Lothar von Kübel


Lothar Kübel or von Kübel was a German Roman Catholic clergyman, who acted as auxiliary bishop and Apostolic Administrator in the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Freiburg. A street in his birthplace as well as the town's Realschule and Hauptschule are all named after him.

Life

Early life

The youngest of six children, he came from a family of builders but as a gifted pupil he was allowed to visit the Gymnasium in Rastatt. From 1843 onwards he studied theology in Freiburg and Munich and on 17 August 1847 Freiburg's archbishop Hermann von Vicari ordained him to the priesthood. He became a vicar in Donaueschingen, Bonndorf and Freiburg before in December 1848 becoming a 'repetitor' in Freiburg's theological college. In 1854 he joined an episcopal ordinariate overseeing educational issues, which had become one of the Church's points of conflict with the government of the Grand Duchy of Baden in Karlsruhe. When the Grand-ducal Theological College was converted into an archepiscopal 'Konvikt', he became its director.

Apostolic administrator

Kübel became Freiburg's cathedral dean and vicar general on 20 Novembner 1867 and on 22 March the following year he was consecrated an auxiliary bishop and titular bishop of Leuce by Wilhelm Emmanuel von Ketteler, bishop of Mainz. After von Vicari's death on 14 April 1868 the cathedral chapter elected Kübel the archdiocesan administrator. However, the church and the secular government of the Grand Duchy could not agree on a new bishop, so Kübel remained in post until his death, essentially continuing the church-state policies of von Vicari.

Kulturkampf

The Grand Duchy's support for the idea of a sovereign state church and the separation of church and state led to a continuing conflict with von Vicari and Kübel, particularly marked during Julius Jolly's time as Interior Minister from 1866 to 1876. This meant that Baden's 'Kulturkampf' was a forerunner of that in Prussia. Some key issues involved were removing elementary schools from church control, introducing compulsory state exams for theology students, registering births, marriages and deaths in church-run registry offices, making state law superior to church law, closing church-run societies, charities and hospitals and only allowing religious charities which were exclusively religious in their purpose.