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Encyclopedia > Bishop of Mainz

Between 780/82 AD and 1802 AD the Archbishop of Mainz, was an influential ecclesiastic and secular prince of the middle ages. His see was established in the 4th century AD, in the city of Mainz, which had been a Roman provincial capital, but the office really came to prominence upon its elevation to an archdiocese in 780/82. The first bishops have legendary names, beginning with St Crescentius, but the ecclesiastical and secular importance of Mainz dates from the accession of St. Boniface to the see. Boniface was previously an archbishop, but the honor did not immediately devolve upon the see itself.


This archdiocese is best known as a substantial ecclesiastical principality of the Holy Roman Empire. It included lands near Mainz on the both the Left and Right Banks of the Rhine, as well as territory along the Main above Frankfurt (including the district of Aschaffenburg), and territory around Erfurt in Thuringia. The Archbishop was also, traditionally, one of the Imperial Prince-Electors, the Archchancellor of Germany, and presiding officer of the electoral college.


In 1802, Mainz lost its archiepiscopal character. In the secularizations that accompanied the Reichsdeputationshauptschluss of 1803, the seat of the Elector, Karl Theodor von Dalberg, was moved to Regensburg, and the Electorate lost its Left Bank territories to France, its right bank areas along the Main below Frankfurt to Hesse_Darmstadt and the Nassau princes, and Erfurt to Prussia. Dalberg retained the Aschaffenberg area however, and when the Holy Roman Empire finally came to an end in 1806, this became the core of Dalberg's new Grand Duchy of Frankfurt. Since then the Diocese of Mainz has had two cardinals and via various concordats was allowed to retain the medieval tradition of the cathedral chapter electing a successor to the bishop. This practice has all but disappeared in the Roman Catholic Church.

Contents

Archbishops of Mainz, 745-1802

  • Bonifacius 745-755 (At this time, Mainz did not have the status of an archdiocese. Bonifacius had been archbishop because the pope had declared him to be.)
  • Lullus 755-786 (First "real" archbishop)
  • Richholf 787-813
  • Adolf 813-826
  • Odgar 826-847
  • Rabanus Maurus 848-856
  • Karl 856-863
  • Ludbert 863-889
  • Sunderhold 889-891
  • Hatto I 891-913
  • Herigar 913-937
  • Friedrich 937-954
  • Wilhelm 954-968
  • Hatto II 968-970
  • Rudbrecht 970-975
  • Willigis 975-1011
  • Erchenbald 1011-1021
  • Aribo 1021-1031
  • Bardo 1031-1051
  • Leutpold 1051-1059
  • Siegfried I 1060-1084
  • Wezilo 1084-1088
  • Rudhart 1088-1109
  • Adalbert I von Saarbrücken 1111-1137
  • Adalbert II von Saarbrücken 1138-1141
  • Markholf 1141-1142
  • Heinrich I 1142-1153
  • Arnold 1153-1160
  • Konrad I von Wittelsbach 1161-1165
  • Christian I 1165-1183
  • Konrad I von Wittelsbach (restored) 1183-1200
  • Lupold von Scheinfeld 1200-1208
  • Sigfried II von Eppenstein 1200-1230 (in opposition to 1208)
  • Sigfried III von Eppenstein 1230-1249
  • Christian III von Weissenau 1249-1251
  • Gerhard I von Daun-Kirberg 1251-1259
  • Werner II von Eppenstein 1260-1284
  • Heinrich II von Isny 1286-1288
  • Gerhard II von Eppenstein 1286-1305
  • Peter Aspelt 1306-1320
  • Matthias von Buchek 1321-1328
  • Heinrich III von Virneberg 1328-1337
  • Gerlach von Nassau 1346-1371
  • Johann I von Luxemburg-Ligny 1371-1373
  • Ludwig von Meissen 1374-1379
  • Adolf I von Nassau 1379-1390
  • Konrad II von Weinsberg 1390-1396
  • Johann II von Nassau 1396-1419
  • Joffrid von Leiningen 1396-1397 (in opposition)
  • Konrad III Wild- und Rheinsgraf zum Stein 1419-1434
  • Dietrich I 1434-1459
  • Dieter von Isenburg 1460-1461
  • Adolf III von Nassau 1461-1475
  • Dieter von Isenburg (restored) 1476-1482
  • Albert II 1482-1484
  • Bertold von Henneberg-Römhild 1484-1504
  • Jakob von Liebenstein 1504-1508
  • Uriel von Gemmingen 1508-1514
  • Albert III von Brandenburg 1514-1545
  • Sebastian von Heusenstamm 1545-1555
  • Daniel Brendel von Homburg 1555-1582
  • Wolfgang von Dalberg 1582-1601
  • Johann Adam von Bicken 1601-1604
  • Johann Schweikhard von Kronberg 1604-1626
  • Georg Friedrich von Greiffenklau 1626-1629
  • Anselm Casimir Wambold von Umstadt 1629-1647
  • Johann Philipp von Schönborn 1647-1673
  • Lothar Friedrich von Metternich 1673-1675
  • Damian Hartrad von der Leyen 1675-1678
  • Karl Heinrich von Metternich 1679
  • Anselm Franz von Ingelheim 1679-1695
  • Lothar Franz von Schönborn 1695-1729
  • Franz Ludwig von Pfalz-Neuburg 1729-1732
  • Philipp Karl von Eltz 1732-1743
  • Johann Friedrich Karl von Ostein 1743-1763
  • Emmerich Josef von Briedbach 1763-1774
  • Friedrich Karl Josef von Erthal 1774-1802
  • Karl Theodor von Dalberg 1802 (d.1817, Archbishop of Regensburg 1803-1810, Prince of Frankfurt 1806-1810, Grand Duke of Frankfurt 1810-1813)

