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Roman Catholicism in Germany : ウィキペディア英語版
Roman Catholicism in Germany

The Roman Catholic Church in Germany, part of the worldwide Catholic Church, is under the leadership of the Pope, assisted by the Roman Curia, and of the German bishops. The current "speaker" (i.e., the chairperson) of the episcopal conference is Cardinal Reinhard Marx, metropolitan Archbishop of Munich and Freising. The German church, due to a church tax compulsory for those who register civilly as Catholics, is the wealthiest Catholic Church in Europe. It is divided into 27 dioceses, 7 of them with the rank of metropolitan sees.〔Annuario Pontificio 2012, p. 1127〕 All the archbishops and bishops are members of the Conference of German Bishops.
Secularisation has had its impact in Germany as elsewhere in Europe; nevertheless, 29.5% of the total population is Catholic (23,939 million people as of December 2014),〔(Zahlen und Fakten 2014/15 Website der Deutschen Bischofskonferenz ) (PDF), retrieved 20. July 2015〕〔()〕 down 3% compared to the year 2000. Before the 1990 unification of the Federal Republic of Germany (or West Germany) and the German Democratic Republic (or East Germany), Catholics were 42% of the population of West Germany.〔(Church statistics PDF )〕 What makes it easier to know religious statistics in Germany is that Christian taxpayers must declare their religious affiliation as church tax is deducted by the State to be passed on to the relevant church in the state where the taxpayer lives.
Apart from its demographic weight, German Catholicism has a very old religious and cultural heritage, which reaches back to both St. Boniface, apostle of Germany and first archbishop of Mainz, and to Charlemagne, buried at Aachen Cathedral. Notable religious sites include Ettal Abbey, Maria Laach Abbey, and Oberammergau, famous for its performance of the Passion Play, which takes place every 10 years. (The last performance of the Passion Play was in 2010.)
The German church also boasts one of the most recognizable landmarks in all of Germany, Cologne Cathedral. Other notable Catholic cathedrals are in Freising, Mainz (St. Martin's Cathedral), Fulda, Paderborn, Regensburg, Frankfurt, Munich (Frauenkirche), Worms, Berlin (St. Hedwig's Cathedral, with crypt of Bernhard Lichtenberg), Bamberg, and Trier.〔Annuario Pontificio 2008 en presentert〕
==History of Catholicism in Germany==
(詳細はウィキペディア(Wikipedia)

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