fbpx
Wikipedia

Roman Catholic Diocese of Osnabrück

The Diocese of Osnabrück (Latin: Dioecesis Osnabrugensis) is a Latin Church ecclesiastical territory or diocese of the Catholic church in Germany.[1][2] The diocese was originally founded circa 800. It should not be confused with the smaller Prince-Bishopric of Osnabrück–an ecclesiastical principality of the Holy Roman Empire until 1803–over which the bishop, as prince-bishop, exercised both temporal and spiritual authority.

Diocese of Osnabrück

Dioecesis Osnabrugensis

Bistum Osnabrück
St Peter's Cathedral, Osnabrück
Location
CountryGermany
Ecclesiastical provinceHamburg
Statistics
Area12,573 km2 (4,854 sq mi)
Population
- Total
- Catholics
(as of 2013)
2,150,000
569,400 (26.5%)
Parishes256
Information
DenominationCatholic Church
Sui iuris churchLatin Church
RiteRoman Rite
Established772
CathedralSt. Peter's Cathedral
Secular priests320
Current leadership
PopeFrancis
BishopSede vacante
Metropolitan ArchbishopStefan Heße
Auxiliary BishopsJohannes Wübbe
Bishops emeritus
Map

Map of Diocese of Osnabrück
Website
bistum-osnabrueck.de

History edit

The Prince-Bishopric of Osnabrück edit

The diocese was erected in 772 and it is certainly 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. Osnabrück diocese was originally a suffragan to the Archdiocese of Cologne (until 1824).

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.

During the Protestant Reformation of the 16th century, Osnabrück did not remain completely Catholic nor switch to Protestantism. Instead, each parish decided on its own which elements of Protestantism it took over. This unique state of affairs ended with the Peace of Westphalia (1648), which froze the parishes at their religious status as of 1624. From then on, the bishops alternated between Lutheran and Catholic office holders. While the prince-bishopric was ruled by a Protestant bishop, the Archbishop of Cologne would oversee the exercise of the Catholic religion in Osnabrück.

The Protestant bishops were selected from the neighboring Duchy of Brunswick-Lüneburg, with priority given to the cadets of what became the House of Hanover. The last Prince-Bishop of Osnabrück, the Lutheran Prince Frederick of Great Britain (1764–1803), was made Bishop in 1764 when he was only 197 days old. At the time, he was the younger of two sons of George III, giving him the strongest claim to election as prince-bishop.

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 restoration of the diocese edit

Under Pope Leo XII the papal bull Impensa Romanorum Pontificum (26 March 1824) re-established the See of Osnabrück as an exempt see, i.e., immediately subject to Rome. This Bull, recognized by the civil authority, promised that, for the present, the Bishop of Hildesheim would be also Bishop of Osnabrück, but had to be represented at Osnabrück by a vicar-general and an auxiliary bishop, and this lasted for thirty years.

This diocese, comprised within the Kingdom of Hanover, the Landdrosteien (high-bailiwicks, governorates) of Osnabrück and Aurich (excepting Wilhelmshaven) and those parts of Hanover that were west of the River Weser. In 1910 it numbered 12 deaneries, 108 parishes, 153 pastoral stations, 271 secular and 12 regular priests, with 204,500 Catholic faithful. The only religious communities of men were the Capuchin convent at Clemenswerth and the Apostolic School of the Marists at Meppen. The religious orders of women include Benedictines, Borromeans, Franciscans, Ursulines and others.

As Apostolic administrator, the bishop was Vicar Apostolic of the Northern Missions of Germany and Prefect-Apostolic of Schleswig-Holstein (as of 1868). According to the Bull Impensa Romanorum (26 March 1824), he was elected by the chapter of the cathedral, composed of a dean, six canons and four vicars, elected in turn by the bishop and by the chapter.

