:''This article is about the Prince-Bishopric as a state of the Holy Roman Empire. For the Roman Catholic diocese with which it was entwined, see
Diocese of Osnabrück''
The 'Prince-Bishopric of Osnabrück' was a
prince-bishopric centered on the
Diocese of Osnabrück. The diocese was erected in 772 and is the oldest see founded by
Charlemagne, in order to christianize the conquered
stem-duchy of
Saxony. The first bishop of Osnabrück was
Saint Wilho (
785–
804); the second bishop, Meginhard or Meingoz (
804–
33), was the real organizer of the see.
The temporal possessions of the see, originally quite limited, grew in time, and its
prince-bishops exercised an extensive civil jurisdiction within the territory covered by their rights of
immunity. The Prince-Bishopric continued to grow in size, making its status during the Reformation a highly contentious issue.
The temporal protectorate (; ) exercised over so many mediæval dioceses by laymen became, after the
12th century, hereditary in the Amelung family, from whom it passed to
Henry the Lion.
After Henry's overthrow it fell to Count Simon of
Tecklenburg and to his descendants, though the source of many conflicts with the bishops. In 1236 the Count of Tecklenburg was forced to renounce all jurisdiction over the town of Osnabrück, and the lands of the see, the chapter and the parish churches. On the other hand, the bishop and chapter, from the
13th century on, spread their jurisdiction over many convents, churches and hamlets. Scarcely any other German see freed itself so thoroughly from civil jurisdiction within its territory. The royal prerogatives were transferred little by little to the bishop, e.g. the holding of
fairs and markets, rights of toll and coinage, forest and hunting rights, mining royalties, fortresses etc, so that the bishop by the early part of the 13th century was the real governor of the civil territory of Osnabrück.
Among the prominent mediæval bishops are Drogo (
952–
68); Conrad of Veltberg (
1002); the learned Thietmar or Detmar (
1003–
22); Benno II (
1067–
88); Johann I (
1001–
10), who built the actual cathedral in place of the wooden one destroyed by fire in the time of his predecessor; Diethard I (
1119–
37) was the first bishop elected by the free choice of the cathedral clergy; Philip II (
1141–
73) ended the conflicts between his see and the
Imperial Abbeys of
Corvey and
Hersfeld;
Arnold of Berg (
1137–
91) died a
crusader before
Akkon. In the time of
Engelbert of Altena-Isenberg (
1224–
26, deposed following his implication in Archbishop
Engelbert II of Berg's assassination, rehabilitated
1238–
50),
Bruno of Altena-Isenberg (
1250–
59), and Conrad II of Rietberg (
1269–
97) the new orders of
Franciscans,
Dominicans and
Augustinians were received with favour.
In the
14th and
15th centuries ,the power of the bishops waned before the increasing influence of the chapter, of the military servants (or knights) of the diocese, and of the town of Osnabrück. The latter sought to free itself from the bishop's sovereignty, but never became a
Free City of the Empire. The see was almost continually engaged in warlike troubles and difficulties and had also to defend itself against the Bishops of
Minden and
Münster. From the 14th century on we meet many auxiliary bishops of Osnabrück, made necessary by the civil duties that absorbed the attention of the ordinary.
The successor of Bishop Conrad IV of Rietberg (
1488–
1508) was Eric of Brunswick (
1508–
32), simultaneously
Bishop of Münster and
Paderborn. He opposed the Reformers strongly and successfully. Franz of Waldeck (
1533–
53), also Bishop of Minden, acted, on the contrary, a very doubtful part. He offered little resistance to
Lutheranism in Münster, though he vigorously opposed the
Anabaptists; after
1543 he allowed in Osnabrück an evangelical service. However, the chapter and the
Dominicans opposed a German service that dispensed with all the characteristics of the Roman Catholic Mass. In
1548, Bishop Franz promised to suppress the Reformation in Osnabrück and to execute the
Augsburg Interim, but fulfilled his promise very indifferently; on his deathbed he received Lutheran communions. His successor, John IV of Hoya (
1553–
74), was more Catholic, but was succeeded by three bishops of a Protestant temper:
Henry III of Saxony (
1574–
85), Bernhard of Waldeck (
1585–
91), and Philip Sigismund (
1591–
1623). Under them the Reformation overran nearly the whole diocese.
