Bishop of Speyer  | |
|---|---|
| Bishopric | |
| catholic | |
![]() Franz Christoph von Hutten zum Stolzenberg, prince-bishop of Speyer  | |
| Incumbent: Karl-Heinz Wiesemann 19 December 2007  | |
| Location | |
| Country | Germany | 
| Information | |
| Established | 1802 | 
| Archdiocese | Bamberg | 
| Diocese | Speyer | 
The Bishop of Speyer is the Ordinary of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Speyer, which is a suffragan see of the Archdiocese of Bamberg.[1][2] The diocese covers an area of 5,893 km². The current bishop is Karl-Heinz Wiesemann.[3]
Listed here are the bishops of the diocese and auxiliary bishops.
Bishops to 1802
At some point, the bishops of Speyer acquired imperial fiefs.
| Name | From | Until | 
|---|---|---|
| Jesse of Speir | circa 346 | |
| Hildericus episcopus | circa 613 | |
| Atanasius | 610 | 650 | 
| Principius | 650 | 659 | 
| Dragobodo | 659 | 700 | 
| Otto | 700 | 709 | 
| Siegwin I | 709 | 725 | 
| Luido | 725 | 743 | 
| David | 743 | 760 | 
| Basinus | 760 | 775 | 
| Siegwin II | 775 | 802 | 
| Otto I | 802 | 810 | 
| Fraido | 810 | 814 | 
| Benedikt | 814 | 828 or 830 | 
| Bertin, also Hertinus | 828 or 830 | 845 or 846 | 
| Gebhard I | 845 or 847 | 880 | 
| Goddank | 881 | 895 or 898 | 
| Einhard, also Eginhard | 895 or 898 | 913 | 
| Bernhard | 914 | 922 | 
| Amalrich | 913 or 923 | 943 | 
| Reginwalt I, also Reginhard | 943 or 944 | 950 | 
| Gottfried I | 950 | 960 | 
| Otgar | 960 | 970 | 
| Balderich | 970 | 987 | 
| Ruprecht | 987 | 1004 | 
| Walter | 1004 | 1031 | 
| Siegfried I | 1031 | 1032 | 
| Reinher, also Reginher | 1032 | 1033 | 
| Reginhard II of Dillingen,[4] also Reginbald | 1033 | 1039 | 
| Sigbodo I, also Siegbodo | 1039 | 1051 | 
| Arnold I of Falkenberg | 1051 | 1056 | 
| Konrad I | 1056 | 1060 | 
| Eginhard II of Katzenelnbogen | 1060 | 1067 | 
| Heinrich of Scharfenberg | 1067 | 1075 | 
| Rüdiger Huzmann (Huozmann, Hutzmann) | 1075 | 1090 | 
| Johann I of Kraichgau | 1090 | 1104 | 
| Gebhard II, Count of Urach | 1105 | 1107 († 1110) | 
| Bruno, Count of Saarbrücken (Count of Saargau) | 1107 | 1123 | 
| Arnold II, Count of Leiningen | 1124 | 1126 | 
| Siegfried I, Count of Wolffölden | 1127 | 1146 | 
| Günther von Henneberg | 1146 | 1161 | 
| Ulrich I of Dürrmenz | 1161 | 1163 | 
| Gottfried II | 1164 | 1167 | 
| Rabodo, Count of Lobdaburg | 1167 | 1176 | 
| Konrad II | 1176 | 1178 | 
| Ulrich II of Rechberg | 1178 | 1187 | 
| Otto II, Count of Henneberg | 1187 | 1200 | 
| Conrad III of Scharfenberg | 1200 | 1224 | 
| Beringer of Entringen | 1224 | 1232 | 
| Konrad IV of Dahn | 1233 | 1236 | 
| Konrad V, Count of Eberstein | 1237 | 1245 | 
| Heinrich II, Count of Leiningen | 1245 | 1272 | 
| Friedrich of Bolanden | 1272 | 1302 | 
| Sigibodo II of Lichtenberg, also Siegbodo | 1302 | 1314 | 
| Emich, Count of Leiningen, also Emicho | 1314 | 1328 | 
| Berthold, Count of Bucheck | 1328 | 1328 | 
| Walram, Count of Veldenz | 1328 | 1336 | 
| Baldwin, Archbishop of Trier (Administrator) | 1332 | 1336 | 
| Gerhard of Ehrenberg | 1336 | 1363 | 
| Lambert of Born (Brunn?) | 1364 | 1371 | 
| Adolf I, Count of Nassau | 1371 | 1388 | 
| Nikolaus I aus Wiesbaden | 1388 | 1396 | 
| Raban of Helmstatt | 1396 | 1438 | 
| Reinhard of Helmstatt | 1438 | 1456 | 
| Siegfried III Freiherr of Venningen | 1456 | 1459 | 
| Johann II Nix of Hoheneck, aka Enzenberger | 1459 | 1464 | 
| Matthias Freiherr of Rammingen | 1464 | 1478 | 
| Ludwig of Helmstädt | 1478 | 1504 | 
| Philip I of Rosenberg | 1504 | 1513 | 
| George, Count Palatine by Rhine | 1513 | 1529 | 
| Philip II of Flersheim | 1529 | 1552 | 
| Rudolf of Frankenstein | 1552 | 1560 | 
| Marquard Freiherr of Hattstein | 1560 | 1581 | 
| Eberhard of Dienheim | 1581 | 1610 | 
| Philipp Christoph von Sötern | 1610 | 1652 | 
| Lothar Friedrich of Metternich | 1652 | 1675 | 
| Johann Hugo von Orsbeck | 1675 | 1711 | 
| Heinrich Hartard of Rollingen | 1711 | 1719 | 
| Hugo Damian of Schönborn[5] | 1719 | 1743 | 
| Franz Christoph of Hutten zu Stolzenberg | 1743 | 1770 | 
| Damian August Philipp Karl, Count of Limburg-Stirum-Vehlen | 1770 | 1797 | 
| Philipp Franz Wilderich of Walderdorf | 1801 | 1802 († 1810) | 
