Incumbent: Danald Jute | |
Location | |
Ecclesiastical province | South East Asia |
Information | |
First holder | Francis Thomas McDougall |
Established | 1855, current establishment in 1962 |
Diocese | Kuching |
Cathedral | St. Thomas' Cathedral |
The Diocese of Kuching is a diocese of the Anglican Church of the Province of South East Asia that covers Sarawak (in Malaysia) and Brunei. Founded in 1962, the see was originally established as the Bishopric of Sarawak linked to the Diocese of Labuan in 1855. [1] The current bishop is the Right Rev'd Danald Jute, 14th Lord Bishop of the Diocese of Kuching and Brunei, who was consecrated on 13 August 2017. [2] His seat is at St. Thomas' Cathedral, Kuching. [2]
An Anglican mission, called the Borneo Church Mission, was established in 1846 and the Anglican Church began in Sarawak on 29 June 1848, when a party of missionaries arrived at the invitation of James Brooke, Rajah of Sarawak. [1] [3] Francis Thomas McDougall who led the group was deemed suitable for the job because he was a doctor as well as a priest. [4] [5]
The Rajah gave the missionaries a piece of land on which to build their base. The land was used to build a church, which was to serve as pro-cathedral for many years, as well as a school which later grew into St. Thomas' and St. Mary's, and also a dispensary. [1]
It was soon realised that the Church in the Rajah's territory would be better administered as a bishopric. [1] The Society for the Propagation of the Gospel supported the proposal and contributed a sum of £5,000 towards the endowment. However, the political conventions of the day ruled that no Anglican diocese could be created outside the limits of the British Empire, and Sarawak was technically an independent principality of the Rajah. [1] The difficulty was sidestepped by founding the diocese upon the island of Labuan, a Crown Colony since 1846. [1] [6] The bishop of Labuan could then be appointed bishop of Sarawak by the Rajah. This practice prevailed until Sarawak became a Crown Colony in 1946. [1]
Letters Patent were issued on 6 August 1855, erecting the "Island of Labuan and its Dependencies into a Bishop's See or Diocese to be styled the Bishopric of Labuan." [7] McDougall was nominated by the Crown as the first bishop, and was consecrated on 18 October 1855 in Calcutta. On 1 January 1856 he was appointed bishop of Sarawak. [8]
The linked diocese of Labuan and bishopric of Sarawak increased in size as the principality grew and Anglican work in North Borneo and Brunei developed. [1] It extended further when, by an Act of Parliament in 1869, the Church in the Straits Settlements (Singapore, Penang and Malacca) was separated from the see of Calcutta and placed under the episcopal care of the bishop of Labuan. [1] This arrangement lasted until 1909, when the diocese of Singapore was founded. [9]
The first sixty years of the Church in Borneo were a chronicle of effort, disappointment and service by priests and lay missionaries. Asian workers played an increasingly larger part as time passed because the formation of a truly indigenous church had been intended from the beginning. [1]
After 1909, when the bishop could concentrate on Borneo alone, a new era in the Church began. Three decades of growth and development followed, with the longed-for ordination of Dayak and Chinese clergy in increasing numbers. [1]
After the devastation of World War II the diocese of Labuan and the bishopric of Sarawak were joined into the diocese of Borneo and in 1949 Nigel Cornwall was consecrated bishop. [1] His immediate task was to restore the ruins of the churches, schools and other mission property destroyed during the years of the Japanese occupation. [1] 1953 saw the construction of the new St. Thomas' Cathedral to replace the leaky wooden edifice built by McDougall. [10] Men prepared for ordination at the House of the Epiphany (established in 1952) provided nine new priests for the area in 1956. [1]
By 1962 plans were completed for the division of the diocese of Borneo. [1] [11] The new diocese of Jesselton (Sabah) including Labuan came into being on 24 July 1962. [1] [11] The remainder of the diocese, including Brunei, was reconstituted as the Diocese of Kuching on 13 August 1962. [1] [11] Nigel Cornwall continued as Bishop. [1] [11]
