Diocese of Linköping

Diocese of Linköping
Linköpings stift

Arms of the diocese of Linköping
Location
Country Sweden
Deaneries 9 kontrakt[1]
Coordinates 58°24′40″N 15°37′02″E / 58.41111°N 15.61722°E / 58.41111; 15.61722Coordinates: 58°24′40″N 15°37′02″E / 58.41111°N 15.61722°E / 58.41111; 15.61722
Statistics
Parishes 56[1]
Congregations 109[1]
Information
Denomination Church of Sweden
Established 12th century[2]
Cathedral Linköping Cathedral
Current leadership
Bishop Martin Modéus[3]
Map
Website
svenskakyrkan.se/linkopingsstift

The Diocese of Linköping is a diocese within the Church of Sweden administering the Östergötland County, the north eastern part of Jönköping County and the northern part of Kalmar County. It comprises nine deaneries subdivided into 176 parishes with a total of 443,000 members. The dioecese's largest parish is Motala. The Diocese of Linköping has a rank directly below the archdiocese of the Church of Sweden. The current bishop is Martin Modéus.

The Diocese of Linköping was a Catholic Church Diocese up to the Lutheran reformation.

Lutheran diocese

Now belonging to the Church of Sweden, under its sole Archbishop (Uppsala), it comprises Östergötland County and parts of Jönköping and Kalmar County. It has 212 parishes with a total of 443 000 members. As of 2006 Martin Modéus is bishop.

Former Roman Catholic diocese

It originally included Småland, Östergötland, the Islands of Gotland and Öland. The district of Värend in Småland was taken from Linköping and formed into the Diocese of Växjö about 1160. From 990 to 1100 the Diocese of Skara embraced the whole country of the Goths (Gauthiod); it was then divided between those of Skara and Linköping.[4] The diocese was a suffragan of the Archdiocese of Bremen, and became a suffragan of the Diocese of Lund, when the latter was elevated to an archdiocese in 1104.

The first three bishops of Linköping were Herbert, Richard and Gisle (c. 1138-48). Then came Stenar, who apparently resigned in 1160 and subsequently became Bishop of Vexiö. Notable bishops after him were Kol (c. 1160-96), who died on a pilgrimage in Jerusalem and Bengt Magnusson who was killed at the Battle of Lihula in Estonia on 8 August 1220, when fighting against the heathen; and Benedict (1220–37), the first of a long line of pious and munificent prelates, who built and endowed the fine cathedral, which had been begun in 1150 but was still not finished at the reformation. Among these was Blessed Nicholas Hermansson (1374–91); educated at the University of Orléans, he had been tutor to Charles and Birger, the sons of St. Bridget, whose body he received when it was brought to Vadstena by her daughter, St. Catherine. He composed a beautiful Office in honour of St. Bridget, which included the hymn "Rosa rorans bonitatem".

The last Catholic bishop of Linköping was Hans Brask (born 1464; bishop, 1513–27; died 30 July 1539), the valiant champion of the Old Learning, who was compelled to leave his diocese in 1527 owing to the adoption of Lutheranism as the new Swedish state religion at the Diet of Västerås.

The cathedral of Linköping, the abbey church of Vadstena and the numerous interesting churches on the Island of Gotland bear witness to a splendid Catholic past.

Council of Skenninge

Of the numerous provincial and diocesan synods held in the Diocese of Linköping, the Council of Skenninge (1248) was the most important. The papal legate, Cardinal William of Sabina, presided and the celibacy of the clergy was strongly enforced. The following religious institutions were set up in the diocese between the twelfth and the sixteenth centuries: the cathedral chapter, which consisted at the time of the Reformation of a dean, an archdeacon, a subdean, nine canons and fifteen other prebendaries; the Cistercians had three houses for men, the abbeys of Alvastra, the mother-house of the Cistercian Order in Sweden, in Östergötland and Nydala in Småland, both founded in 1143, and Gutvalla (Roma) in Gotland; also four nunneries, Vreta Abbey (1160), Askaby, Byarum, dissolved about 1250 and the nuns transferred to Sko (in Upland) and Solberga Abbey (Gotland); the Brigittines, who had the great Abbey of Vadstena; the Dominicans, who possessed priories at Skenninge (1220?), Visby (1240) and Kalmar, as well as nunneries at Skenninge (1260) and Kalmar (1286). There were hospitals at Linköping, Visby (2), Söderköping (2) Skenninge (2), Kalmar (2), Norrabygd (Uknabäck) and on the Island of Öland. Most of these institutions were destroyed at the Reformation.

See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 "Församling - pastorat - kontrakt" (in Swedish). Church of Sweden. Retrieved 26 August 2011.
  2. "Linköpings stift". Nationalencyklopedin (in Swedish). Retrieved 26 August 2011. (subscription required)
  3. "Biskop Martin Modéus" (in Swedish). Church of Sweden. Retrieved 26 August 2011.
  4.  "Ancient See of Linköping". Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company. 1913.

External links

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