Peder Winstrup
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Peder (Pedersen) Winstrup (30 April 1605 - 28 December 1679) was Bishop of Lund in Scania during a period spanning both Danish and Swedish sovereignty of the region.
Winstrup was born in Copenhagen and was a son of Peder Jensen Winstrup, Bishop of Sjaelland and professor of Theology at the University of Copenhagen. After his father's death in 1614, his mother married his successor as bishop. Peder Winstrup the younger studied at the universities of Rostock, Wittenberg, Leipzig and Jena in Germany and graduated from the University of Copenhagen in 1633. In 1635 he was appointed royal chaplain in the household of King Christian IV. He was awarded a doctorate in Theology in 1636 and made bishop of Lund in 1638.
After Scania and the other provinces included in his diocese had been ceded to Sweden through the Treaty of Roskilde in 1658, Winstrup's loyalty shifted to his new sovereign, Charles X Gustav of Sweden, and he was ennobled under the name Himmelstjerna, a name he never actually used. In 1658, he suggested that a new university should be founded in Lund, but received little response from the King. When the Swedish authorities moved to found a university a few years later, at least some of the initiative lay with a subordinate priest in the diocese, Bernhardus Oelreich, and Winstrup turned to oppose the idea. After the University of Lund was established in 1668, Oelreich was appointed the prokansler ("pro-chancellor"), despite the statutes giving this position to the Bishop. Winstrup was nevertheless appointed to this position in 1671. Despite rumours accusing him for lack of loyalty to the Swedish crown, he remained bishop until his death in 1679.
[edit] Bibliography
- H. F. Rørdam, "Vinstrup, Peder Pedersen, 1605-79, Biskop", Dansk biografisk leksikon, XIX. Bind. Vind - Oetken, p 53-56