Klemens von Gruben was succeeded by the auxiliary bishop Karl Anton von Lüpke, also administrator of the North German Missions. After his death new negotiations led to the endowment of a new independent see. Pope Pius IX, with the consent of King George V of Hanover, appointed Paulus Melchers of Münster as bishop on 3 August 1857. In 1866 the territory of the diocese passed, with Hanover, to Prussia (Province of Hanover); Melchers became Archbishop of Cologne, and was succeeded in 1866 by Johannes Heinrich Beckmann (1866–78), who was succeeded by Bernhard Höting (1882–98) after a vacancy of four years owing to the Kulturkampf. The next bishop (to 1911), Hubert Voss, was appointed 12 April 1899.

In 1930, following the Prussian Concordat, the Prefecture of Schleswig-Holstein and the Northern Missions of Germany, comprising several Protestant areas of Northern Germany, were added to the diocese: Hamburg, Bremen, Schleswig-Holstein, Mecklenburg-Schwerin, Mecklenburg-Strelitz and Schaumburg-Lippe (the latter ceded to Hildesheim diocese in 1965). On the same occasion Osnabrück became again a suffragan of Cologne.

In 1995, the northern parts of the Diocese (Hamburg, Schleswig-Holstein and Mecklenburg) were made into the newly founded Archdiocese of Hamburg. Osnabrück became subordinate to this Archdiocese of Hamburg. The former Bishop of Osnabrück was Franz-Josef Bode. His resignation was accepted by the Pope on March 25, 2023.

Incumbents of the see edit

Bishops edit

  • 783–809: Wiho I (Wicho I; 783 to 1 April 809)
  • 810–829: Maynard (Meginhard; 810 to 12 April 829)
  • 829–845: Goswin
  • 845–860: Gosbert (845 to 11 April 860)
  • 860–887: Eckbert (860 to 1 February 887)
  • 887–906: Egilmar (887 to 11 May 906)
  • 906–918: Bernard I
  • 918–949: Dodo I (918 to 14 May 949)
  • 949–967: Drogo (949 to 7 November 967)
  • 967–978: Ludolf (967 to 31 March 978)
  • 978–996: Dodo II (978 to 12 April 996)
    • 978–980: Kuno (counter-bishop)
  • 996–1000: Günther (996 to 27 November 1000)
  • 998–1003: Wodilulf (998 to 17 February 1003)
  • 1003–1022: Dietmar (1003 to 18 June 1022)
  • 1023–1027: Meginher (1023 to 10 December 1027)
  • 1028–1036: Gozmar (1028 to 10 December 1036)
  • 1036–1052: Alberich (1036 to 19 April 1052)
  • 1052–1067: Benno I (Werner; 1052–3 December 1067)
  • 1068–1088: Benno II (also Bernard; 1068 to 27 July 1088)
  • 1088–1093: Marquard
  • 1093–1101: Wicho II (1093 to 21 April 1101)
  • 1101–1109: John I (1101 to 13 July 1109)
  • 1109–1119: Gottschalk of Diepholz (1109 to 1 January 1119)
  • 1119–1137: Diethard
    • 1119–1125: Conrad (counter-bishop)
  • 1137–1141: Udo of Steinfurt (1137 to 28 June 1141)
  • 1141–1173: Philipp von Katzenelnbogen (1141 to 15 June 1173)
    • 1141: Wezel (counter-bishop)
  • 1173–1190: Arnold of Altena
  • 1190–1216: Gerard I of Oldenburg-Wildeshausen
  • 1216–1224: Adolphus of Tecklenburg

Prince-bishops and administrators edit

Prince-Bishops of Osnabrück include:

