Livonian Canons and Challenge of the Reformation
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St Petersburg State University
Abstract
The article examines five Livonian cathedral chapters — Riga, Dorpat, Osilia, Curonia and
Reval — during the Reformation era (1522–1566): from the beginning of Livonian Reformation
to the dissolution of the Chapter of Riga. The main aim is to identify the most important
changes in the chapters, and to examine reactions to the Reformation and to the religious alterations
amongst the canons. Although there are obvious gaps in the statistical data, it is possible
to present an overall picture of the situation. If one compares the beginning and the end
of the period, the numbers of the canons seem to have remained almost the same. The number
of local canons that came from burgher families drops which could be connected with the success
of the Reformation in Livonian towns, while the increase in the number of canons from
Germany might be connected to the intensifying relations of Livonia with the Holy Roman
Empire. The falling number of cumulations (i. e., cases when a canon held multiple chapter
seats simultaneously) might indicate pursuit to enhance internal discipline in the chapters and
attempt to face the challenge of the Reformation. The data about religious affiliations shows
that the chapter of Riga was dominantly Catholic at the end of the 1540s, but mainly Protestant
by the end of the 1550s. Generally, it appears that there were no serious confessional
conflicts in Livonian chapters, and as there is no information about them elsewhere, it can be
concluded that confessional conflicts reached Livonia only during and after the Livonian War.
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Maasing M. Livonian Canons and Challenge of the Reformation. Vestnik of Saint Petersburg University. History, 2019, vol. 64, iss. 3, рp. 996–1013.