as Prince-Archbishop of Salzburg, incorporating elements of princely and ecclesiastical heraldry. Archbishop Eberhard II of Regensberg was made a
prince of the Empire in 1213, and created three new sees:
Chiemsee (1216),
Seckau (1218) and
Lavant (1225). In 1241, at the Council of
Regensburg he denounced
Pope Gregory IX as "that man of perdition, whom they call Antichrist, who in his extravagant boasting says, I am God, I cannot err." During the
German Interregnum, Salzburg suffered confusion.
Philip of Spanheim, heir to the Dukedom of Carinthia, refused to take priestly consecrations, and was replaced by
Ulrich,
Bishop of Seckau. King
Rudolph I of
Habsburg quarrelled with the archbishops through the manipulations of Abbot
Henry of Admont, and after his death the archbishops and the Habsburgs made peace in 1297. The people and archbishops of Salzburgs remained loyal to the Habsburgs in their struggles against the
Wittelsbachs. When the
Black Death reached Salzburg in 1347, the
Jews were accused of poisoning the wells and suffered severe persecution. In 1473, he summoned the first provincial diet in the history of the archbishopric, and eventually abdicated. It was only
Leonard of Keutschach (reigned 1495–1519) who reversed the situation. He had all the
burgomasters and town councillors (who were levying unfair taxes) arrested simultaneously and imprisoned in the castle. His last years were spent in bitter struggle against
Matthäus Lang of Wellenburg,
Bishop of Gurk, who succeeded him in 1519. Matthäus Lang was largely unnoticed in official circles, although his influence was felt throughout the archbishopric. He brought in
Saxon miners, which brought with them
Protestant books and teachings. He then attempted to keep the populace Catholic, and during the Latin War was besieged in the
Hohen-Salzburg, declared a "monster" by
Martin Luther, and two later uprisings by the peasants lead to suffering to the entire archdiocese. Later bishops were wiser in the ruling and spared Salzburg the religious wars and devastation seen elsewhere in Germany. Archbishop
Wolf Dietrich von Raitenau gave the Protestants the choice of converting to Catholicism or leaving Salzburg. The cathedral was rebuilt in such splendour that it was unrivalled by all others north of the
Alps. Archbishop
Paris of Lodron led Salzburg to peace and prosperity during the
Thirty Years' War in which the rest of Germany was thoroughly devastated. During the reign of
Leopold Anthony of Firmian, the remaining Protestants in Salzburg were expelled in 1731. He invited the
Jesuits to Salzburg and asked for help from the emperor, and finally ordered the Protestants to recant their beliefs or emigrate. Over 20,000
Salzburg Protestants were forced to leave their homes, most of whom accepted an offer of land by King
Frederick William I of Prussia. The last Prince-Archbishop,
Hieronymus von Colloredo, is probably best known for his patronage of
Mozart. His reforms of the church and education systems alienated him from the people. ==Secularisation==