Michael Helding

German Roman Catholic bishop, scholar, writer and humanist


title: "Michael Helding" type: doc version: 1 created: 2026-02-28 author: "Wikipedia contributors" status: active scope: public tags: ["roman-catholic-bishops-of-merseburg", "1506-births", "1561-deaths", "people-from-biberach-(district)"] description: "German Roman Catholic bishop, scholar, writer and humanist" topic_path: "people/1500s" source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Michael_Helding" license: "CC BY-SA 4.0" wikipedia_page_id: 0 wikipedia_revision_id: 0

::summary German Roman Catholic bishop, scholar, writer and humanist ::

::data[format=table title="Infobox Christian leader"]

FieldValue
typeBishop
honorific-prefixThe Most Reverend
titleAuxiliary Bishop of Mainz
Titular Bishop of Sidon
imageMichael Helding.jpg
captionMichael Helding
churchRoman Catholic
dioceseDiocese of Merseburg
term1549–1561
successor
ordination1533
consecration4 August 1538
consecrated_byAlbert of Brandenburg
rank
birth_date1506
birth_placeLangenenslingen, Germany
death_date30 Sep 1561
death_placeMerseburg, Germany
previous_postAuxiliary Bishop of Mainz (1538–1549)
nationalityGerman
::

| type = Bishop | honorific-prefix = The Most Reverend | title = Auxiliary Bishop of Mainz Titular Bishop of Sidon | image = Michael Helding.jpg | alt = | caption = Michael Helding | church = Roman Catholic | archdiocese = | diocese = Diocese of Merseburg | see = | term = 1549–1561 | predecessor = | successor = | ordination = 1533 | ordained_by = | consecration = 4 August 1538 | consecrated_by = Albert of Brandenburg | cardinal = | rank = | birth_date = 1506 | birth_place = Langenenslingen, Germany | death_date = 30 Sep 1561 | death_place = Merseburg, Germany | previous_post = Auxiliary Bishop of Mainz (1538–1549) | nationality = German

Michael Helding (1506–30 September 1561) was a Roman Catholic bishop, scholar, writer and humanist. He is also known by his pen-name of Sidonius.

Life

Helding was born in Langenenslingen bei Riedlingen/Sigmaringen, a miller's son. In autumn 1525 he matriculated at the University of Tübingen. At Pentecost in 1527 he graduated BA and at Christmas 1528 as MA. He became a lecturer in Mainz, where he became rector of the Domschule (cathedral school) in 1531. There he began his lifelong close contact with humanism. After being ordained as a priest, he worked under Cardinal Albrecht of Brandenburg at Mainz Cathedral from 1533 onwards.

On 18 October 1537 he was selected to become auxiliary bishop of Mainz and was ordained to that role on 4 August the following year. He was also appointed titular bishop of Sidon.

At the 'armoured' Diet of Augsburg of 1547-48 he became the co-author of the Augsburg Interim, drawing harsh polemics from Matthias Flacius and other Protestants. In December 1550 he became the successor to the Protestant George III, Prince of Anhalt-Dessau as the last Catholic Bishop of Merseburg. He was present at the Council of Augsburg in 1555 and in the autumn of 1557 at the Colloquy of Worms, where his questions caused internal conflict between Lutheran theologians. In 1561, less than a year before Helding's death, Ferdinand I appointed him head of the Imperial Council in Vienna. He died in Vienna, aged about 55.

Helding is considered one of the most important proponents of Catholic Reform of his time, who tried to use his speeches and writings to maintain Christian unity and to contribute actively towards what he saw as a necessary reform of the Roman Catholic church. He remained true to Catholicism, but was still friendly to reform and tolerant towards the Protestant denominations and other faiths.

Bibliography

References

  1. [http://www.catholic-hierarchy.org/bishop/bheld.html "Bishop Michael Helding"] ''[[Catholic-Hierarchy.org]]''. David M. Cheney. Retrieved August 5, 2016
  2. Setton, Kenneth M.. (1984). "The Papacy and the Levant (1204–1571)". American Philosophical Society.

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