- Prince-Bishop
A Prince-Bishop is a
bishop who is a territorialPrince of the Church on account of one or moresecular principalities, usually pre-existent titles of nobility held concurrently with their inherentcleric al office. If the see is anarchbishop ric, the correct term is prince-archbishop; the equivalent in the regular clergy is aprince-abbot .In the West, with the decline of imperial power from the
4th century onwards in the face of thebarbarian invasions, sometimesChristian bishops of cities took the place of the Roman commander, made secular decisions for the city and led his own troops when necessary. Later relations between a prince-bishop and the burghers were not invariably cordial. As cities demanded charters from emperors or kings and declared themselves independent of the secular territorial magnates, friction intensified between burghers and bishops.In the
Byzantine Empire , the stillautocratic Emperors passed general legal measures assigning all bishops certain rights and duties in the secular administration of their dioceses, but that was part of a caesaropapist development putting the Eastern Church in the service of the Empire, with itsEcumenical Patriarch almost reduced to the Emperor's minister of religious affairs. TheRussia n empire went even further, abolishing its own patriarchy and placing the church under direct control of the secular government.Holy Roman Empire
Bishops had been involved in the government of the Frankish realm and subsequent
Carolingian empire frequently as the clerical member of a duo of envoys styledMissus dominicus , but that was an individual mandate, not attached to the see.Prince-bishoprics were most common in the feudally fragmented
Holy Roman Empire , where many were formally awarded the rank of "Reichsfürst " ("Prince of the Empire"), granting them representation in the Reichstag (imperial Diet).They were finally dissolved in most countries by
Napoleon Bonaparte , with the downfall of theHoly Roman Emperor in 1806. However in some countries outside of French control, such asAustria andPrussia the institution continued, and in some cases was revived; a new, titular type arose.In Germany proper
No less than three of the (originally only seven)
Prince-elector s, the highest order ofReichsfürst en (comparable in rank with the French pairs), were Prince-archbishops, each holding the title ofArchchancellor (the only archoffice amongst them) for a part of the Empire; given the higher importance of an electorate, their principalities were known as "Kurfürstentum" ('electoral principality') rather than prince-archbishoprics:
*Archbishopric of Köln (Cologne)
*Archbishopric of Mainz (Mayence)
*Archbishopric of Trier Other prince-archbishoprics were
*Archbishopric of Magdeburg
*Archdiocese of Bremen Other prince-bishoprics in present Germany were those of:
*Augsburg
*Bamberg
*Eichstätt
*Freising, laterMünchen -Freising
*Fulda , until 5 October 1752 a "Reichsabtei "
*Halberstadt
*Konstanz (Constance)
*Hildesheim
*Lübeck ; continued after Reformation
*Merseburg
*Minden
*Münster
*Naumburg
*Osnabrück, exchanged between Catholic and Protestant incumbents after theThirty Years' War , an example of post-Reformation denaturation
*Paderborn
*Passau
*Ratzeburg
*Regensburg (Ratisbon)
*Schwerin
*Speyer (Spires)
*Verden
*WürzburgFurthermore there were prince-bishoprics in neighbouring regions, then considered part of Germany (the Holy Roman Empire minus all other realms within the empire), notably in the former central kingdom of Lotharingia, now in France's region Alsace-Lorraine:
*Straßburg (Strasbourg in French)
*the so-called threeLorrain bishoprics:
**Metz
**Toul
**Verdun
*Basel. Most of the former "Fürstbistum Basel" is now in Switzerland.In Austria
*The
Archbishopric of Salzburg was and remains the Catholic metropolitan, with primatial title; in 1803 its large temporal territory was raised to the status of electorate, but also secularised as a duchy.Furthermore, among of its suffragans:
*theprince-bishop of Gurk , inCarinthia
*theprince-bishop of St.Andrä /Lavant , inStyria
*theprince-bishop of Seckau , also in Styria, later shifting see toGraz In Switzerland
*The establishment of the
Bishopric of Sion , or rather Sitten in German, is a classic example of unified secular and diocesan authority.
