Apostolic Vicariate of Northern Germany


The Vicariate Apostolic of Northern Germany was known for most of its existence as the Vicariate Apostolic of the Northern Missions, established on 28 April 1667. It was a Roman Catholic missionary jurisdiction of a Vicar Apostolic in predominantly Protestant Northern Europe. On 7 August 1868, on the occasion of completing separate jurisdictions for all of Scandinavia, the vicariate only continued to comprise small areas in Northern Germany and was thus renamed. With the integration of these areas into other Roman Catholic dioceses the vicariate ceased to exist on 13 August 1930.

History

The Reformation in the 16th century caused the Roman Catholic Church to lose almost all of Northern Europe. In 1582 the stray Catholics of Denmark, Finland, Northern Germany, Norway, and Sweden were placed under the jurisdiction of an Apostolic Nuncio to Cologne. The Congregation de propaganda fide, on its establishment in 1622, took charge of the vast missionary field, which at its third session it divided among the nuncio of Brussels, the nuncio at Cologne and the nuncio of Poland.
Following the organisational structure of the Church the apostolic vicariate included the diocesan areas of bishoprics, where Roman Catholic jurisdiction had effectively been abolished. This was partially due to secular rulers or governments repressing Catholic faith and clergy in their territories, which comprised the diocesan areas, due to the fact that incumbent bishops had converted to Lutheranism, or because the cathedral capitular canons, responsible for electing new bishops, had adopted Lutheranism and thus chose fellow faithful candidates, who thus de facto ascended the sees.
So while the area under the jurisdiction of the vicar apostolic followed originally the diocesan boundaries of the de facto defunct bishoprics, the boundaries of new jurisdictions followed mostly the political borders relevant at the time of their establishment.
The scattered Catholics in Northern Europe were placed under the pastoral care of the Jesuits, Franciscans and Dominicans. Catholics in many places had at their disposal only the chapels established in the houses of the diplomatic representatives of the Holy Roman Emperor and of other Catholic Powers, France and Spain. Sometimes admission even to these chapels was rendered difficult, or entirely prohibited to native Catholics.
In some districts the conversion of the monarchs, e.g. Duke John Frederick of Brunswick and Lunenburg, Prince of Calenberg and Duke Christian I Louis of Mecklenburg-Schwerin, brought Catholics some measure of freedom. The number of Catholics having increased in 1667, chiefly through the above-mentioned Prince of Calenberg, a vicariate Apostolic was established for Northern Germany.
The first vicar was Valerio Maccioni, titular Bishop of Morocco, who resided at Hanover. He died in 1676, and was succeeded by the celebrated Danish convert Nicolaus Steno, who in 1680 was obliged to leave Hanover, was made Auxiliary Bishop of Münster, and in 1683 returned to the Nordic Missions. He died at Schwerin in 1686, and was followed in the vicariate successively by Friedrich von Hörde, Auxiliary Bishop of Hildesheim and titular Bishop of Joppe, Jobst Edmund von Brabeck, Bishop of Hildesheim and Otto von Bronckhorst, Auxiliary Bishop of Osnabrück.
The Northern Missions, viewed in a wider sense, included also the Apostolic Prefectures of Schleswig-Holstein, coinciding with the Prussian province of that name, of Denmark and of Norway, which were placed under separate prelates in 1868. The vicariate and prefectures were under the permanent jurisdiction of the Bishop of Osnabrück as administrator Apostolic. In the vicariate, corresponding mostly to the Prussian province of Schleswig-Holstein, Catholics numbered about 79,400, under 47 secular priests having care of 17 parishes and 17 mission stations. The following religious congregations had houses in the vicariate: Sisters of Mercy of St. Charles Borromeo, 1; Sisters of St. Elizabeth, 5; Franciscan Sisters, 2; Ursulines, 2. The Prefecture Apostolic of Schleswig-Holstein had in 1909: 11 parishes, 31 mission stations, 34 secular priests, 35,900 Catholics, and 550,000 of other beliefs; 4 communities of Sisters of St. Elizabeth and 3 of Franciscan nuns.
In summer the Catholic population in the vicariate of Northern Germany and prefecture of Schleswig-Holstein was increased by 17,000 to 20,000 labourers from other parts of Germany, who returned to their homes at the beginning of the winter. The spiritual interests of the faithful were inadequately attended to owing to the extent of the parishes, the lack of priests, the poverty of the majority of the Catholics and in many places the hostility of the Protestant state or municipal governments. A more encouraging picture was presented by the numerous Catholic societies and by the maintenance of private Catholic schools, despite the fact that the Catholics were often obliged to contribute also to the support of the state and Protestant parish schools. A very fruitful activity has been developed in these missions by the Boniface Association.
The French Revolution and the Napoleonic regime brought great relief to Catholics in many cities and states; but the equality granted them by law in some countries was often merely theoretical.
At the reorganisation of Catholic affairs in Germany after the Napoleonic era, the greater part of the Northern Missions was added to adjacent bishoprics. The only districts remaining mission territory were the Kingdom of Saxony, the Principality of Anhalt, constituted separate vicariates Apostolic in 1816 and 1825 respectively, and the North, which in 1826 was placed temporarily under the jurisdiction of the Bishop of Paderborn.
In 1839 Pope Gregory XVI wished to entrust the vicariate to a bishop with his see at Hamburg. Johann Theodor Laurent was appointed vicar and consecrated bishop. Lutheran opposition prevented the realisation of the plan and Laurent was denied to enter Hamburg. The pope thereupon gave the administration of the vicariate to the Auxiliary Bishop of Osnabrück, . The Bishop of Osnabrück has since then been the regular Vicar Apostolic of the Northern Missions, and administrator of the Prefecture Apostolic of Schleswig-Holstein since its separation from the vicariate in 1868. In 1869 Denmark and Norway were erected into apostolic prefectures of their own, and in 1892 into apostolic vicariates.