The limits of the Diocese are those of the present administrative divisions of the State of Sarawak and Brunei Darussalam together with that part of Indonesian Borneo lying North of the equator, and West of longitude 115 º42’. [1]
On 7 April 1970 the diocese of West Malaysia was formed to separate that region from Singapore. [12]
The present Bishop is the Right Reverend Danald Jute, who is the 14th Lord Bishop of Kuching since 1855, when the diocese was first created. [2]
Bishop of Labuan and Sarawak | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
From | Until | Incumbent | Notes | |
1856 | 1869 | Francis McDougall | ||
Bishops of Labuan, Sarawak and Singapore | ||||
From | Until | Incumbent | Notes | |
1869 | 1881 | Walter Chambers | Churches in the Straits Settlements separated from the Diocese of Calcutta and placed under the Diocese of Labuan and Sarawak. Diocese renamed Diocese of Labuan, Sarawak and Singapore. | |
1882 | 1908 | George Hose | ||
Bishops of Labuan and Sarawak | ||||
From | Until | Incumbent | Notes | |
1909 | 1916 | Robert Mounsey | Churches in Singapore were separated from the Diocese to form its own Diocese of Singapore. The Diocese reverted to the name of Diocese of Labuan and Sarawak. | |
1917 | 1931 | Logie Danson | Returned to England as Assistant Bishop of Carlisle; later Bishop of Edinburgh and Primus | |
1932 | 1937 | Noel Hudson | ||
1938 | 1948 | Francis Hollis | Returned to England as Assistant Bishop of Leicester | |
Bishop of Borneo | ||||
From | Until | Incumbent | Notes | |
1948 | 1962 | Nigel Cornwall | The diocese was renamed the Diocese of Borneo and included Anglican missions in Kalimantan. | |
Bishops of Kuching | ||||
From | Until | Incumbent | Notes | |
1963 | 1968 | Nicholas Allenby | The diocese was separated into the Diocese of Kuching and the Diocese of Jesselton (later renamed the Diocese of Sabah); David Howard Nicholas Allenby was consecrated bishop 30 November 1962 by Michael Ramsey, Archbishop of Canterbury, at Southwark Cathedral; [13] later Assistant Bishop of Worcester [14] | |
1968 | 1984 | Basil Temenggong | The first native Malaysian and Sarawakian to be appointed as bishop. After Temenggong died suddenly, the former Assistant Bishop of Kuching, Peter Howes, returned to be the acting Bishop. [15] | |
1985 | 1995 | John Leong Chee Yun | ||
1996 | 2007 | Made Katib | ||
2007 | 2017 | Bolly Lapok | Archbishop of South East Asia, 2012–2016. Aeries Sumping Jingan and Solomon Cheong were assistant Bishops of Kuching | |
2017 | present | Danald Jute | Current incumbent since 2017. Nelson Ugas and Andy Shie are assistant Bishops of Kuching | |
Sources: [16] [17] [18] [19] [20] [21] [22] |
The diocese is divided into five distinct archdeaconries. [23]
- Incharge by: The.Venerable Archdeacon Phillip Tauk
- The.Venerable Archdeacon Jackson Jarau Unggin (retired as Archdeacon of Central Sarawak on 2024)
- Incharge by: The.Venerable Archdeacon Tony Jilat
- Incharge by: The.Venerable Archdeacon Ramdan Mejem
- Incharge by: The.Venerable Archdeacon Jose Jol Endru
- Incharge by: The.Venerable Archdeacon Joseph Dusit
Source: [23]
Source: [23]
Source: [23]
Source: [23]
The Borneo Post, established in 1978, is the largest and widely circulated English-language daily newspaper in East Malaysia and also the alternately circulated newspaper in Brunei. The newspaper is the first English newspaper in East Malaysia to use photo-composition for type-setting and printing was done in offset as against the old-fashioned letterpress.
The Church of the Province of South East Asia is an autonomous member of the Anglican Communion, created in 1996 with the four dioceses of Kuching, Sabah, Singapore and West Malaysia.
Divisions are the primary subdivisions of Sabah and Sarawak, the states in East Malaysia. Each division is subdivided into districts — this is different in Peninsular Malaysia whereby districts are generally the primary subdivisions of a state. Each division is headed by a resident.
