Gabala

 Gabbatha

 Vicariate Apostolic of Gaboon

 Gabriel

 Brothers of Saint Gabriel

 Bl. Gabriel Possenti

 Gabriel Sionita

 Gad

 Gadara

 Agnolo, Giovanni, and Taddeo Gaddi

 Archdiocese of Gaeta

 Ivan Sergejewitch Gagarin

 Achille Gagliardi

 William Gahan

 Claude Ferdinand Gaillard

 St. Gal

 Epistle to the Galatians

 Pietro Colonna Galatino

 Valerius Maximianus Galerius

 Joseph Galien

 Galilee

 Alessandro Galilei

 Galileo Galilei

 Elizabeth Galitzin

 St. Gall

 Abbey of St. Gall

 St. Galla

 Vicariate Apostolic of Galla

 Louis Gallait

 Antoine Galland

 Andrea Gallandi

 Diocese of Galle

 Juan Nicasio Gallego

 Pietro Luigi Galletti

 Gallia Christiana

 Gallicanism

 Gallican Rite

 Sts. Gallicanus

 Publius Licinius Egnatius Gallienus

 Joseph de Gallifet

 Diocese of Gallipoli

 Adele Amalie Gallitzin

 Demetrius Augustine Gallitzin

 Diocese of Galloway

 Pasquale Galluppi

 Peter Gallwey

 Diocese of Galtelli-Nuoro

 Bernhard Galura

 Luigi Galvani

 Diocese of Galveston

 Diocese of Galway and Kilmacduagh

 Vasco da Gama

 Gamaliel

 Jean Gamans

 Gambling

 Pius Bonifacius Gams

 Peter Gandolphy

 Gangra

 Diocese of Gap

 Anne García

 St. Gonsalo Garcia

 Gabriel García Moreno

 Garcilasso de la Vega

 Garcilasso de la Vega (the Inca)

 Aloisio Gardellini

 Stephen Gardiner

 Julius Peter Garesché

 Jean Garet

 Gargara

 André Garin

 Garland

 John Garland

 Ven. Nicholas Garlick

 François-Xavier Garneau

 Henry Garnet

 Ven. Thomas Garnet

 Charles Garnier

 Jean Garnier

 Julien Garnier

 Raffaele Garrucci

 Diocese of Garzon

 Bl. Gaspare del Bufalo

 Philippe-Aubert de Gaspe

 Pierre Gassendi

 Joseph Gasser von Valhorn

 Johann Joseph Gassner

 William Gaston

 St. Gatianus

 Franz Christian Gau

 Antoine Gaubil

 St. Gaudentius

 Gaudentius of Brescia

 Gaudete Sunday

 Antoine le Gaudier

 Gaudiosus

 Christian Gaul

 Giovanni Battista Gaulli

 Aloisius-Edouard-Camille Gaultier

 Jean-Joseph Gaume

 Bartolommeo Gavantus

 Charles Etienne Arthur Gayarré

 Gaza

 Pietro Maria Gazzaniga

 Gebhard (III) of Constance

 Emile Gebhart

 Gedeon

 Nicolas Gédoyn

 Josef Anton von Gegenbauer

 Johann Geiler von Kaysersberg

 Johannes von Geissel

 Pope St. Gelasius I

 Pope Gelasius II

 Gelasius of Cyzicus

 Gemblours

 Genealogy (in the Bible)

 Genealogy of Christ

 Gilbert Génebrard

 General Chapter

 Generation

 Genesareth

 Genesis

 Genesius

 St. Genevieve

 Land of Genezareth

 Girolamo Genga

 Edward Génicot

 St. Gennadius I

 Gennadius II

 Gennadius of Marseilles

 Edmund and John Gennings

 Archdiocese of Genoa

 Gentile da Fabriano

 Gentiles

 Aloysius Gentili

 Genuflexion

 Geoffrey of Clairvaux

 Geoffrey of Dunstable

 Geoffrey of Monmouth

 Geoffrey of Vendôme

 Biblical Geography

 Geography and the Church

 St. George

 George Hamartolus

 George of Trebizond

 George Pisides

 George the Bearded

 Georgetown University

 Georgia

 Georgius Syncellus

 Diocese of Gerace

 St. Gerald

 Diocese of Geraldton

 Baron Ferdinand de Géramb

 Joseph-Marie de Gérando

 St. Gérard, Abbot of Brogne

 St. Gerard, Bishop of Toul

 Gerard, Archbishop of York

 John Gerard

 Ven. Miles Gerard

 Richard Gerard

 St. Gerard Majella

 Gerard of Cremona

 Gerardus Odonis

 Gerasa

 Gabriel Gerberon

 Martin Gerbert

 Olympe-Philippe Gerbet

 Jean-François Gerbillon

 Hyacinthe Sigismond Gerdil

 Gerhard of Zütphen

 Gerhoh of Reichersberg

 St. Germain (1)

