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Roman Catholic Territorial Prelature of Schneidemühl

The Territorial Prelature of Schneidemühl or Territorial Prelature of Piła (German: Freie Prälatur Schneidemühl, Latin: Territorialis Praelatura Schneidemuhlensis, Polish: Niezależna Prałatura Pilska) was a Roman Catholic territorial prelature in first Germany (Nazi Germany as of 1933) and then Poland. It covered the territory of the Prussian Province of the Frontier March of Posen-West Prussia, but also the territories of the Lauenburg and Bütow (Lębork and Bytów) Land and the former Starostwo of Draheim (Drahim), which were parts of the Province of Pomerania at the time. It was named after its seat in Schneidemühl (Piła) and belonged to the Eastern German Ecclesiastical Province under the Breslau/Wrocław Metropolia since 1930.

Territorial Prelature of Schneidemühl

Territorialis Praelatura Schneidemuhlensis

Prälatur Schneidemühl (in German)
Prałatura Pilska (in Polish)
Holy Family Church in Piła (former Co-Cathedral)
Location
CountryGermany
Poland
TerritoryPosen-West-Prussia, Lauenburg and Bütow Land, Starostwo of Draheim
Ecclesiastical provinceEastern Germany
MetropolitanBreslau (Wrocław)
Deaneries8
Statistics
Area9,601 km2 (3,707 sq mi)
Population
- Total
- Catholics
(as of 1933)
427,522
135,310 (31.59%)
Parishes74 (as of 1930)
Information
RiteLatin Rite
Established1 May 1923
Dissolved1972
Co-cathedralCo-Cathedral of the Holy Family in Schneidemühl (Piła)
Secular priests123 (as of 1930)

History edit

Following the restoration of independent Poland following World War I, it regained the bulk of the territories of the Archdiocese of Gniezno-Poznań (until 1946 in personal union) and the Diocese of Chełmno annexed by Prussia in the Partitions of Poland, however, small portions remained within Germany after 1919 and 1920. On 1 December 1920 Archbishop Edmund Dalbor of Gniezno-Poznań appointed an archiepiscopal delegate with the powers of a vicar general for the five concerned deaneries with 45 parishes and 80,000-100,000 Catholic faithful. Bishop Augustinus Rosentreter of Chełmno objected to separate his three eastern deaneries located in the historical Lauenburg and Bütow Land and Starostwo of Draheim, with about 40,000 Catholic parishioners.[1]

 
Tuczno Castle, seat of the Administrator of Tütz between 1920 and 1927.

Nevertheless, the Holy See disentangled these deaneries of Chełmno in 1922 and subordinated them to the archiepiscopal delegate seated in Tütz (Tuczno). On 1 May 1923 the Holy See united the concerned deaneries to form the new Apostolic Administration of Tütz.[2] The Holy See entrusted protonotary Robert Weimann (1870–1925) with the Administration Apostolic of Tütz.[3]

On 6 July 1926 Maximilian Kaller succeeded Weimann. On Kaller's instigation the seat of the Administration was moved from Tütz to Schneidemühl (Piła) in 1927, where Kaller then took on the local parish.[3] Schneidemühl had become the capital of Frontier March of Posen-West Prussia Province, when the Free State of Prussia had reorganised its dissected remnants of the former Provinces of Posen and of West Prussia as a province of their own on 1 July 1922.[4]

Following the 1929 Prussian Concordat, concluded between the Nuncio to Prussia, Eugenio Pacelli, and the Free State, the administration was elevated to Territorial Prelature within the new Eastern German Ecclesiastical Province under the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Wrocław on 13 August 1930. The prelates were not to be consecrated as bishops. Kaller was elevated to be the first prelate.

In 1930 Kaller founded Katholischer Siedlungsdienst (Catholic Colonisation Service) in Berlin and entrusted Ludwig Sebald Polzin (1892–1964) with its management. During his term the colonisation service bought and parcelled manor estates and founded new settlements in Adlig Rose, Bärenwalde (Bińcze), Barkenfelde (Barkowo), Eckartsberge (Kolno), Falkenwalde (Sokole), Marienthal, Paradies (Paradyż), Philipshof, Sampohl (Sąpolno), Schlichtingsheim (Szlichtyngowa), and Schmirtenau (Śmiardowo). Later in 1930 Kaller was consecrated in Schneidemühl's Holy Family Concathedral bishop of his new Diocese of Warmia, then moving to its diocesan seat in Frauenburg (Frombork).

