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Difference between revisions of "Gebhard Truchsess"

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Gebhard Truchsess <ref name="term_41091" />  
 
<p> archbishop of Cologne, was born at Waldburg November 10, 1547; was made prebendary of [[Augsburg]] in 1562, of [[Strasburg]] in 1567, of [[Cologne]] in 1570, and in 1577 elector and archbishop of Cologne. In 1582 he became a Protestant, and in the following year he married the countess [[Agnes]] von Meansfeld. He proclaimed unrestricted religious liberty, and intended to convert his spiritual into a temporal electorate. His plan was highly approved by the people and the nobility, but the cathedral chapter opposed it with all its might. The pope fulminated a ban against him, and the emperor, Rudolph II, declared him deposed. The Protestant princes ultimately deserted him, and the newly-elected archbishop, duke Ernest of Bavaria, overcame him by force of arms (1584). He fled to Holland, but not receiving any help there, he returned to Germany, where be vainly solicited the assistance of the Protestant princes, as well as petitioned queen [[Elizabeth]] of [[England]] for aid in regaining his bishopric; he finally retired to Strasburg, where he officiated as dean of the cathedral, and died May 21, 1601. See K hler, De actis et fatis Gebhardi (Altd. 1723); Barthold, in Raumer's Historisches Taschenbuch (1840); Pierer, Univerasal-Lexikon, s.v. </p>
Gebhard Truchsess <ref name="term_41091" />
==References ==
<p> archbishop of Cologne, was born at Waldburg November 10, 1547; was made prebendary of Augsburg in 1562, of [[Strasburg]] in 1567, of [[Cologne]] in 1570, and in 1577 elector and archbishop of Cologne. In 1582 he became a Protestant, and in the following year he married the countess [[Agnes]] von Meansfeld. He proclaimed unrestricted religious liberty, and intended to convert his spiritual into a temporal electorate. His plan was highly approved by the people and the nobility, but the cathedral chapter opposed it with all its might. The pope fulminated a ban against him, and the emperor, Rudolph II, declared him deposed. The [[Protestant]] princes ultimately deserted him, and the newly-elected archbishop, duke Ernest of Bavaria, overcame him by force of arms (1584). He fled to Holland, but not receiving any help there, he returned to Germany, where be vainly solicited the assistance of the Protestant princes, as well as petitioned queen [[Elizabeth]] of [[England]] for aid in regaining his bishopric; he finally retired to Strasburg, where he officiated as dean of the cathedral, and died May 21, 1601. See K hler, De actis et fatis Gebhardi (Altd. 1723); Barthold, in Raumer's Historisches Taschenbuch (1840); Pierer, Univerasal-Lexikon, s.v. </p>
 
== References ==
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<ref name="term_41091"> [https://bibleportal.com/encyclopedia/cyclopedia-of-biblical-theological-and-ecclesiastical-literature/gebhard+truchsess Gebhard Truchsess from Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature]</ref>
<ref name="term_41091"> [https://bibleportal.com/encyclopedia/cyclopedia-of-biblical-theological-and-ecclesiastical-literature/gebhard+truchsess Gebhard Truchsess from Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature]</ref>
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