 St. Germain (2)

 St. Germaine Cousin

 Bl. German Gardiner

 Germanicia

 Germanicopolis

 Germans in the United States

 St. Germanus I

 Germany

 Vicariate Apostolic of Northern Germany

 Germia

 Diocese of Gerona

 Gerrha

 Jean le Charlier de Gerson

 Bl. Gertrude of Aldenberg

 Gertrude of Hackeborn

 St. Gertrude of Nivelles

 St. Gertrude the Great

 Ven. Gertrude van der Oosten

 Dom François Armand Gervaise

 George Gervase

 Gervase of Canterbury

 Gervase of Tilbury

 Sts. Gervasius and Protasius

 St. Géry

 Gesellenvereine

 Gesta Dei per Francos

 Gesta Romanorum

 Gethsemani

 Abbey of Our Lady of Gethsemani

 Gezireh

 August Friedrich Gfrörer

 Prefecture Apostolic of Ghardaia

 Diocese of Ghent

 Lorenzo di Cione Ghiberti

 Ghirlandajo

 St. Ghislain

 Ghost Dance

 Pietro Giannone

 Gibail and Batrun

 Pierre Gibault

 John Gibbons

 Richard Gibbons

 Jean-Pierre Gibert

 Gian Matteo Giberti

 Vicariate Apostolic of Gibraltar

 Bonaventure Giffard

 Godfrey Giffard

 William Giffard

 William Gifford

 Supernatural Gift

 Nicolas-Joseph-Laurent Gilbert

 Sir John Thomas Gilbert

 Gilbert de la Porrée

 Gilbert Foliot

 Order of Gilbertines

 Vicariate Apostolic of the Gilbert Islands

 St. Gilbert of Sempringham

 St. Gildas

 Alvarez Carillo Gil de Albornoz

 St. Giles

 Gillespie

 James Gillis

 Patrick Sarsfield Gilmore

 Bl. Gil of Santarem

 Gindarus

 Jacques-Marie-Achille Ginoulhiac

 Vincenzo Gioberti

 Fra Giovanni Giocondo

 Tommaso Giordani

 Luca Giordano

 Giorgione

 Giotto di Bondone

 Ruggiero Giovanelli

 Giovanni Battista Giraldi

 Ubaldo Giraldi

 Giraldus Cambrensis

 Jean-Baptiste Girard

 François Girardon

 Giraud de Borneil

 Girba

 Girgenti

 Blaise Gisbert

 Giulio Romano

 Bl. Giuseppe Maria Tommasi

 Giuseppe Giusti

 Raoul Glaber

 Manius Acilius Glabrio

 Glagolitic

 Jean-Baptiste Glaire

 Ranulf de Glanville

 Henry Glarean

 Archdiocese of Glasgow

 Glastonbury Abbey

 Glebe

 School of Glendalough

 Gloria in Excelsis Deo

 Glory

 Scriptural Glosses

 Glosses, Glossaries, Glossarists

 Episcopal Gloves

 Gluttony

 Archdiocese of Gnesen-Posen

 Gnosticism

 Archdiocese of Goa

 Vicariate Apostolic of Goajira

 St. Goar

 Jacques Goar

 George Gobat

 Gobban Saer

 Person Gobelinus

 God

 St. Godard

 Thomas Godden

 Antoine Godeau

 St. Godeberta

 St. Godelina

 Paul Godet des Marais

 Godfrey of Bouillon

 Godfrey of Fontaines

 Godfrey of Viterbo

 Godric

 Marie Josephine Goetz

 Stephen Goffe

 Leonard Goffine

 Gog and Magog

 Golden Calf

 Golden Rose

 Carlo Goldoni

 Thomas Goldwell

 Francisco Lopez de Gómara

 Francisco Gomes De Amorim

 Gondulphus

 Jean Baptiste Gonet

 Jérôme de Gonnelieu

 Ercole Gonzaga

 Scipione Gonzaga

 Thyrsus González de Santalla

 Gonzalo de Berceo

 Good

 Highest Good

 Good Faith

 Good Friday

 Eastern Vicariate of the Cape of Good Hope

