Tu banner alternativo

Template:Ordination/doc

In today's world, Template:Ordination/doc has become a topic of great relevance and interest to a wide spectrum of individuals. The importance of Template:Ordination/doc lies in its direct impact on people's daily lives, as well as its influence on various aspects of society. Since its appearance, Template:Ordination/doc has generated a great debate and has been the subject of numerous studies and research that seek to understand its essence and its impact in different contexts. In this article, we will explore in detail the meaning and importance of Template:Ordination/doc, as well as its implications today.

Tu banner alternativo

{{Ordination}} is a template that can be used to provide information related to the ordination and consecration of members of the clergy of various Christian denominations as deacons, priests, and bishops, as well as relating to the elevation of cardinals. The template can also be used to provide information regarding the consecrations of other bishops in which the subject bishop acted as principal or only consecrator. It can be used in the article of any person who claims to be ordained as part of the historical episcopate, such as Catholics, Eastern and Oriental Orthodox, Anglicans, Old Catholics, some Lutherans, etc.

This template replaces {{Episcopal succession}}, which is now deprecated.

Full syntax

Ordination history of
{{{name}}}
History
Diaconal ordination
Ordained by{{{ordained deacon by}}}
Date{{{date of diaconal ordination}}}
Place{{{place of diaconal ordination}}}
Priestly ordination
Ordained by{{{ordained priest by}}}
Date{{{date of priestly ordination}}}
Place{{{place of priestly ordination}}}
Episcopal consecration
Principal consecrator{{{consecrated by}}}
Co-consecrators{{{co-consecrators}}}
Date{{{date of consecration}}}
Place{{{place of consecration}}}
Cardinalate
Elevated by{{{elevated by}}}
Date{{{date of elevation}}}
Episcopal succession
Bishops consecrated by {{{alternate name}}} as principal consecrator
{{{bishop 1}}}{{{consecration date 1}}}
{{{bishop 2}}}{{{consecration date 2}}}
{{{bishop 3}}}{{{consecration date 3}}}
Source(s):{{{sources}}}
{{Ordination
| embed                        =
| expand                       =
| denomination                 =
| name                         =
| alternate name               =
| ordained deacon by           =
| date of diaconal ordination  =
| place of diaconal ordination =
| ordained priest by           =
| date of priestly ordination  =
| place of priestly ordination =
| consecrated by               =
| co-consecrators              = <!--List several, separated by commas and linebreaks-->
| date of consecration         =
| place of consecration        =
| elevated by                  =
| date of elevation            =
| bishop 1                     =
| consecration date 1          =
| bishop 2                     =
| consecration date 2          =
| bishop 3                     =
| consecration date 3          =
| bishop 4                     =
| consecration date 4          =
| bishop 5                     =
| consecration date 5          =
| bishop 6                     =
| consecration date 6          =
| bishop 7                     =
| consecration date 7          =
| bishop 8                     =
| consecration date 8          =
| bishop 9                     =
| consecration date 9          =
| bishop 10                    =
| consecration date 10         =
...
| bishop 360                   =
| consecration date 360        =
| sources                      =
| qid                          =
| suppressfields               =
| onlysourced                  =
}}

Parameters and usage

All parameters are optional.

Wikidata
The parameters marked as using Wikidata in the right hand column automatically call the value of the parameter from the associated Wikidata item if one exists; the called value can be overridden by using a parameter below. Unless there is a reason to override the Wikidata value, a Wikidata-enabled parameter should not be used. If the value is missing from Wikidata, it is almost always preferable to add it there instead of using one of the parameters. The Wikidata property from which a parameter's value is called and the when the data must be structured in order to be called is listed in the right hand column.

