Heinrich Haehling von Lanzenauer

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Auxiliary Bishop Heinrich Haehling von Lanzenauer

Heinrich Haehling von Lanzenauer (born February 19, 1861 in Koblenz , † August 30, 1925 in Paderborn ) was a theologian and auxiliary bishop in the diocese of Paderborn . (He just called himself Heinrich von Haehling )

Life

He came from the 1828 originally Austrian noble family of Haehling von Lanzenauer and was born as the son of the tax council or first director of the Arnsberg tax office Heinrich Ernst Haehling von Lanzenauer (1821-1883). After attending grammar school in Arnsberg , Haehling studied philosophy and theology in Innsbruck and Eichstätt . The Paderborn Theological Faculty was closed at the time because of the Kulturkampf . On October 10, 1883, he was ordained a priest in Paderborn Cathedral .

Initially he was chaplain in Böddeken , from 1884 chaplain in Etteln , 1887 chaplain in Atteln and from 1890 chaplain in Horn . In 1892 he was appointed parish administrator in Gardelegen and in 1893 parish administrator in Oschersleben . After the reestablishment of the Theologenkonvikt in Paderborn, he became its director in 1895. In 1899 he first worked as a pastor in Bigge and from 1904 as a pastor in Dessau , he was appointed cathedral dean in Paderborn on July 18, 1912 .

Pope Pius X appointed Heinrich Haehling von Lanzenauer on August 1, 1912 titular bishop of Delcus and appointed him auxiliary bishop in Paderborn. The episcopal ordination donated him the Paderborn Bishop Karl Joseph Schulte on 24 October 1912th

As auxiliary bishop, besides his episcopal activities, he mainly devoted himself to charitable and pastoral-organizational tasks. Haehling was Vice President of the Bonifatius Association , Diocesan Director of the Xaverius Association and, from 1922, Diocesan President of the Elisabeth Associations . In 1913, at the German Catholic Day in Metz , he appeared as a speaker and is immortalized with a photo in the festschrift.

The auxiliary bishop died suddenly of a stroke . He was buried in the chapter cemetery in Paderborn.

The brother Alois Haehling von Lanzenauer (1867-1929) was also a Catholic clergyman and emerged as an author and publicist.

Awards, honors

Works

  • On to the fight for the free denominational school: a pamphlet for all circles of our people Paderborn 1922.
  • Coeducation or the common upbringing of boys and girls, especially in elementary school: the right principles for a burning question Paderborn 1924.
  • Eight sermons on mixed marriages (in connection with the recent pastoral letters from the German bishops) Paderborn 1923.
  • Diaspora pastoral care. A book for pastors and friends of the Paderborn Diaspora 1920.

literature

  • Hans Jürgen Brandt, Karl Hengst : The auxiliary bishops in Paderborn . Bonifatius, Paderborn 1986. ISBN 3-87088-493-2 .
  • Hans Jürgen Brandt, Karl Hengst: The Archdiocese of Paderborn . Bonifatius, Paderborn 1989. ISBN 3-87088-595-5 .

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Hans Friedrich von Ehrenkrook: Genealogisches Handbuch des Adels , Volume 32, 1964, Page 151, ISBN 3798008485 ; Excerpt from the source, establishing the noble family
  2. ^ CA Starke: Genealogisches Handbuch des Adels , Volume 83, 1984, page 173; Excerpt from the source, to the father
  3. Alois Haehling von Lanzenauer in the Westphalian Biographies