Bishopric of Ösel–Wiek

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Bishopric of Ösel–Wiek
Bisdom Ösel–Wiek (
la
)
1228–1560
of Osel–Wiek
Coat of arms
Low German, Estonian
Religion
Roman Catholicism
GovernmentPrince-Bishopric
Prince-Bishop 
• 1228–1229
Gottfried
• 1542–1560
Johannes V von Münchhausen
Historical eraMiddle Ages
• Established
1 October 1228
• Sold to Denmark
1560
Preceded by
Succeeded by
Lääne County
Saare County
Danish Estonia
Crown of the Kingdom of Poland
Today part ofEstonia

The Bishopric of Ösel–Wiek (

Old Livonia) in the Holy Roman Empire. The bishopric covered what are now Saare, Hiiu, Lääne counties and the western part of Pärnu county of Estonia
.

History

Haapsalu Episcopal Castle.
Haapsalu Episcopal Castle.
Bishopric of Ösel-Wiek, the Livonian Order, and Oeselians (now at National Archives of Sweden
)

The bishopric was created on 1 October 1228 as a

Perona (Vana-Pärnu) from 1251, Hapsal (Haapsalu) Castle from 1279, and the seat shifted (alone) to the castle of Arensburg (Kuressaare) on the island of Ösel (Saaremaa); the cathedral and cathedral chapter (canons) remained in Hapsal. It was a suffragan diocese in the ecclesiastical province of the Metropolitan Archbishopric of Riga
from 1253.

One of the five members of the

Livonian Confederation, the state was administratively divided into two bailiwicks (Latin advocaciae, German Vogteien). The bishop was also the lord of the Teutonic Order
over its fiefs on the bishopric's territory. From 1241 until 1343, Ösel (Saaremaa) Island was an autonomous part of Ösel-Wiek prince-bishopric (autonomy renewed 27 August 1255).

The principality ceased to exist in 1560 when its last

Magnus of Livonia, Duke of Holstein, obtained it as an appanage on 15 April 1560 and was elected bishop on 13 May 1560; the Danish dynasty being Lutheran
, he abolished the diocese and assumed the secular feudal style Lord of Ösel (Stieffte Ozel und Wieck Herr) on 20 March 1567.

Denmark ceded Wiek (

Danish possession
.

Episcopal Ordinaries and Prince-Bishops of Ösel-Wiek (Saare-Lääne)

  • Gottfried,
    Cistercian Order
    (O. Cist.) (1227, elected 29 June 1228; approved August 1228 – death after 1257)
  • vacancy & interregnum 1229 - 1234, ruled by the Bishop of Riga and the Livonian
    Swordbrothers
    Order.
  • Heinrich I, Dominican Order (O.P.) (1234 – death 1260.03.10)
  • Hermann I de Becheshovede (Buxhoevden) (1262– death 1285?)
  • Heinrich II (1290.05.10 – death 1294)
  • Konrad I (1294? – death 1307)
  • Vacancy & Interregnum
  • Hartung (Garttungus) (1310 – death 1321)
  • Jakob II (1322.03.03 – 1337)
  • Hermann II Osenbrügge (de Osenbrygge), (1338 – death 1362?63)
  • Konrad II (1363.07.24 – death 1374)
  • Heinrich III (1374.10.23 – assassinated before 1381.07.05), previously Bishop of
    Schleswig
    (1370.01.30 – 1374.10.23)
  • Vacancy & Interregnum
  • Winrich von Kniprode (1385.03.28 – death 1419.11.05)
  • Caspar Schuwenflug (1420.01.08 – death 1423.08.10)
  • Christian Kuband,
    Norbertines
    (O. Praem.) (1423.08.10 – death 1432.07.21)
  • Johannes I Schutte (1432.10.22 – 1438.09.12)
  • Johannes II Creul (Kreuwel), Teutonic Order (O.T.) (1439.03.20 de jure – 1457 de facto since 1449 in Wiek as the younger Bishop - death 1454.09.23)
  • Ludolf Grove (1457 de jure – death 1458.03.11) (de facto since 1439, since 1449 as the older Bishop in Saaremaa and Dagö)
  • Jodokus Hoenstein (1458.07.24 – death 1471.01.17)
  • Peter Wetberg (1471.06.17 – death before 1491.11.14)
  • Johannes III Orgas (Johann Orgies) (1492.03.26 – death 1515.03.19)
  • Johannes IV Kyvel (Kievel) (1515.03.19 – death 1527.04.22), succeeded as former
    Coadjutor Bishop
    of Ösel-Wiek (? – 1515.03.19)
  • Georg von Tiesenhausen (1527.05.20 – death 1530.10.02), previously Bishop of Reval (Estonia) (1525.07.21 – 1530.10.12)
  • Reinhold von Buxhoeveden (1532.07.03 – retired before 1541.07.13), died 1557
  • Johannes V von Münchhausen (1542.01.09 – 1560 sold the see)
  • Protestant
    bishop, died 1583)

See also

Sources and external links

Bibliography
  • Pius Bonifacius Gams, Series episcoporum Ecclesiae Catholicae, Leipzig 1931, p. 297
  • Konrad Eubel, Hierarchia Catholica Medii Aevi, vol. 1, p. 379; vol. 2, p. 207; vol. 3, p. 264
  • Ernst Friedrich Mooyer, Verzeichnisse der deutschen Bischöfe seit dem Jahr 800 nach Chr. Geb., Minden 1854, p. 75