  • 1224–1226: Engelbert I of Isenberg
  • 1206–1227: Otto I
  • 1227–1239: Conrad I of Velber
  • 1239–1250: Engelbert I of Isenberg
  • 1251–1258: Bruno of Isenberg
  • 1259–1264: Baldwin of Rüssel
  • 1265–1269: Widukind of Waldeck
  • 1270–1297: Conrad II of Rietberg
  • 1297–1308: Louis of Ravensberg
  • 1309–1320: Engelbert II of Weyhe
  • 1321–1349: Gottfried of Arnsberg
  • 1350–1366: John II Hoet
  • 1366–1376: Melchior of Brunswick-Grubenhagen
  • 1376–1402: Dietrich of Horne
  • 1402–1410: Henry I of Schaumburg-Holstein
  • 1410–1424: Otto II of Hoya
  • 1424–1437: John III of Diepholz
  • 1437–1442: Eric of Hoya
  • 1442–1454: sede vacante
    • 1442–1450: Henry of Moers (Catholic administrator; Nov 1441 Appointed – 2 Jun 1450 Died)
    • 1450–1454: Albert of Hoya (Catholic administrator)
  • 1454–1455: Rudolf of Diepholz (30 Aug 1454 Appointed – 24 Mar 1455 Died)
  • 1455–1482: Conrad III of Diepholz (11 Jun 1455 Appointed – 21 May 1482 Died)
  • 1482–1508: Conrad IV of Rietberg (13 Jul 1482 Appointed – 9 Feb 1508 Died)
  • 1508–1532: Eric of Brunswick-Grubenhagen (6 Mar 1508 Appointed – 14 May 1532 Died)
  • 1532–1553: Francis of Waldeck (11 Jun 1532 Appointed – 15 Jul 1553 Died; from 1543 on Lutheran)
  • 1553–1574: John II of Hoya zu Stolzenau † (5 Oct 1553 Appointed – 5 Apr 1574 Died)
  • 1574–1585: Henry II of Saxe-Lauenburg (Lutheran; 1574 Appointed – 3 May 1585 Died)
  • 1585: William of Schenking zu Bevern (30 Jul 1585 Appointed – 8 Aug 1585 Died)
  • 1585–1591: Bernard of Waldeck (25 Oct 1585 Appointed – 25 May 1588 Resigned)
  • 1591–1623: Philip Sigismund of Brunswick and Lunenburg (5 Jun 1591 Appointed – 19 Mar 1623 Died)
  • 1623–1625: Eitel Frederick of Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen (Catholic; 28 Apr 1623 Appointed – 19 Sep 1625 Died)
  • 1625–1634: Francis of Wartenberg (Catholic; 27 Oct 1625 Appointed – 1 Dec 1661 Died)
  • 1634–1648: Gustav Gustavsson af Vasaborg (Lutheran)
  • 1648–1661: Francis of Wartenberg (Catholic)
  • 1662–1698: Ernest Augustus I of Brunswick and Lunenburg (Calenberg) (Lutheran; 1662 Appointed – 29 Jan 1698 Died)
  • 1698–1715: Charles Joseph of Lorraine (Catholic; 14 Apr 1698 Appointed – 4 Dec 1715 Died)
  • 1715–1728: Ernest Augustus II of York and Albany (Lutheran; 1716 Appointed – 14 Aug 1728 Died)
  • 1728–1761: Clemence Augustus of Bavaria (Catholic; 4 Nov 1728 Appointed – 6 Feb 1761 Died)
  • 1764–1802: Frederick of York and Albany (Lutheran; 1764 Appointed – 10 Nov 1802 Resigned), last prince-bishop before its mediatisation to Hanover.

Sede vacante edit

  • 1802–1857: sede vacante
    • 1803–1827: Karl von Gruben, Catholic Vicar Apostolic to the See of Osnabrück, void of any regalia
    • 1830–1855: Carl Anton Lüpke, Catholic leading auxiliary bishop
    • 1855–1857: Eduard Jakob Wedekin, in personal union Catholic bishop of Hildesheim

