Johann Karl von Herberstein

Johann Karl von Herberstein (Slovenized: Karel Janez Herberstein, July 7, 1719 – October 7, 1787) was a bishop of Ljubljana.[1][2]

His Excellency

Johann Karl von Herberstein
Prince-Bishop of Ljubljana
DioceseLjubljana
Installed1772
Term ended1787
PredecessorLeopold Josef von Petazzi
SuccessorMichael Leopold Brigido
Orders
Ordination1743
Personal details
Born(1719-07-07)July 7, 1719
DiedOctober 7, 1787(1787-10-07) (aged 68)
Ljubljana, Slovenia

Life

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Johann Karl von Herberstein's parents were the Styrian governor Johann Ernst von Herberstein (1671–1746) and Maria Dorothea, daughter of Count Franz Adam von Dietrichstein and Rosa Theresia von Trauttmansdorff. Johann Karl studied theology at the University of Salzburg. On June 8, 1743, he was ordained a priest in Salzburg and received a canon's position in Trent. On November 20, 1769 he was appointed coadjutor of Ljubljana Bishop Leopold Josef von Petazzi and at the same time auxiliary bishop in Ljubljana and titular bishop of Myndus. His episcopal ordination took place in 1770 by Bishop Petazzi.

After Bishop Petazzi's death in 1772, Karl Johann von Herberstein became his successor as bishop of Ljubljana. His induction into the office took place on December 5, 1772.

During his term, he supported Emperor Josef II's church policy reforms. He advocated the diocesan regulation of Inner Austria, which sought to take into account the geographic conditions and population policy of the territory. He visited the rural parishes and supported the cultural and spiritual needs of ethnic minorities. He arranged for translations of religious literature into Slovene in Carniola[3] and called for tolerance in religious matters.[4] In 1782 he authored a pastoral letter in which he clearly addressed the issues and conflicts between the state and the Church.

For years, Pope Pius VI had opposed Emperor Joseph II's request to elevate Ljubljana to an archbishopric and to thus elevate Johann Karl von Herberstein to archbishop. The pope rejected the Josephinian reforms and disapproved of the attitude of the bishop, who was a proponent of the reforms. The negotiations between the court in Vienna and the curia dragged on for years.[5] Herberstein died in 1787, and he bequeathed his fortune to the normal school and the institute for the poor.

References

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  1. ^ Melton, James Van Horn (2003). Absolutism and the Eighteenth-Century Origins of Compulsory Schooling in Prussia and Austria. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. p. 80.
  2. ^ Blanning, T. C. W. (2014). Joseph II. London: Routledge. p. 44.
  3. ^ Matjaž Ambrožič (2011). "Cerkvene razmere v Japljevem času". In Humar, Marjeta (ed.). Japljev zbornik. Ljubljana: Založba ZRC. p. 9.
  4. ^ Blair, John Hamilton (1908). The Policy of the Emperor Joseph II in Regard to Religious Tolerance. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University. p. 52.
  5. ^ Barbo, Matjaž (2011). František Josef Benedikt Dusík: The Biography of an Eighteenth-Century Composer. Vienna: Hollitzer Verlag.