Concordats with individual states of Germany

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Concordats between the Holy See and individual German states were concluded even prior to the unification of Germany in the 1870s:

  • Bavaria in 1817
  • Prussia in 1821
  • Würtemberg, Baden, Hesse, Nassau, free city of Frankfurt, Mainz, Saxony, Oldenburg, Waldeck, Bremen and Lübeck (multilateral) in 1821 and in 1827
  • Oldenburg in 1830
  • Hannover in 1834

In addition to the Reichskonkordat at the federal level, there are at present concordats between the Holy See and 13 German states (Länder). This is because the individual states of the German federation have competencies in legislation with respect to education, culture and, to some extent, finance. In 1929 Prussia and the Holy See signed the Prussian Concordat (German: Preußenkonkordat) still valid for formerly Prussian territory within some of its successor states. Baden signed its concordat in 1932. The Reich's Concordat, later affirmed as valid by West Germany in 1957, applied some features of Baden's concordat to Hesse, Württemberg and the Diocese of Meissen, which then comprised all of Saxony and parts of Thuringia.

German states with concordats are Baden-Württemberg (1932), Bavaria (1817–1924), Brandenburg (2003), Bremen (2003), Hamburg (2005), Lower Saxony (1965-1973-1989-1993), Mecklenburg-Vorpommern (1997), North Rhine-Westphalia (1929-1956-1984), Rhineland-Palatinate (1929-1969-1973), Saarland (1929-1975-1985), Saxony (1996), Saxony-Anhalt (1998), Schleswig-Holstein (2009) and Thuringia (1997). Three states, Berlin (1970), Hesse (1963–1974), and Rhineland-Palatinate (1975), have agreements with Catholic bishoprics.[1]

There have been three separate waves of concordats.[2] The last one was set off by the dissolution of East Germany, when its five German states that had exited before World War II were reconstituted, joined the Federal Republic of Germany, and entered agreements with the Holy See. Since then three of the northernmost German states, which havce a small Catholic minority, have also concluded concordats.

In recent years some of the educational provisions of the Bavarian concordat have aroused controversy. In 2008, the Catholic Church's veto of an academically well-regarded nominee for president of Germany's only Catholic University sparked protests.[3] This veto was permitted by Article 5 of the Bavarian concordat.[4] Another part of the same concordat, Article 3 on "concordat chairs", was unsuccessfully challenged in court in 2009.[5] This provision establishes Church-controlled professorships in theology, philosophy, pedagogy, and the social sciences at state universities.[6]

Notes

References

  1. List of current German Concordats (German)
  2. "État et religions en Europe", 2004, Prof. Francis Messner (English)
  3. Church control over professors through the Bavarian Concordat (English summary with links to German sources)
  4. ASC&kb_id=18381 Article 5 of the Bavarian concordat (English)
  5. German newspaper accounts of the verdict against the concordat challenge which was handed down on 4 May 2009 (English)
  6. Article 3 of the Bavarian concordat (English)