First female Archbishop of Canterbury to meet pope

Published April 26, 2026 Updated April 26, 2026 05:03am

VATICAN CITY: New Archbishop of Canterbury Sarah Mullally, the first woman to lead the world’s Anglican Christians, heads to Rome and the Vatican this weekend for an audience with Pope Leo XIV.

Mullally will meet the head of the world’s 1.4 billion Catholics during a four-day visit starting Saturday, her first abroad since being enthroned last month as the Church of England’s top cleric.

The audience comes 60 years after a historic meeting in 1966 between then archbishop Michael Ramsey and pope Paul VI, the first at that level since the Church of England was created in the 16th century, when king Henry VIII broke with Rome.

Relations have been steadily improving since although in 2016 their successors noted “new disagreements”, particularly on the ordination of the wo­­men — making Mulla­lly’s visit a significant mo­­m­­­ent.

The 63-year-old former nurse, who is married with two children, is the first woman to lead the mother church of the world’s 85-million strong Anglican community.

The first female Anglican bishops were appointed in the United States in 1989, and they have been allowed in the Church of England since 2014, although the issue remains divisive.

By contrast the Catholic Church has repeatedly rejected the idea of female priests, while male priests also cannot marry — with the exception of married Anglican priests who want to convert.

Campaigners for women’s rights, who had hoped for progress under former Pope Francis before his death last year, welcomed the archbishop’s visit. “If a female archbishop comes to see him, it might give Po­­pe Leo XIV pause for tho­­ught,” Sylvaine Landr­ivon, spokeswoman for Cat­holic feminist association Magdala, said.

Published in Dawn, April 26th, 2026

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