Parameter Description Wikidata
Content parameters
Top of template
denomination Entry determines the heading color. Entries are case sensitive. See Automatic coloring below for acceptable entries. religion (P140)
name The name of the subject; defaults to the page name base when left empty or not used. Page name base of the Wikipedia article
History
Diaconal ordination
ordained deacon by The bishop who ordained the subject a deacon. significant event (P793)
diaconal ordination (Q41463713)
appointed by (P748)
date of diaconal ordination Date of the subject's ordination as a deacon. significant event (P793)
diaconal ordination (Q41463713)
point in time (P585)
place of diaconal ordination The church and city where the subject was ordainaed a deacon. For example: Westminster Cathedral, London significant event (P793)
diaconal ordination (Q41463713)
location (P276), located in the administrative territorial entity (P131), country (P17)
Priestly ordination
ordained priest by The bishop who ordained the subject a priest. significant event (P793)
priestly ordination (Q41463697)
appointed by (P748)
date of priestly ordination Date of the subject's ordination as a priest. significant event (P793)
priestly ordination (Q41463697)
point in time (P585)
place of priestly ordination The church and city where the subject was ordained a priest. For example: Westminster Cathedral, London significant event (P793)
priestly ordination (Q41463697)
location (P276), located in the administrative territorial entity (P131), country (P17)
Episcopal consecration
consecrated by The bishop who consecrated the subject a bishop. Label appears as "Principal consecrator" if the co-consecrators parameter is used and as "Consecrated by" if co-consecrators is not used.

The position or diocese of the consecrator should not be entered here. Only the wikilinked name should go here.

significant event (P793)
consecration (Q125375)
consecrator (P1598)
co-consecrators The names of the co-consecrators of the subject in either order.
date of consecration Date of the subject's consecration as a bishop. significant event (P793)
consecration (Q125375)
point in time (P585)
place of consecration The church and city where the subject was consecrated a bishop. For example: Westminster Cathedral, London significant event (P793)
consecration (Q125375)
location (P276), located in the administrative territorial entity (P131), country (P17)}}
Cardinalate
elevated by The pope who elevated the subject to the cardinalate. significant event (P793)
elevation (Q41154026)
appointed by (P748)
date of elevation Date of the subject's elevation to the cardinalate. significant event (P793)
elevation (Q41154026)
point in time (P585)
Episcopal succession
alternate name Is used to replace the subject's name in 'bishops consecrated' section with another shorter name, if necessary. Usually the subject's surname (or regnal name in the case of popes). Overrides name, the QID name, and pagenamebase. Page name base of the Wikipedia article
bishop 1 – bishop 360 The name of the bishop that has been consecrated by the subject.
consecration date 1 – consecration date 360 The date that the bishop was consecrated by the subject.
Bottom of template
sources Sources for the information entered in the template.
Template behavior controls
expand Enter the name of the section to be expanded (e.g. History or Episcopal succession). For multiple entries, separate with commas (e.g. History, Episcopal succession). Enter ALL to expand all sections. Entries are case sensitive. Sections are collapsed by default. n/a
qid Identifying number of the Wikidata item from which all template information will be called. Affects all other Wikidata-enabled parameters n/a
suppressfields Can be used to suppress the display of fields that call values from Wikidata. Enter the name of the parameter to be suppressed. Using this parameter will suppress the named parameter even if its value is locally supplied in the template. n/a
onlysourced Can be used to suppress the call of Wikidata values if they are not sourced. Set to 'yes' to use. n/a
embed Can be used to embed this template in another infobox template. Set to 'yes' to use. For information on embedding, see Wikipedia:WikiProject Infoboxes/embed. n/a

Automatic coloring

The header of the template changes depending on the Christian denomination of the subject. The color is determined by Wikidata property religion (P140) or the denomination parameter. The chart below displays the color that is output by entering one of the listed denominations. If none of these is entered, a generic color defaults. The wikitext determining the output colors can be found at Template:Ordination/color.