The Raj of Sarawak, Kingdom of Sarawak or State of Sarawak, was an independent state founded in 1841 in northwestern Borneo and was in a treaty of protection with the United Kingdom from 1888. It was formed from a series of land concessions acquired by the Englishman James Brooke from the Sultan of Brunei. Sarawak was recognised as a sovereign state by the United States in 1850, and by the United Kingdom in 1864. The territory of the Kingdom is now the Malaysian state of Sarawak.
St. Thomas' Secondary School is an all-boys secondary day school situated in Kuching, the capital of the Malaysian state of Sarawak. It is the oldest school in Sarawak, though the school was originally at St Mary's location back in 1848. The school is the fourth oldest in Malaysia. The students of St. Thomas are called Thomians regardless of gender, and it is a government-aided mission school.
The Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Kuching is a Metropolitan Latin archbishopric of the Roman Catholic Church in Sarawak, Malaysia. It is however remains dependent on the missionary Roman Congregation for the Evangelization of Peoples.
The Diocese of Sabah is an Anglican diocese which covers Sabah and Labuan in Malaysia. Founded in 1962, the see was originally part of the much larger Diocese of Labuan and its Dependencies which was established in 1855. Following the carving out of the Diocese of Singapore in 1909 from this last ecclesiastical territory, the area of the present-day Diocese fell under the jurisdiction of the Diocese of Labuan & Sarawak, which was reorganised as the Diocese of Borneo in 1949. In 1962, the latter diocese was divided into two, forming the Diocese of Kuching and the Diocese of Jesselton, which was renamed the Diocese of Sabah when the capital city was given the new name of Kota Kinabalu in 1967.
The Bishop of Sabah is an Anglican prelate who oversees the Diocese of Sabah in the Church of the Province of South East Asia. Following the death of Albert Vun Cheong Fui on 14 July 2014, Melter Tais was installed as the sixth bishop on 14 May 2015. His seat is All Saints' Cathedral, Kota Kinabalu.
The History of Sarawak can be traced as far as 40,000 years ago to the paleolithic period where the earliest evidence of human settlement is found in the Niah caves. A series of Chinese ceramics dated from the 8th to 13th century AD was uncovered at the archeological site of Santubong. The coastal regions of Sarawak came under the influence of the Bruneian Empire in the 16th century. In 1839, James Brooke, a British explorer, first arrived in Sarawak. Sarawak was later governed by the Brooke family between 1841 and 1946. During World War II, it was occupied by the Japanese for three years. After the war, the last White Rajah, Charles Vyner Brooke, ceded Sarawak to Britain, and in 1946 it became a British Crown Colony. On 22 July 1963, Sarawak was granted self-government by the British. Following this, it became one of the founding members of the Federation of Malaysia, established on 16 September 1963. However, the federation was opposed by Indonesia, and this led to the three-year Indonesia–Malaysia confrontation. From 1960 to 1990, Sarawak experienced a communist insurgency.
The Roman Catholic Diocese of Sibu is the ecclesiastical territory of the Latin Church or the diocese of the Catholic Church in the state of Sarawak, Malaysia. It is headquartered in Sibu and covered the divisions of Sibu, Mukah, Sarikei, and Kapit.
Francis Septimus Hollis was a British clergyman in the Anglican Church. He held the position of Bishop of Labuan and Sarawak in Southeast Asia from 1938 until 1948.
Francis Thomas McDougall was the first Bishop of Labuan and Sarawak from 1849 to 1868.
Bolly anak Lapok was the fourth Metropolitan Archbishop and Primate of the Anglican Church of the Province of South East Asia as well as the Bishop of Kuching.
The Bishop of Kuching is the ordinary of the Anglican Diocese of Kuching in the Church of the Province of South East Asia. The bishop exercises episcopal authority over Anglican churches in the Malaysian state of Sarawak and in the independent nation of Brunei Darussalam.
Mukah (muːkəh), historically known as Muka is a coastal town which has served as the capital and the administrative center of the Mukah Division since 1 March 2002.
Datuk Basil Temenggong was a Malaysian clergyman in the Anglican Church. He was the second Bishop of Kuching from 1968 until his death in 1984, and the first indigenous Sarawakian bishop.
The House of the Epiphany is an Anglican educational institution in Kuching, Malaysia, providing theological education to candidates for ordination. It was established in 1952. There were a number of short-lived theological colleges in what is now the Diocese of Kuching before the House of the Epiphany was opened.