Lukas Schleppel

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Coat of arms of the Principality of Speyer

Lukas Schleppel (* in the 15th century ; † 1519 ) was titular bishop of Thermopylae / Mundinitza and auxiliary bishop in Speyer .

Live and act

Schleppel came from the middle-class upper class of Pforzheim and enrolled in the winter semester 1477/78 as one of the first students at the newly founded University of Tübingen . In December 1479 he enrolled at the University of Cologne . In 1490 he had the title of Magister and in 1511 the title of Doctor of Theology. In 1490 he received a canonical at the St. John the Baptist altar of the Pforzheim Monastery , which he exchanged on October 12, 1491 for the plebany (pastor) at the collegiate church. Later he also appears as a pastor in Bruchsal and Waibstadt .

On December 12, 1511, Bishop Philipp von Rosenberg presented him as auxiliary bishop in the diocese of Speyer and he was ordained titular bishop of Thermopylae / Mundinitza on March 31, 1512 . On September 18, 1512, Lukas Schleppel in Speyer documented the waiver of the salary he was entitled to from the episcopal table, as his office as pastor of Bruchsal and pastor of Waibstadt, as well as other spiritual income, would provide him with sufficient support.

On March 5, 1515, he bestowed various indulgences on the St. Anna Brotherhood in Mörsch .

Lukas Schleppel probably died at the end of 1519, but at least before January 23, 1520, when the Speyer bishop Georg von der Pfalz presented his successor Anton Engelbrecht .

literature

  • Hans-Peter Becht: Pforzheim in the Middle Ages: Studies on the history of a sovereign city , Jan Thorbecke Verlag, 1983, p. 158, ISBN 3799560440 ; (Detail scan)
  • Pforzheim City Archives: Pforzheimer Geschichtsblätter , Volume 6, 1983, p. 158; (Detail scan)
  • Manfred Krebs: The Protocols of the Speyer Cathedral Chapter , Volume 1, p. 323, footnote 14, Kohlhammer Verlag, 1968; (Detail scan)

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Heinrich Hermelink: The matriculations of the University of Tübingen , Volume 1, p. 16, W. Kohlhammer Verlag, 1906; (Detail scan)
  2. Hans-Jürgen Kremer: "Reading, exercieren und examinieren": the history of the Pforzheimer Latin School, higher education in southwest Germany from the Middle Ages to the modern age , Pforzheim City Archives, 1997, p. 29 u. 140, ISBN 3929366495 ; (Detail scans)
  3. Anneliese Seeliger-Zeiss: The inscriptions of the city of Pforzheim , 2003, p. 80, ISBN 3895003263 ; (Detail scan)
  4. ^ Franz Xaver Glasschröder : Documents on the Palatinate Church History in the Middle Ages , Munich, 1903, p. 156, document regist No. 371
  5. ibid., P. 232, document regimen no.563