Ordinaries edit

  • 1857–1866: Paul Ludolf Melchers, S.J. † (3 Aug 1857 Appointed – 8 Jan 1866 Appointed, afterwards Archbishop of Cologne)
  • 1866–1878: Johannes Heinrich Beckmann (5 Apr 1866 Appointed – 30 Jul 1878 Died)
  • 1878–1882: sede vacante
  • 1882–1898: Johann Bernard Höting † (10 Feb 1882 Appointed – 21 Oct 1898 Died)
  • 1899–1914: Heinrich Hubert Aloysius Voß (Voss) † (12 Apr 1899 Appointed – 3 Mar 1914 Died)
  • 1914–1955: Hermann Wilhelm Berning † (14 Jul 1914 Appointed – 23 Nov 1955 Died)
  • 1956–1957: Gerhard Franz (Franziskus) Demann † (21 May 1956 Appointed – 27 Mar 1957 Died)
  • 1957–1987: Helmut Hermann Wittler † (22 Jul 1957 Appointed – 9 Sep 1987 Resigned)
  • 1987–1994: Ludwig Averkamp (9 Sep 1987 Succeeded – 24 Oct 1994 Appointed, afterwards Archbishop of Hamburg)
  • 1995–2023: Franz-Josef Hermann Bode (12 Sep 1995 Appointed – 15 mar 2023 Resigned)
  • 2023: sede vacante

Auxiliary bishops edit

  • Johannes Fabri (bishop of Osnabrück), O.F.M. (20 Nov 1434 - Mar 1451)[3][4]
  • Godefridus Yerwerd, O.S.B. (13 Feb 1471 - 28 Mar 1476)[5]
  • Johannes Meppen, O.S.A. (24 Jan 1477 - 1495)[6]
  • Heinrich Schodehoet, O.S.A. (8 Jan 1494 - 1515)[7][8]
  • Johannes Pictor Meler, O.S.A. (15 Jan 1518 - 1529)
  • Kaspar Münster, O. Carm. (13 Feb 1631 - 4 Feb 1654)
  • Ägidius Gelenius (29 Apr 1655 - 24 Aug 1656)
  • Johann Bischopinck (9 Jul 1657 - 19 Sep 1667)
  • Otto Wilhelm von Bronckhorst zu Gronsfeld, S.J. (2 Jan 1693 - 5 Apr 1713)
  • Hyacinth Petit, O. Carm. (11 Feb 1718 - 26 Jul 1719)
  • Johann Friedrich Adolf von Hörde zu Schönholthausen (15 Mar 1723 - 3 Aug 1761)
  • Johann Hugo von Gäertz (4 Feb 1715 - 31 Dec 1716)
  • Wilhelm von Alhaus, O.S.C. (3 Sep 1764 - 26 May 1794)
  • Karl Klemens von Gruben (1 Jun 1795 - 4 Jul 1827)
  • Karl Anton Joseph Lüpke (5 Jul 1830 - 8 Apr 1855)
  • Johannes Albert von Rudloff (1 Apr 1950 - 29 Jun 1978)
  • Bernhard Schräder (22 Jun 1959 - 10 Dec 1971)
  • Karl-August Siegel (12 Dec 1974 - 18 Nov 1988)
  • Hubert Brandenburg (12 Dec 1974 - 21 Nov 1977)
  • Hans-Jochen Jaschke (18 Nov 1988 - 24 Oct 1994)
  • Theodor Kettmann (27 Nov 1978 - 30 Nov 2011)
  • Johannes Wübbe 18 Jun 2013)

References edit

  1. ^ "Diocese of Osnabrück" Catholic-Hierarchy.org. David M. Cheney. Retrieved February 29, 2016
  2. ^ "Diocese of Osnabrück" GCatholic.org. Gabriel Chow. Retrieved February 29, 2016
  3. ^ "Bishop Johannes Fabri, O.F.M." Catholic-Hierarchy.org. David M. Cheney. Retrieved September 5, 2016
  4. ^ "Bishop Johannes Fabri, O.F.M." GCatholic.org. Gabriel Chow. Retrieved September 5, 2016
  5. ^ "Bishop Godefridus Yerwerd, O.S.B." Catholic-Hierarchy.org. David M. Cheney. Retrieved March 21, 2016
  6. ^ "Bishop Johannes Meppen, O.S.A." Catholic-Hierarchy.org. David M. Cheney. Retrieved March 21, 2016
  7. ^ "Bishop Heinrich Schodehoet, O.S.A." Catholic-Hierarchy.org. David M. Cheney. Retrieved September 5, 2016
  8. ^ "Bishop Heinrich Schodehoet, O.E.S.A." GCatholic.org. Gabriel Chow. Retrieved September 5, 2016
  •   This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainHerbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). "Diocese of Osnabrück". Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company.