Defunct dioceses comprised in the vicariate

On its establishment the Apostolic Vicariate comprised first only the Diocese of Minden. The other former Catholic dioceses followed at three later dates. The date in the second column refers to the year, when last time a catholic bishop could effectively wield his pontificate, not an eventual later appointment or continued titulature in exile. Some last Catholic bishops had already been preceded by Lutheran incumbents.
The list below records the bishoprics whose diocesan areas fell under the jurisdiction of the Nordic Missions. The list shows when the various diocesan areas left the jurisdiction of the Nordic Missions, to which Roman Catholic jurisdictions the areas used to belong afterwards, and to which jurisdictions they belong today. Today the areas of some defunct dioceses are partitioned among several modern dioceses. By clicking on the buttons the list can be ordered along the categories given in each column. The list does not claim to record the correct affiliations for every area of the former dioceses.
Diocese / Archdiocese Last Catholic episcopate ended inJurisdiction by Northern MissionsLater jurisdiction
Today's jurisdictionPre-Reformation ecclesiastical province; remarks
Minden 16481667–1709, and again
1780–1821
Upper and Lower Saxony 1709–1780 Paderborn since 1821
Halberstadt 15521669–1709, and again
1780–1821
Upper and Lower Saxony 1709–1780
Paderborn 1821–1994
Magdeburg since 1994
Verden 16311669–1709, and again
1780–1821/24
Upper and Lower Saxony 1709–1780
Paderborn 1821–1994
Hildesheim since 1824
Magdeburg since 1994
Bremen 15661670–1821/24, partially till 1868 and 1930Schleswig-Holstein 1868–1930
Osnabrück 1930–1994
Hildesheim since 1824
Osnabrück since 1930
Münster since 1821
Hamburg since 1994
15611670–1930Osnabrück 1930–1994Hamburg since 1994
Ratzeburg 15541670–1930Osnabrück 1930–1994Hamburg since 1994
Schwerin 15331670–1930Osnabrück 1930–1994Hamburg since 1994
Magdeburg 15521670–1709, and again
1780–1821, Anhalt till
1825
Upper and Lower Saxony 1709–1780
Paderborn 1821–1994
Anhalt 1825–1921
Paderborn 1921–1994
Magdeburg since 1994
Brandenburg 15391670–1709, and again
1780–1821
Upper and Lower Saxony 1709–1780
Breslau's Prince-Episcopal Delegation for Brandenburg and Pomerania 1821–1930
Berlin since 1930
Havelberg 15481670–1709, and again
1780–1821
Upper and Lower Saxony 1709–1780
Breslau's Prince-Episcopal Delegation for Brandenburg and Pomerania 1821–1930
Berlin since 1930
Lebus 15551670–1709, and again
1780–1821
Upper and Lower Saxony 1709–1780
Breslau's Prince-Episcopal Delegation for Brandenburg and Pomerania 1821–1930
Berlin 1930–1951
Cammin, Lebus and Schneidemühl Prelature 1951–1972
Berlin since 1930
Gorzów since 1972
Merseburg 15441670–1709Upper and Lower Saxony 1709–1743
Saxon Hereditary Lands 1743–1921
Saxon Hereditary Lands 1743–1821
Paderborn 1821–1994

