Ruprecht of the Palatinate (archbishop of Cologne) explained

Type:Bishop
Ruprecht of the Palatinate
Archbishop of Cologne
Church:Roman Catholic Church
Archdiocese:Cologne
See:Cologne
Appointed:1463
Term End:1480
Birth Date:27 February 1427
Death Date:16 or
Death Place:Burg Blankenstein, Gladenbach, Landgraviate of Hesse

Ruprecht of the Palatinate (27 February 1427 – 16 or 26 July 1480) was the Archbishop and Prince Elector of Cologne from 1463 to 1480.

Biography

Ruprecht was the third son of Louis III, Count Palatine of the Rhine, by his second wife, Matilda of Savoy.[1] He renounced his claim to lands of the Palatinate[2] and studied for holy orders at the universities of Heidelberg and Cologne. He was a canon in the Mainz Cathedral and then became subdeacon of the cathedral chapter at Cologne[1] and cathedral provost at Würzburg.

Ruprecht was elected Archbishop of Cologne on 30 March 1463, but not confirmed by the Pope until August 1464 and not consecrated until Palm Sunday 1468. He only received the episcopal regalia from the Holy Roman Emperor in August 1471.[3] Chosen for his family connections,[3] he faced the challenge of guarding the Electorate of Cologne against diminution of its powers[4] while solving its internal problems, in particular the shortage of income from being denied the toll income from the most important Rhine trading towns, which had been mortgaged by his predecessor, Dietrich II von Moers, to raise money for war. He was required to agree to 23 articles presented by the cathedral chapter limiting his financial options which the chapter and the Estates had agreed upon four days before his election,[1] [3] [5] and to the chapter holding the important trading town of Zons as a pledge of his good behaviour.[1]

Ruprecht quarrelled with his advisors and became involved in external politics. In 1467, he entered into an alliance with Adolf, Duke of Guelders against the Duke of Cleves,[3] with the aim of regaining control over Soest, Xanten and Rees. After finally receiving his regalia, by autumn 1471 he was repudiating the agreement he himself had had a hand in drafting as a chapter member and demanding higher taxes,[6] and to obtain them, he occupied Zons.[3]

Ruprecht persisted in trying to reduce the privileges of cities within the archbishopric. With military and financial assistance from his brother Frederick I, Elector Palatine,[7] he began the Cologne Ecclesiastical Conflict (German: Kölner Stiftsfehde), which grew into the Burgundian Wars. The majority of Ruprecht's vassals, including the citizens of Cologne, renounced their allegiance to him and asked both the Pope and Emperor Frederick III to intervene. In open rebellion, they proclaimed Landgrave Hermann of Hesse administrator and protector of the archbishopric.[5] Only a few minor lords remained loyal to Ruprecht.[3] Ruprecht appealed for help to Charles the Bold, Duke of Burgundy, who announced himself the protector of Cologne.[8] [9] The Emperor attempted in December 1473 to mediate the conflict, but failed. In 1474, Charles besieged Neuss, a stronghold of the rebels in which Hermann had taken refuge; the Reichstag decided at Augsburg to go to war against Charles,[1] and a general call to arms was issued in the German Empire.[10] The Siege of Neuss lasted almost a year and ended in Charles accepting the Pope's mediation, including concerning Ruprecht's position as archbishop.[11] Ruprecht had been excommunicated by the Pope in 1472 for not paying required contributions from his see to Rome.[3] His position continued to weaken; his brother did not support him against the Emperor[12] and died on 12 December 1476,[3] and he lost the support of all but Kempen and Altenahr and in March 1478 was taken captive by the Hessians. Imprisoned in Burg Blankenstein near Gladenbach and with the Duke of Jülich-Berg acting as mediator, he was forced to renounce his position as archbishop in exchange for an income of 4,000 gold guilders.[1] He died before the Pope granted acceptance of his resignation,[13] and was buried in the Bonn Minster. His successor as Archbishop of Cologne was Hermann of Hesse, who had successfully defended Neuss against him and his allies and became Hermann IV; he gave Ruprecht an imposing tomb.[1]

Ruprecht had some success in monastic reform,[3] extending even to institutions outside his area of control, in Cleves and Jülich-Berg.[14] He was passionate about hunting and hawking.[15]

Sources

Notes and References

  1. Adolf Ulrich, "Ruprecht von der Pfalz (Erzbischof von Köln)", Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie, ed. Historical Commission, Bavarian Academy of Sciences and Humanities, Volume 29 Leipzig: Duncker & Humblot, 1889, pp. 729–30, online at de.wikisource; online at GoogleBooks.
  2. in exchange for his brother's promise to pay him an annuity until he obtained a bishopric: Henry J. Cohn, The Government of the Rhine Palatinate in the Fifteenth Century, Oxford: Oxford University, 1965, p. 31.
  3. Manfred Groten, "Ruprecht von der Pfalz, Erzbischof von Köln", Neue Deutsche Biographie, ed. Historical Commission, Bavarian Academy of Sciences and Humanities, Volume 22 2nd ed. Berlin: Duncker & Humblot, 2005,, pp. 286–87, online at Digitale Bibliothek.
  4. For a summary of the encroachment on the territories of Cologne by secular rulers, see Benjamin Arnold, Princes and Territories in Medieval Germany, Cambridge: Cambridge University, 1991,, pp. 236–37, who speaks of a "stranglehold".
  5. Hans Prutz, The Age of the Renaissance, A History of All Nations 10, Philadelphia/New York: Lea, 1905, p. 310.
  6. Jahresberichte der Geschichtswissenschaft 12 (1889) p. 617
  7. Cohn, p. 77 mentions substantial loans of money and provisions.
  8. Nicholas Michael, Armies of Medieval Burgundy 1364–1477, Men-at-arms series 144, London: Osprey, 1983,, p. 25.
  9. John Bagnell Bury, The Cambridge Medieval History Volume 8, The Close of the Middle Ages, Cambridge: University Press, 1936,, p. 152.
  10. Prutz, p. 313.
  11. Prutz, pp. 314, 315.
  12. Cohn, p. 13.
  13. K. Lyncker, "Die Belagerung von Neuß in den Jahren 1474 und 1475: Eine Episode zur Hessischen Geschichte", Zeitschrift des Vereins für hessische Geschichte und Landeskunde 6 (1854) 1–63, p. 56 : giving the date as 26 July. Both the Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie and the Neue Deutsche Biographie give 16 July.
  14. Elke-Ursel Hammer, Monastische Reform zwischen Person und Institution: zum Wirken des Abtes Adam Meyer von Gross St. Martin in Köln (1454–1499), Veröffentlichungen des Max-Planck-Instituts für Geschichte 165; Veröffentlichungen des Max-Planck-Instituts für Geschichte, Studien zur Germania sacra 22, Göttingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 2001,, pp. 390–91
  15. Friedrich Christoph Schlosser, rev. Oskar Jäger, Franz Wolff, Friedrich Christoph Schlosser's Weltgeschichte für das deutsche Volk, 4th ed. Berlin: Seehagen, 1885, p. 297 describes him as "einen wüsten Trinker und Jäger" — "a dissolute drinker and hunter".