*thebishop of Geneva (Genève in French, Genf in German), with a far smaller territory than the surroundingcountship of Geneva which belonged toSavoy
*thebishop of Lausanne , idem
*thebishop of Chur In present Italy
*the prince-archbishopric of the patriarch of
Aquileia , known because of its superior ecclesiastical rank as patriarchate
*the bishop (and count) of Brescia
*thebishop of Brixen ("Bressanone" in Italian), until 1964
*the bishop of Trent ("Trento" in Italian, "Trient" in German)
*thebishop of Triest held the homonymous countship (it had earlier been a duchy)In the Low Countries
* Liège in present
Belgium ; _nl. Luik, _de. Lüttich
* Cambrai (Kamerijk in Dutch; an archiocese 1559-1802), now in France, was a medium-size prince-bishopric in the Holy Roman Empire, which in 1007, St. Henry II invested with authority over the countship ofCambrésis , remaining a real prince-(arch)bishopric until underLouis XIV it became French in 1678, and ecclesiastically covered long about all the western part of Belgium (the rest was under Liège).
* the bishopric of Utrecht had a surrounding "Sticht" (Stift), until its conversion into a temporal lordship in 1527 (later became the only Dutch archbishopric), but also a far larger "Oberstift" ('Opper Stift'), in Germany proper, also until secularized and broke up (mainly lordships ofOverijssel , 1528 and ofDrenthe , 1538) , only later raised to metropolitan rank:Those three were all (at least originally) suffragans of the elector (prince-archbishop) of CologneIn the East
*The
prince-bishop of Kammin , presently in Poland
*InSilesia , since bishop Preczlaus of Pogarell (1341-1376) bought the Duchy ofGrottkau from Duke Boleslaw of Brieg and added it to the episcopal territory of the "Fürstentum von Neiße", the Bishops ofBreslau wereFürst (Prince) of Neiße and "Herzog" (Duke) ofGrottkau , and took precedence over the other Silesian rulers
*In the non-Slavonic Baltic region ofErmland was the "Fürstbischof zu Ermland" a "Hochstift" since 1243, sovereign Reichsfürst since 1251; in Polish: "Ksiaże biskup" Warmiński, since 1454 incorporated in Poland (recognized by him only in 1464) as a part of (West)Royal Prussia , 1466 under direct Polish crown sovereignty, 1479 re-established as autonomous prince-bishopric under the Polish crown, 1772 abolished at Prussian annexation (First partition of thePolish-Lithuanian Commonwealth )The career of
Albert of Buxhoeveden and his brother Herman exemplify the double nature of power, especially on themarches of Europe, where Roman Catholicism was pushed aggressively to the East. At the opening of the 13th century, the time of theThird Crusade , Albert, with a fleet of ships and a thousandcrusade rs, began the Christianization of the EasternBaltic region , with the blessing ofPope Innocent III , his uncle the Archbishop of Hamburg and Bremen, and of King Philip of the Holy Roman Empire, who created the formercanon of Bremen a Prince of the Holy Roman Empire (1207) andLivonia (Latvia and part ofEstonia ) as a fief. The Prince built his own cathedral atRiga , the city which he founded.
*The Czech bishopric (later Metropolitan) ofOlmütz , as a vassal principality of theBohemia n crown, was the peer of the margraviate ofMoravia , and from 1365 its prince-bishop was 'Count of the Bohemian Chapel', i.e. firstcourt chaplain , who was to accompany the Monarch on his frequent travels.Elsewhere
Former Ottoman territories
The
vladika s ofCetinje , who took the place of the earlier secular (Grand) Voivodes in 1516 in the unique position of Slavonic, "Orthodox" prince-bishops under Ottoman (i.e. "Islamic) suzerainty", actually became the secularized, hereditary princes and ultimately kings ofMontenegro in 1852, as reflected in their styles: first "Vladika i upravitelj Crne Gore i Brde" "Vladika [bishop] and Ruler of Montenegro and Brda"; (b) from 13 March 1852 (New Style): "Po Bozjoj milosti knjaz i gospodar Crne Gore i Brde" "By the grace of God Prince and Sovereign of Montenegro and Brda"; (c) from 28 August 1910 (New Style): "Po Bozjoj milosti kralj i gospodar Crne Gore" "By the grace of God, King and Sovereign of Montenegro".In England
The Bishops of Durham were also territorial Prince Bishops, with the extraordinary secular rank of
Earl palatine , for it was their duty not only to be head of the large diocese, but also to help protect the Kingdom against the Scottish threat from the north. The title survived the union of England and Scotland into theKingdom of Great Britain in 1707 until 1836.In France
Apart from Cambrai (see above, Low Countries), no French diocese had a principality of political significance linked to its see.