Magdeburg since 1994
Naumburg 15641670–1709Upper and Lower Saxony 1709–1743
Saxon Hereditary Lands 1743–1921
Saxon Hereditary Lands 1743–1821
Paderborn 1821–1994

Magdeburg since 1994
Cammin 15441688–1709, and again
1780–1821, M.-Strelitz till
1930
Upper and Lower Saxony 1709–1780
Breslau's Prince-Episcopal Delegation for Brandenburg and Pomerania 1821–1930
Berlin 1930–1951
Cammin, Lebus and Schneidemühl Prelature 1951–1972
Osnabrück 1930–1994
Berlin since 1930
Szczecin-Kamień since 1972
Koszalin-Kołobrzeg since 1972
Hamburg since 1994
Cammin was an exempt diocese since 1140
Lund 15361688–1783, Bornholm till 1868 1783–1953
Denmark 1868–1892
Denmark 1892–1953
Stockholm since 1953
Copenhagen since 1953
Aarhus 15361688–1868Denmark 1868–1892
Denmark 1892–1953
Copenhagen since 1953
15361688–1868Denmark 1868–1892
Denmark 1892–1953
Copenhagen since 1953
Odense 1868–1892
Denmark 1892–1953
Copenhagen since 1953
Ribe 15361688–1868Denmark 1868–1892
Denmark 1892–1953
Copenhagen since 1953
Roskilde 15291688–1868, Rügen only till 1821Denmark 1868–1892
Denmark 1892–1953
Breslau's Prince-Episcopal Delegation for Brandenburg and Pomerania 1821–1930
Copenhagen since 1953
Berlin since 1930
Schleswig 15421688–1868Schleswig-Holstein 1868–1920
Schleswig-Holstein 1920–1930
Osnabrück 1930–1994
Denmark 1920–1953
Copenhagen since 1953
Hamburg since 1994
Viborg 15361688–1868Denmark 1868–1892
Denmark 1892–1953
Copenhagen since 1953
Meissen 1559/15811688–1709 Meissen 1560–1567
Upper Lusatia 1567–1921
Upper and Lower Saxony 1709–1743
Saxon Hereditary Lands 1743–1921
Breslau 1821–1972
Görlitz 1972–1994

Görlitz since 1994
Meissen was an exempt diocese, and since re-establishment in 1921, renamed to Dresden-Meissen in 1980, it is suffragan to Berlin since 1994.
Trondheim 15461688–1834Sweden 1834–1855
1855–1869
Sweden 1855–1868
Norway 1868–1892
Norway 1892–1931
Missionary District of Central Norway 1931–1935
Central Norway 1935–1953
Central Norway 1953–1979
Missionary District of Northern Norway 1931–1944
Northern Norway 1944–1955
Northern Norway 1955–1979
Trondheim since 1979
Tromsø since 1979
Bergen 15351688–1834Sweden 1834–1868
Norway 1868–1892
Norway 1892–1931
Oslo 1931–1953
Oslo since 1953
Faroe 15381688–1855North Pole 1855–1869
Denmark 1869–1892
Denmark 1892–1953
Copenhagen since 1953
Garðar 1537 1688–1855North Pole 1855–1869
Denmark 1869–1892
Denmark 1892–1953
Copenhagen since 1953
Hamar 15371688–1834Sweden 1834–1868
Norway 1868–1892
Norway 1892–1931
Oslo 1931–1953
Oslo since 1953
15501688–1855North Pole 1855–1869
Denmark 1869–1892
Denmark 1892–1923
Iceland 1923–1929
Iceland 1929–1968.
Reykjavík since 1968
Oslo 15371688–1834Sweden 1834–1868
Norway 1868–1892
Norway 1892–1931
Oslo 1931–1953
Oslo since 1953
15411688–1855North Pole 1855–1869
Denmark 1869–1892
Denmark 1892–1923
Iceland 1923–1929
Iceland 1929–1968.
Reykjavík since 1968
Stavanger 15371688–1834Sweden 1834–1868
Norway 1868–1892
Norway 1892–1931
Oslo 1931–1953
Oslo since 1953
Uppsala 15241688–1783Sweden 1783–1953Stockholm since 1953
15501688–1783Sweden 1783–1809
Mohilev 1809–1920
Finland 1920–1955
Helsinki since 1955
Linköping 15271688–1783Sweden 1783–1953Stockholm since 1953
Skara 15211688–1783Sweden 1783–1953Stockholm since 1953
15361688–1783Sweden 1783–1953Stockholm since 1953
15341688–1783Sweden 1783–1953Stockholm since 1953
15301688–1783Sweden 1783–1953Stockholm since 1953