External links edit

  • Official site (in German)
  • Map of Lower Saxony in 1789

52°16′39″N 8°02′41″E / 52.2776°N 8.0447°E / 52.2776; 8.0447

roman, catholic, diocese, osnabrück, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, schola. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Roman Catholic Diocese of Osnabruck news newspapers books scholar JSTOR May 2016 Learn how and when to remove this message The Diocese of Osnabruck Latin Dioecesis Osnabrugensis is a Latin Church ecclesiastical territory or diocese of the Catholic church in Germany 1 2 The diocese was originally founded circa 800 It should not be confused with the smaller Prince Bishopric of Osnabruck an ecclesiastical principality of the Holy Roman Empire until 1803 over which the bishop as prince bishop exercised both temporal and spiritual authority Diocese of OsnabruckDioecesis OsnabrugensisBistum OsnabruckSt Peter s Cathedral OsnabruckLocationCountryGermanyEcclesiastical provinceHamburgStatisticsArea12 573 km2 4 854 sq mi Population Total Catholics as of 2013 2 150 000569 400 26 5 Parishes256InformationDenominationCatholic ChurchSui iuris churchLatin ChurchRiteRoman RiteEstablished772CathedralSt Peter s CathedralSecular priests320Current leadershipPopeFrancisBishopSede vacanteMetropolitan ArchbishopStefan HesseAuxiliary BishopsJohannes WubbeBishops emeritusFranz Josef BodeTheodor KettmannMapMap of Diocese of OsnabruckWebsitebistum osnabrueck de Contents 1 History 1 1 The Prince Bishopric of Osnabruck 1 2 The restoration of the diocese 2 Incumbents of the see 2 1 Bishops 2 2 Prince bishops and administrators 2 3 Sede vacante 2 4 Ordinaries 3 Auxiliary bishops 4 References 5 External linksHistory editThe Prince Bishopric of Osnabruck edit Main article Prince Bishopric of Osnabruck The diocese was erected in 772 and it is certainly the oldest see founded by Charlemagne in order to Christianize the conquered stem duchy of Saxony The first bishop of Osnabruck was Saint Wilho 785 804 the second bishop Meginhard or Meingoz 804 33 was the real organizer of the see Osnabruck diocese was originally a suffragan to the Archdiocese of Cologne until 1824 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 During the Protestant Reformation of the 16th century Osnabruck did not remain completely Catholic nor switch to Protestantism Instead each parish decided on its own which elements of Protestantism it took over This unique state of affairs ended with the Peace of Westphalia 1648 which froze the parishes at their religious status as of 1624 From then on the bishops alternated between Lutheran and Catholic office holders While the prince bishopric was ruled by a Protestant bishop the Archbishop of Cologne would oversee the exercise of the Catholic religion in Osnabruck The Protestant bishops were selected from the neighboring Duchy of Brunswick Luneburg with priority given to the cadets of what became the House of Hanover The last Prince Bishop of Osnabruck the Lutheran Prince Frederick of Great Britain 1764 1803 was made Bishop in 1764 when he was only 197 days old At the time he was the younger of two sons of George III giving him the strongest claim to election as prince bishop In the German Mediatisation of 1803 the