Metropolitan of Kiev, Galicia and all Ruthenia (1748–1762)
Florian Hrebnicki (born as Franciszek Hrebnicki; Polish: Florian Hrebnicki ; 1683 – 18 July 1762) was the "Metropolitan of Kiev, Galicia and all Ruthenia "[ a]
On 14 March 1716 Hrebnicki was ordained by Primate of the Uniate church Leo Kiszka as a archbishop of Polock.
On 16 December 1748 he was confirmed as the Metropolitan bishop of Kiev, Galicia, and all Ruthenia.
He consecrated following bishops Maksymilian Rylo and Theodosius Godebski.
Hrebnicki died in 1762 at a residence of the Polotsk Archbishops that he built in village of Strunie (today in Polotsk District ).
^ The title is also known as the Metropolis of Kiev, Halych and all Rus' or Metropolis of Kyiv, Halychyna, and All-Rus' . The name "Galicia " is a Latinized form of Halych , one of several regional principalities of the medieval state of Kievan Rus' .
Metropolis of Kiev and all Rus' (988–1281)
(Michael and Leontius)
Theophylact
John
Teopempt
(Hilarion )u
Ephraim
George (1069–1073)
John II
John III
Nicholas
Nikephoros
Nikita
Michael II
(Clyment )u
Costantine
Teodor
John IV
Costantine II
John V
Nikephoros II
Matthew
Сyril
Joseph
(Peter )u
Kirill II (1250–1281)
sede vacante (1281–1283)
Partition of the metropolis (1283–1378)
Metropolis of Kiev and all Rus'(episcopal seat in Moscow ) Metropolis of Halych
Niphont (1303–1305)
sede vacante (1305–1326)
Gabriel (1326–1329)
Theodore (1337–1347)
Antoniy (1370–1391) (Metropolitan of those Halych eparchies within Poland)
Metropolis of Lithuania Metropolis of Lithuania-Volhynia
Roman (1355–1362) (merged metropolises of Lithuania and Halych)
Administered by Alexius (1362–1378)
Metropolis disestablished. Territory reunited to the Metropolis of Kiev and all Rus'
Gregory Tsamblak (1414–1420 in pretense)u
Reunited Metropolis (1378–1441)
Cyprian (restored 12 February 1378–1406)
Photius (1408–1431)
Gerasimus (1431–1437)
Isidore (1437–1441) Later, as the uniate Metropolitan (1441–1458)b
Parallel successions (1441–1596)
Parallel successions (1596–1805)
Metropolis today c Recognised by Rome alone; b Recognised by both Rome and Constantinople; u Not recognised by Constantinople
In 1839 Polotsk Uniate eparchy was dissolved by the Council of Polotsk
International National Other