States and territories covered by the vicariate

The states and territories covered by the vicariate altered over the long duration of its existence. So the table below tries to present those states and territories which were part of the vicariate before it was territorially reduced for the first time on 6 April 1709.
Owing to its vast extent, Pope Clement XI divided the old Vicariate Apostolic into two vicariates: the Vicariate Apostolic of Upper and Lower Saxony, embracing the portions of the old vicariate situated in the Palatinate and in Lower Saxon Electoral Hanover and the Duchy of Bremen, as well as in Upper Saxon Anhalt, Electoral Brandenburg, Swedish Hither Pomerania, and Electoral Saxony. This new Apostolic Vicariate was seated in Hanover city. It was placed in charge of Agostino Steffani, Bishop of Spiga and minister of the Elector Palatine, as vicar Apostolic.
So the rest of the original vicariate, comprising all of Northern Europe north of the Elbe, and Bremen, remained with the Nordic Missions, which retained the title of Vicariate of the North. It was placed under the Auxiliary Bishop of Osnabrück. Since 1743 the Roman Catholics in the Wettin-held imperial fief of Electorate of Saxony were subject to the Apostolic Vicariate of the Saxon Hereditary Lands, later also acceded by Reuss Elder Line, Reuss Younger Line, and Saxe-Altenburg. Saxon Hereditary Lands merged with the Apostolic Prefecture of Upper Lusatia into the new Diocese of Meissen on 24 June 1921.
The division between the Nordic Missions and the Upper and Lower Saxon vicariate lasted until 1779/80, when Friedrich Wilhelm von Westphalen, Prince-Bishop of Hildesheim, reunited under his administration the vicariates. On 11 February 1780 the territorially lessened Vicariate of Upper and Lower Saxony remerged into the Nordic Missions. Three years later the Apostolic Vicariate of Sweden was established, then competent for Roman Catholics in the Swedish Empire with Finland and Sweden proper. The Swedish-held imperial fief in Hither Pomerania remained with the Nordic Missions, also after it became Prussian in 1815.
With Pomerania and the March of Brandenburg having ceased to be parts of the Holy Roman Empire in 1806, but become provinces of Prussia, the latter agreed with the Holy See to place the Prussian part of the Nordic Missions under the jurisdictions of neighbouring Prussian dioceses as of 16 August 1821. Thus the Prince-Bishop of Breslau took direct responsibility for the now Prussian-held part of Meissen's former diocesan areas in then Brandenburgian Lower Lusatia and then Silesian Upper Lusatia. Breslau wielded its indirect jurisdiction in the remainder of Brandenburg and most of Pomerania by its new Prince-Episcopal Delegation for Brandenburg and Pomerania. The diocesan areas of the defunct bishoprics in Prussian Saxony came under the jurisdiction of the Diocese of Paderborn, as was the case with the diocesan area of defunct Minden in Prussian Westphalia.
Also in the Kingdom of Hanover the diocesan areas of defunct bishoprics were assigned to the neighbouring existing dioceses of Hildesheim and of Osnabrück on 26 March 1824.
Also Brunswick and meanwhile only tripartite Anhalt left the Nordic Missions in 1825, but without a persisting domestic Catholic diocese and only few domestic Catholics they formed an Apostolic Vicariate of their own, also acceded by Saxe-Gotha, Schwarzburg-Rudolstadt, and Schwarzburg-Sondershausen. In 1834 Brunswick, leaving Anhalt apostolic vicariate, merged into the jurisdiction of neighbouring Hanoveran Hildesheim diocese and Norway, leaving the Nordic Missions, became part of the Swedish vicariate the same year. In 1855 northern Norway switched to the, while the rest of Norway remained with Sweden until 1868. At this time all of Northern Europe formed separate Roman Catholic jurisdictions and had left the Nordic Missions:
Simultaneously with the establishment of the Danish and Norwegian apostolic prefectures the Nordic Missions had been reduced to small member states in the North German Confederation, such as the Grand Duchies of Mecklenburg-Schwerin and Mecklenburg-Strelitz, the Duchy of Saxe-Lauenburg, the Hanseatic free cities of Bremen, Hamburg and Lübeck, the Principalities of Lübeck, and Schaumburg-Lippe, and the British Island of Helgoland.
