Archbishop of America


The Archdiocese of America, better known as the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of America, is a jurisdiction of the Eastern Orthodox Church under the Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople. It was formally constituted in 1922 and has had seven Archbishops. The Archdiocese currently covers the United States and one parish in the Bahamas, and is mostly Greek-American in composition and culture.

Archbishops of America

The following individuals have held the office of Archbishop of America:

Archbishops of the Russian Diocese of the Aleutians and North America

The Diocese of the Aleutians and North America was a pan-ethnic and missionary jurisdiction of the Eastern Orthodox Church under the Russian Orthodox Church from 1900 to 1922. From 1905 to 1922, its incumbents held the title of Archbishop:
Since 1922 its incumbents and primates have held the title of Metropolitan of All America and Canada. Today it is majority-Russian in ecclesiastical heritage, but with significant Romanian, Albanian, Bulgarian, and Mexican jurisdictions and at least one Arab parish - all largely English- speaking - as well as increasing numbers of transfers from other Orthodox jurisdictions, and converts to Orthodoxy.

Archbishops of the Russian Exarchate of North America

The Russian Exarchate of North America was another jurisdiction of the Russian Orthodox Church under its Patriarchate of Moscow from 1933 to 1970. While most of its bishops were titled Metropolitans of varying Sees, the final one was
Moscow was permitted to replace this Exarchate, and a diocese in Canada, with a non-diocesan patriarchal vicariate in each country, the United States and Canada, when it and the Metropolia were reconciled, and Moscow recognized the Metropolia's autocephaly, in 1970. These vicariates form the "Russian Orthodox Patriarchal Parishes in the USA", sometimes described as "Russian Orthodox Church in the USA", with some patriarchal parishes in Canada.