bishopric was dissolved and given to the Hanover branch of Brunswick Luneburg 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 restoration of the diocese edit Under Pope Leo XII the papal bull Impensa Romanorum Pontificum 26 March 1824 re established the See of Osnabruck as an exempt see i e immediately subject to Rome This Bull recognized by the civil authority promised that for the present the Bishop of Hildesheim would be also Bishop of Osnabruck but had to be represented at Osnabruck by a vicar general and an auxiliary bishop and this lasted for thirty years This diocese comprised within the Kingdom of Hanover the Landdrosteien high bailiwicks governorates of Osnabruck and Aurich excepting Wilhelmshaven and those parts of Hanover that were west of the River Weser In 1910 it numbered 12 deaneries 108 parishes 153 pastoral stations 271 secular and 12 regular priests with 204 500 Catholic faithful The only religious communities of men were the Capuchin convent at Clemenswerth and the Apostolic School of the Marists at Meppen The religious orders of women include Benedictines Borromeans Franciscans Ursulines and others As Apostolic administrator the bishop was Vicar Apostolic of the Northern Missions of Germany and Prefect Apostolic of Schleswig Holstein as of 1868 According to the Bull Impensa Romanorum 26 March 1824 he was elected by the chapter of the cathedral composed of a dean six canons and four vicars elected in turn by the bishop and by the chapter Klemens von Gruben was succeeded by the auxiliary bishop Karl Anton von Lupke also administrator of the North German Missions After his death new negotiations led to the endowment of a new independent see Pope Pius IX with the consent of King George V of Hanover appointed Paulus Melchers of Munster as bishop on 3 August 1857 In 1866 the territory of the diocese passed with Hanover to Prussia Province of Hanover Melchers became Archbishop of Cologne and was succeeded in 1866 by Johannes Heinrich Beckmann 1866 78 who was succeeded by Bernhard Hoting 1882 98 after a vacancy of four years owing to the Kulturkampf The next bishop to 1911 Hubert Voss was appointed 12 April 1899 In 1930 following the Prussian Concordat the Prefecture of Schleswig Holstein and the Northern Missions of Germany comprising several Protestant areas of Northern Germany were added to the diocese Hamburg Bremen Schleswig Holstein Mecklenburg Schwerin Mecklenburg Strelitz and Schaumburg Lippe the latter ceded to Hildesheim diocese in 1965 On the same occasion Osnabruck became again a suffragan of Cologne In 1995 the northern parts of the Diocese Hamburg Schleswig Holstein and Mecklenburg were made into the newly founded Archdiocese of Hamburg Osnabruck became subordinate to this Archdiocese of Hamburg The former Bishop of Osnabruck was Franz Josef Bode His resignation was accepted by the Pope on March 25 2023 Incumbents of the see editBishops edit 783 809 Wiho I Wicho I 783 to 1 April 809 810 829 Maynard Meginhard 810 to 12 April 829 829 845 Goswin 845 860 Gosbert 845 to 11 April 860 860 887 Eckbert 860 to 1 February 887 887 906 Egilmar 887 to 11 May 906 906 918 Bernard I 918 949 Dodo I 918 to 14 May 949 949 967 Drogo 949 to 7 November 967 967 978 Ludolf 967 to 31 March 