Pacandus

 Bartolommeo Pacca

 St. Pachomius

 George Michael Pachtler

 Pacificus

 Bl. Pacificus of Ceredano

 St. Pacificus of San Severino

 Lucas Pacioli

 Diocese of Paderborn

 Juan de Padilla

 Diocese of Padua

 University of Padua

 Paganism

 Mario Pagano

 Ven. Anthony Page

 Antoine Pagi

 Santes Pagnino

 Religious Painting

 Pakawá Indians

 Palæography

 Palæontology

 Juan de Palafox y Mendoza

 Ven. Thomas Palasor

 Rhenish Palatinate

 Palatini

 Prefecture Apostolic of Palawan

 Diocese of Palencia

 Paleopolis

 Gabriele Paleotti

 Archdiocese of Palermo

 University of Palermo

 Diocese of Palestrina

 Giovanni Pierluigi da Palestrina

 Frederick Apthorp Paley

 Pall

 Andrea Palladio

 St. Palladius

 Palladius

 Pietro Sforza Pallavicino

 Pallium

 Ven. Vincent Mary Pallotti

 Palma Vecchio

 William Palmer

 Domenico Palmieri

 Luigi Palmieri

 Palm in Christian Symbolism

 Palm Sunday

 Palmyra

 Francisco Palou

 Paltus

 Peter Paludanus

 Pamelius

 Diocese of Pamiers

 St. Pammachius

 St. Pamphilus of Cæsarea

 Diocese of Pamplona

 Republic and Diocese of Panama

 Pandects

 Pandulph

 Panemotichus

 Pange Lingua Gloriosi

 Francesco Panigarola

 Arnold Pannartz and Konrad Sweinheim

 Pano Indians

 Panopolis

 Panpsychism

 Pantænus

 St. Pantaleon

 Pantheism

 Onofrio Panvinio

 Gregorio Panzani

 Ven. Angelo Paoli

 Papacy

 Pápago Indians

 Papal Arbitration

 Papal Elections

 Paphnutius

 Paphos

 St. Papias

 Bernardus Papiensis

 Nicholas Papini

 Parables

 Parabolani

 Theophrastus Paracelsus

 Paraclete

 François Para du Phanjas

 Parætonium

 Paraguay

 Books of Paralipomenon

 Diocese of Parahyba

 Parallelism

 Psycho-Physical Parallelism

 Paralus

 Diocese of Paraná

 Parasceve

 Paray-le-Monial

 Ignace-Gaston Pardies

 Pardons of Brittany

 Ambroise Paré

 Francisco Pareja

 Parents

 Diocese of Parenzo-Pola

 Giuseppe Parini

 Paris

 University of Paris

 Alexis-Paulin Paris

 Gaston-Bruno-Paulin Paris

 Matthew Paris

 Parish

 Parium

 Abbey of the Park

 Anthony Parkinson

 Parlais

 Filippo Parlatore

 Diocese of Parma

 Antoine-Augustin Parmentier

 Il Parmigiano

 Parnassus

 Parochial Mass

 Parœcopolis

 Dominique Parrenin

 Parsis

 Partnership

 Paolo Paruta

 Blaise Pascal

 St. Pascal Baylon

 Pasch or Passover

 Pope Paschal I

 Pope Paschal II

 Paschal III

 Paschal Candle

 Paschal Tide

 St. Paschasius

 St. Paschasius Radbertus

 Carlo Passaglia

 Diocese of Passau

 Ven. Joseph Passerat

 Domenico Passignano

 Domenico Passionei

 Passionists

 Passion Music

 Commemoration of the Passion of Christ

 Passion Offices

 Devotion to the Passion of Jesus Christ

 Passion of Jesus Christ in the Four Gospels

 Passion Plays

 Passions

 Passion Sunday

 Passiontide

 Passos

 Louis Pasteur

 Diocese of Pasto

 Pastor

 Crusade of the Pastoureaux

 Patagonia

 Patara

 Paten

 Ven. William Patenson

 Mental Pathology

 Coventry Patmore

 Patmos

 Patras

 Patriarch

 Patriarch and Patriarchate