 Western Vicariate of the Cape of Good Hope

 Godfrey Goodman

 Ven. John Goodman

 Sisters of the Good Samaritan

 Our Lady of Charity of the Good Shepherd

 Pierre-Lambert Goossens

 Gordian

 Sts. Gordianus and Epimachus

 Andrew Gordon

 Gordon Riots

 Gordos

 St. Gorgonius

 Martyrs of Gorkum

 Guido Görres

 Johann Joseph Görres

 Gortyna

 Görz

 Goscelin

 Gospel and Gospels

 Gospel in the Liturgy

 Alexander Goss

 Jan Gossaert

 Jean-Edmé-Auguste Gosselin

 John Gother

 Gothic Architecture

 Gottfried von Strasburg

 St. Gottschalk

 Gottschalk of Orbais

 Abbey of Göttweig

 Diocese of Goulburn

 Charles-François Gounod

 René Goupil

 Thomas-Marie-Joseph Gousset

 John Gower

 Francisco José de Goya y Lucientes

 Diocese of Goyaz

 Diocese of Gozo

 Carlo Gozzi

 Gozzoli

 Grace

 Controversies on Grace

 William Russell Grace

 Grace at Meals

 Gradual

 Gradual Psalms

 Robert Gradwell

 Graffiti

 Patrick Graham

 Holy Grail

 Eugénie de Gramont

 Archdiocese of Gran

 Archdiocese of Granada

 University of Granada

 Jean Grancolas

 Theodor Granderath

 Philippe-André Grandidier

 Abbey and Order of Grandmont

 Diocese of Grand Rapids

 Thomas Grant

 Antoine Perrenot de Granvelle

 François-Joseph-Paul Grasse

 Lorenz Grässel

 Paris de Grassis

 Gratian

 Jerome Gratian

 Johannes Gratian

 Gratianopolis

 Ortwin Gratius

 Auguste-Joseph-Alphonse Gratry

 Peter Aloys Gratz

 Jacques Gravier

 Dominic Gravina

 Giovanni Vincenzo Gravina

 Diocese of Gravina and Montepeloso

 University of Graz

 Great Falls

 Greece

 Greek Catholics in America

 Greek Church

 Greek Orthodox Church in America

 Greek Rites

 Hugh Green

 Thomas Louis Green

 Diocese of Green Bay

 Greenland

 Gregorian Chant

 Pope St. Gregory I

 Pope St. Gregory II

 Pope St. Gregory III

 Pope Gregory IV

 Pope Gregory V

 Pope Gregory VI

 Gregory VI (Antipope)

 Pope St. Gregory VII

 Pope Gregory VIII

 Gregory VIII

 Pope Gregory IX

 Pope Gregory X

 Pope Gregory XI

 Volume 8

 Pope Gregory XII

 Pope Gregory XIII

 Pope Gregory XIV

 Pope Gregory XV

 Pope Gregory XVI

 Gregory Bæticus

 Gregory of Heimburg

 St. Gregory of Nazianzus

 St. Gregory of Neocaesarea

 St. Gregory of Nyssa

 Gregory of Rimini

 St. Gregory of Tours

 St. Gregory of Utrecht

 Gregory of Valencia

 Gregory the Illuminator

 University of Greifswald

 Karl Johann Greith

 Gremiale

 Diocese of Grenoble

 Dietrich Gresemund

 Adrien Greslon

 Jean Baptiste Gresset

 Jacob Gretser

 Jean-Baptiste Greuze

 Grey Nuns

 Grey Nuns of the Cross

 Gerald Griffin

 Thomas Griffiths

 Franz Grillparzer

 Francesco Maria Grimaldi

 Giovanni Francesco Grimaldi

 Johann Jacob Christoffel von Grimmelshausen

 Valentin Gröne

 Gerard Groote

 John Gropper

 Robert Grosseteste

 Diocese of Grosseto

 Diocese of Grosswardein

 Abbey of Grottaferrata

 Johann Grueber

 Anastasius Grün

 Archdiocese of Guadalajara (Guadalaxara)

