Lev Skrbenský z Hříště explained

Type:Cardinal
Honorific-Prefix:His Eminence
Lev Skrbenský z Hřiště
Cardinal, Archbishop of Olomouc
Church:Roman Catholic
Archdiocese:Olomouc
Term Start:1916
Term End:6 July 1920
Predecessor:Franziskus von Sales Bauer
Successor:Antonín Cyril Stojan
Other Post:Cardinal-Priest of Santo Stefano al Monte Celio (1901–1938)
Ordination:7 July 1889
Consecration:6 January 1900
Cardinal:15 April 1901
Created Cardinal By:Leo XIII
Rank:Cardinal
Birth Date:12 June 1863
Birth Place:Hausdorf (now a part of Bartošovice), Moravia, Austria-Hungary
Death Place:Dlouhá Loučka, Czechoslovakia
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Previous Post:Cardinal Archbishop of Prague (1899–1916)

Lev Skrbenský z Hříště, German: Leo Skrbenský von Hříště, also spelt Skrebensky (12 June 1863, Hausdorf (now a part of Bartošovice), Moravia, Austria-Hungary – 24 December 1938, Dlouhá Loučka, Czechoslovakia) was a prominent Cardinal in the Catholic Church during the early 20th century.

Born into a wealthy family, Lev Skrbenský z Hříště was educated at the seminary of Olomouc and during the 1880s worked on a doctorate in canon law at the Pontifical Gregorian University. During his stay in Rome he lived in the priest college Santa Maria dell'Anima and served there as a chaplain from 1890 to 1892,[1] as did many other priests from Bohemia and Moravia.[2] After being ordained in 1889, he went into the army of the Austrian Empire and spent the following decade serving as an army chaplain.

He left his military duties in 1899, and Emperor Franz Joseph I of Austria selected him as Archbishop of Prague. Two years later, he was made a cardinal on 15 April 1901, at the age of thirty-seven. He received the red hat on 9 June 1902.[3] Later that year, Lev (together with other Bohemian and Moravian bishops) was addressed in pope Leo's encyclical Quae Ad Nos.[4] He participated in the 1903 and 1914 conclaves, and in 1916 was transferred to the see of Olomouc, to which he was elected by its cathedral chapter at the request of the Habsburg government. He resigned this see in 1920 due to poor health and did not participate in the 1922 conclave.

Although his health remained very poor, Skrbenský z Hříště lived until 1938 and was the last cardinal created by Pope Leo XIII to die, outliving Vincenzo Vannutelli by more than eight years.

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Lenzenweger, Joseph. Sancta Maria de Anima. Herder. 1959. 160.
  2. Scheer . Tamara . 2020 . Negotiating National Character. The Habsburgs’ Roman Catholic Priest College Santa Maria dell’ Anima and the German National Church in Rome, 1859-1915 . Austrian Studies . 28 . 64-78.
  3. News: The Times . Latest intelligence - Papal Consistory . 10 June 1902 . 7 . 36790 .
  4. Web site: Quae Ad Nos . November 20, 1902 . April 5, 2021 . Leo XIII . Pope Leo XIII.