Demetrius Augustine GallitzinAmerican missionary

Main

one of the first Roman Catholic priests to serve as a missionary to European immigrants in the United States during the early 19th century. He was known as the “Apostle of the Alleghenies.”

Of noble Russian parentage (his father was Prince Dmitry Alekseyevich Golitsyn, Russian ambassador to the Dutch Republic), Gallitzin converted to Roman Catholicism in 1787. He traveled to the United States and was ordained priest in Baltimore, Md., in 1795. John Carroll, first U.S. bishop, sent him to Cambria county, Pennsylvania, where immigrant Roman Catholics were settling in the Allegheny foothills. Like many of his peers, he was deeply engrossed in land and colony projects to attract Roman Catholic immigrants. At his death, when he was vicar general for western Pennsylvania, about 10,000 Roman Catholics lived in his district, where 40 years earlier there had been only 12.

Gallitzin wrote controversial tracts and pamphlets defending Roman Catholicism against attacks by frontier Protestants; typical of these polemics is A Defence of Catholic Principles (1816). A collection of his letters was published in 1940.

Citations

MLA Style:

"Demetrius Augustine Gallitzin." Encyclopædia Britannica. 2009. Encyclopædia Britannica Online. 08 Jan. 2009 <http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/224459/Demetrius-Augustine-Gallitzin>.

APA Style:

Demetrius Augustine Gallitzin. (2009). In Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved January 08, 2009, from Encyclopædia Britannica Online: http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/224459/Demetrius-Augustine-Gallitzin

Link to this article and share the full text with the readers of your Web site or blog-post.

If you think a reference to this article on "Demetrius Augustine Gallitzin" will enhance your Web site, blog-post, or any other web-content, then feel free to link to this article, and your readers will gain full access to the full article, even if they do not subscribe to our service.

You may want to use the HTML code fragment provided below.

copy link

We welcome your comments. Any revisions or updates suggested for this article will be reviewed by our editorial staff. Contact us here.

Regular users of Britannica may notice that this comments feature is less robust than in the past. This is only temporary, while we make the transition to a dramatically new and richer site. The functionality of the system will be restored soon.

A-Z Browse

Image preview