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  1. The Bishopric of Havelberg (German: Bistum Havelberg) was a Roman Catholic diocese founded by King Otto I of Germany in 946, from 968 a suffragan to the Archbishops of Magedeburg. A Prince-bishopric from 1151, Havelberg as a result of the Protestant Reformation was secularised and finally annexed by the margraves of Brandenburg in 1598.

  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › HavelbergHavelberg - Wikipedia

    The Bishopric of Havelberg was founded in 946, by Otto I, Holy Roman Emperor (then a prince), but the bishop tended to live in either Plattenburg or Wittstock, a few miles north of Havelberg. An early bishop was Anselm of Havelberg .

    • 26 m (85 ft)
    • Stendal
  3. 21 de ago. de 2020 · The Havelberger Dom (St Marien) is a large Romanesque-Gothic cathedral church with an impressive fort-like westwork, a triple-nave basilica, and a large monastery-like complex.

    • John, Bishop of Havelberg1
    • John, Bishop of Havelberg2
    • John, Bishop of Havelberg3
    • John, Bishop of Havelberg4
    • John, Bishop of Havelberg5
  4. 8 de oct. de 2020 · The interpretation by Rupert of Deutz, followed by Anselm of Havelberg and, especially, Joachim of Fiore interpreted Revelation in terms of broader conceptions of history.

  5. Anselm of Havelberg's extant work, slimmer in its corpus than Philip of Harvengt's, has received far richer scholarly attention in part because of Anselm's higher profile in twelfth-century affairs of church and state. The bishop-theologian Anselm was one of the original followers of Norbert, and

  6. The date 1162 is inferred from his reference to Bishop Omnibonus, whose activity as a bishop is first documented in 1162: Kehr, VII 225. The passage may be owed to a reviser: Southern, R. W., ‘Master Vacarius and the Beginning of an English Academic Tradition,’ Medieval Learning and Literature (edd.

  7. Anselm was born before 1099, consecrated by Norbert of Xanthen in 1129 as bishop of Havelberg (the town exists to this day in Germany, Sachsen-Anhalt, and bears the same name, not “Brandenberg”, as in Taft 2000, p. 457).