In 1930 the new prelature comprised 74 parishes with 123 priests dispersed in four separate exclaves, on the German side of the border to the Polish Voivodeships of Poznań and of Pomerania. Visiting the parishes in the different exclaves was a tiresome effort. In 1933 the prelature comprised 9,601 km2 with 135,310 Catholic parishioners among 427,522 inhabitants. It was divided into eight deaneries seated in Betsche (Pszczew), Bomst (Babimost), Deutsch Krone (Wałcz), Flatow (Złotów), Fraustadt (Wschowa), Lauenburg in Pomerania (Lębork), Schlochau (Człuchów) and Schneidemühl.

Neighbouring dioceses were Chełmno in the northeast, Poznań in the east and south, Breslau in the south and Berlin in the west and north. While the Apostolic Administration did not dispose of an efficace administration, the Prelature had a consistory consisting of five persons, with a vicar general (Msgr. Johannes Bleske) and an official (Erich Klitsche) since 1930. On 25 February 1931 Franz Hartz succeeded Kaller as prelate.

During the Great Depression Polzin organised "Katholischer Freiwilliger Arbeitsdienst" (Catholic Volunteer Service), an employment-creation measure financed by the prelature. Soon after the Nazi takeover the volunteer service was confiscated by the Reichsarbeitsdienst, the colonisation service was gradually usurped by the Nazi party and Polzin temporarily taken into Gestapo arrest in 1935, while the Nazis fought the Catholic youth organisations.

 
Grave slab of Prelate Franz Hartz in St. Cyriacus Church in Hüls, Krefeld.

In early 1945 Prelate Hartz fled – like many other parishioners too – the invading Soviet Red Army and stranded in Fulda by the end of World War II. In March 1945 the area became eventually again part of Poland, although with a Soviet-installed communist regime, which remained in power for several decades. The new authorities expelled most of the remaining and surviving German population to Allied-occupied Germany in the years between 1945 and 1948 in accordance with the Potsdam Agreement. Polzin, who served as priest in Rokitten (Rokitno) since 1936, was expelled on 22 June 1945. Stranded in Berlin he organised the "Katholischer Flüchtlingsdienst" (Catholic Refugee Service), taking care of the destitute refugees and expellees.

Cardinal August Hlond, arrogating his special papal plenipotentiary power to reorganise the Polish episcopate, also appointed apostolic administrators for the former German dioceses now under Polish rule. Although Hartz had not resigned, Hlond appointed on 15 August 1945 Edmund Nowicki (1900–1971) with effect of 1 September as administrator for the Prelature and the Diocese of Berlin east of the Oder. Nowicki was titled Administrator of Kamień, Lubusz and the Prelature Piła (Polish: Administrator Kamieński, Lubuski i Prałatury Pilskiej), seated in Gorzów Wielkopolski. The anti-clerical communist government under Bolesław Bierut deposed and banished Nowicki from the administration in 1951. Thus Vicar Tadeusz Załuczkowski replaced him, followed by Vicar Zygmunt Szelążek in 1952.

Prelate Hartz died in 1953 in Hüls, a locality of Krefeld. In the same year the Schneidemühl Consistory, whose members then lived in the Federal Republic of Germany, then – following canon law – elected Polzin capitular vicar for the vacant see, confirmed by the Holy See on 20 October 1953.[2] In 1956 Teodor Bensch (1903–1958) was appointed administrator of Kamień, Lubusz and the Prelature Piła, succeeded by Józef Michalski (only 1958), and again by Administrator Wilhelm Pluta (1910–1986), Bishop of the titulature of Leptis Magna, serving as administrator until 1972.

After Polzin's death the Schneidemühl Consistory had elected Wilhelm Volkmann capitular vicar in 1964, holding that position until 1972.[5] With the reorganisation of the church administration in western Poland in 1972 the Prelature of Piła was dissolved and its diocesan area divided between the Dioceses of Gorzów (since 1992 Zielona Góra-Gorzów) and of Koszalin-Kolobrzeg.

