Siegfried III (archbishop of Mainz)

Archbishop Siegfried III. of Mainz. The oldest memorial in Mainz Cathedral.[1]

Siegfried III von Eppstein (died 9 March 1249) was Archbishop of Mainz from 1230 to 1249. He in 1244 granted freedom to the citizens of Mainz, who subsequently could run their affairs more independently though their own council;[2][3] in law it remained an episcopal city.[4]

He acted as regent for Conrad IV of Germany, while Emperor Frederick II was campaigning in Italy, 1237 to 1242.[5] He was, though, a supporter of Pope Innocent IV.[6] He ordered the destruction of the then Imperial City of Wiesbaden located just across the Rhine from Mainz in 1242.

He held a major synod in 1239.[7]

He added Lorsch Abbey to the archbishopric.[8]

Notes

  1. Kathryn Brush, The tomb slab of archbishop Siegfried III von Eppstein in Mainz cathedral : a thirteenth-century image and its interpretative context in: Grabmäler. Tendenzen der Forschung (2000) p. 33-50
  2. John M. Jeep, Medieval Germany: An Encyclopedia (2001), p. 486.
  3. Mainz
  4. André Vauchez, Richard Barrie Dobson, Michael Lapidge, Encyclopedia of the Middle Ages (2000), p. 892.
  5. The New Cambridge Medieval History V, p. 399.
  6. Catholic Encyclopedia
  7. Paul B. Pixton, The German Episcopacy and the Implementation of the Decrees of the Fourth (1995), p. 418.
  8. CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: Lorsch Abbey
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Preceded by
Siegfried II
Archbishop of Mainz
1230–1249
Succeeded by
Christian II
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