The Diocese of Gurk-Klagenfurt (German: Diözese Gurk-Klagenfurt, Slovene: Krška škofija) is a Latin Church diocese of the Catholic Church covering the...
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Hemma of Gurk (German: Hemma von Gurk; c. 995 – 27 June 1045), also called Emma of Gurk (Slovene: Ema Krška), was a noblewoman and founder of several churches...
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pillar basilica in Gurk, in the Austrian state of Carinthia. The former cathedral and current co-cathedral of the Catholic Diocese of Gurk was built from...
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The Bishop of Gurk is the head of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Gurk, which was established by Archbishop Gebhard of Salzburg, in 1072, as the first suffragan...
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Stadtpfarrkirche Hll. Petrus und Paulus) is the cathedral of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Gurk-Klagenfurt and also the main parish church of Klagenfurt. It was built...
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Bishop of Lausanne (redirect from Diocèse de Lausanne)
Bishop of Lausanne (French: Évêque de Lausanne) was the principal ecclesiastical authority of the Catholic Diocese of Lausanne (Latin: Dioecesis Lausannensis)...
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Slovenia, while the Carinthian parishes passed to the Diocese of Gurk. The diocese became the Diocese of Maribor (Marburg, in Slovenia), separated from the...
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see of Austria, a former prince-bishopric Diocese of Feldkirch Diocese of Graz-Seckau Diocese of Gurk Diocese of Innsbruck Ecclesiastical Province of Vienna...
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22 June 1218, then the third suffragan of the metropolitan diocese of Salzburg after Gurk (1072) and Chiemsee (1215), by Archbishop Eberhard von Regensberg...
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Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Salzburg (redirect from Diocese of Salzburg)
had not yet assigned appropriate decimae to the new diocese. The boundaries of the diocese of Gurk were finally delimited in 1131 by Archbishop Conrad...
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Albeck, Carinthia (category Articles with German-language sources (de))
newly established Diocese of Gurk. Albeck Castle (present-day Alt-Abeck) was first mentioned in 1155. Located high above the narrow Gurk valley, it was the...
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for an ecclesiastical diocese, a geographically based division of the Christian Church. Austria: Diocesan Museum, Graz, Styria Gurk Treasury, Carinthia...
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Matthäus Lang von Wellenburg (category Articles with German-language sources (de))
cathedral at Augsburg and five years later with the position of the Bishop of Gurk. He also received the Bishopric of Cartagena in Murcia in 1510 and was appointed...
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Škrljevo Castle (category CS1 German-language sources (de))
the Benedictine monastery she founded on the Gurk in Carinthia until 1072 and then to the Gurk diocese, which the Grailach lordship gave as a fief in...
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Hieronymus Balbus (category Bishops of Gurk)
or Accellini) was a Renaissance Humanist, poet, diplomat, and Bishop of Gurk in Carinthia, b. about 1450 in Venice; d. there, probably 1535. Balbus was...
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Archbishop of Vienna (redirect from Diocese of Vienna)
metropolitan bishop of its ecclesiastical province which includes the dioceses of Eisenstadt, Linz and St. Pölten. From 1469 to 1513, bishops from elsewhere...
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Raymond Peraudi (category Bishops of Gurk)
approved as bishop of Gurk in Consistory by Pope Innocent VIII on 21 February 1491, and, unusually, was allowed to retain the diocese when he became a cardinal...
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Gurk, then was converted into a military hospital in 1943. The Marianhiller's took the building back in 1948. In 1959 it was purchased by the Diocese...
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Gebhard of Salzburg (category Articles with German-language sources (de))
dissolved the double monastery of Gurk Abbey, founded by Saint Hemma in 1043, and replaced it by the suffragan Diocese of Gurk. Gebhard also established Admont...
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- ?) Johann von Töckheim (28 April 1357 - 6 March 1364), later Bishop of Gurk (Austria) (1364.03.06 – death 1376.02.29) Miklós I (5 September 1365 - 16...
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Salzburg Diocese of Feldkirch Diocese of Graz-Seckau Diocese of Gurk Diocese of Innsbruck Ecclesiastical Province of Wien Archdiocese of Wien Diocese of Eisenstadt...
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the ecclesiastical province, and assigned as suffragans the dioceses of Trent, Brixen, Gurk, Seckau, and Lavant. ... Ingenuinus (attested c. 590) Mastalo...
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Cathedral) without the Carinthian parishes, which were transferred to the Diocese of Gurk. List of Jesuit sites Dehio-Handbuch. Die Kunstdenkmäler Österreichs...
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The Diocese of Passau (Latin: Diœcesis Passaviensis) is a Latin diocese of the Catholic Church in Germany that is a suffragan of the Archdiocese of Munich...
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dioceses List of Chaldean dioceses Coptic Catholic dioceses Ethiopic Catholic dioceses Melkite Catholic dioceses Maronite dioceses Ruthenian dioceses...
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principality") rather than prince-archbishopric. The suffragan-bishoprics of Gurk (established 1070), Chiemsee (1216), Seckau (1218), and Lavant (1225) sometimes...
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Tanzenberg Castle (category CS1 German-language sources (de))
candidates. In 1953, the castle became the property of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Gurk. In 1995/1996, the facades were restored. The mighty three-story palace...
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Carinthia (category CS1 German-language sources (de))
continuous valley with East Tyrol, Tyrol to the west. Tributaries are the Gurk, the Glan, the Lavant, and the Gail rivers. Carinthia's lakes including Wörther...
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Ross, probably in the 1390s, he brought one John de Kylwos – clearly a relative – into his diocese, as the Subdean. Alexander was certainly born in or...
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Millstatt Abbey (category Articles with German-language sources (de))
Upper Carinthia and with its possessions around Millstätter See, in the Gurk Valley (Brückl) as well as in the former March of Friuli and in the Archbishopric...
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