 Shrine of Guadalupe

 Diocese of Guadeloupe

 Guaicuri Indians

 Guaraní Indians

 Law of Guarantees

 Diocese of Guarda

 Francesco Guardi

 Guardian Angel

 Feast of Guardian Angels

 Guardianship

 Battista Guarini

 Guarino da Verona

 Diocese of Guastalla

 Guastallines

 Archdiocese of Santiago de Guatemala

 Diocese of Guayaquil

 Diocese of Gubbio

 Moritz Gudenus

 St. Gudula

 Guelphs and Ghibellines

 Prosper Louis Pascal Guéranger

 Robert Guérard

 Anne-Thérèse Guérin

 Guérin

 Joseph Heinrich Aloysius Gügler

 Giovanni Battista Guglielmini

 Guiana

 Guibert of Ravenna

 Francesco Guicciardini

 Guido of Arezzo

 Guigues du Chastel

 André Guijon

 Guilds

 Patrick Robert Guiney

 Robert Guiscard

 House of Guise

 Guitmund

 Vicariate Apostolic of Gulf of St. Lawrence

 Gunpowder Plot

 Bl. Gunther

 Anton Günther

 Günther of Cologne

 Diocese of Gurk

 Jean-Pierre Gury

 Bartholomeu Lourenço de Gusmão

 Johann Gutenberg

 St. Guthlac

 Jeanne-Marie Bouvier de La Motte-Guyon

 Fernando Pérez de Guzmán

 Diocese of Györ

Greek Catholics in America

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The Uniat churches of the Byzantine or Greek Rite were almost unknown to the United States some twenty-five years ago [1884]. Occasionally a priest of that rite from Syria came to America to ask assistance for his people who were struggling amid the Moslems, but while his visit was a matter of curiosity, his rite and the peoples who followed it were wholly unknown to American Catholics. To-day, however, emigration has increased to such an extent and is drawn from so many lands and peoples that there are representatives of most of the Eastern rites in America, and particularly those of the Greek Rite. These have lately arrived in large numbers and have erected their churches all over the country. The chief races which have brought the Greek Rite with them to the United States are the various Slavs of Austro-Hungary, and they are now approaching such a position of material well-being and intellectual development as to be reckoned with as one of the factors of Catholic life in the United States. Other races have also brought the Greek Rite with them and established it where they have settled. The advent of the Slavs into the United States really commenced about 1879-1880. Those of the Greek Rite came from the north-eastern portion of the Austro-Hungarian monarchy, where they inhabited chiefly the northern and southern slopes of the Carpathian Mountains, which form the boundary line between Galicia and Hungary. The first of the new-corners were miners in the coal districts. During the troublous times in Pennsylvania, from 1871 to 1879, when the "Molly Maguires" terrorized the mining districts and practically defied the authority of the State, the various coal companies determined to look abroad for foreign labour to replace their lawless workmen, and so they introduced the Austrian Slav to the mining regions of Pennsylvania. His success in wage-earning induced his countrymen to follow, and the coal companies and iron-masters of Pennsylvania were quick to avail themselves of the new and less costly labour. This was before any of the present contract labour laws were enacted. The Slav was willing to work for longer hours than the English-speaking labourer, to perform heavier work, and to stolidly put up with inconveniences which his predecessor would not brook. He came from a land in which he had originally been a serf (serfdom was abolished in Austria-Hungary in 1848, and in Russia in 1861), then a degraded poverty-stricken peasant with hardly anything to call his own, and it was no wonder that America seemed to offer him boundless opportunity to earn a living and improve his condition. At first he was a cheap man; but in the course of a very short time the Slav became not a mere pair of strong hands, but a skilled worker, and as such he drove out his competitors, and his success drew still more of his countrymen across the sea. In the anthracite coal region of Pennsylvania there were in 1880 but some 1900 Slavs; in 1890, over 40,000; and in 1900, upwards of 81,000. The same proportion holds good of the bituminous coal-mining districts and of the iron regions in that and other states. Taking simply the past four years (1905-1908), the immigration of the Slovaks and Ruthenians, both of the Greek Catholic Rite, has amounted to 215,972. This leaves out of consideration the immigration (147,675) of the Croatians and Slavonians for the same period, though a considerable portion of them are also of the Greek Rite. These Slavs brought with them their Greek Catholic rites and practices, but they were illiterate, ignorant, the poorest of the poor, and knew nothing of the English language. Herding together in camps and settlements, and working like serfs at the most exhausting labour, they had but little opportunity to improve themselves or to learn the language, customs, and ways of the Americans around them, while both American and foreign-born Catholics failed to recognize in them fellow-Catholics, and so passed them scornfully by, and the American of the older stock and anti-Catholic prejudices too often held them in supreme contempt. Yet as soon as they gathered some little substance and formed a. settled community they sent for their clergy. When these arrived, they, too, were often imbued with national and racial prejudices, and knew too little of the English language and American ideas and customs to initiate immediately the progress of their people, yet they created for them churches, schools, and a branch of their native literature upon American soil, and gradually brought them into touch with the people around them. In this they were seconded by many educated laymen who also followed their countrymen, and the result has been that the Greek Rite has now been established in the United States much more solidly and with greater virility than it is in many of the dioceses in south-eastern Europe. Other races and nationalities have also established themselves besides the Slavs; and there are in America also the Rumanians, the Syrians, and the Italians who follow the Greek Rite. But the people who have been foremost and most enthusiastic inthe support of and devotion to their Oriental Rite are the so-called Ruthenians, a name used to designate the Ruthenians proper and also those Slovaks who are their immediate neighbours. In order to understand fully their position and relations in America, some of their history and peculiarities should be given.


