Brandenburg, Bishopric of
BRANDENBURG, BISHOPRIC OF: A diocese
established by Otto the Great in 948, including
the territory between the Elbe on the west, the
Oder on the east, and the Black Elster on the south,
and taking in the Uckermark to the north. It
was originally under the archiepiscopal jurisdiction
of Mainz, but in 968 was transferred to that of Magdeburg.
The disturbances of 983 practically
annihilated it; bishops continued to be named,
but they were merely titular, until the downfall
of the Wends in the twelfth century and the German
settlement of that region revived the bishopric.
Bishop Wigers (1138–60) was the first of a series of
bishops of the Premonstratensian order; which
chose the occupants of the see until 1447; in that
year a bull of Nicholas V gave the right of nomination
to the elector of Brandenburg, with whom the
bishops stood in a close feudal relation. The last
actual bishop was Matthias von Jagow (d. 1544),
who took the side of the Reformation, married, and
in every way furthered the undertakings of Elector
Joachim II. There were two more nominal
bishops, but on the petition of the latter of these,
the electoral prince John George, the secularization
of the bishopric was undertaken and finally accomplished,
in spite of legal proceedings to have
the bishopric declared immediately dependent on
the empire and so to preserve it, which dragged on
into the seventeenth century.