Prince-bishop


A prince-bishop is a bishop who is also the civil ruler of some secular principality and sovereignty, as opposed to Prince of the Church itself, a title associated with cardinals. Since 1951, the sole extant prince-bishop has been the Bishop of Urgell, Catalonia, who has remained ex officio one of two co-princes of Andorra, along with the French president.

Overview

In the West, with the decline of imperial power from the 4th century onwards in the face of the barbarian invasions, sometimes Christian bishops of cities took the place of the Roman commander, made secular decisions for the city and led their own troops when necessary. Later relations between a prince-bishop and the burghers were invariably not cordial. As cities demanded charters from emperors, kings, or their prince-bishops and declared themselves independent of the secular territorial magnates, friction intensified between burghers and bishops. The principality or prince-bishopric ruled politically by a prince-bishop could wholly or largely have overlapped with his diocesan jurisdiction, but some parts of his diocese, even the city of his residence, could have been exempt from his civil rule, obtaining the status of free imperial city. If the episcopal see was an archbishopric, the correct term was prince-archbishop; the equivalent in the regular clergy was prince-abbot. A prince-bishop was usually considered an elected monarch. With the dissolution of the Holy Roman Empire in 1806, the title finally became defunct in the Confederation of the Rhine. However, in respect to the lands of the former Holy Roman Empire outside of French control, such as the Habsburg Monarchy, including Austria proper, the Lands of the Bohemian Crown, as well as in respect to the parts of the 1795-partitioned Polish state, including those forming part of the Kingdom of Galicia and Lodomeria or those acquired by the Kingdom of Prussia, the position continued in some cases nominally and was sometimes transformed into a new, titular type, initially recognized by the German Empire and Austria-Hungary until their demise, with the title ultimately abolished altogether by the pope in 1951.
The sole exception is the Bishop of Urgell, Catalonia, who no longer has any secular rights in Spain, but remains ex officio one of two co-princes of Andorra, along with the French head of state, and thus the last extant prince-bishop.
In the Byzantine Empire, the still autocratic Emperors passed general legal measures assigning all bishops certain rights and duties in the secular administration of their dioceses, possibly as part of a development to put the Eastern Church in the service of the Empire, with its Ecumenical Patriarch almost reduced to the Emperor's minister of religious affairs.. The institution of prince-bishop was revived in the Orthodox Church in the modern times during the existence of the Prince-Bishopric of Montenegro.

History

Holy Roman Empire

Bishops had been involved in the government of the Frankish realm and subsequent Carolingian Empire frequently as the clerical member of a duo of envoys styled Missus dominicus, but that was an individual mandate, not attached to the see. Prince-bishoprics were most common in the feudally fragmented Holy Roman Empire, where many were formally awarded the rank of an Imperial Prince Reichsfürst, granting them the immediate power over a certain territory and a representation in the Imperial Diet.
The stem duchies of the German Kingdom inside the Empire had strong and powerful dukes, always looking out more for their duchy's "national interest" than for the Empire's. In turn the first Ottonian king Henry the Fowler and more so his son, Emperor Otto I, intended to weaken the power of the dukes by granting loyal bishops Imperial lands and vest them with regalia privileges. Unlike dukes they could not pass hereditary titles and lands to any descendants. Instead the Emperors reserved the implementation of the bishops of their proprietary church for themselves, defying the fact that according to canon law they were part of the transnational Catholic Church. This met with increasing opposition by the Popes, culminating in the fierce Investiture Controversy of 1076. Nevertheless, the Emperors continued to grant major territories to the most important bishops. The immediate territory attached to the episcopal see then became a prince-diocese or bishopric. The German term Hochstift was often used to denote the form of secular authority held by bishops ruling a prince-bishopric with Erzstift being used for prince-archbishoprics.
Emperor Charles IV by the Golden Bull of 1356 confirmed the privileged status of the Prince-Archbishoprics of Mainz, Cologne and Trier as members of the electoral college. At the eve of the Protestant Reformation, the Imperial states comprised 53 ecclesiastical principalities. They were finally secularized in the 1803 German Mediatization upon the territorial losses to France in the Treaty of Lunéville, except for the Mainz prince-archbishop and German archchancellor Karl Theodor Anton Maria von Dalberg, who continued to rule as Prince of Aschaffenburg and Regensburg. With the dissolution of the Holy Roman Empire in 1806, the title finally became defunct in the successor Confederation of the Rhine.
No less than three of the prince-electors, the highest order of Reichsfürsten, were prince-archbishops, each holding the title of Archchancellor for a part of the Empire; given the higher importance of an electorate, their principalities were known as Kurfürstentum rather than prince-archbishopric.
ArmsNameRankLocal nameImperial immediacyImperial
Circle
Modern
nation
Notes
AugsburgBishopric–1803SwabianAugsburg became a Free Imperial City in 1276.
BambergBishopric1245–1802Franconian
BaselBishopric
1032–1803Upper Rhenish

