feet) long and 23.30 metres (76 feet) wide. The three-naved church was damaged by the bombings during World War II.
The Diocese of Urdaneta, along with Alaminos, was canonically erected on January 12, 1985, during the papacy of Pope John Paul II. Urdaneta's Immaculate Conception Church was designated as the diocesan seat of the bishopric.
The reredos or retablo of the cathedral are works of Kapampangan artist Willy Layug, who also worked on the cathedrals of Dagupan, Bacolod, and San Jose in Nueva Ecija.
Gallery
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The cathedral's tabernacle at the altar's left side
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Cathedral bell tower
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Cathedral side entrances
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Memorial for abortion victims at the bell tower's base
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Saint John Paul II Pastoral Center
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Urdaneta bishop's residence
References
- ^ "Cathedral of Our Lady of the Immaculate Conception Urdaneta City, Pangasinan, Ilocos, Philippines". GCatholic. Retrieved June 26, 2021.
- ^ "Diocese of Urdaneta". June 26, 2021. Archived from the original on September 4, 2012.
- ^ "Urdaneta City History". UCU-MIS. Retrieved June 26, 2021.
- ^ "History of Urdaneta". City Government of Urdaneta. Archived from the original on January 3, 2013. Retrieved June 26, 2021.
- ^ "Our Lady of Immaculate Conception Cathedral – OLICC". Diocese of Urdaneta. Retrieved June 26, 2021.
- ^ De la Torre, Visitacion (1997). Faith Enshrined: Churches of Pangasinan. University of Michigan: Tower Book House.
- ^ "Layug's sculptures lead to 'sacred encounters'". Inquirer Lifestyle. April 17, 2019. Retrieved June 26, 2021.
External links
- Media related to Immaculate Conception Cathedral, Urdaneta at Wikimedia Commons
- Urdaneta Cathedral on Facebook
- Roman Catholic Diocese of Urdaneta on Facebook