| Sede vacante | 1802 | 1818 | 
| Secularization and division of the diocese[6] | 1803 | 
Bishops after 1818
| Tenure | Incumbent | Notes | 
|---|---|---|
| 1802 to 5 February 1818 | Sede vacante | Secularization and division of the bishopric of Speyer | 
| 5 February 1818 to 30 June 1826 | Matthäus Georg von Chandelle | Priest of Mainz; ordained 9 December 1821; died in office | 
| 22 July 1826 to 25 March 1835 | Johann Martin Manl | Priest of Mainz; confirmed 9 April 1827; ordained 25 April 1827; appointed Bishop of Eichstätt | 
| 23 March 1835 to 20 September 1836 | Johann Peter von Richarz | Priest of Würzburg; confirmed 24 July 1835; ordained 1 November 1835; Appointed Bishop of Augsburg | 
| 20 September 1836 to 23 May 1842 | Johannes von Geissel | Priest of Speyer; confirmed 19 May 1837; ordained 13 August 1837; Appointed Bishop of Cologne | 
| 5 March 1842 to 13 December 1869 | Nicolaus von Weis | Priest of Speyer; confirmed 23 May 1842; ordained 10 July 1842; died in office | 
| 6 May 1870 to 4 April 1871 | Konrad Reither | Priest of Speyer; confirmed 27 June 1870; ordained 18 September 1870; died in office | 
| 23 May 1872 to 31 May 1876 | Bonifatius von Haneberg, OSB | Priest of the Order of Saint Benedict; confirmed 29 July 1872; ordained 25 August 1872; died in office | 
| 9 June 1878 to 18 March 1905 | Joseph Georg von Ehrler | Priest of Würzburg; confirmed 9 June 1878; ordained 15 July 1878; died in office | 
| 21 March 1905 to 9 September 1910 | Konrad von Busch | Priest of Speyer; confirmed 30 May 1905; ordained 16 July 1905; died in office | 
| 4 November 1910 to 26 May 1917 | Michael von Faulhaber | Priest of Speyer; confirmed 7 January 1911; ordained 19 February 1911; appointed Archbishop of München und Freising | 
| 28 May 1917 to 20 May 1943 | Ludwig Sebastian | Priest of Bamberg; confirmed 31 July 1917; ordained 23 September 1917; died in office | 
| 20 May 1943 to 9 August 1952 | Joseph Wendel | Coadjutor Bishop of Speyer; installed 4 June 1943; Appointed Archbishop of München und Freising | 
| 22 December 1952 to 10 February 1968 | Isidor Markus Emanuel | Priest of Speyer; ordained 1 February 1953; resigned | 
| 28 May 1968 to 28 October 1982 | Friedrich Wetter | Priest of Speyer; ordained 29 June 1968; Appointed Archbishop of München und Freising | 
| 25 August 1983 to 10 February 2007 | Anton Schlembach | Priest of Würzburg; ordained 16 October 1983 | 
| 19 December 2007 to present | Karl-Heinz Wiesemann | Auxiliary bishop of Paderborn; ordained 2 March 2008 | 
Auxiliary bishops
- Pierre Spitznagel, O. Carm. (1444–1465)[7]
 - Johann Isenberg, O.F.M. (1466–1484)
 - Stephan Karrer, O.P. (1484–1486)
 - Heinrich Schertlin (1486–1511)
 - Lukas Schleppel (1512–1520)
 - Anton Engelbrecht (1520–1525)
 - Nikolaus Schigmers, O.S.A. (1529–1541)
 - Georg Schweicker (1544–1563)
 - Matthais Ob (1566–1572)
 - Heinrich Fabricius (1575–1595)
 - Dionys Burckard (1596–1605)
 - Theobald Manshalter (1606–1610)
 - Johannes Streck (1611–)
 - Wolfgang Ralinger (1623–1663)
 - Johann Brassert (1673–1684)
 - Johann Philipp Burkhard (1685–1698)
 - Peter Cornelius Beyweg (1701–1744)
 - Johann Adam Buckel (1745–1771)
 - Johann Andreas Seelmann (1772–1789)
 - Valentin Philipp Anton Schmidt (1790–1805)
 - Ernst Gutting (1971–1994)
 - Otto Georgens (1995–)
 
See also
References
- ↑ "Diocese of Speyer" Catholic-Hierarchy.org. David M. Cheney. Retrieved February 29, 2016
 - ↑ "Diocese of Speyer" GCatholic.org. Gabriel Chow. Retrieved February 29, 2016
 - ↑ "Bischöfe". Home page of the Diocese of Speyer (in German). Bistum Speyer. 2003. Archived from the original on 2006-03-29. Retrieved 2009-07-06.
 - ↑ Reginhard II/Reginbald according to Gumbert was the architect of the Speyer Cathedral.
 - ↑ Hugo Damian of Schönborn moved the seat of the bishopric to Bruchsal.
 - ↑ The diocese was secularized in 1803 by France and with the Rhine as a border, divided between France and the margraviate of Baden.
 - ↑ "Bishop Pierre Spitznagel, O. Carm." Catholic-Hierarchy.org. David M. Cheney. Retrieved March 21, 2016
 
    This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.
