The following people were bishops, prince-bishops or archbishops of Freising or Munich and Freising in Bavaria:

The bear miracle — Saint Corbinian of Freising, as a bishop, crossing the Alps on his way to Rome in 710, Jan Polack, oil on pinewood, 1489
Bishops of Freising
- St. Corbinian (724–730); founded the Benedictine abbey in Freising, although the diocese was not organized until 739)
 
- Establishment of episcopal organisation in Old Bavaria by Saint Boniface in 739.
 
- Erembert (739–747/748; sometimes referred to as Corbinian's half brother[1])
 - Joseph of Freising, also known as Joseph of Verona (747/748–764)
 - Arbeo (764–783/784)
 - Atto (783/784–810/811)
 - Hitto (810/811–834/835)
 - Erchanbert (835/836–854)
 - Anno (854/855–875)
 - Arnold (875–883)
 - Waldo (883/884–903/906)
 - Utto (904/906–907)
 - Dracholf (907–926)
 - Wolfram (926–937)
 - St. Lantpert (937/938–957)
 - Abraham (956/957–993/994)
 - Gottschalk of Hagenau (994–1005)
 - Egilbert of Moosburg (1005–1039)
 - Nitker (1039–1052)
 - Ellenhard, Count of Meran (1052–1078)
 - Meginward, Count of Scheyarn (1078–1098)
 - Henry I of Freising, also known as Henry I of Ebersdorf (1098–1137)
 - Otto I (1137–1158)
 - Albert I of Harthausen (1158–1184)
 - Otto II (1184–1220)
 - Gerold of Waldeck (1220–1230)
 - Conrad I of Tölz and Hohenburg (1230–1258)
 - Conrad II Wildgraf of Dhaun (1258–1278/1279)
 - Frederick of Montalban (1279–1282)
 
- Elevation to a Hochstift i.e. Prince-Bishopric in 1294
 
Prince-bishops of Freising

Prince-bishop Philip of the Palatinate (portrait around 1525/27)

Prince-bishop Albert Sigismund of Bavaria (1675painting)
- Waldgrave Emicho (1282–1311)
 - Gottfried of Hexenagger (1311–1314)
 - Conrad III the Sendlinger (1314–1322)
 - John I Wulfing (1323–1324)
 - Conrad IV of Klingenberg (1324–1340)
 - John II Hake (1340–1349)
 - Albert II of Hohenberg (1349–1359)
 - Paul of Jägerndorf (1359–1377)
 - Leopold of Sturmberg (1377–1381)
 - Berthold of Wehingen (1381–1410)
 - Conrad V of Hebenstreit (1411–1412)
 - Hermann of Cilli (1412–1421)
 - Nicodemus of Scala (1421/1422–1443)
 - Henry II of Schlick (1443–1448)
 - John III Grünwald (elected 15 Jan 1448; died 2 Dec 1452)
 - John IV Tulbeck (elected Jan 1453; resigned Nov 1473)
 - Sixtus of Tannberg (elected 12 Jan 1473; died 14 Jul 1495)
 - Ruprecht of the Palatinate (elected 1 Aug 1495; resigned 3 Dec 1498)
 - Philip of the Palatinate (elected 1498; died 5 Jan 1541)
 - Henry II of the Palatinate (succeeded 5 Jan 1541; died 3 Jan 1552)
 - Leo Lösch of Hilkertshausen (elected 15 Feb 1552; died 8Apr 1559)
 - Moritz of Sandizell (elected 12 Jun 1559; died 18 Oct 1566)
 - Ernest of Bavaria (elected 18 Oct 1566; died 17 Feb 1612)
 - Stephen of Seiboldsdorf (elected May 1612; died 16 Jan 1618)
 - Veit Adam of Gepeckh von Arnsbach (elected 12 Feb 1618; died 8 Dec 1651)
 - Albert Sigismund of Bavaria (1651/1652–1685)
 - Joseph Clemens of Bavaria (succeeded 4 Nov 1685; resigned 29 Sep 1694)
 - John Francis Eckher of Kapfing and Liechteneck (elected 29 Jan 1694/1695; died 23 Feb 1727)
 - Cardinal John Theodore, Duke of Bavaria (succeeded 23 Feb 1727; died 27 Jan 1763)
 - Clemens Wenceslaus, Duke of Saxony (elected 18 Apr 1763; resigned 20 Aug 1768)
 - Louis Joseph Freiherr of Welden on Laupheim and Hohenaltingen (electected 23 Jan 1768; died 15 Mar 1788)
 - Maximilian Prokop of Toerring-Jettenbach elected 26 May 1788; died 30 Dec 1789)
 - Joseph Conrad Freiherr of Schroffenberg, C.R.S.A. (elected 1 Mar 1790; died 4 Apr 1803). After his death, the temporal authority of the bishop was mediatised and abolished by the Elector of Bavaria.
 
- Sede vacante as a result of the secularisation under Napoleonic rule (1803–1821)
 
- Joseph James of Heckenstaller, priest, vicar capitular (appointed 14 Apr 1803); was also named first a vicar general and, later, a papal delegate as "vicar capitular apostolic", but never raised to the episcopacy; resigned 16 Feb 1818. The episcopal functions were exercised by auxiliary bishop, Johann Nepomuk Wolf.
 
- Elevation to an archdiocese in 1817/1821
 
Archbishops of Munich and Freising

Cardinal Döpfner at Munich's Corpus Christi procession in 1971
- Lothar Anselm Freiherr von Gebsattel (appointed 16 February 1818; confirmed soon, but at first only apostolic administrator; archbishop 1 November 1821; died 1 October 1846)
 - Karl August Cardinal Graf von Reisach (succeeded 1 October 1846; cardinal 17 December 1855; resigned 19 June 1856)
 - Gregor (Leonhard Andreas) von Scherr, O.S.B. (appointed 6 January 1856; died 24 October 1877)
 - Antonius von Steichele (appointed 30 April 1878; died 9 October 1889)
 - Antonius von Thoma (appointed 23 October 1889; died 24 November 1897)
 - Franz Joseph von Stein (appointed 24 December 1897; died 4 May 1909)
 - Franziskus Cardinal von Bettinger (appointed 23 May 1909; cardinal 25 May 1914; died 12 April 1917)
 - Michael Cardinal von Faulhaber (appointed 26 May 1917; cardinal 7 March 1921; died 12 June 1952)
 - Joseph Cardinal Wendel (appointed 9 August 1952; cardinal 12 January 1953; died 31 December 1960)
 - Julius August Cardinal Döpfner (appointed 3 July 1961, already a cardinal; died 24 July 1976)
 - Joseph Cardinal Ratzinger (appointed 24 March 1977; cardinal 27 June 1977; resigned 15 February 1982), subsequently Pope Benedict XVI
 - Friedrich Cardinal Wetter (appointed 28 October 1982; cardinal 25 May 1985; retired 2 February 2007)
 - Reinhard Cardinal Marx (appointed 30 November 2007; cardinal 20 November 2010)
 
See also
References
- ↑ Maß, Josef (2005). "Der hl. Bonifatius und das Bistum Freising". Beiträge zur altbayerischen Kirchengeschichte (in German). 48: 9–27.
 
Sources
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Bishops of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Munich and Freising.
- "diocese/dmunc". Catholic-Hierarchy.org. David M. Cheney.
 
    This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.