978 978 996 Dodo II 978 to 12 April 996 978 980 Kuno counter bishop 996 1000 Gunther 996 to 27 November 1000 998 1003 Wodilulf 998 to 17 February 1003 1003 1022 Dietmar 1003 to 18 June 1022 1023 1027 Meginher 1023 to 10 December 1027 1028 1036 Gozmar 1028 to 10 December 1036 1036 1052 Alberich 1036 to 19 April 1052 1052 1067 Benno I Werner 1052 3 December 1067 1068 1088 Benno II also Bernard 1068 to 27 July 1088 1088 1093 Marquard 1093 1101 Wicho II 1093 to 21 April 1101 1101 1109 John I 1101 to 13 July 1109 1109 1119 Gottschalk of Diepholz 1109 to 1 January 1119 1119 1137 Diethard 1119 1125 Conrad counter bishop 1137 1141 Udo of Steinfurt 1137 to 28 June 1141 1141 1173 Philipp von Katzenelnbogen 1141 to 15 June 1173 1141 Wezel counter bishop 1173 1190 Arnold of Altena 1190 1216 Gerard I of Oldenburg Wildeshausen 1216 1224 Adolphus of Tecklenburg Prince bishops and administrators edit Prince Bishops of Osnabruck include 1224 1226 Engelbert I of Isenberg 1206 1227 Otto I 1227 1239 Conrad I of Velber 1239 1250 Engelbert I of Isenberg 1251 1258 Bruno of Isenberg 1259 1264 Baldwin of Russel 1265 1269 Widukind of Waldeck 1270 1297 Conrad II of Rietberg 1297 1308 Louis of Ravensberg 1309 1320 Engelbert II of Weyhe 1321 1349 Gottfried of Arnsberg 1350 1366 John II Hoet 1366 1376 Melchior of Brunswick Grubenhagen 1376 1402 Dietrich of Horne 1402 1410 Henry I of Schaumburg Holstein 1410 1424 Otto II of Hoya 1424 1437 John III of Diepholz 1437 1442 Eric of Hoya 1442 1454 sede vacante 1442 1450 Henry of Moers Catholic administrator Nov 1441 Appointed 2 Jun 1450 Died 1450 1454 Albert of Hoya Catholic administrator 1454 1455 Rudolf of Diepholz 30 Aug 1454 Appointed 24 Mar 1455 Died 1455 1482 Conrad III of Diepholz 11 Jun 1455 Appointed 21 May 1482 Died 1482 1508 Conrad IV of Rietberg 13 Jul 1482 Appointed 9 Feb 1508 Died 1508 1532 Eric of Brunswick Grubenhagen 6 Mar 1508 Appointed 14 May 1532 Died 1532 1553 Francis of Waldeck 11 Jun 1532 Appointed 15 Jul 1553 Died from 1543 on Lutheran 1553 1574 John II of Hoya zu Stolzenau 5 Oct 1553 Appointed 5 Apr 1574 Died 1574 1585 Henry II of Saxe Lauenburg Lutheran 1574 Appointed 3 May 1585 Died 1585 William of Schenking zu Bevern 30 Jul 1585 Appointed 8 Aug 1585 Died 1585 1591 Bernard of Waldeck 25 Oct 1585 Appointed 25 May 1588 Resigned 1591 1623 Philip Sigismund of Brunswick and Lunenburg 5 Jun 1591 Appointed 19 Mar 1623 Died 1623 1625 Eitel Frederick of Hohenzollern Sigmaringen Catholic 28 Apr 1623 Appointed 19 Sep 1625 Died 1625 1634 Francis of Wartenberg Catholic 27 Oct 1625 Appointed 1 Dec 1661 Died 1634 1648 Gustav Gustavsson af Vasaborg Lutheran 1648 1661 Francis of Wartenberg Catholic 1662 1698 Ernest Augustus I of Brunswick and Lunenburg Calenberg Lutheran 1662 Appointed 29 Jan 1698 Died 1698 1715 Charles Joseph of Lorraine Catholic 14 Apr 1698 Appointed 4 Dec 1715 Died 1715 1728 Ernest Augustus II of York and Albany Lutheran 1716 Appointed 14 Aug 1728 Died 1728 1761 Clemence Augustus of Bavaria Catholic 4 Nov 1728 Appointed 6 Feb 1761 Died 1764 1802 Frederick of York and Albany Lutheran 1764 Appointed 10 Nov 1802 Resigned last prince bishop before its mediatisation to Hanover Sede vacante edit 1802 1857 sede vacante 1803 1827 Karl von Gruben Catholic