Johannes von Parkentin

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Bernt Notke : Gregorsmesse ; Johannes von Parkentin can probably be identified with one of the three depicted bishops with miters

Johannes von Parkentin , also: Johann von P. , Johann (es) von Berkentin (* before 1450 probably in Dassow ; † June 15, 1511 in Stove, today part of Carlow (Mecklenburg) , buried in Ratzeburg ) was from 1479 to his death in 1511 as Johannes V the 26th bishop of the diocese of Ratzeburg .

Life

Bishop Johannes V. von Ratzeburg was probably the son of Detlev von Parkentin on Lütgenhof near Dassow, a noble family from Northern Germany residing in the duchy of Saxony-Lauenburg and Mecklenburg . He can be traced back to 1460 as a canon and succeeded him after the death of his predecessor, Bishop John IV († January 21, 1479). Bishop Johannes von Parkentin played a decisive role in the Rostock cathedral feud (1486–1491) and placed the city under a ban . In 1492 he was involved in the Sternberg host abuse trial .

In 1491 he acquired the property at Große Burgstraße 11 in Lübeck for the Principality of Ratzeburg . In the Middle Ages, when the hotel business - as we know it today - was still unthinkable, people bought a house if they were often active here. Its name has since been the episcopal hostel.

In 1503 he was one of the guests when the papal legate Raimund Peraudi visited Lübeck and took part in the great procession held on the occasion.

In the summer of 1505 he accompanied the Mecklenburg Duke Heinrich V to the Reichstag in Cologne, where he received the feudal letter. On the political and warlike effects of the Lübeck feud of the years 1505-1507, which had started at the Dassower Bridge because of the fishing rights on the Stepenitz , he actively sided with the Dukes of Mecklenburg and his family in the Klützer Winkel .

In church terms, he strengthened the political role of his small diocese as a territory. During his term of office, the so-called transmutatio (conversion), which affected the Ratzeburg cathedral chapter, fell. Pope Julius II issued a bull on May 22, 1504 , according to which the monastic cathedral chapter , which had been part of the Premonstratensian order since Bishop Evermod, became a secular canon.

Johannes von Parkentin was buried in the Ratzeburg Cathedral . His successor, Bishop Heinrich III. Bergmeier († 1524) was ordained bishop on June 28, 1511. He had previously rendered outstanding services to the office of Duke Johann IV of Sachsen-Lauenburg.

literature

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Andrea Boockmann: The destroyed painting of the 'Gregorsmesse' by Bernt Notke in the Marienkirche and the stay of Cardinal Raimundus Peraudi in Lübeck 1503. In: Journal of the Association for Lübeckische Geschichte und Altertumskunde (ZVLGA) 81, 2001, pp. 105-122 , heir p. 118
  2. Volker Honemann: The Sternberger desecration of the host and its sources. 2008, with reference to the single-sheet print by Simon Koch: Van der mishandelinge des hilligen Sacraments der bosse ioden to den Sternberge. Magdeburg, 1492.
predecessor Office successor
Johannes Stalkoper Bishop of Ratzeburg
1479 - 1511
Heinrich Bergmeier