The Holy See established the office of a Visitator Apostolic for the diocesans of the Prelature of Schneidemühl exiled in today's Germany. Paul Snowadzki was appointed first visitator in 1972 (till 1982), succeeded by Wolfgang Klemp in the years 1982 to 1997.[5] Currently, Lothar Schlegel is entrusted the visitation of the diocesans of Danzig (Gdańsk), Warmia and Schneidemühl living in Germany.[6] In Fulda former Schneidemühl diocesans run the Heimatwerk der Katholiken aus der Freien Prälatur Schneidemühl e.V. (Homeland endowment of the Catholics from the Territorial Prelature of Schneidemühl), an association occupied with the history, culture and legacy of the prelature and its diocesans.

Leadership edit

Administrators of Tütz edit

  • 1923–1925: Protonotary Robert Weimann (1870–1925), already archiepiscopal delegate since 1920
  • 1926–1930: Administrator Maximilian Kaller (1870–1947)

Prelates of Schneidemühl edit

  • 1930: Prelate Maximilian Kaller, advanced to Bishop of Ermland
  • 1931–1953: Prelate Franz Hartz (1870–1953)

Capitular Vicars of Schneidemühl edit

  • 1953–1964: Ludwig Sebald Polzin (1892–1964)
  • 1964–1972: Wilhelm Volkmann

Apostolic Administrators and Vicars of Kamień, Lubusz and the Prelature of Piła edit

  • 1945–1951: Administrator Edmund Nowicki (1900–1971), deposed and banished by Bolesław Bierut government
  • 1951–1952: Vicar Tadeusz Załuczkowski
  • 1952–1956: Vicar Zygmunt Szelążek
  • 1956–1958: Administrator Teodor Bensch (1903–1958)
  • 1958: Jozef Michalski
  • 1958–1972: Administrator Wilhelm Pluta (1910–1986), advanced to Bishop of Gorzów

Apostolic Visitators for the exiled Schneidemühl diocesans edit

  • 1972–1982: Paul Snowadzki
  • 1982–1997: Wolfgang Klemp
  • 1997–present: Msgr. Lothar Schlegel

Literature edit

  • Die Apostolische Administratur Schneidemühl. Ein Buch für das katholische Volk, Franz Westpfahl (ed.), Schneidemühl: Verlag des Johannesboten, 1928.
  • Kirchliches Handbuch für das katholische Deutschland, Amtliche Zentralstelle für Kirchliche Statistik des Katholischen Deutschlands (ed.), Cologne: Bachem, 1909–1943, here: vol. 20 '1937/1938' (publ. 1937), vol. 21: '1939/1940' (publ. 1939) and vol. 22 '1943' (publ. 1943).

External links edit

  • Michael Rademacher, "Die Freie Prälatur Schneidemühl", on: Deutsche Verwaltungsgeschichte von der Reichseinigung 1871 bis zur Wiedervereinigung 1990, retrieved on 23 January 2013

Notes edit

  1. ^ In 1933 Bütow District comprised 617 km2 with 6,070 Catholic parishioners among 27,510 inhabitants, the corresponding numbers for Lauenburg i. Pom. District were 1,289 km2, 5,654 Catholics and a total population of 62,434.
  2. ^ a b Cf. Barbara Wolf-Dahm (1994). "Polzin, Ludwig Sebald". In Bautz, Traugott (ed.). Biographisch-Bibliographisches Kirchenlexikon (BBKL) (in German). Vol. 7. Herzberg: Bautz. cols. 817–821. ISBN 3-88309-048-4..
  3. ^ a b Georg May, Ludwig Kaas: der Priester, der Politiker und der Gelehrte aus der Schule von Ulrich Stutz: 3 vols., Amsterdam: Grüner, 1981-1982 (=Kanonistische Studien und Texte; vols. 33–35), vol. 1, p. 175. ISBN 90-6032-197-9.
  4. ^ In 1933 Posen-West Prussia comprised 7,695 km2 with 123,310 Catholic parishioners among 337,578 inhabitants.
  5. ^ a b Sabine Voßkamp, Katholische Kirche und Vertriebene in Westdeutschland: Integration, Identität und ostpolitischer Diskurs 1945-1972, Stuttgart: Kohlhammer Verlag, 2007, (=Konfession und Gesellschaft; vol. 40), p. 395. ISBN 3-17-019967-6.
  6. ^ Cf. "Zum Geleit", signed by Lothar Schlegel as Visitator Ermland - Danzig - Schneidemühl, subsequent to the Rahmenprogramm (framework programme) 2011-07-28 at the Wayback Machine of a pilgrimage, on: Apostolischer Visitator Ermland 2014-05-18 at the Wayback Machine (official website), retrieved on 13 May 2011.