Acceptable denomination inputs and color outputs
Anglicanism
  • Anglican
  • Anglican Communion
  • Episcopal Church in the United States of America
  • Episcopal Church
  • Episcopalianism
  • Episcopalian
  • Church of England
  • Anglican Church in Aotearoa, New Zealand and Polynesia
  • Anglican Church of Australia
  • Church of Bangladesh
  • Anglican Episcopal Church of Brazil
  • Province of the Anglican Church of Burundi
  • Anglican Church of Canada
  • Church of the Province of Central Africa
  • Anglican Church in Central America
  • Province of the Anglican Church of the Congo
  • Hong Kong Sheng Kung Hui
  • Hong Kong Anglican Church
  • Church of the Province of the Indian Ocean
  • Church of Ireland
  • Anglican Church in Japan
  • Nippon Sei Ko Kai
  • Anglican Episcopal Church in Japan
  • Episcopal Church in Jerusalem and the Middle East
  • Anglican Church of Kenya
  • Anglican Church of Korea
  • Anglican Church of Melanesia
  • Anglican Church of Mexico
  • Church of the Province of Myanmar
  • Church of Nigeria
  • Church of North India
  • Church of Pakistan
  • Anglican Church of Papua New Guinea
  • Episcopal Church in the Philippines
  • Province of the Anglican Church of Rwanda
  • Scottish Episcopal Church
  • Church of the Province of South East Asia
  • Church of South India
  • Anglican Church of Southern Africa
  • Anglican Church of South America
  • Province of the Episcopal Church of South Sudan
  • Anglican Church of Tanzania
  • Church of Uganda
  • Church of the Province of Uganda
  • Church in Wales
  • Church of the Province of West Africa
  • Church in the Province of the West Indies
#EBB0DE
Catholicism: Latin Church
  • Roman Catholic
  • Roman Catholic Church
  • Roman Catholicism
  • Catholic Church
  • Catholicism
  • Catholic
#FFCF00
Catholicism: Eastern Catholic Churches
  • Eastern Catholic
  • Eastern rite Catholic
  • Eastern-rite Catholic
  • Eastern-rite Catholic Church
  • Oriental Catholic
  • Oriental Catholic Church
  • Eastern Catholic Church
  • Albanian Greek Catholic Church
  • Albanian Greek Catholic
  • Armenian Catholic Church
  • Armenian Catholic
  • Belarusian Greek Catholic Church
  • Belarusian Greek Catholic
  • Bulgarian Greek Catholic Church
  • Bulgarian Greek Catholic
  • Chaldean Catholic Church
  • Chaldean Catholic
  • Coptic Catholic Church
  • Coptic Catholic
  • Eritrean Catholic Church
  • Eritrean Catholic
  • Ethiopian Catholic Church
  • Ethiopian Catholic
  • Greek Byzantine Catholic Church
  • Greek Byzantine Catholic
  • Greek Catholic Church of Croatia and Serbia
  • Hungarian Greek Catholic Church
  • Hungarian Greek Catholic
  • Italo-Albanian Greek Catholic Church