The table below shows the territories and states at the beginning of the 18th century and how new jurisdictions developed over the centuries. The table can be sorted by the territories and states, the empires they used to belonged to, the years they belonged to the Apostolic Vicariate of the Nordic Missions, and the names of the present jurisdictions by clicking on the buttons.
Territory or stateDefunct dioceses comprised
Jurisdiction by Northern MissionsLater jurisdiction
Today's jurisdictionIn early 18th century affiliated with
Anhalt-BernburgHalberstadt
Magdeburg
1669–1709,
1670–1709 and both again
1780–1825
Upper and Lower Saxony 1709–1780
Anhalt 1825–1921
Paderborn 1921–1994
Magdeburg since 1994
Anhalt-DessauHalberstadt
Magdeburg
1669–1709,
1670–1709 and both again
1780–1825
Upper and Lower Saxony 1709–1780
Anhalt 1825–1921
Paderborn 1921–1994
Magdeburg since 1994
Anhalt-KöthenHalberstadt
Magdeburg
1669–1709,
1670–1709 and both again
1780–1825
Upper and Lower Saxony 1709–1780
Anhalt 1825–1921
Paderborn 1921–1994
Magdeburg since 1994
Anhalt-ZerbstBremen
Halberstadt
Magdeburg
1669–1709,
1670–1709 and both again
1780–1821/25
Upper and Lower Saxony 1709–1780
Anhalt 1825–1921
Paderborn 1921–1994
Münster since 1821
Magdeburg since 1994
Brandenburg, , in personal union with PrussiaBrandenburg
Cammin
Havelberg
Lebus
Verden
1670–1709,
1688–1708, and all again
1780–1821
Upper and Lower Saxony 1709–1780
Breslau's Prince-Episcopal Delegation for Brandenburg and Pomerania 1821–1930
Cammin, Lebus and Schneidemühl Prelature 1951–1972
Berlin since 1930
Gorzów since 1972
Szczecin-Kamień since 1972
Koszalin-Kołobrzeg since 1972
Bremen, free imperial city Bremen 1670–1709, and again
1780–1930
Upper and Lower Saxony 1709–1780Osnabrück since 1930
Bremen, duchy, in personal union with SwedenVerden
Bremen
1669–1721,
1670–1721, and both again
1780–1824
Upper and Lower Saxony 1709–1780Hildesheim since 1824
Brunswick and Lunenburg, electorate, in personal union with Great BritainVerden
Halberstadt
1669–1709, 1670–1709, and both again
1780–1824
Upper and Lower Saxony 1709–1780Hildesheim since 1824
Brunswick and Lunenburg, duchy Minden
Halberstadt
Hildesheim's , jurisdiction denied since 1568
Mainz' , jurisdiction denied since 1568
Paderborn's , jurisdiction denied since 1568
1667–1709, 1669–1709, and all again
1780–1834
Upper and Lower Saxony 1709–1780Hildesheim since 1834
DenmarkAarhus
Børglum
Lund
Odense
Ribe
Roskilde
Viborg
1688–1868Denmark 1868–1892
Denmark 1892–1953
Copenhagen since 1953
Faroe IslandsFaroe 1688–1855North Pole 1855–1869
Denmark 1869–1892
Denmark 1892–1953
Copenhagen since 1953
Finland1688–1783Sweden 1783–1809
Mohilev 1809–1920
Finland 1920–1955
Helsinki since 1955
GreenlandGarðar 1688–1855North Pole 1855–1869
Denmark 1869–1892
Denmark 1892–1953
Copenhagen since 1953
Hamburg, free imperial city Bremen 1670–1709; and again
1780–1930
Upper and Lower Saxony 1709–1780
Osnabrück 1930–1994
Hamburg since 1994
Holstein, a royal Danish-ducal Gottorpian condominiumBremen 1670–1868Schleswig-Holstein 1868–1930
Osnabrück 1930–1994
Hamburg since 1994
Iceland1688–1855North Pole 1855–1869
Denmark 1869–1892
Denmark 1892–1923
Iceland 1923–1929
Iceland 1929–1968.
Reykjavík since 1968
1670–1930Osnabrück 1930–1994Hamburg since 1994
1670–1930Osnabrück 1930–1994Hamburg since 1994
Mecklenburg-SchwerinRatzeburg
Schwerin ?
1670–1930Osnabrück 1930–1994Hamburg since 1994
Mecklenburg-StrelitzRatzeburg
Cammin
1670–1930
1688–1930
Osnabrück 1930–1994Hamburg since 1994
NorwayBergen
Hamar
Oslo
Stavanger
Trondheim
1688–1834Sweden 1834–1855
North Pole 1855–1869
Sweden 1855–1868
Norway 1868–1892
Norway 1892–1931
Oslo 1931–1953
Missionary District of Central Norway 1931–1935
Central Norway 1935–1953
Central Norway 1953–1979
Missionary District of Northern Norway 1931–1944
Northern Norway 1944–1955
Northern Norway 1955–1979
Oslo since 1953
Trondheim since 1979
Tromsø since 1979
Oldenburg, duchy, in personal union with Denmark-NorwayBremen 1670–1709, and again
1780–1821
Upper and Lower Saxony 1709–1780Münster since 1821
Pomerania, Swedish, in personal union with SwedenCammin
Roskilde
1688–1709, and again
1780–1821
Upper and Lower Saxony 1709–1780
Breslau's Prince-Episcopal Delegation for Brandenburg and Pomerania 1821–1930
Berlin since 1930
Saxe-Lauenburg, in personal union with Hanover-BritainRatzeburg 1670–1930Osnabrück 1930–1994Hamburg since 1994
Saxony, electorateMeissen
Merseburg
Naumburg
1677–1709,
1688–1709, and all again
1780–1821
Meissen 1560–1567
Upper Lusatia 1567–1921
Upper and Lower Saxony 1709–1743
Saxon Hereditary Lands 1743–1921
Breslau 1821–1972
Görlitz 1972–1994
Paderborn 1821–1994

