- Bishopric of Speyer
Infobox Former Country
native_name = "Fürstbistum Speyer"
conventional_long_name = Prince-Bishopric of Speyer
common_name = Speyer
continent = Europe
region = Rhine Basin
country = France, Germany
era = Middle Ages
status = Vassal
empire = Holy Roman Empire
government_type = Theocracy
year_start = 888
year_end = 1803
event_pre = Established
date_pre = 3rd or 4th century
event_start = Gained territory
date_start =
event1 =Speyer became Imp. City
date_event1 =1294
event2 = Lost territory to France
date_event2 =1681 –97
event_end = Partitioned and secularised
spaces|4to France and Baden
date_end =1801 –03
p1 = Duchy of Franconia
image_p1 =
s1 = Mont-Tonnerre
flag_s1 = Flag of France.svg
s2 = Margraviate of Baden
image_s2 =
image_map_caption =
capital =Speyer (to1379 )
Udenheim¹ (1379 –1723 )Bruchsal (from1723 )
footnotes = 1: Known as Philippsburg from1632 The Bishopric of Speyer until thesecularization of1803 was the wordly realm of the prince-bishops ofSpeyer in what is today the German state ofRhineland-Palatinate .Geography
The bishopric of Speyer belonged to the
Upper Rhenish Circle of theHoly Roman Empire and encompassed an area of 28 square miles (about 1540 km²) on both sides of theRhine . It included the towns ofBruchsal (on the right bank) as well asDeidesheim ,Herxheim bei Landau , and Lauterburg (on the left bank). Around 1800 the bishopric included about 55,000 people.History
A
Diocese of Speyer has possibly existed since the 3rd or 4th centuries. It was first mentioned in historical documents in 614. Until 748 it belonged to theArchbishopric of Trier . From then until the dissolution of the bishopric in 1803, Speyer belonged to theArchbishopric of Mainz .The history of the Bishopric of Speyer began latest in the late 7th century when the bishop of
Speyer received royal domains in the neighboringSpeyergau . In the 10th and 11th centuries, the diocese received additional lands, including gifts by emperor Otto I. In 1030 the building of the cathedral was begun. In 1061 the cathedral was consecrated. In 1086 emperor Henry IV granted the bishopric the remaining parts of the county of Speyergau.From 1111 the citizens of the city of Speyer began to increasingly loosen their bonds to the rulership of the bishop. In 1230 a Bürgermeister ("mayor") was mentioned for the first time. 1294 Speyer became a
Free Imperial City . The bishop moved his palace in 1371 to "Udenheim". At the beginning of the 17th century bishopPhilipp Christoph von Sötern expanded as the fortress ofPhilippsburg . The prince-bishops reigned from there from 1371 to 1723. Afterwards the prince-bishop moved his seat to Bruchsal.From 1681 to 1697, at the end of the
War of the Grand Alliance , part of the bishopric's left-bank territories went toFrance . In 1801/1802, the remaining left-bank territories were conquered by French troops as part of theFrench Revolution . The right-bank territories went to margraves of Baden.This ended the worldy responsibilities of the bishop of Speyer. The bishopric was secularized and continued ecclesiastically as the
Diocese of Speyer .Prince-bishops of Speyer
The following were
prince-bishop s of Speyer, whom were worldly as well as ecclesiastical rulers.ee also
*
Bishop of Speyer
*Speyer Cathedral Footnotes
References
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