The ItalianJesuit missionary Matteo Ricci introduced Catholicism into Jiangsu in 1599. He stayed in Suzhou in January of that year. In 1616, Giulio Aleni founded a church in Changshu, which is currently a city in the Suzhou Diocese.[2][3]
Qing dynasty
In Suzhou city, Italian missionaries established the first Catholic church in 1649. By 1664, there were over 500 Catholics in Suzhou city and over 10,000 Catholics in Changshu.[3]
In 1922, the Deanery of Suzhou was included under the newly established Jiangsu Apostolic Prefecture, which changed its name to Nanjing Apostolic Prefecture in 1926.[7] The Shanghai Apostolic Prefecture, which contained the Suzhou Deanery, was separated from the Nanjing Prefecture in 1933, and became a diocese in 1946.[7] The Suzhou Deanery was elevated into a diocese and separated from the Shanghai Diocese on 9 June 1949.[8][9][3]
People's Republic of China
Upon the founding of the PRC, there were about 34 clergy members and 31,350 Catholics in the diocese.[3] During the Cultural Revolution, many historical churches of the diocese were damaged. Church activities gradually resumed in the 1980s.[1] In 1992, there were about 8 priests, 18 nuns, and 50,000 Catholics in the diocese.[3]
Yushan Forum
Since 2018, the diocese has been a co-sponsor of the Yushan Forum (Chinese: 渔山论坛), according to the Bureau of Religious and Ethnic Affairs of Suzhou (Chinese: 苏州市民族宗教事务局). The forum's topics of each time are listed below:
According to the Chinese Province of the Jesuits, the auxiliary bishop Joseph Fan Zhongliang (Chinese: 范忠良) would have automatically succeeded as the bishop of Suzhou Diocese after Kung's death. Fan was secretly consecrated in 1985. However, he was not recognized by the Chinese government. He died in 2014.[16]
Ignatius Shen Chuming (Chinese: 沈初鸣) became the vicar general of Suzhou in 1956. He was elected bishop in 1958 and consecrated in 1959. He was a standing member of the national Catholic Patriotic Association (CPA) of China. The year of his death is uncertain: according to Catholic-Hierarchy.org, he died in 1966; according to the Committee of Ethnic and Religious Affairs of Jiangsu (Chinese: 江苏省民族宗教事务委员会), he died in 1974.[17][2]
Matthias Ma Longlin (Chinese: 马龙麟) was elected and consecrated bishop in 1981. He later became the chair of the CPA of Suzhou. He died in 1999.[2]
According to Jiangsu's Catholic Patriotic Association (CPA), an organization affiliated with the Chinese united front, the diocese contains the following churches:[21]
Suzhou Industrial Park
Suzhou Industrial Park Catholic Church, where the bishop's office is located. It is the tallest Catholic Church building in China, with its main tower standing 80 metres (260 ft) tall.[22][23]
Xiaohengtang Catholic Church (小横塘天主堂): upon its consecration on 2 May 2016, it was the tallest Catholic church in China. It has a 75 metres (246 ft) tall main spire and a boat-shaped structure.[25]
^Thomas H. Reilly (2004), The Taiping Heavenly Kingdom: Rebellion and the Blasphemy of Empire, Seattle, WA: University of Washington Press, pp. 43ff, 14ff, 150ff, ISBN0295984309, see [1], accessed 18 April 2015.
^Pan, Yiting; Wang, Jun; Chen, Xi (September 2021). "糅杂与权宜:苏州杨家桥天主堂"混合性"建造溯源研究" [Eclecticism and Expediency:"Hybridity" of Sino-Western Building Construction in the Yangjiaqiao Catholic Church in Suzhou]. Huazhong Jianzhu (in Chinese). 39 (292): 127–132. doi:10.13942/j.cnki.hzjz.2021.09.026. Retrieved 13 January 2023.
^Pope Pius XII (1949). "CONSTITUTIONES APOSTOLICAE"(PDF). Acta Apostolicae Sedis. 16. TYPIS POLYGLOTTIS VATICANIS: 588. Retrieved 13 January 2023.