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Encyclopedia > Archbishop Anno II of Cologne
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Archbishop of Cologne, 1055-1075 Born to non noble family in approximately 1010, educated at Bamburg, and was eventually elevated into the court Chapel of Emperor Henry III. He was was invested as archbishop of Cologne by the emperor in 1055. A few years after the death of Henry III in 1056, he and a group of other prominent magnates orchestrated a coup at Kaiserwerth in 1062 that resulted in the kidnapping of the young king Henry IV (later Emperor Henry IV) and in the ending the regency of Empress Agnes. He was regent of the German Empire between 1062 and 1064, when Henry IV reached the age of majority. In 1064, Anno participated in negotiations between two claimants to the papacy, Nicholas II of the papal reform party and Bishop Cadulus of Parma during a period of schism. During his tenure as archbishop, he largely supported monastic reform by establishing new monasteries at Siegburg (Landkreis Bonn-Siegburg), Grafschaft (Westphalia) and Saalfeld (Thuringia). He consecrated and expanded numerous churches in Cologne, including Saint Maria ad Gradus (located east of the present Cologne Cathedral) the church of St. Georg, and church of St. Gereon. He also supported placing his relatives into ecclesiastical seats. This had tragic results in 1066, when Anno's nephew Conrad was murdered shortly after being appointed by him as archbishop of Trier, apparently against the will of the local clergy, nobles, and the people. In 1074 he was briefly driven from Cologne by the citizens and merchants following his highly resented aquisition of a merchant ship for his own purposes. However, he was able to return and reassume his position, after severely punishing the leaders of the uprising. He died in 1075 and was buried at the Benedictine monastery at nearby Siegburg. After a series of miracles were reported in Cologne and Siegburg in the twelfth century, he was canonized in 1183. Prominent sources include the Vita Annonis (Latin, Monumenta Germania Historica, Scriptores Volume XI), Vita Annonis Minor (Latin and German, ed. and trans. M. Mittler), and several passages from the Annalen of Lampert von Hersfeld (Latin and German). The Archbishopric of Cologne was one of the major ecclesiastical principalities of the Holy Roman Empire. ... Henry III (1017-1056) was a member of the Salian (sometimes Franconian) dynasty of Holy Roman Emperors. ... In Christianity, an archbishop is an elevated bishop heading a diocese of particular importance due to either its size, history, or both, called an archdiocese. ... Jump to: navigation, search Cologne skyline at night with river Rhine in the foreground and famous Cologne Cathedral on the right. ... Henry IV (November 11, 1050 — 1106) was King of Germany from 1056 and Emperor from 1084, until his abdication in 1105. ... Agnes de Poitou or Empress Agnes (1020-1077) was regent of the Holy Roman Empire from 1056 to 1068. ... Nicholas II can refer to: Pope Nicholas II Tsar Nicholas II of Russia This is a disambiguation page — a navigational aid which lists other pages that might otherwise share the same title. ... The rear of the cathedral, viewed from across the Rhine Cologne Cathedral (German: Kölner Dom) is one of the best-known architectural monuments in Germany and has been Colognes most famous landmark for centuries. ... Trier: The Porta Nigra, viewed from outside Location of Trier Trier (French: Trèves, Spanish: Treveris, Italian: Treviri) is Germanys oldest city. ...


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Archbishop of Cologne (236 words)
The Archbishopric of Cologne was one of the major ecclesiastical principalities of the Holy Roman Empire.
Cologne itself became a free city[?] in 1288, and the seat of the Archbishop was moved from Cologne Cathedral to Bonn.
The Archbishop was traditionally one of the Imperial Electors[?] and the Archchancellor of Italy.
CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: Cologne (4781 words)
Cologne, in size the third city of Prussia, and the capital of the district (Regierungsbezirk) of Cologne, is situated in the lowlands of the lower Rhine on both sides of the river.
Hermann II (1036-56) was followed by Saint Anno II, who did much for the authority and honour of the See of Cologne; at the same time he was the first archbishop to come into open conflict with the city, now rapily growing in numbers and wealth.
Frederick I (1100-31) was the last Archbishop of Cologne to be invested with the episcopal ring and crosier; in 1111, during the three-days fight in the streets of Rome, he saved the Emperor Henry V from defeat, after his imprisonment of Pope Paschal II, but in 1114 abandoned the imperial party.
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