Coptic Catholic Church
0 sources
Coptic Catholic Church
Summary
Coptic Catholic Church is a Catholic particular church sui iuris[1]. It draws 742 Wikipedia views per month (catholic_particular_church_sui_iuris category, ranking #3 of 4).[2]
Key Facts
- Coptic Catholic Church's instance of is recorded as Catholic particular church sui iuris[3].
- Coptic Catholic Church's instance of is recorded as Eastern Catholic Churches[4].
- Coptic Catholic Church's headquarters location is recorded as Cathedral of Our Lady of Egypt[5].
- Coptic Catholic Church is part of Catholic Church[6].
- Coptic Catholic Church is part of Christianity of Copts[7].
- Coptic Catholic Church is part of Eastern Christianity[8].
- Coptic Catholic Church's Commons category is recorded as Coptic Catholic Church[9].
- 1947 marks the founding of Coptic Catholic Church[10].
- Coptic Catholic Church's official website is recorded as http://coptcatholic.net[11].
- Coptic Catholic Church's topic's main category is recorded as Category:Coptic Catholic Church[12].
- Coptic Catholic Church's OpenStreetMap tag is recorded as denomination=coptic_catholic[13].
- Coptic Catholic Church's member count is recorded as {'amount': '+187320'}[14].
- Coptic Catholic Church's position held by head of the organization is recorded as Coptic Catholic Patriarch of Alexandria[15].
- Coptic Catholic Church's Christian liturgical rite is recorded as Alexandrian Rite[16].
Body
Founding
1947 marks the founding of Coptic Catholic Church[10].
Identity
Part of include Catholic Church[6], a Christian denomination[17], in Vatican City[18], founded in 0001[19], headquartered in Vatican City[20]; Christianity of Copts[7]; and Eastern Christianity[8], a Christian denominational family[21].
Operations
Coptic Catholic Church's headquarters location is recorded as Cathedral of Our Lady of Egypt[5].
Why It Matters
Coptic Catholic Church draws 742 Wikipedia views per month (catholic_particular_church_sui_iuris category, ranking #3 of 4).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 22 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[22] It is known by 4 alternative names across languages and contexts.[23]