  • Italo-Albanian Greek Catholic
  • Macedonian Byzantine-Catholic Church
  • Macedonian Byzantine-Catholic
  • Melkite Greek Catholic Church
  • Melkite Greek Catholic
  • Romanian Greek Catholic Church
  • Romanian Greek Catholic
  • Russian Greek Catholic Church
  • Russian Greek Catholic
  • Ruthenian Greek Catholic Church
  • Ruthenian Greek Catholic
  • Ruthenian Catholic Church
  • Ruthenian Catholic
  • Byzantine Catholic Church
  • Byzantine Catholic
  • Slovak Greek Catholic Church
  • Slovak Catholic Church
  • Slovak Byzantine Catholic Church
  • Slovak Byzantine Catholic
  • Syriac Catholic Church
  • Syriac Catholic
  • Aramean Catholic Church
  • Aramean Catholic
  • Syriac Maronite Church
  • Syriac Maronite
  • Maronite Church
  • Syro-Malabar Catholic Church
  • Syro-Malabar Catholic
  • Syro Malabar Catholic
  • Syro-Malankara Catholic Church
  • Syro-Malankara Catholic
  • Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church
  • Ukrainian Greek Catholic
#FFCF00
Eastern Orthodoxy
  • Eastern Orthodox
  • Eastern Orthodox Church
  • Georgian Orthodox
  • Georgian Orthodox Church
  • Greek Orthodox Church
  • Greek Orthodox
  • Russian Orthodox
  • Russian Orthodox Church
  • Bulgarian Orthodox Church
  • Bulgarian Orthodox
  • Serbian Orthodox Church
  • Serbian Orthodox
  • Abkhazian Orthodox Church
  • Abkhazian Orthodox
#FFC569
Oriental Orthodoxy
  • Oriental Orthodox
  • Coptic Orthodox Church of Alexandria
  • Coptic Orthodox Church
  • Coptic
  • Syriac Orthodox
  • Syriac Orthodox Church
  • Armenian Apostolic Church
  • Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo Church
  • Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo
  • Ethiopian Orthodox
  • Eritrean Orthodox Tewahedo Church
  • Eritrean Orthodox Tewahedo
  • Eritrean Orthodox
  • Malankara Orthodox Syrian Church
  • Malankara Orthodox Syrian
  • Indian Orthodox Church
  • Indian Orthodox
#73C2FB
Lutheranism
  • Lutheran
  • Lutheranism
  • Church of Sweden
#EBB0DE
Assyrian Church of the East
  • Holy Apostolic Catholic Assyrian Church of the East
#CCB2FF
Independent Catholicism
  • Old Catholic
  • Old Catholic Church
  • Old Catholicism
  • Independent Catholic
  • Independent Catholic Church
  • Sedevacantist
  • Sedevacantism
  • Conclavist
  • Conclavism
  • Society of Saint Pius X
  • Palmarian Catholic Church
  • Palmarian Catholic
  • Mariavite Church
  • Old Catholic Mariavite Church
  • Catholic Mariavite Church
  • Old Roman Catholic Church in North America
#BDB76B
Moravianism
  • Moravian
  • Moravian Church
#F56FA1
Gnosticism
  • Gnostic
  • Gnosticism
#696969
Miscellaneous
Entering anything else or leaving the parameter blank defaults to
#CCCC99

