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Louis of Meissen

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Noble family
  
House of Wettin

Name
  
Louis Meissen

Buried
  
Cathedral of Magdeburg

Mother
  
Matilda of Bavaria


Father
  
Frederick II, Margrave of Meissen

Born
  
25 February 1341 Wartburg (
1341-02-25
)

Died
  
February 17, 1382, Calbe, Germany

Place of burial
  
Magdeburg Cathedral, Magdeburg, Germany

Parents
  
Matilda of Bavaria, Margravine of Meissen, Frederick II, Margrave of Meissen

Grandparents
  
Louis IV, Holy Roman Emperor, Frederick I, Margrave of Meissen, Beatrice of Silesia

People also search for
  
Matilda of Bavaria, Margravine of Meissen

Great-grandparents
  
Bolko I the Strict

Louis of Meissen (25 February 1341 at the Wartburg – 17 February 1382 in Calbe) was a German nobleman from the House of Wettin. He was Bishop of Halberstadt and later Bishop of Bamberg, then Archbishop of Mainz and finally Archbishop of Magdeburg.

Life

He was the fourth son of Margrave Frederick II of Meissen and his wife Matilda, the daughter of emperor Ludwig IV.

On 1357, at the age of 17, Louis was appointed — probably because of his membership of the powerful House of Wettin — as Bishop of Halberstadt. In 1366 he resigned from this post when he was appointed Bishop of Bamberg. In 1374, he resigned in Bamberg when he was appointed as Archbishop of Mainz. In 1381, he resigned in Mainz and was appointed Archbishop of Magdeburg.

After the death of Archbishop John of Mainz in 1373, the cathedral chapter of Mainz elected Adolph I of Nassau as administrator of the archbishopric. However, at the request of Emperor Charles IV, pope Gregory XI refused to confirm his election and appointed Louis of Meissen instead. This led to an armed conflict, known as the Schism of Mainz. Battles were fought in Thuringia and the Eichsfeld. Louis was supported by the Emperor and his son Wenceslaus, by his three brothers and by Landgrave Henry II of Hesse. Adolph of Nassau was supported by Duke Otto I of Brunswick-Göttingen, Count John I of Nassau, Count Henry VI of Waldeck and Count Gottfried VIII of Ziegenhain. Neither side was strong enough to force a victory, and the conflict lasted until 1381.

After Gregory XI died in 1378, the Western church was divided by two rival popes, a conflict known as the Western Schism. The Antipope Clement VII confirmed the election of Adolph as administrator of Mainz in 1379 and appointed Adolph as administrator of Speyer in 1380. When King Wenceslaus subsequently confirmed Adolph's appointment, Louis abdicated as Archbishop of Mainz, and was given the Archbishopric of Magdeburg as compensation. He travelled to Magdeburg. However, he died in February 1382 and was buried in the Cathedral of Magdeburg.

References

Louis of Meissen Wikipedia