However, a number of French Bishops did hold a noble title, with a tiny territory usually about their seat; it was often a
prince ly title, especially Count. Indeed, six of the originalPairie s (the royal vassals awarded with the highest precedence at Court) were episcopal: theArchbishop of Reims and five other Bishops (suffragans to Reims, except theBishop of Langres ); the three highest ones held a ducal title and the others a comital title.They were later joined by the
Archbishop of Paris , with a ducal title, but with precedence over the others. See alsoPeerage of France .In Portugal
The bishop of
Coimbra held the comital title Count ofArganil .Beyond Catholic feudalism
While one might expect that the Protestant Schism,
Counter-Reformation and more modern regimes than the traditional feudal principality would have eradicated the prince-bishopric, they didn't quite.Even when the true prince-(arch)bishoprics disappeared from the map of Europe as it was redrawn by
Napoleon I Bonaparte (who caused the end of the Holy Roman Empire) and theCongress of Vienna after his defeat, the title found a new, "titular" use. In the Habsburg dynasty's "new" empire, the Danubian Double MonarchyAustria-Hungary , reduced to the parts south of Prussia's (German) sphere of dominance that would become the (largely Protestant) German Empire, actual territorial power was no longer held by the bishops, but the status of "Fürst(erz)bisschof" was maintained, and could be given a similar political role in the more modern, almost standardizedCisleithania n provincial level, the "Kronland" 'crown land ', asex officio members of itsLandtag , the representative and legislative assembly, often with "Virilstimme", while other bishops could collectively be represented as a 'prelates bench' (an elected "Kurie").The Emperors of Austria now bestowed the title upon Bishops even "without" any feudal principality, but as a princely style and rank (as had been usual for centuries with secular noble titles of peerage ranks) awarded to episcopal sees, carrying the privilege of a seat in the estates, e.g. for the bishop of
Laibach (as a consolation prize for the see's loss of metropolitan rank toGraz ).pecial cases
The ultimate Prince Bishop is the
Bishop of Rome , i.e. the Pope, universal head (Supreme Pontiff ) of theRoman Catholic Church . His claims to territorial power were bolstered by the fraudulent early-Medieval document "Donation of Constantine ", and the authenticDonation of Pepin , establishing thePatrimonium Petri which was further extended as the powerfulPapal States .Pope Pius IX was the last of the true, sovereign Prince-Bishops, divested of territorial powers when the Papacy was forced to surrender the rule of Rome in 1870 to the reunited kingdom of Italy, which was supported by liberal-nationalists. The Pope was however madeHead of state again of the specially createdVatican City , a small enclave in the Eternal City, by the (later favorably amended)Lateran Treaties withBenito Mussolini 's Fascist Italy.The Spanish
Catalonia nBishop of Urgell , who no longer has any secular rights inSpain , still is one of the twoco-princes of Andorra , along with the Head of State (presentlyPresident of the Republic ) of France.ee also
*
Crown-cardinal
*Lord Bishop ources, References and External links
*
Catholic Encyclopaedia passim
* [http://www.zum.de/whkmla/military/17cen/muenster1661.html The Prince-Bishop of Münster]
* [http://www.buxhoeveden.net/index.php?link=2 Albert of Buxhoeveden, Prince-Bishop of Livonia]
* [http://www.heraldica.org/topics/france/peerage.htm#twelve Heraldica.org - here French peerage]
*Westermann, "Großer Atlas zur Weltgeschichte" (in German)
* [http://www.worldstatesmen.org/ WorldStatesmen] search under each present country
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