Sebastian von Rostock
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Sebastian von Rostock (24 August 1607 – 9 June 1671), was a German Catholic Bishop of Breslau.
He was born at Grottkau, Silesia, and studied classics at Neisse and from 1627 to 1633, philosophy and theology at Olmütz. After his ordination to the priesthood in 1633 he was assigned to pastoral duty at Neisse. When the Swedes captured the city in 1642, Rostock was taken prisoner and deported to Stettin. After his release he was ennobled by the Emperor, but remained pastor of Neisse until his transfer in 1649 to the cathedral of Breslau, where he spent the rest of his life.
Henceforth he played a prominent part in the administration of the diocese, and in 1653 was appointed vicar-general. It was largely through his efforts that the right of reformation (jus reformandi), granted the emperor by the Peace of Westphalia, was effectively exercised in the territory of Breslau. In all 656 Catholic churches which had been seized by the Protestants were restored to their former owners.
Considerable difficulty was experienced in providing suitable priests for these numerous churches. Rostock consecrated his life to the task, in spite of the the almost uninterrupted absence from their diocese of the three bishops under whom he served. In 1664 he was himself elected bishop, and shortly after the civil administration of the district was also placed in his hands. He continued in work of Catholic reorganization, endeavoured to suppress the power of the Protestants over affairs of the Catholic Church and to neutralize the anti-Catholic influence of Protestant teachers.
[edit] References
- Jungnitz, Sebastian von Rostock (Breslau, 1891)
[edit] External link
- "Sebastian von Rostock". Catholic Encyclopedia. (1913). New York: Robert Appleton Company.
- This article incorporates text from the entry Sebastian von Rostock in the public-domain Catholic Encyclopedia of 1913.

