Otto Truchsess von Waldburg

Otto Truchsess von Waldburg (25 February 1514 – 2 April 1573) was Prince-Bishop of Augsburg from 1543 until his death and a Cardinal of the Catholic Church.


Otto Truchsess von Waldburg
Cardinal, Prince-Bishop of Augsburg
Cardinal Otto Truchsess von Waldburg, contemporary portrait by Lambert Sustris
DioceseAugsburg
In office1543–1573
PredecessorChristoph von Stadion
SuccessorJohann Eglof von Knöringen
Orders
ConsecrationOctober 1543
Created cardinal19 Dec 1544
by Pope Paul III
Personal details
Born25 February 1514
Scheer Castle
Died2 April 1573(1573-04-02) (aged 59)
Rome, Papal States
DenominationRoman Catholic

Childhood and Education

Otto was born at Scheer Castle to the Swabian noble House of Waldburg, which, for their support in the German Peasants' War was vested with the title of a hereditary Imperial Seneschal (Truchsess) by Emperor Charles V in 1526. Designated for an ecclesiastical career, he studied at the Universities of Tübingen, Dole, Padua, Bologna, where he received his degree of Doctor of Theology in 1534, and Pavia. He was a fellow student of Cristoforo Madruzzo, Stanislaus Hosius and Viglius van Zwichem.

At an early age he had received canonries at Trent, Spires, and Augsburg. In 1541 he was appointed Imperial councillor and acted as a strong advocate of the Catholic faith against the Protestant Reformation at the 1542 Reichstag of Speyer. Thereafter, while on an embassy to Rome, was made a papal chamberlain and nuncio for the scheduled Council of Trent.

Career

On 10 May 1543, the skilled and ambitious man backed by Emperor Charles V was elected Prince-Bishop of Augsburg; in 1544 he was appointed Cardinal of the titulus of Santa Balbina by Pope Paul III for settling the dispute with the Emperor upon the concessions he had made to several Lutheran princes of the Schmalkaldic League at the Fourth Diet of Speyer. Otto however urged on a military expedition against the revolting nobles, which the Emperor prepared by forging an alliance with the (Lutheran) Duke Maurice of Saxony, when the Protestants in 1546 sparked the Schmalkaldic War by a preventive strike against the town of Füssen, a possession of the Augsburg bishop.

He remained a loyal supporter of victorious Emperor Charles V, though he was dissatisfied with the terms of the Augsburg Interim and especially had further on to deal with the unruly population of the Imperial City of Augsburg. The conditions in his diocese were dreadful: the clergy were ignorant and depraved, and Protestantism was widespread. He sought to mend matters and to revitalize Catholicism through education, diocesan synods, visitations, edicts and improved religious instruction.. At his residence, he founded the University of Dillingen under Pedro de Soto, now a lyceum, and the ecclesiastical seminary at Dillingen (1549–55). In 1564 he transferred the management of these institutions to the Jesuits.

In 1549–50 and again in 1555 he took part in the papal elections at Rome. The situation of the bishopric worsened in 1552, when it was devastated by the troops of the former ally Maurice, meanwhile Saxon Elector. The emperor's younger brother King Ferdinand I, now in charge and prepared to compromise, concluded the Peace of Passau with Maurice, which led to the 1555 Peace of Augsburg with the Lutheran princes. Otto's advice was no longer in demand and with the abdication of Charles V the next year, his powerful position finally was lost. He once more went to Rome in 1559 and was there made the head of the Inquisition and, in 1562, Cardinal-Bishop of Albano. In 1567 he held a diocesan synod at Dillingen.

From 1568 he lived full-time at Rome, where he died. He was a moral, religious man, with great force of character, to whom half measures and shiftiness were foreign. He incurred the hatred of the Protestants for his protest against the Religious Peace of Augsburg.

Cultural references

A fictional version of him is seen in the third series of Showtime's Emmy Award–winning show The Tudors. He is played by Swedish actor Max von Sydow.

References

    • Braun, Gesch. der Bischofe von Augsburg, III (Augsburg, 1814)
    •  This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Herbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). "Otto Truchsess von Waldburg". Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company.
    • DuhrQue, llen zu einer Biogr. des Kard. Otto Truchsess von Waldburg in Hist. Jahrbuch, VII (Munich, 1886), 177–209, and XX (Munich, 1899), 71–4.
    • Janssen, History of the German People, tr. Christie, VI–IX (London, 1905–8), passim
    • Truchsess, Literae ad Hosium, ed. Weber (Ratisbon, 1892)
    • Weber, Card. Otto Truchsess in Hist.-pol. Blatter, CX (Munich, 1892)., 781–96
    • Oxford University Press, Cardinal Otto Truchsess Von Waldburg And His Role As Art Dealer For Albrecht V OF Bavaria (1568–73)By Noes M. Overbeeke (http://jhc.oxfordjournals.org/content/6/2/173.full.pdf+html)
    Catholic Church titles
    Preceded by
    Christoph von Stadion
    Prince-Bishop of Augsburg
    1543–1573
    Succeeded by
    Johann Eglof von Knöringen
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