roman, catholic, territorial, prelature, schneidemühl, territorial, prelature, schneidemühl, territorial, prelature, piła, german, freie, prälatur, schneidemühl, latin, territorialis, praelatura, schneidemuhlensis, polish, niezależna, prałatura, pilska, roman,. The Territorial Prelature of Schneidemuhl or Territorial Prelature of Pila German Freie Pralatur Schneidemuhl Latin Territorialis Praelatura Schneidemuhlensis Polish Niezalezna Pralatura Pilska was a Roman Catholic territorial prelature in first Germany Nazi Germany as of 1933 and then Poland It covered the territory of the Prussian Province of the Frontier March of Posen West Prussia but also the territories of the Lauenburg and Butow Lebork and Bytow Land and the former Starostwo of Draheim Drahim which were parts of the Province of Pomerania at the time It was named after its seat in Schneidemuhl Pila and belonged to the Eastern German Ecclesiastical Province under the Breslau Wroclaw Metropolia since 1930 Territorial Prelature of SchneidemuhlTerritorialis Praelatura SchneidemuhlensisPralatur Schneidemuhl in German Pralatura Pilska in Polish Holy Family Church in Pila former Co Cathedral LocationCountryGermanyPolandTerritoryPosen West Prussia Lauenburg and Butow Land Starostwo of DraheimEcclesiastical provinceEastern GermanyMetropolitanBreslau Wroclaw Deaneries8StatisticsArea9 601 km2 3 707 sq mi Population Total Catholics as of 1933 427 522135 310 31 59 Parishes74 as of 1930 InformationRiteLatin RiteEstablished1 May 1923Dissolved1972Co cathedralCo Cathedral of the Holy Family in Schneidemuhl Pila Secular priests123 as of 1930 Contents 1 History 2 Leadership 2 1 Administrators of Tutz 2 2 Prelates of Schneidemuhl 2 3 Capitular Vicars of Schneidemuhl 2 4 Apostolic Administrators and Vicars of Kamien Lubusz and the Prelature of Pila 2 5 Apostolic Visitators for the exiled Schneidemuhl diocesans 3 Literature 4 External links 5 NotesHistory editFollowing the restoration of independent Poland following World War I it regained the bulk of the territories of the Archdiocese of Gniezno Poznan until 1946 in personal union and the Diocese of Chelmno annexed by Prussia in the Partitions of Poland however small portions remained within Germany after 1919 and 1920 On 1 December 1920 Archbishop Edmund Dalbor of Gniezno Poznan appointed an archiepiscopal delegate with the powers of a vicar general for the five concerned deaneries with 45 parishes and 80 000 100 000 Catholic faithful Bishop Augustinus Rosentreter of Chelmno objected to separate his three eastern deaneries located in the historical Lauenburg and Butow Land and Starostwo of Draheim with about 40 000 Catholic parishioners 1 nbsp Tuczno Castle seat of the Administrator of Tutz between 1920 and 1927 Nevertheless the Holy See disentangled these deaneries of Chelmno in 1922 and subordinated them to the archiepiscopal delegate seated in Tutz Tuczno On 1 May 1923 the Holy See united the concerned deaneries to form the new Apostolic Administration of Tutz 2 The Holy See entrusted protonotary Robert Weimann 1870 1925 with the Administration Apostolic of Tutz 3 On 6 July 1926 Maximilian Kaller succeeded Weimann On Kaller s instigation the seat of the Administration was moved from Tutz to Schneidemuhl Pila in 1927 where Kaller then took on the local parish 3 Schneidemuhl had become the capital of Frontier March of Posen West Prussia Province when the Free State of Prussia had reorganised its dissected remnants of the former Provinces of Posen and of West Prussia as a province of their own on 1 July 1922 4 Following the 1929 Prussian Concordat concluded between the Nuncio to Prussia Eugenio Pacelli and the Free State the administration was elevated to Territorial Prelature within the new Eastern German Ecclesiastical Province under the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Wroclaw on 13 August 1930 The prelates were not to be consecrated as bishops Kaller was elevated to be the first prelate In 1930 Kaller founded Katholischer Siedlungsdienst Catholic Colonisation Service in Berlin and entrusted Ludwig