Samuel Maciejowski
Samuel Maciejowski (15 January 1499 – 26 October 1550) was a 16th-century Roman Catholic Bishop of Chełm, Płock and Kraków, in Poland.[1][2]
Early life
He was born 15 January 1499 and ordained a priest in 1530. He began his career in 1518 as a notary public of King Sigismund I the Old. In 1522, he went to study philosophy and rhetoric in Padua and then continued his studies in Bologna. After being ordained in 1530, became canon of Kraków.
Episcopal career
He was first made Bishop of Chełm, and was then Appointed Bishop of Płock, Poland on 22 August 1541 followed by being made Bishop of Kraków, on 19 Jun 1546. He was also Secretary of the Crown.[3]
As Bishop of Kraków, he was concerned with the level of education of the clergy, was a supporter of a soft approach with dissenters. In 1546, he ordered an inspection visit of the diocese, which in concept at least, was to limit the influence of the Reformation, but due to the mildness of his character was largely ineffectual.
He called a diocesan synod in 1547 at Wiślica but the resolution of the Synod has not been preserved.
He gathered around him scholars and poets such that the atmosphere of the cathedral was one of vigorous scientific and literary debate.
He died on 26 October 1550 and was interred in the burial chapel of Our Lady of the Snows in Wawel Cathedral near his nephew, Bernard Maciejowski also a Bishop of Kraków.
References
Religious titles | ||
---|---|---|
Preceded by Jakub Buczacki | Bishop of Płock 1541–1546 | Succeeded by Jan Bieliński |
- v
- t
- e
- Jan z Buska
- Janko z Czarnkowa
- Klemens Moskarzewski
- Zawisza Kurozwęcki
- Stanisław Kurozwęcki
- Mikołaj Trąba
- Dunin ze Skrzyńska
- Jan Szafraniec
- Stanisław Ciołek
- Władysław Oporowski
- Wincenty Kot
- Grzegorz Lubrański
- Tomasz Strzępiński
- Jan Lutek
- Andrzej Oporowski
- Wojciech Żychliński
- Zbigniew Oleśnicki
- Wincenty Przerębski
- Maciej Drzewicki
- Piotr Tomicki
- Krzysztof Szydłowiecki
- Samuel Maciejowski
- Jan Ocieski
- Jan Przerębski
- Filip Padniewski
- Franciszek Krasiński
- Piotr Myszkowski
- Stanisław Miński
- Piotr Dunin-Wolski
- Jan Zamoyski
- Jan Borukowski
- Jan Tarnowski
- Wojciech Baranowski
- Wawrzyniec Gembicki
- Feliks Kryski
- Henryk Firlej
- Andrzej Lipski
- Stanisław Łubieński
- Jakub Zadzik
- Tomasz Zamoyski
- Piotr Gembicki
- Jerzy Ossoliński
- Andrzej Leszczyński
- Wacław Leszczyński
- Piotr Tylicki
- Hieronim Radziejowski
- Stefan Koryciński
- Andrzej Trzebicki
- Bogusław Leszczyński
- Mikołaj Prażmowski
- Jan Gniński
- Jan Żniński
- Andrzej Olszowski
- Jan Leszczyński
- Jan Stefan Wydżga
- Jan Wielopolski
- Jan Małachowski
- Michał Stefan Radziejowski
- Karol Tarło
- Jan Szembek
- Jan Kazimierz de Alten Bokum
- Jan Lipski
- Jan Małachowski
- Andrzej Stanisław Młodziejowski
- Michał Wodzicki
- Maciej Garnysz
- Jan Jędrzej Borch
- Jacek Małachowski
- Hugo Kołłątaj
- Wojciech Skarszewski
This article about a Polish Catholic bishop or archbishop is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e