Embedding

Most articles that use this template will also use another infobox, especially {{Infobox Christian leader}}, but may use others such as {{Infobox person}} or {{Infobox officeholder}}. It may sometimes be necessary to embed this template in one of these other infoboxes. The primary reason this is done is to save space when an article is short enough that this template when used with another infobox would extend beyond the written text of the article. Unless there is a reason to embed this template, it should be used as a standalone template.

When this template is embedded in {{Infobox Christian leader}}, the Orders section in that template should not be used (meaning parameters: ordination, ordained_by, consecration, consecrated_by, cardinal, created_cardinal_by, and rank), since they would be duplicated by this template.

To embed this template, first find the module parameter in the parent infobox. The entire wikitext of this template should be entered within that parameter. Then, enter | embed = yes inside this template. After those two steps, this template can be used as normal. It can be embedded in any infobox that is designed to accept child templates.

An example of this template embedded in {{Infobox Christian leader}} for the subject Mario Meini is below.


Mario Meini
Bishop of Fiesole
DioceseFiesole
Appointed13 February 2010
Installed18 April 2010
PredecessorLuciano Giovannetti
Other postVice President of the Italian Episcopal Conference
Previous postBishop of Pitigliano-Sovana-Orbetello (1996–2010)
Personal details
Born (1946-11-17) 17 November 1946 (age 79)
Legoli, Peccioli, Tuscany
NationalityItalian
DenominationRoman Catholic
MottoPax et Lux
English: Peace and Light
Coat of armsMario Meini's coat of arms
Ordination history
History
Priestly ordination
Date27 June 1971
PlaceDiocese of Volterra
Episcopal consecration
Principal consecratorVasco Giuseppe Bertelli
Co-consecratorsOvidio Lari,
Antoni Bagnoli
Date7 September 1996
Episcopal succession
Bishops consecrated by Ordination/doc as principal consecrator
Guglielmo Borghetti15 September 2010
{{Infobox Christian leader
| type = bishop
| honorific-prefix = ], ]
| name = Mario Meini
| title = ]
| diocese = ]
| appointed = 13 February 2010
| enthroned = 18 April 2010
| predecessor = ]
| other_post = Vice President of the ]
| birth_date = {{birth date and age|1946|11|17|df=yes}}
| birth_place = Legoli, ], ]
| nationality = Italian
| religion = ]
| previous_post = ] (1996–2010)
| coat_of_arms = Coat of arms of Mario Meini.svg
| motto = Pax et Lux<br>{{Langx|en|Peace and Light}}
| module =
 {{Ordination
 | embed = yes
 | date of priestly ordination = 27 June 1971
 | place of priestly ordination = ]
 | consecrated by = ]
 | co-consecrators = ],<br />]
 | date of consecration = 7 September 1996
 | bishop 1 = ]
 | consecration date 1 = 15 September 2010
 }}
}}

Examples

Locally supplied

This is what the template would look like if were placed in the Timothy M. Dolan article and if all the information were supplied locally, using the template's parameters. The 'Episcopal succession' section is expanded.

Ordination history of
Timothy M. Dolan
History
Priestly ordination
Ordained byEdward Thomas O'Meara
DateJune 19, 1976
Episcopal consecration
Principal consecratorJustin Rigali
Co-consecratorsJoseph Fred Naumann,
Michael John Sheridan
DateAugust 15, 2001
PlaceCathedral Basilica of Saint Louis, St. Louis, Missouri, USA
Cardinalate
Elevated byPope Benedict XVI
DateFebruary 18, 2012
Episcopal succession
Bishops consecrated by Timothy M. Dolan as principal consecrator
William P. CallahanDecember 21, 2007
Terry R. LaValleyApril 30, 2010
Edward Bernard ScharfenbergerApril 10, 2014
John Joseph JenikAugust 4, 2014
John Joseph O’HaraAugust 4, 2014
Peter John ByrneAugust 4, 2014
{{Ordination
| expand = Episcopal succession
| ordained priest by    = ]
| date of priestly ordination = June 19, 1976
| consecrated by        = ]
| co-consecrators       = ],<br />]
| date of consecration  = August 15, 2001
| place of consecration = ], ], ], USA
| elevated by           = ]
| date of elevation     = February 18, 2012
| bishop 1              = ]
| consecration date 1   = December 21, 2007
| bishop 2              = ]
| consecration date 2   = April 30, 2010
| bishop 3              = ]
| consecration date 3   = April 10, 2014
| bishop 4              = ]
| consecration date 4   = August 4, 2014
| bishop 5              = ]
| consecration date 5   = August 4, 2014
| bishop 6              = ]
| consecration date 6   = August 4, 2014
}}

Completely from Wikidata

This is what the template would look like if it were placed in the Pope Francis article without adding any parameters. All content in this template was called from Wikidata and none was supplied locally in the template.

Ordination history of
Pope Francis
History
Priestly ordination
Ordained byRamón José Castellano Edit this on Wikidata
Date13 December 1969 Edit this on Wikidata
Episcopal consecration
PlaceBuenos Aires Metropolitan Cathedral Edit this on Wikidata, Buenos Aires Edit this on Wikidata
{{Ordination}}

TemplateData

Tracking categories

Pages only occur in the following categories if they are in the mainspace.

Preview warnings

These warnings will be displayed only in preview. If one appears, please rectify the relevant problem.

Cause Warning
If an unknown parameter is used. The unknown parameter will be displayed where _VALUE_ is.
Warning: Page using Template:Ordination with unknown parameter "_VALUE_" (this message is shown only in preview).
If there is no sourced value for religion (P140) on Wikidata and a value for denomination has not been supplied.
Warning: If "denomination" parameter is not used and the Wikidata value for P140 is missing, unsourced, or only sourced to Wikipedia, a generic color will appear in the template header (this message is shown only in preview).

See also