I. RUTHENIAN GREEK CATHOLICS

The word Ruthenian is derived from the later Latin Ruthenia, the former name for Russia, and of course the Ruthenians might well be called Russians. Indeed, the present Ruthenians declare that they are the original Russians, and that the present Russia and Russians owe their name and nation to the accident of successful conquest and assimilation. Their own name for themselves is Rusini, and it is probable that Ruthenian was merely an attempt to put this word into Latin. The word Rutheni is first found in the writings of the Polish annalist, Martinus Gallus (1190), and the Danish historian, Saxo Grammaticus (1203). The original word Rusini is derived from Rus, the abstract word for Russian fatherland or dwelling-place of the Slavic people; and the English word "Russian" may therefore mean a derivative from the word Rus, as denominating the race, or it may mean a subject of the Russian Empire. The former is russky the latter rossiisky, in the Russian and Ruthenian languages, and hence, while the first word is translated either as Russian or Ruthenian, it carries no special reference to the Russian Empire. These people are also called "Little Russians" (an expression chiefly used for them in the Russian Empire), originally an allusion to their stature as contrasted with the Muscovites. Their language is known as Ruthenian or Little Russian, and is spoken in Northern Hungary, Galicia Bukowina, and in the Provinces of Volhynia, Podolia, Chelm, and Kiev in Russia. It is quite similar to the Russian language of the Russian Empire (sometimes called Great Russian), bearing about the same relation to it as Lowland Scotch does to English, or Plattdeutsch to German, and rather closer than Portuguese does to Spanish. The Ruthenians (in Austria) and Little Russians (in Russia) use the Russian alphabet and write their language in almost the same orthography as the Great Russians of St. Petersburg and Moscow, but they pronounce it in many cases very differently, quite as the French and English might pronounce differently a word written the same in each language. This fact has led in late years to a recension of the Russian alphabet in Galicia and Bukowina by the governmental authorities, and by dropping some letters and adding one or two more and then spelling all the words just as they are pronounced, they have produced a new language at least to the eye. This is the "phonetic" alphabet and orthography, and as thus introduced it differentiates the Ruthenian language of these provinces more than ever from the Russian. The phonetic system of orthography is still fiercely opposed at home and in America, and as an Austrian governmental measure it is regarded by many as an effort to detach the Ruthenians from the rest of the Russian race and in a measure to Polonize them. This battle of the reformed phonetic spelling rages as fiercely in the United States as in Austria. Indeed the Greek Catholic bishop here has found it necessary to issue his official documents in both the phonetic and the etymologic spelling (as the older form is called), so as to meet the views of both parties. The phonetic spelling has never been introduced among the Ruthenians in Hungary, and their section of the language is still written in the customary form, there and in the United States. Besides the Ruthenians there are also the Slovaks who live in Northern and North-western Hungary, close neighbours to the Ruthenians, who are Greek Catholics, and who speak a language almost like the Bohemian, yet similar to the Ruthenian. It is written, however, with Roman letters, and the pronunciation follows the Bohemian more than the Ruthenian. These people seem to have been originally Ruthenian, but became gradually changed and moulded by the Bohemians and their language and for a long time wrote their language in the same manner as the Bohemian. The Bohemians, however, are in the Austrian part of the empire, while the Slovaks are in Hungary. They have emigrated to the United States in large numbers, and are about equally divided between the Greek and Roman Rites. This again necessitates the publication of church matters, prayer books, journals, etc., in the Slovak language. It illustrates the difficulties of the Greek Catholic priests in the United States, since they are likely to have in their parishes Ruthenians (of the old and new orthographies), Slovaks, and even those who speak only Hungarian, having lost their Slavic tongue. It is no uncommon thing to find a Greek Catholic priest capable of speaking five languages: Ruthenian, Slovak, Hungarian, German, and English. It is these people as a whole who are comprehended under the term Ruthenian, although that term applies strictly to those speaking Russian and using the Russian alphabet. After the eleventh century the larger portion of Russians fell away from the unity of the Church in the schism of Constantinople, while a minority continued faithful to the Catholic Church, and later many more returned to unity. The Holy See, therefore, made use of the ancient word Ruthenian to designate those Russians who followed the Greek Rite in unity with the Holy See, in order to distinguish them from the Northern Russians who adhered to the schism. Later on, those Russians who joined the union under the Polish kings received the same name, and the word Ruthenian is to-day used exclusively to designate the Russians of Austro-Hungary, who are Greek Catholics in contradistinction to the Russians of the Russian Empire, who are of the Greek Orthodox faith.