Görlitz since 1994
Magdeburg since 1994
Schaumburg-LippeMinden 1667–1930Osnabrück 1930–1965Hildesheim since 1965
Schleswig, duchySchleswig 1688–1868Schleswig-Holstein 1868–1920
Schleswig-Holstein 1920–1930
Osnabrück 1930–1994
Denmark 1920–1953
Hamburg since 1994
Copenhagen since 1953
SwedenLinköping
Lund
Skara
Strängnäs
Uppsala
Västerås
Växjö
1688–1783Sweden 1783–1953Stockholm since 1953
Verden, principality, in personal union with SwedenVerden 1669–1721, and again
1780–1824
Upper and Lower Saxony 1709–1780Hildesheim since 1824
Wismar, in personal union with SwedenRatzeburg 1670–1930Osnabrück 1930–1994Hamburg since 1994

Vicars Apostolic

In 1709 the was disentangled from the Nordic Missions.
The remainder of the vicariate, after secession of Hereditary Saxony vicariate in 1743, remerged into the Nordic Missions in 1780.

Vicars Apostolic for the Saxon Hereditary Lands

In 1743 the Vicariate Apostolic for Saxon Hereditary Lands was disentangled from the Upper and Lower Saxony vicariate.
In 1921 the Holy See elevated the Apostolic Prefecture of Upper Lusatia to the modern Diocese of Meissen, followed by the investiture of as bishop, the Vicariate of the Saxon Hereditary Lands was then merged into this new diocese.