Vicar Apostolic to the See of Osnabruck void of any regalia 1830 1855 Carl Anton Lupke Catholic leading auxiliary bishop 1855 1857 Eduard Jakob Wedekin in personal union Catholic bishop of Hildesheim Ordinaries edit 1857 1866 Paul Ludolf Melchers S J 3 Aug 1857 Appointed 8 Jan 1866 Appointed afterwards Archbishop of Cologne 1866 1878 Johannes Heinrich Beckmann 5 Apr 1866 Appointed 30 Jul 1878 Died 1878 1882 sede vacante 1882 1898 Johann Bernard Hoting 10 Feb 1882 Appointed 21 Oct 1898 Died 1899 1914 Heinrich Hubert Aloysius Voss Voss 12 Apr 1899 Appointed 3 Mar 1914 Died 1914 1955 Hermann Wilhelm Berning 14 Jul 1914 Appointed 23 Nov 1955 Died 1956 1957 Gerhard Franz Franziskus Demann 21 May 1956 Appointed 27 Mar 1957 Died 1957 1987 Helmut Hermann Wittler 22 Jul 1957 Appointed 9 Sep 1987 Resigned 1987 1994 Ludwig Averkamp 9 Sep 1987 Succeeded 24 Oct 1994 Appointed afterwards Archbishop of Hamburg 1995 2023 Franz Josef Hermann Bode 12 Sep 1995 Appointed 15 mar 2023 Resigned 2023 sede vacanteAuxiliary bishops editJohannes Fabri bishop of Osnabruck O F M 20 Nov 1434 Mar 1451 3 4 Godefridus Yerwerd O S B 13 Feb 1471 28 Mar 1476 5 Johannes Meppen O S A 24 Jan 1477 1495 6 Heinrich Schodehoet O S A 8 Jan 1494 1515 7 8 Johannes Pictor Meler O S A 15 Jan 1518 1529 Kaspar Munster O Carm 13 Feb 1631 4 Feb 1654 Agidius Gelenius 29 Apr 1655 24 Aug 1656 Johann Bischopinck 9 Jul 1657 19 Sep 1667 Otto Wilhelm von Bronckhorst zu Gronsfeld S J 2 Jan 1693 5 Apr 1713 Hyacinth Petit O Carm 11 Feb 1718 26 Jul 1719 Johann Friedrich Adolf von Horde zu Schonholthausen 15 Mar 1723 3 Aug 1761 Johann Hugo von Gaertz 4 Feb 1715 31 Dec 1716 Wilhelm von Alhaus O S C 3 Sep 1764 26 May 1794 Karl Klemens von Gruben 1 Jun 1795 4 Jul 1827 Karl Anton Joseph Lupke 5 Jul 1830 8 Apr 1855 Johannes Albert von Rudloff 1 Apr 1950 29 Jun 1978 Bernhard Schrader 22 Jun 1959 10 Dec 1971 Karl August Siegel 12 Dec 1974 18 Nov 1988 Hubert Brandenburg 12 Dec 1974 21 Nov 1977 Hans Jochen Jaschke 18 Nov 1988 24 Oct 1994 Theodor Kettmann 27 Nov 1978 30 Nov 2011 Johannes Wubbe 18 Jun 2013 References edit Diocese of Osnabruck Catholic Hierarchy org David M Cheney Retrieved February 29 2016 Diocese of Osnabruck GCatholic org Gabriel Chow Retrieved February 29 2016 Bishop Johannes Fabri O F M Catholic Hierarchy org David M Cheney Retrieved September 5 2016 Bishop Johannes Fabri O F M GCatholic org Gabriel Chow Retrieved September 5 2016 Bishop Godefridus Yerwerd O S B Catholic Hierarchy org David M Cheney Retrieved March 21 2016 Bishop Johannes Meppen O S A Catholic Hierarchy org David M Cheney Retrieved March 21 2016 Bishop Heinrich Schodehoet O S A Catholic Hierarchy org David M Cheney Retrieved September 5 2016 Bishop Heinrich Schodehoet O E S A GCatholic org Gabriel Chow Retrieved September 5 2016 nbsp This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Herbermann Charles ed 1913 Diocese of Osnabruck Catholic Encyclopedia New York Robert Appleton Company External links editOfficial site in German Map of Lower Saxony in 1789 52 16 39 N 8 02 41 E 52 2776 N 8 0447 E 52 2776 8 0447 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Roman Catholic Diocese of Osnabruck amp oldid 1211161711, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.