The Diocese of Vanuatu and New Caledonia is one of the ten dioceses within the Anglican Church of Melanesia.
Originally established as the Diocese of the New Hebrides in 1975,[1][2] it was inaugurated the same year at Lolowai on Aoba Island. The diocese was renamed the Diocese of Vanuatu c. 1980 following the Republic of Vanuatu's independence,[3] and around 2010, it adopted its current name to include New Caledonia.
The diocese is organized into eight regions and 39 parishes, with its headquarters in Luganville.
List of bishops
editBishops of the New Hebrides | |||
---|---|---|---|
From | Until | Incumbent | Notes |
1975 | 1980 | Derek Rawcliffe | Previously assistant bishop in the Diocese of Melanesia since 1974. |
1980 | 1980 | Harry Tevi | Previously Assistant Bishop of the New Hebrides since 1979. |
Bishops of Vanuatu | |||
1980 | 1989 | Harry Tevi | Title changed with Vanuatu independence |
1990 | 2000 | Michael Tavoa | Consecrated and installed on 21 April 1990.[4] |
2000 | 2006 | Hugh Blessing-Boe | Consecrated and installed on 29 June 2000.[5] |
2006 | ? | James Ligo | Fifth bishop[6] |
Bishops of Vanuatu and New Caledonia | |||
? | 2017 | James Ligo | Title changed to Bishop of Vanuatu and New Caledonia. |
2017 | present | James Tama |
References
edit- ^ Anglican Church of Melanesia — Diocese of Malaita Archived 2020-11-28 at the Wayback Machine (Accessed 4 September 2016).
- ^ Anglican Communion — Melanesian Messenger Online, November 4, 2004 (Archived 5 July 2007; archive accessed 5 September 2016).
- ^ [1] Footnote 47.
- ^ List of small publications in the Archives of the Anglican Church of Melanesia (in the National Archives of Solomon Islands) p. 16. (Accessed 30 August 2016)
- ^ Small publications, p. 25. (Accessed 30 August 2016)
- ^ Small publications, p. 31. (Accessed 30 August 2016)