Henryk z Wierzbnej

Henry of Wierzbna also known as Henry of Wierzbnej or Heinrich von Würben was a Bishop of Wrocław in Poland from 1302-1319AD.[1]

He was born into the Wierzbnej noble family of Würben toward the end of the 1260s and was the third and youngest son of John, the Castellan of Ryczyna in Silesia.

He was made a Canon of Wrocław on 31 August 1290 and supported King Wenceslaus II of Bohemia and his relative Jan Muskata, Bishop of Kraków in the dynastic struggles of the day.

He was made Bishop in 1302 by the pope and he was the first of the Bishops of Wroclaw to take the princely title.

His time in office was notable for his organization of a Court of the Inquisition in 1315[2] the result of which included burning at the stake more than 50 people convicted of heresy in the towns of Wroclaw, Swidnica and Nysa.[3] His inquisition was particularly against Beguines and Beghards.

He died 23 September 1319.[4] and was buried in the Wrocław Cathedral. Due to competing claims a replacement Bishop was not appointed for seven years following his death and the dicocese was administered by his canon Nicholas of Banz.

[5]

Further reading

References

  1. Bishops of Wroclaw at the Wrocław Diocese Webpage .
  2. m. Banaszak, History of the Catholic Church, Warsaw, 1991, vol. 2, p. 148,
  3. P. Karst, Ad abolendam diversarum haeresium pravitatem. The Inquisition System in medieval Europe, BALLS, 2006, p. 416
  4. Bishops of Wroclaw at GCatholic.org.
  5. Herb Thomas, gentlemen of Wierzbnej. The study of genealogy, London, 2006.
Religious titles
Preceded by
Johann III Romka
Bishop of Wrocław
1292–1301
Succeeded by
Nankier Kołda


This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Monday, June 22, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.