Francesco Zabarella

 Zabulon

 Diocese of Zacatecas

 Francesco Antonio Zaccaria

 Ludovico Zacconi

 Zacharias

 Zacharias Chrysopolitanus

 Pope St. Zachary

 János Zádori

 Zahle and Forzol

 Zakho

 Jacob Anton Zallinger zum Thurn

 Gregor Zallwein

 José Maria de Zalvidea

 Zama

 Prefecture Apostolic of the Zambesi Mission

 Diocese of Zamboanga

 Giuseppe Zamboni

 Diocese of Zamora (1)

 Diocese of Zamora (2)

 Vicariate Apostolic of Zamora

 Roman Sebastian Zängerle

 Diocese of Zante

 Francesco Zantedeschi

 Zanzibar

 Zapoteca Indians

 Archdiocese of Zara

 Zarai

 Gioseffe Zarlino

 Ulric Zasius

 Zeal

 Nicholas Tacitus Zegers

 Zela

 Karl Zell

 Ulrich Zell

 Diocese of Zengg-Modrus

 St. Zeno

 St. Zenobius

 Zenonopolis

 Zeno of Elea

 Pope St. Zephyrinus

 Zephyrium

 Zeugma

 Johann Kaspar Zeuss

 Magnoald Ziegelbauer

 Gregorius Thomas Ziegler

 Cornelius van Zierikzee

 Tommaso Maria Zigliara

 Patrick Benedict Zimmer

 Niccolò Antonio Zingarelli

 Pius Zingerle

 Zionists

 Zionites

 Diocese of Zips

 Zircz

 St. Zita

 St. Zita's Home for Friendless Women

 Zoara

 Jörgen Zoega

 Stanislaus Zolkiewski

 John Zonaras

 Zoque Indians

 Pope St. Zosimus

 Zosimus

 Zucchetto

 Diocese of Zulia

 Zululand

 Juan de Zumárraga

 Zuñi Indians

 Francisco Zurbaran

 Zurich

 Giacinto Placido Zurla

 Cistercian Abbey of Zwettl

 Ulrich Zwingli

 Ernst Friedrich Zwirner

Karl Zell


Statesman, philologist, and defender of the rights of the Church, b. at Mannheim, 8 April, 1793; d. at Freiburg, 24 january, 1873. He attended the high-school of his native town, and studied philology at the Universities of Heidelberg, Gottingen, and Breslau (1810-14). In 1814 he became professor at the lyceum at Rastatt, in 1821 professor of classical philology at the University of Freiburg, where he soon attained prominence by his work as teacher and author. As representative of the university in the Upper Chamber of the Diet of Baden during the years 1831-35, he advocated a thorough reform of the high-school system of Baden and the establishment of a special board for the supervision and encouragement of the higher studies. Zell undertook the execution and completion of the new system, having been appointed ministerial councillor and member of the new council of higher studies. In 1848 he returned to academic work as professor of archaeology at the University of Heidelberg, in which capacity he developed a large and many-sided activity. He was elected (1848) a member of the Lower Chamber of the Diet of Baden, in which he was a deputy until 1855. In the severe struggles for its rights which the Church had at that time in Baden, then ruled by the Liberals, Zell courageously and unweariedly defended it by speech and writing, a championship in which he stood almost alone. The fame he won far beyond the boundaries of Baden led to his election as president of the congresses for Catholic Germany held at Munster in 1852 and at Vienna in 1853. During the Revolution of 1848-49 his loyalty to the grand-duke never wavered, just as his loyalty to the Church never changed. He refused to recognize the provisional revolutionary government which ruled Baden after the flight of the grand-dike or to take the oath to it. In 1855 Zell retired from the service of the State, and in 1857 settled at Freiburg. In the ecclesiastico-political battles in which Archbishop Hermann Bikari became involved with the Government of Baden for its active adherence to the Kulturkampf policy, Zell was the archbishop's constant adviser and active assistant. As a speaker at assemblies, in pamphlets and articles for periodicals and newspapers, like the "Freiburger Kirchenblatt" and the "Historisch-Politische Blatter", he constantly defended the rights of the Church, Christian schools, religious orders, and refuted the calumnies circulated against the Church. A permanent memorial of his labours for the head of the Church is the St. Michaelsverein (St. Michael's Association) for the Archdiocese of Freiburg, which he founded, in order to organize the gifts of the faithful for the Holy Father (Peterspence); the society still flourishes in the archdiocese. As an author he wrote on a great variety of subjects, devoting himself especially to Aristotle, Calderon, Shakespeare, and the history of Baden. Works still valuable are: "Fereinschriften" (3 vols., Freiburg, 1826-33; new series, 1857); "Treatise on St. Lioba" (Freiburg, 1860); and historical articles for the "Freiburger Diözesanarchiv".

WEECH, Badische Biographien, 534-37, contains a list of his most important writings; HANSEN, Lebensbilder deutscher Katholiken, V (Paderborn, 1910)

JOSEPH LINS