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Sixtus of Tannberg

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Church
  
Catholic

Name
  
Sixtus Tannberg

Predecessor
  
John IV Tulbeck

In office
  
1474-1495

See
  
Freising


Sixtus of Tannberg

Successor
  
Ruprecht of the Palatinate

Consecration
  
April 10, 1474 by Archbishop Bernhard von Rohr

Died
  
1495, Frankenthal, Germany

Place of burial
  
Freising Cathedral, Freising, Germany

Diocese
  
Roman Catholic Diocese of Gurk

Sixtus of Tannberg (died: 14 July 1495 in Frankenthal) was from 1470 to 1474 Bishop of Gurk and from 1474 to 1495 Prince-Bishop of Freising.

Life

Sixtus of Tannenberg was a son of Johann Tannberg of Aurolzmünster and Ursula von Rohr, a sister of Archbishop Bernhard von Rohr. In 1442 he was admitted in Freising as an Exspektant and in 1456 he joined the local Cathedral Chapter. He studied at Padua for almost eight years and became a doctor of both laws. In 1458 he became provost in Isen in Upper Bavaria and in 1466 pastor of Laufen. Allegedly he was also chancellor of Bishop John IV Tulbeck of Freising and canon at Salzburg.

After the death of Ulrich III Sonnenberger, the Archduchy of Austria and the Archdiocese of Salzburg again had an argument over who was entitled to appoint a new Bishop of Gurk. Archbishop Bernhard von Rohr appointed Sixtus and this appointment was confirmed by the pope in 1470. Emperor Frederick III would have preferred the appointment of Lawrence of Freiberg, who was Provost of Gurk at the time. Both candidates were summoned, under threat of excommunication, to come to Augsburg, where the dispute was settled by Cardinal Mark, who was Patriarch of Aquileia and Papal Nuncio to Germany.

Sixtus of Tannenberg was chancellor of the Prince-Bishop John IV Tulbeck of Freising, who resigned in 1473 in favor of Tannberg. Tannberg resigned as Bishop of Gurk, leaving the post to Lawrence of Freiberg. Between 1481 and 1483, during Tannberg's reign, a vault was designed, which still exists today, for the nave of the Freising Cathedral. Tannberg was very pious and led to several diocesan synods and introduced profound reforms of the clergy in his diocese. He also founded in 1484 his own Cathedral Choir, who would contribute to more worthy church services. He died on 14 July 1495 in the monastery of the Canons Regular of St. Augustine in Frankenthal, near Worms. He was buried in the Freising Cathedral.

References

Sixtus of Tannberg Wikipedia