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- Prince-bishop abstract "A prince-bishop is a bishop who is a territorial Prince of the Church on account of one or more secular principalities, usually pre-existent titles of nobility held concurrently with their inherent clerical office. Thus the principality ruled politically by a prince-bishop could wholly or largely overlap with his diocesan jurisdiction, but not necessarily; several lost their actual see (the city itself), which could obtain the status of free imperial city. If the see is an archbishopric, the correct term is prince-archbishop; the equivalent in the regular (monastic) clergy is prince-abbot.In the West, with the decline of imperial power from the 4th century onwards in the face of the barbarian invasions, sometimes Christian bishops of cities took the place of the Roman commander, made secular decisions for the city and led their own troops when necessary. Later relations between a prince-bishop and the burghers were not invariably cordial. As cities demanded charters from emperors, kings, or their prince-bishops and declared themselves independent of the secular territorial magnates, friction intensified between burghers and bishops.In the Byzantine Empire, the still autocratic Emperors passed general legal measures assigning all bishops certain rights and duties in the secular administration of their dioceses, but that was part of a caesaropapist development putting the Eastern Church in the service of the Empire, with its Ecumenical Patriarch almost reduced to the Emperor's minister of religious affairs. The Russian Empire went even further, abolishing its own patriarchy and placing the church under direct control of the secular government.".
- Prince-bishop thumbnail Johann_Otto_von_Gemmingen.jpg?width=300.
- Prince-bishop wikiPageExternalLink index.php?link=2.
- Prince-bishop wikiPageExternalLink twelve.
- Prince-bishop wikiPageExternalLink www.worldstatesmen.org.
- Prince-bishop wikiPageExternalLink muenster1661.html.
- Prince-bishop wikiPageID "51270".
- Prince-bishop wikiPageRevisionID "599323654".
- Prince-bishop subject Category:Ecclesiastical_titles.
- Prince-bishop subject Category:Heads_of_state.
- Prince-bishop subject Category:History_of_Roman_Catholicism.
- Prince-bishop subject Category:Noble_titles.
- Prince-bishop subject Category:Prince-Bishoprics.
- Prince-bishop subject Category:Prince-Bishops.
- Prince-bishop subject Category:Religion_in_the_Holy_Roman_Empire.
- Prince-bishop comment "A prince-bishop is a bishop who is a territorial Prince of the Church on account of one or more secular principalities, usually pre-existent titles of nobility held concurrently with their inherent clerical office. Thus the principality ruled politically by a prince-bishop could wholly or largely overlap with his diocesan jurisdiction, but not necessarily; several lost their actual see (the city itself), which could obtain the status of free imperial city.".
- Prince-bishop label "Fürstbischof".
- Prince-bishop label "Prince-bishop".
- Prince-bishop label "Prince-évêque".
- Prince-bishop label "Principe vescovo".
- Prince-bishop label "Prins-bisschop".
- Prince-bishop label "Príncipe-bispo".
- Prince-bishop label "Príncipe-obispo".
- Prince-bishop label "Князь-епископ".
- Prince-bishop label "司教領".
- Prince-bishop label "采邑主教".
- Prince-bishop sameAs Kníže-biskup.
- Prince-bishop sameAs Fürstbischof.
- Prince-bishop sameAs Príncipe-obispo.
- Prince-bishop sameAs Prince-évêque.
- Prince-bishop sameAs Principe_vescovo.
- Prince-bishop sameAs 司教領.
- Prince-bishop sameAs Prins-bisschop.
- Prince-bishop sameAs Príncipe-bispo.
- Prince-bishop sameAs m.0dj9f.
- Prince-bishop sameAs Q22881.
- Prince-bishop sameAs Q22881.
- Prince-bishop wasDerivedFrom Prince-bishop?oldid=599323654.
- Prince-bishop depiction Johann_Otto_von_Gemmingen.jpg.
- Prince-bishop isPrimaryTopicOf Prince-bishop.