Basel joined the Old Swiss Confederacy as the Canton of Basel in 1501. Secularized as a result of Swiss Mediation. A tiny fraction of the bishopric is not now in Switzerland: Schliengen and Istein are both now in Germany; a very small part of the Vogtei of St Ursanne is now in France.
BesançonArchbishopric
1043–1678/1803Upper RhenishMade Prince by Henry III in 1043. Temporal power revoked and granted to the Free City of Besançon in 1290, while the title of Prince was retained by the Archbishop. Transferred to the Burgundian Circle in 1512. Imperial Diet seat was retained but left vacant after France annexed Besançon in 1678.
BrandenburgBishopric–1598Upper SaxonFounded in 948; annihilated 983; re-established. Continued by Lutheran administrators after the Reformation in 1520; secularized and incorporated into the Margraviate of Brandenburg in 1571.
BremenArchbishopric1180–1648Lower SaxonContinued by Lutheran administrators from the Reformation in 1566 until 1645/1648. Bremen itself became autonomous in 1186, and was confirmed as a Free Imperial City in 1646.

Breslau Bishopric

fief of the Bohemian crown, after 1748 also of the Kingdom of Prussia-



Ceded 1335/1348 by Poland. After dissolution of the HRE, secularized in 1810 and in 1850. The princely title continued until 1951, elevated to archbishopric 1930
BrixenBishopric
1027–1803Austriansecularized to Tyrol
CambraiBishopric, then archbishopric
1007–1678Lower Rhenish / WestphalianTo France by 1678 Peace of Nijmegen
ChurBishopric

831/1170–1526Austrian
Secularized 1803 as a result of Swiss Mediation.
CologneArchbishopric electorate953–1803Electoral RhenishPrince-elector and Arch-Chancellor of Italy. Duke of Westphalia from 1180. Cologne became a Free Imperial City in 1288.
ConstanceBishopric1155–1803Swabian

Greatly reduced during the Reformation, when significant parts of Swabia and Switzerland became Protestant.
EichstättBishopric1305–1802Franconian
FreisingBishopric1294–1802Bavarian
FuldaAbbey, then bishopric1220–1802Upper RhenishImperial Abbey until 5 October 1752, when it was raised to a bishopric. Secularized in 1802 in the German Mediatization
GenevaBishopric
1154-1526Upper Rhenish
De jure reichsfrei since 1154. De facto dominated by their guardians, the counts of Geneva and Savoy. Geneva joined the Old Swiss Confederacy in 1526.
HalberstadtBishopric1180–1648Lower Saxon
HavelbergBishopric1151–1598Lower SaxonFounded in 948; annihilated 983; re-established 1130. Continued by Lutheran administrators from Reformation in 1548 until 1598
HildesheimBishopric1235–1803Lower Saxon
LausanneBishopric
1270–1536-Conquered by the Swiss city canton of Bern in 1536.
LebusBishopric
1248/1454/1506–1598-
Established 1124 in Poland, 1248-1372 disputed and 1372 ultimately lost to HRE. 1372–1454 fief of the Bohemian crown, seated in Fürstenwalde from 1385; reichsfrei ostensibly from 1248, but challenged by Brandenburg. Continued by Hohenzollern Lutheran administrators from Protestant Reformation in 1555 until secularization in 1598.
LiègeBishopric

980–1789/1795Lower Rhenish / Westphalian
LübeckBishopric1180–1803Lower SaxonSeated in Eutin from the 1270s; Reformation started in 1535, continued by Lutheran administrators from 1586 until secularization in 1803. Lübeck became a Free Imperial City in 1226.
LyonArchbishopric
1157-1312-Seated in Lyon; Reichsfreiheit confirmed by Frederick Barbarossa in 1157. Annexed by the Kingdom of France in 1312.
MagdeburgArchbishopric1180–1680Lower SaxonContinued by Lutheran administrators between 1566 and 1631, and again from 1638 until 1680.
MainzArchbishopric electorate–1803Electoral RhenishPrince-elector and Arch-Chancellor of Germany.
MerseburgBishopric1004–1565-Administered by the Lutheran Electorate of Saxony between 1544 and 1565.
MetzBishopric
10th century–1552Upper RhenishOne of the Three Bishoprics ceded to France by the 1552 Treaty of Chambord.
MindenBishopric1180–1648Lower Rhenish / Westphalian
MünsterBishopric1180–1802Lower Rhenish / Westphalian
NaumburgBishopricUnder guardianship of Meissen from 1259. Administered by Saxony from 1564.
OlomoucBishopric, then archbishopric