In
1624, Cardinal
Eitel Frederick of
Hohenzollern became Bishop of Osnabrück and called in the
Jesuits. But he had scarcely begun his work when he died, and left to his successor, Francis of Wartenberg (
1625–
61), the task of executing the
Counter-Reformation. The city-council was purified of anti-Catholic elements and the former
Augustinian convent was turned over to the Jesuits. The Edict of Restitution was executed successfully by him and in
1631 he founded a university at Osnabrück.
But in
1633, Osnabrück was captured by the
Swedes, the university was discontinued, Catholic religious exercises suppressed, and the see (
1633–
51) administered by the conquerors. By the
Peace of Westphalia in
1648, the bishop succeeded in preventing the secularization of the see, as contemplated by the Swedes. Nevertheless, it was stipulated that henceforth a Catholic and a Protestant bishop (of the
Augsburg Confession) would alternately hold the see. During the rule of the Protestant bishop, always chosen from the ducal House of
Brunswick-Lüneburg, the spiritual government of the Catholics was committed to the
Archbishop of Cologne.
Wartenberg was made cardinal in
1660 and was succeeded by the married Protestant bishop,
Ernest Augustus (
1661–
98), who transferred the residence to
Hanover. He was succeeded by the Catholic bishop, Prince
Charles Joseph of Lorraine,
Bishop of Olmütz, later
Archbishop of Trier (
1698–
1715). The Protestant Bishop
Ernest Augustus (
1715–
28) was succeeded by
Clemens August of Bavaria,
Archbishop-Elector of Cologne (
1728–
61). The last bishop,
Prince Frederick of Great Britain (
1764–
1803), later
Duke of York, was, until his majority (
1783), under the guardianship of his father,
George III, king of the United Kingdom and Hanover.
In the
German Mediatisation of
1803, the Bishopric was dissolved and given to the
Hanover branch of Brunswick-Lüneburg; the see, the chapter, the convents and the Catholic charitable institutions were finally secularized. The territory of the see passed to
Prussia in
1806, to the
Kingdom of Westphalia in 1807, to
Napoleonic France in
1810, and again to Hanover in 1814.
Klemens von Gruben,
titular Bishop of
Paros, was made
vicar Apostolic, and as such cared for the spiritual interests of the Catholic population.
The Diocese was reerected in 1824, but henceforth the Bishop would no longer wield any temporal power.
From about 1100 after the big fire in Osnabrück the Bischops had their residence in the castle of
Bad Iburg. This period ended when Ernest Augustus built a baroque castle in Osnabrück which was finished in 1673.
List of Prince-Bishops
Prince-Bishops of Osnabrück include:
★ 1623-1625:
Eitel Frederick Cardinal von Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen (Catholic)
★ 1625-1634:
Franz Wilhelm von Wartenberg (Catholic)
★ 1634-1648:
Gustav Gustavsson af Vasaborg (Lutheran)
★ 1648-1661: Franz Wilhelm von Wartenberg (Catholic)
★ 1662-1698:
Ernest Augustus, Elector of Brunswick-Lüneburg (Lutheran)
★ 1698-1715:
Charles Joseph of Lorraine (Catholic)
★ 1715-1728:
Ernest Augustus, Duke of York and Albany (Lutheran)
★ 1728-1761:
Klemens August of Bavaria (Catholic)
★ 1764-1802:
Prince Frederick, Duke of York and Albany (Lutheran), last Prince-Bishop
Sources and external links
★
[1]
★
Official site (in German)
★
Osnabrück at catholic-hierarchy.org
★
Map of Lower Saxony in 1789