Zeitschrift für Ostmitteleuropa-Forschung (Sep 2023)

Die Domkapitel von Kurland und Riga. Ein Beitrag zum Inkorporationsbegriff im Deutschen Orden

  • Johannes Götz

DOI
https://doi.org/10.25627/202372311391
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 72, no. 3
pp. 325 – 376

Abstract

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Research on the cathedral chapters of the ecclesiastical province of Riga shows that the Teu-tonic Order played a significant role in how they operated, since five of the eight cathedral chapters were regulated according to its rule. These five are referred to in the literature as cathedral chapters that were incorporated into the Teutonic Order. This goes back to the source term “incorporation,” which, however, is misleading, because in each case, that was not an incorporation in the sense of canon law. Research has therefore attempted to explain how the concept of incorporation is to be understood and how the relationship between the cathedral chapters and the leadership of the Order is to be evaluated. So far, this has been presented primarily through the examples of the Prussian Teutonic Order cathedral chapters of Samland, Pomesania and Kulm. This article focuses on the Livonian Teutonic Order ca-thedral chapters of Riga and Courland in order to introduce them into the research discussion on the concept of incorporation. Evaluating the “incorporation” of the cathedral chapters of Courland and Riga, in¬volves, firstly, tracing the respective legal frameworks and, secondly, contextualizing the most im-portant rights of the Livonian master of the Teutonic Order—canonical visitation and par¬tic-ipation in the election of canons. It can be observed that canonical visitation in fact played no role, but only the rights of the master to participate in the election of canons were of im-portance. The cathedral chapters of Courland and Riga, however, are characterized by the fact that there were hardly any institutional connections with the Livonian branch of the Teutonic Order and a duty of obedience of the canons towards the superiors of the Order did not, in fact, exist. Consequently, in the future, the term “incorporation” should be avoided in the literature, since it on the one hand can only be found in documents influenced by the Teutonic Order and thus the term stands for the self-perception of the Order; on the other hand it distorts the view of these cathedral chapters in general.

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