fief of the Bohemian Crown, after 1742 also of the Kingdom of Prussia-
The Czech bishopric of Olomouc, as a fief of the Bohemian Crown, was the peer of the Margraviate of Moravia, and from 1365 its prince-bishop was 'Count of the Bohemian Chapel', i.e., first court chaplain, who was to accompany the monarch on his frequent travels. Secularized in 1803, but the princely title continued. However, all bishops' princely titles were abolished by the pope in 1951.
OsnabrückBishopric1225/1236–1802Lower Rhenish / WestphalianAlternated between Catholic and Protestant incumbents after the Thirty Years' War; secularized in 1802/1803
PaderbornBishopric1281–1802Lower Rhenish / Westphalian
PassauBishopric999–1803Bavarian
Princely title was confirmed at Nuremberg in 1217.
RatzeburgBishopric1236–1648Lower SaxonRuled by Lutheran administrators between 1554 and 1648.
RegensburgBishopric, then archbishopric electorate1132?–1803BavarianRegensburg became a Free Imperial City in 1245.
SalzburgArchbishopric electorate1278–1803BavarianRaised to an electorate in 1803, but simultaneously secularized; see Electorate of Salzburg. Since 1648, the archbishop has also borne the title Primas Germaniae, First of Germania, which used to include the right to preside over the Princes of the Holy Roman Empire. However, all bishops' princely titles were abolished by the pope in 1951.
SchwerinBishopric1180–1648Lower SaxonRuled by an administrator between 1516 and 1648.
SpeyerBishopric888–1803Upper RhenishTerritories to the east of the Rhine were annexed by France in 1681, confirmed in 1697. Speyer became a Free Imperial City in 1294.
StrasbourgBishopric

982–1803Upper Rhenish
Territories to the east of the Rhine were annexed by France in 1681, confirmed in 1697.
TarentaiseArchbishopric

1186-1769Upper RhenishCount of Tarentaise from 996; reichsfrei from 1186. De facto dominated by their guardians Savoy. Secularized and annexed by the Kingdom of Sardinia 1769.
ToulBishopric
10th century – 1552Upper RhenishOne of the Three Bishoprics ceded to France by the 1552 Treaty of Chambord, confirmed in 1648.
TrentBishopric

1027–1803AustrianSecularized to Tyrol in 1803.
TrierArchbishopric electorate
772–1803Electoral RhenishPrince-elector and Arch-Chancellor of Burgundy.
UtrechtBishopric1024–1528Lower Rhenish / WestphalianSold to Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor in 1528, after which it was moved to the Burgundian Circle. Founding member of the Dutch Republic in 1579/1581, confirmed in 1648.
VerdenBishopric1180–1648Lower Rhenish / WestphalianContinued by Lutheran administrators after Reformation until 1645/1648, when it was continued as a secular and independent principality until its disestablishment in 1807. It became a part of the Kingdom of Hanover in 1815.
VerdunBishopric
10th century – 1552Upper RhenishOne of the Three Bishoprics ceded to France by the 1552 Treaty of Chambord, confirmed in 1648.
WormsBishopric861–1801Upper RhenishWorms city rule established by Bishop Burchard. Episcopal residence at Ladenburg from 1400. Held large estates in the former Lahngau region. Territories on the Left Bank of the Rhine lost by the 1797 Treaty of Campo Formio; secularized at first to the French Empire, then to Baden and Hesse-Darmstadt in 1815.

The suffragan-bishoprics of Gurk, Bishopric of Chiemsee, Prince-bishop of Seckau, and Lavant sometimes used the Fürstbischof title, but never held any reichsfrei territory. However, all bishops' princely titles were abolished by the pope in 1951.
The Patriarchate of Aquileia was conquered by Venice in 1420 and officially incorporated after the 1445 Council of Florence.
In Brescia Bishop Notingus was made count of Brescia in 844.
In the Bishopric of Belley, Saint Anthelm of Belley was granted Reichsfreiheit by Emperor Frederick I, but submitted temporal authorities to the Duchy of Savoy in 1401.
The Bishopric of Sion was from 999 a classic example of unified secular and diocesan authority. It progressively lost its powers since the Renaissance, and was finally replaced by the Republic of the Seven Tithings in 1634.