Jump to content

Arnold II of Horne

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Arnold II of Horne
Prince-Bishop of Liège
ChurchCatholic Church
DioceseLiège
In office1378–1389
Previous post(s)Bishop of Utrecht
Personal details
Died8 March 1389

Arnold II of Horne (died 8 March 1389) served as Prince and Bishop of Liège from 1378 until his death in 1389.[1] He had previously served as Bishop of Utrecht from 1371 to 1378.[2] Arnold was the son of Willem IV of Horne and Elisabeth of Cleves.

Biography

[edit]

After the death of bishop Jan van Virneburg in 1371, the cathedral chapter nominated its provost Zweder Uterlo as candidate for the bishopric, but the rest of the chapters supported the papal candidate Arnold van Horne, who as a result become bishop. Arnold seems to have been a forceful bishop, though he endangered the financial state of the bishopric. He involved himself in the Guelders War of Succession in 1371–1372, which almost led to his capture, and from 1373 to 1375 he waged war against the County of Holland over the advantageously located trading town of Vreeswijk. These actions had little results however, while they cost a lot of money. While the western border of the Sticht was re-enforced and the Hollandic advance was halted, Holland still held the mouth of the rivers Vecht and Lek, which kept Utrecht isolated.

Bishop Arnold was forced to grant participation to the Utrecht burghers in the administration of the land, in the Landbrief (landletter) of 1375, after which they accepted new taxes in order to straighten out the financial status of the bishopric. This Landbrief is an important document that is considered the first constitution of the Nedersticht.

Now that the wars had been halted, an old party struggle in the city erupted again, with the Gunterlingen on one side and the Lichtenbergers on the other side. Bishop Arnold managed to keep the parties separate, but he was moved to the Bishopric of Liège in 1378 by Pope Urban VI. However, the chapter at Liege had chosen someone else for the bishopric, and this candidate was supported by Antipope Clement VII. Only after a year of struggle was Arnold able to take his seat at Liege.

Arnold of Horne was a learned man who was a good organiser, and able to inspire people. He was also adept at the Vielle.

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Blok, Petrus Johannes; Molhuysen, Philipp Christiaan, eds. (1937). "[Hoorn, Arnold van]". Nieuw Nederlandsch Biografisch Woordenboek (in Dutch). Vol. 10. Retrieved 19 February 2024.
  2. ^ Alberdingk, Thijm (1875). "Arnold II. von Hoorn". Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie (in German). Vol. 1 (Online ed.). pp. 581–582.
Arnold of Horne
 Died: 8 March 1389
Catholic Church titles
Regnal titles
Preceded by Bishop of Utrecht
as Arnold II

1371–1378
Succeeded by
Preceded by Prince-Bishop of Liège
1378–1389
Succeeded by