Bishops of Mainz, 1802-present

  • Joseph Ludwig Colmar 1802-1818
  • Joseph Vitus Burg 1829-1833
  • Johann Jakob Humann 1833-1834
  • Petrus Leopold Kaiser 1834-1848
  • Wilhelm Emmanuel Freiherr von Ketteler 1850-1877
  • Paul Leopold Haffner 1886-1899
  • Heinrich Brück 1900-1903
  • Georg Heinrich Kirstein 1903-1921
  • Ludwig Maria Hugo 1921-1935
  • Albert Stohr 1935-1961
  • Hermann Cardinal Volk 1962-1982
  • Karl Cardinal Lehmann 1983-



Roman Catholic Hierarchy in Germany
    Archdioceses Dioceses
    Bamberg Eichstätt | Speyer | Würzburg
    Berlin Dresden-Meissen | Görlitz
    Freiburg im Breisgau Mainz | Rottenburg-Stuttgart
    Hamburg Hildesheim | Osnabrück
    Cologne Aachen | Essen | Limburg | Münster | Trier
    Munich & Freising Augsburg | Passau | Regensburg
    Paderborn Erfurt | Fulda | Magdeburg
edit this box (http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Template:Roman_Catholic_Bishops_%26_Archbishops_-_Germany&action=edit)



See also

  • Lists of office-holders

External links

Official Website (http://www.bistum-mainz.de)




  Results from FactBites:
 
Saint Boniface - LoveToKnow 1911 (1020 words)
Having sent special word to Gregory of his success, he was summoned to Rome and consecrated bishop on the 30th of November 722, of ter taking an oath of obedience to the pope.
Between 746 and 748 Boniface was made bishop of Mainz, and became metropolitan over the Rhine bishoprics and Utrecht, as well as over those he had established in Germany - thus founding the pre-eminence of the see of Mainz.
In 747 a synod of the Frankish bishops sent to Rome a formal statement of their submission to the papal authority.
Mainz (262 words)
Mainz (French Mayence) is a city in Germany, capital of the German Bundesland Rheinland-Pfalz, and is located at the confluence of the Main River with the Rhine.
In 2001 the current Bishop of Mainz Karl Lehmann was appointed a Cardinal by Pope John Paul II.
Mainz was French territory from 1798 to 1814 which the city and the people reflect in many ways.
  More results at FactBites »


 
 

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