The language of the Mass and the other liturgical services according to the Byzantine Rite is the ancient Slavonic (staroslavianski), and the Greek Liturgy was originally translated by Sts. Cyril and Methodius about the year 868, and it has remained substantially the same ever since. It is curious to notice that the Ruthenian language is much closer, both in spelling and pronunciation, to the church Slavonic than the present Russian language of St. Petersburg and Moscow. The letters in which the church books are printed are the Cyrillic, or Kirillitsa said to have been invented or, rather, adapted by St. Cyril from the Greek alphabet, together with some additional letters of his own invention. It consists of forty-three letters of archaic form as used in the church books, but has been altered and reduced in modern Russian and Ruthenian to thirty-five letters. In the year 879 Pope John VIII formally authorized the use of the Slavonic language forever in the Mass and in the whole liturgy and offices of the Church, according to the Greek Rite, and its use has been continued ever since by the Catholic and the Orthodox (schismatic) Greeks of the Slavic races. This is the language used in the Sluzhebnik (Missal), Trebnik (Ritual), Chasoslov (Book of Hours), and other church books of the Ruthenian Greek Catholics in America.

After the schism of Constantinople (1054) most of the Russians became estranged from the unity of the Church. (See under GREEK CHURCH, Vol. VI, pp. 760-62.) In 1595 the Russian bishops of Lithuania and Little Russia determined to return to unity with the Holy See, and held a council at Brest-Litovsk, at which a decree of union was adopted, and where they chose two of their number, Ignatius Potzey and Cyril Terletzki, to go to Rome and take the oath of submission to the pope. They declared that they desired to return to the full unity of the Church as it existed before the schism of Photius and Cærularius, so as to have in Russia one united Catholic Church again. No change in their rites or their calendar was required by Rome, but the whole of the ancient Greek Liturgy, service, and discipline (excepting a few schismatic saints' days and practices) was to go on as before. In December, 1595, Clement VIII solemnly ratified the union of the two Churches in the Bull "Magnus Dominus". On 6 October, 1596, the union between the Eastern and Western Churches was proclaimed and ratified in the Russian part of the Kingdom of Poland. A large number of the Russian bishops immediately went over to the union. In Chelm the Russian Bishop Zbiruiski led the way with his whole diocese, and his successor, Methodius Terletzki, was a valiant champion of the Uniat Church. This Greek Uniat Church even produced a martyr for the Faith, St. Josaphat, Archbishop of Polotzk, who was slain by the Orthodox partisans in 1633. In Galicia, however, the union was slower. While priests and congregations became Uniat, the Bishops of Peremysl and Lemberg stood out for nearly a century. But on 23 June, 1691, Innocent Vinnitzki, Bishop of Peremysl, joined the union, and in 1700 Joseph Shumlanski, Bishopof Lemberg (it was afterwards restored to metropolitan dignity by the pope in 1807), also took the oath of union with the Holy See. From that time till now the Russians on the northern slopes of the Carpathian Mountains and on both sides of the River Dniester have been united with Rome. On the southern side of the Carpathians the Russians also accepted the union. In the year 1636 Vassili Tarasovitch, Bishop of Munkács, acknowledged the pope as the head of the Church and for it he was persecuted, imprisoned and forced to resign his see. But union with the Holy See could not be stayed by such means, and on 24 April, 1646, it was accomplished in the city of Ungvar by Peter Rostoshinski; the then Bishop of Munkács, and George Yakusitch, Bishop of Agri (Erlau). These two bishops in solemn council, with sixty three priests, abjured the schism and confessed themselves Greek clergy holding the Faith of Sts. Cyril and Methodius in communion with Rome. Since that time the Ruthenian people (including the Greek Slovaks) in the Kingdom of Hungary have acknowledged the pope as the visible head of the undivided Catholic Church.

