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Dutch Mission

The Holland Mission or Dutch Mission was the common name of a Catholic Church missionary district in the Low Countries from 1592 to 1853, during and after the Protestant Reformation in the Netherlands.

History
Pre-reformation diocese and archdiocese of Utrecht According to the Catholic Encyclopedia, the founding of the diocese of Utrecht dates back to Francia, when St. Ecgberht of Ripon sent St. Willibrord and eleven companions on a mission to pagan Frisia, at the request of Pepin of Herstal. The Diocese of Utrecht () was erected by Pope Sergius I in 695. In 695 Sergius consecrated Willibrord in Rome as Bishop of the Frisians. John Mason Neale explained, in History of the so-called Jansenist church of Holland, that bishops "became warriors rather than prelates; the duties of their pastoral office were frequently exercised by suffragans, while they themselves headed armies against the Dukes of Guelders or the Counts of Holland." Adalbold II of Utrecht "must be regarded as the principal founder of the territorial possessions of the diocese," according to Albert Hauck, in New Schaff–Herzog Encyclopedia of Religious Knowledge, especially by the acquisition in 1024 and 1026 of the counties of Drenthe and Teisterbant; but, the name "Bishopric of Utrecht" is not used in the article. '''' was Pope Leo X's 1517 prohibition to the Archbishop-Elector of Cologne, Hermann of Wied, as '''', to summon, to a court of first instance in Cologne, Philip of Burgundy, his treasurer, and his ecclesiastical and secular subjects. Leo X only confirmed a right of the Church, explained Neale; but Leo X's confirmation "was providential" in respect to the future schism. Lordship of Utrecht The diocese was elevated to an archdiocese in 1559. The hanging of the nineteen Martyrs of Gorkum in Brielle in 1572 is an example of the persecution which Catholics suffered. Apostolic Vicariate of Batavia The Holland Mission started when the apostolic vicariate was erected by Pope Clement VIII in 1592. "For two centuries after the [1648] Peace of Westphalia much of Holland was under apostolic vicars as mission territory, as England was in the same period; although some areas had archpriests dependent on the nuncios in Cologne and Brussels." In the early 18th century there was a grave internal conflict around the apostolic vicars Johannes van Neercassel and Petrus Codde, who were accused of Jansenism. This resulted in the founding of the Old Catholic Church of Utrecht in 1723, a schism of several thousand leading Dutch Catholics breaking with the Holy See. In 1725, in an attempt to stimulate the schismatic church and weaken the Catholic presence in the Netherlands, the Calvinist States General banned the apostolic vicars from the United Republic. Mission sui iuris of Batavia The vicariate was reduced to a mission sui iuris by Pope Benedict XIII in 1727.it was ruled by the Apostolic Nuncios in Bruxelles until 1794, and by the Apostolic Inter-Nuncios in Netherlands between 1829 and 1853. The feudal Lordship of Utrecht was disestablished when the Batavian Republic was created in 1795. There was an official freedom of religion. Churches did not have to be hidden anymore, new seminaries for priests were founded, and several monasteries were reinstated, especially after the Concordat with King William I of Netherlands in 1827. The Holland Mission ended when the mission sui iuris was suppressed and the modern ecclesiastical province was erected in 1853. Modern Dutch ecclesiastical province of Utrecht The modern Metropolitan Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Utrecht was erected by Pope Pius IX in 1853 from the territory of the mission during a restructuring which erected its ecclesiastical province, the sole one for the Kingdom of the Netherlands. His 1853 papal letter '''' marked the reestablishment of the episcopal hierarchy in the Netherlands. The city of Utrecht was raised, once more, to a Roman Catholic archdiocese and received the four suffragan dioceses of Haarlem, 's-Hertogenbosch, Breda and Roermond. Joannes Zwijsen was appointed the first modern archbishop and was also apostolic administrator of the Diocese of 's-Hertogenbosch. In 1858; the cathedral chapters of the dioceses were organized and in 1864 the first provincial synod was held. == List of Apostolic Vicars ==
List of Apostolic Vicars
Apostolic Vicars in Utrecht Sasbout Vosmeer (1584–1614) • Philippus Rovenius (1614–1651) • Jacobus de la Torre (1652–1660) • Boudewijn Catz (1661–1663) • Johannes van Neercassel (1663–1686) • Petrus Codde (1688–1702/1704) • Theodorus de Kock (1702–1704) • Gerhard Potcamp (1705) • Adam Daemen (1707–1717) • Johannes van Bijlevelt (1717–1725) Apostolic Vicars administrating from BrusselsJoseph Spinelli (1725–1731) • Vincentius Montalto (1731–1732) • Silvester Valenti Gonzaga (1732–1736) • Franciscus Goddard (1736–1737) • Lucas Melchior Tempi (1737–1743) • Petrus Paulus Testa (1744) • Ignatius Crivelli (1744–1755) • Carolus Molinari (1755–1763) • Batholomeus Soffredini (1763) • Thomas Maria Ghilini (1763–1775) • Joannes Antonius Maggiora (1775–1776) • Ignatius Busca (1776–1785) • Michael Causati (1785–1786) • Antonius Felix Zondadari (1786–1790) • Caesar di Brancadoro (1792–1794) Head of the MissionLudovicus Ciamberlani (1794–1828) Apostolic Inter-Nuncios in the NetherlandsFranciscus Cappacini (1829–1831) • Antonius Antonucci (1831–1841) • Innocentius Ferrieri (1841–1847) • Joannes Zwijsen (1847–1848) • Carolus Belgrado (1848–1853) == See also ==
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