Electorate of Trier

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Erzstift Trier / Kurfürstentum Trier (German)
Électorat de Trèves (French)
Electorate of Trier
State of the Holy Roman Empire
Arms of the County Palatine of the Rhine
898 – 1801
 

Coat of arms of Kurtrier

Coat of arms

Location of Kurtrier
The Electorate of Trier in 1648.
Capital Trier
Language(s) French, Latin, Luxembourgish, Moselle Franconian German
Religion Roman Catholic
Government Principality
Historical era Middle Ages
 - Autonomy granted 772
 - Reichsfreiheit status 898, 898
 - Reichsfreiheit confirmed 902
 - Raised to Electorate between 1189 and 1212
 - City rights given to Trier 1212
 - Joined the Imperial Circle
    of Electoral Rhenish
 
1512
 - Ceded to France
    (Treaty of Lunéville)
 
February 9, 1801
 - Restored to Germany as
    the Grand Duchy of the Lower Rhine
 
June 9, 1815

The Electorate of Trier (German: Kurfürstentum Trier or Kurtrier) was an ecclesiastical principality of the Holy Roman Empire and existed from the end of the 9th to the early 19th century. It consisted of the temporal possessions of the larger Archbishopric of Trier (German: Erzbistum Trier). It was ruled by the Archbishop in his function as prince-elector of the empire. The capital of the electorate was Trier, its main residence was Coblence since the 16th century. The electorate was secularized in 1803 during the German Mediatisation.

Contents

[edit] History

Trier, as the important Roman provincial capital of Augusta Treverorum, had been the seat of a bishop since Roman times. It was raised to archiepiscopal status during the reign of Charlemagne, whose will mentions the bishoprics of Metz, Toul and Verdun as its suffragans.

The bishops of Trier were already virtually independent territorial magnates in Merovingian times. In 772 Charlemagne granted Bishop Wiomad complete immunity from the jurisdiction of the ruling count for all the churches and monasteries, as well as villages and castles that belonged to the Church of St. Peter at Trier. In 816 Louis the Pious confirmed to Archbishop Hetto the privileges of protection and immunity granted by his father.

At the partition of the Carolingian empire at Verdun in 843, Trier fell to Lothair; at the partition of Lotharingia at Mersen in 870, it fell to the East Frankish kingdom, which developed into Germany.

Archbishop Radbod received in 898 complete immunity from all taxes for the entire episcopal territory, granted by Zwentibold, the natural son of Emperor Arnulf of Carinthia, who reigned briefly as King of Lotharingia and, under great pressure from his independent nobles, desperately needed a powerful ally. The gift cemented the position of the archbishops as territorial lords in their own right. Following Zwentibold's assassination in 900, the handlers of the child-king Louis courted Radbold in their turn, granting him the district and city of Trier outright, permission to impose customs duties and the right to a mint (as much a symbol of independent authority as an economic tool). From the court of Charles the Simple, he obtained a final right of election of the Bishop of Trier by the chapter, free of Imperial interference.

In Early Modern times, the Electorate of Trier still encompassed territory along the Moselle River between Trier, near the French border, and Koblenz on the Rhine. The Archbishop of Trier, as holder of an imperial office was traditionally an Imperial Elector of the German king. The purely honorary office of Archchancellor of Gaul arose in the 13th century. In this context that was taken to mean the Kingdom of Arles, or Burgundy, technically from 1242 and permanently from 1263, and nominally until 1803. Arles along with Germany and Italy was one of the three component kingdoms of the Empire.

The last elector, Clemens Wenzeslaus of Saxony, resided exclusively in Koblenz since 1786. From 1795, the territories of the Electorate on the left bank of the Rhine were under French occupation; in 1801, they were annexed and a separate bishopric established. In 1803, the bishopric assumed control of the whole diocese and what was left of the Electorate was secularized and annexed by the Princes of Nassau.

[edit] Archbishops and prince electors of Trier

[edit] To 1000

  • Radbod 883-915
  • Rudgar 915-930
  • Rudbrecht 930-956
  • Heinrich I 956-964
  • Dietrich I 965-977
  • Egbert 977-993
  • Ludolf 994-1008

[edit] 1000 to 1300

[edit] 1300 to 1500

[edit] From 1500

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ From 1801, after the French conquest of the Imperial territories on the left-bank of the Rhine, Clemens Wenzel of Saxony was archbishop with effect on the right bank only.


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