These Ruthenians have continued to practise their ancient Greek-Slavonic rites and usages, and their forms of worship introduced into the United States seem strange to the Catholic accustomed only to the Roman Rite, and have made them objects of distrust and even active dislike, so that a few of the most salient differences may be pointed out, although a full statement will be found in the various articles on the Eastern rites, ceremonies, and vestments. The Mass itself is said in ancient Slavonic, the altar is separated from the body of the church by a high partition called the iconostasis, upon which the pictures of Christ and His Mother, as well as various saints, are placed, and the vestments of the Mass are quite different. The stole is a broad band looped around the neck and hanging straight down in front, the chasuble is cut away at the front and closely resembles the Roman cope, and instead of the maniple two broad cuffs are worn, while a broad belt takes the place of the girdle or cincture. Married men may be ordained to the diaconate and priesthood; but bishops must be celibate, nor can a deacon or priest marry after ordination. Priests impart the Sacrament of Confirmation to children immediately after baptism, and Communion is given to the laity under both forms, the consecrated species being mingled together in the chalice and administered to the communicant with a spoon. Organs are not used in their churches, and their church year follows the Julian Calendar, which is now thirteen days behind the Gregorian calendar in use in the United States and Western Europe. Besides this, the Ruthenians (and the Russian Orthodox likewise), display the so-called "three-armed" (or Russian) cross fashioned in this manner upon their churches and use it upon their missals, prayer-books, paintings and banners, as well as other objects. They make the sign of the cross in the reverse direction to the Roman method, and in their religious services the men and women are segregated from each other upon different sides of their churches.

It is from these people, inhabiting Galicia, Bukowina, and Hungary, that the Ruthenian Greek Catholic population has come. Their earliest immigration to the United States began in 1879, from the western portion of Galicia near the Carpathian Mountains, the so-called Lemkovschini, and then spread throughout the Galician and Hungarian sides of the mountains. At first it was hardly noticed, but it grew year by year, the earliest immigrants coming from Grybow, Gorlice, Jaslo, Neu Sandec, Krosno, and Sanok in Galicia, and from Szepes, Saros, Abauj, and Ung in Hungary, until finally the governmental authorities began to notice it. At the post offices in many of the mountain places in the Ruthenian portion of Galicia it was observed that the peasants were receiving large sums of money from their fathers, sons, or brothers in America. The news spread rapidly, the newspapers and officials taking it up, and so emigration was at once stimulated to the highest degree. Every year it has increased, and Ruthenian societies are formed here to assist their newly-arrived brethren to find employment and to give information to those at home about America.. It is impossible to tell exactly how many Ruthenian and Slovak Greek Catholics have come to the United States, because no statistics have been kept by the United States Government in regard to religious faith of immigrants, and not always accurate ones in regard to race or nationality. Still the immigration reports show that immigration from Austria-Hungary from 1861 to 1868 was annually in the hundreds; and from 1869 to 1879 it ranged from 1500 to 8000 annually; and in 1880 it suddenly rose to 17,000. From 1880 to 1908 the total immigration from Austria-Hungary to the United States amounted to 2,780,000, and about twenty percent of these were Ruthenians and Slovaks. Within the last four years (1905-1908) the immigration of the Slovaks and Ruthenians has amounted to 215,972. To this must be added the Croatians and Slavonians (117,695), a large proportion of whom are of the Greek Rite. It is estimated that there are at present in the United States between 350,000 and 400,000 Greek Catholic Ruthenians, including as such the Greek Catholic Slovaks and Croato-Slovenians. The largest number (over one-half) are in Pennsylvania, while New York, New Jersey, and Ohio have each a very large number of them, and the remainder are scattered all through the New England and Western states. From the best information obtainable in advance of the coming census of 1910 their distribution is as follows:—