Jacob van Oudshoorn explained

Type:Bishop
Jacob van Oudshoorn
Bishop of Utrecht
Church:Catholic Church
Diocese:Archdiocese of Utrecht
Term:1322
Death Date:c. 18 September 1322

Jacob van Oudshoorn (died c. 18 September 1322) was bishop of Utrecht in 1322.

Van Oudshoorn descended from a noble Hollandic house; he was the son of Willem and brother of Dirk van Oudshoorn (1301–1327), lords of Oudshoorn and Aarlanderveen.[1] Van Oudshoorn was deacon in Utrecht before he was elected bishop. He was consecrated by the archbishop of Cologne, Hendrik II van Virnenburg, but pope John XXII only accepted his nomination after the payment of a large amount of money, which ruined his family. Shortly after this he died, according to his own suspicions, from poison. He was called brave, learned and pious.

Literature

Van der Aa, Biographisch Woordenboek der Nederlanden (1852)

  1. De Nederlandsche leeuw: Volumes 117-118