Sebald Polzin 1892 1964 with its management During his term the colonisation service bought and parcelled manor estates and founded new settlements in Adlig Rose Barenwalde Bincze Barkenfelde Barkowo Eckartsberge Kolno Falkenwalde Sokole Marienthal Paradies Paradyz Philipshof Sampohl Sapolno Schlichtingsheim Szlichtyngowa and Schmirtenau Smiardowo Later in 1930 Kaller was consecrated in Schneidemuhl s Holy Family Concathedral bishop of his new Diocese of Warmia then moving to its diocesan seat in Frauenburg Frombork In 1930 the new prelature comprised 74 parishes with 123 priests dispersed in four separate exclaves on the German side of the border to the Polish Voivodeships of Poznan and of Pomerania Visiting the parishes in the different exclaves was a tiresome effort In 1933 the prelature comprised 9 601 km2 with 135 310 Catholic parishioners among 427 522 inhabitants It was divided into eight deaneries seated in Betsche Pszczew Bomst Babimost Deutsch Krone Walcz Flatow Zlotow Fraustadt Wschowa Lauenburg in Pomerania Lebork Schlochau Czluchow and Schneidemuhl Neighbouring dioceses were Chelmno in the northeast Poznan in the east and south Breslau in the south and Berlin in the west and north While the Apostolic Administration did not dispose of an efficace administration the Prelature had a consistory consisting of five persons with a vicar general Msgr Johannes Bleske and an official Erich Klitsche since 1930 On 25 February 1931 Franz Hartz succeeded Kaller as prelate During the Great Depression Polzin organised Katholischer Freiwilliger Arbeitsdienst Catholic Volunteer Service an employment creation measure financed by the prelature Soon after the Nazi takeover the volunteer service was confiscated by the Reichsarbeitsdienst the colonisation service was gradually usurped by the Nazi party and Polzin temporarily taken into Gestapo arrest in 1935 while the Nazis fought the Catholic youth organisations nbsp Grave slab of Prelate Franz Hartz in St Cyriacus Church in Huls Krefeld In early 1945 Prelate Hartz fled like many other parishioners too the invading Soviet Red Army and stranded in Fulda by the end of World War II In March 1945 the area became eventually again part of Poland although with a Soviet installed communist regime which remained in power for several decades The new authorities expelled most of the remaining and surviving German population to Allied occupied Germany in the years between 1945 and 1948 in accordance with the Potsdam Agreement Polzin who served as priest in Rokitten Rokitno since 1936 was expelled on 22 June 1945 Stranded in Berlin he organised the Katholischer Fluchtlingsdienst Catholic Refugee Service taking care of the destitute refugees and expellees Cardinal August Hlond arrogating his special papal plenipotentiary power to reorganise the Polish episcopate also appointed apostolic administrators for the former German dioceses now under Polish rule Although Hartz had not resigned Hlond appointed on 15 August 1945 Edmund Nowicki 1900 1971 with effect of 1 September as administrator for the Prelature and the Diocese of Berlin east of the Oder Nowicki was titled Administrator of Kamien Lubusz and the Prelature Pila Polish Administrator Kamienski Lubuski i Pralatury Pilskiej seated in Gorzow Wielkopolski The anti clerical communist government under Boleslaw Bierut deposed and banished Nowicki from the administration in 1951 Thus Vicar Tadeusz Zaluczkowski replaced him followed by Vicar Zygmunt Szelazek in 1952 Prelate Hartz died in 1953 in Huls a locality of Krefeld In the same year the Schneidemuhl Consistory whose members then lived in the Federal Republic of Germany then following canon law elected Polzin capitular vicar for the vacant see confirmed by the Holy See on 20 October 1953 2 In 1956 Teodor Bensch 1903 1958 was appointed administrator of Kamien Lubusz and the Prelature Pila succeeded by Jozef Michalski only 1958 and again by Administrator Wilhelm Pluta 1910 1986 Bishop of the titulature of Leptis Magna serving as administrator until 1972 After Polzin s death the