Uriel von Gemmingen

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Uriel von Gemmingen
Archbishop of Mainz
Epitaph in the Mainzer cathedral. Inscription: Urieli de Gemmingen archiepiscopo Moguntino, principi electori, viro singulari vitae gravitate animique constantia praeclaro, qui posteaquam sedit annos IIII, menses IIII, dies XIII, aetatis suae anno XLV, a Christo nato MDXIIII V idus Februarii vitam cum pontificatu deponit.
ChurchCatholic Church
DioceseElectorate of Mainz
In office1509–1514
Personal details
Born1468
Died9 February 1514
Uriel of Gemmingen, archbishop of Mainz and chancellor of the German Reich. (Woodcut)

Uriel von Gemmingen (1468 – 9 February 1514)[1] was appointed Archbishop of Mainz on 27 September 1508, a prince elector, and chancellor to Emperor Maximillian I on 23 April 1509.

Uriel was one of ten children of Hans von Gemmingen (1431–1487).

On 10 November 1509, he was entangled in the Pfefferkorn controversy, after Johannes Pfefferkorn seized and desired to burn Jewish books.[2] Gemmingen and the consultant Johannes Reuchlin assigned by him did not see a danger to the Christian faith in the writings used by Jews. On 10 May 1513 he appointed the Jewish physician Beyfuss the rabbi over all Jews in the Mainzer state. The argument over the book went beyond Uriel's death in 1514, not ultimately settled until 1520.

He is supposed to have killed a cellar master in anger shortly before his own reputed death after catching the man stealing wine. Rumors suggested that he may have then faked his own death, and that the body buried in Mainz Cathedral was instead that of the cellar master, with Uriel afterwards fleeing to Italy where he died years later. However the tomb was reopened in 1724, where a corpse was found with the expected adornments of an archbishop; the matter is still considered unsettled.

Notes and references

[edit]
  1. ^ According to inscription on the epitaph in Mainz cathedral
  2. ^ catholic encyclopedia Pfefferkorn
Catholic Church titles
Preceded by Archbishop of Mainz
1508 – 1514
Succeeded by
  1. ^ Mainz Until the suppression of the former archdiocese