Schneidemuhl Consistory had elected Wilhelm Volkmann capitular vicar in 1964 holding that position until 1972 5 With the reorganisation of the church administration in western Poland in 1972 the Prelature of Pila was dissolved and its diocesan area divided between the Dioceses of Gorzow since 1992 Zielona Gora Gorzow and of Koszalin Kolobrzeg The Holy See established the office of a Visitator Apostolic for the diocesans of the Prelature of Schneidemuhl exiled in today s Germany Paul Snowadzki was appointed first visitator in 1972 till 1982 succeeded by Wolfgang Klemp in the years 1982 to 1997 5 Currently Lothar Schlegel is entrusted the visitation of the diocesans of Danzig Gdansk Warmia and Schneidemuhl living in Germany 6 In Fulda former Schneidemuhl diocesans run the Heimatwerk der Katholiken aus der Freien Pralatur Schneidemuhl e V Homeland endowment of the Catholics from the Territorial Prelature of Schneidemuhl an association occupied with the history culture and legacy of the prelature and its diocesans Leadership editAdministrators of Tutz edit 1923 1925 Protonotary Robert Weimann 1870 1925 already archiepiscopal delegate since 1920 1926 1930 Administrator Maximilian Kaller 1870 1947 Prelates of Schneidemuhl edit 1930 Prelate Maximilian Kaller advanced to Bishop of Ermland 1931 1953 Prelate Franz Hartz 1870 1953 Capitular Vicars of Schneidemuhl edit 1953 1964 Ludwig Sebald Polzin 1892 1964 1964 1972 Wilhelm Volkmann Apostolic Administrators and Vicars of Kamien Lubusz and the Prelature of Pila edit 1945 1951 Administrator Edmund Nowicki 1900 1971 deposed and banished by Boleslaw Bierut government 1951 1952 Vicar Tadeusz Zaluczkowski 1952 1956 Vicar Zygmunt Szelazek 1956 1958 Administrator Teodor Bensch 1903 1958 1958 Jozef Michalski 1958 1972 Administrator Wilhelm Pluta 1910 1986 advanced to Bishop of Gorzow Apostolic Visitators for the exiled Schneidemuhl diocesans edit 1972 1982 Paul Snowadzki 1982 1997 Wolfgang Klemp 1997 present Msgr Lothar SchlegelLiterature editDie Apostolische Administratur Schneidemuhl Ein Buch fur das katholische Volk Franz Westpfahl ed Schneidemuhl Verlag des Johannesboten 1928 Kirchliches Handbuch fur das katholische Deutschland Amtliche Zentralstelle fur Kirchliche Statistik des Katholischen Deutschlands ed Cologne Bachem 1909 1943 here vol 20 1937 1938 publ 1937 vol 21 1939 1940 publ 1939 and vol 22 1943 publ 1943 External links editMichael Rademacher Die Freie Pralatur Schneidemuhl on Deutsche Verwaltungsgeschichte von der Reichseinigung 1871 bis zur Wiedervereinigung 1990 retrieved on 23 January 2013Notes edit In 1933 Butow District comprised 617 km2 with 6 070 Catholic parishioners among 27 510 inhabitants the corresponding numbers for Lauenburg i Pom District were 1 289 km2 5 654 Catholics and a total population of 62 434 a b Cf Barbara Wolf Dahm 1994 Polzin Ludwig Sebald In Bautz Traugott ed Biographisch Bibliographisches Kirchenlexikon BBKL in German Vol 7 Herzberg Bautz cols 817 821 ISBN 3 88309 048 4 a b Georg May Ludwig Kaas der Priester der Politiker und der Gelehrte aus der Schule von Ulrich Stutz 3 vols Amsterdam Gruner 1981 1982 Kanonistische Studien und Texte vols 33 35 vol 1 p 175 ISBN 90 6032 197 9 In 1933 Posen West Prussia comprised 7 695 km2 with 123 310 Catholic parishioners among 337 578 inhabitants a b Sabine Vosskamp Katholische Kirche und Vertriebene in Westdeutschland Integration Identitat und ostpolitischer Diskurs 1945 1972 Stuttgart Kohlhammer Verlag 2007 Konfession und Gesellschaft vol 40 p 395 ISBN 3 17 019967 6 Cf Zum Geleit signed by Lothar Schlegel as Visitator Ermland Danzig Schneidemuhl subsequent to the Rahmenprogramm framework programme Archived 2011 07 28 at the Wayback Machine of a pilgrimage on Apostolischer Visitator Ermland Archived 2014 05 18 at the Wayback Machine official website retrieved on 13 May 2011 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Roman Catholic Territorial Prelature of Schneidemuhl amp oldid 1218535091, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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