 Patrician Brothers

 St. Patrick

 Francis Xavier Patrizi

 Patrology

 Feast of the Patronage of Our Lady

 Patron and Patronage

 Patron Saints

 Diocese of Patti

 St. Paul

 Pope Paul I

 Pope Paul II

 Pope Paul III

 Pope Paul IV

 Pope Paul V

 St. Paula

 Johannes Pauli

 Paulicians

 St. Paulinus

 St. Paulinus, Bishop of Nola

 St. Paulinus II, Patriarch of Aquileia

 Paulinus a S. Bartholomaeo

 Paulinus of Pella

 Paulists

 Paul of Burgos

 Paul of Middelburg

 Paul of Samosata

 St. Paul of the Cross

 St. Paul the Hermit

 St. Paul the Simple

 Paulus Diaconus

 Paulus Venetus

 Diocese of Pavia

 Nicolas Pavillon

 Pax

 Pax in the Liturgy

 Mariano Payeras

 Peter Pázmány

 Peace Congresses

 War of the Peasants (1524-25)

 Peba Indians

 John Pecham

 Reginald Pecock

 Pectoral

 Pectorale

 Pednelissus

 Pedro de Cordova

 Pelagia

 Pope Pelagius I

 Pope Pelagius II

 Pelagius and Pelagianism

 Ambrose Pelargus

 Paul Pelisson-Fontanier

 Pella

 Pierre-Joseph Pelletier

 Silvio Pellico

 Guillaume Pellissier

 Diocese of Pelotas

 Théophile-Jules Pelouze

 Madeleine de La Peltrie

 Pelusium

 Diocese of Pembroke

 Francisco Peña

 Penal Laws

 Luis Ignatius Peñalver y Cardenas

 Penance

 Henry Pendleton

 Penelakut Indians

 Los Hermanos Penitentes

 Penitential Canons

 Penitential Orders

 Confraternities of Penitents

 Diocese of Penne and Atri

 Pennsylvania

 Penobscot Indians

 Ecclesiastical Pension

 Pentacomia

 Pentapolis

 Pentateuch

 Feast of Pentecost (of the Jews)

 Diocese of Peoria

 Peoria Indians

 Pepin the Short

 John Percy

 Peregrinus

 Benedict Pereira

 Juan Perez

 Ginés Pérez de Hita

 Christian and Religious Perfection

 Pergamus

 Perge

 Giovanni Battista Pergolesi

 Pericui Indians

 Diocese of Périgueux

 Periodi

 Periodical Literature

 Perjury

 Franz Michael Permaneder

 Joseph Maria Pernter

 Religious of Perpetual Adoration

 Religious of the Perpetual Adoration

 Sisters of the Perpetual Adoration

 Perpetual Adorers of the Blessed Sacrament

 Sisters of Our Lady of Perpetual Help

 Our Lady of Perpetual Succour

 St. Perpetuus

 Diocese of Perpignan

 Adolphe Perraud

 Charles Perrault

 Claude Perrault

 Henri Perreyve

 Giovanni Perrone

 Stephen Joseph Perry

 Persecution

 Coptic Persecutions

 Final Perseverance

 Persia

 Ignatius Persico

 Person

 Ecclesiastical Person

 Personality

 Robert Persons

 Diocese of Perth

 Publius Helvius Pertinax

 Peru

 Archdiocese of Perugia

 Perugino (Pietro Vannucci)

 Baldassare Peruzzi

 Diocese of Pesaro

 Pescennius Niger

 Tilmann Pesch

 Diocese of Pescia

 Pessimism

 Pessinus

 Pestalozzi and Pestalozzianism

 Denis Pétau

 St. Peter

 Epistles of St. Peter

 Sarah Peter

 Sts. Peter Baptist and Twenty-five Companions

 Peterborough Abbey

 Diocese of Peterborough

 Bl. Peter Canisius

 Peter Cantor

 Peter Cellensis

 St. Peter Chrysologus

 St. Peter Claver

 Peter Comestor

 St. Peter Damian

 Peter de Blois

 Peter de Honestis

 St. Peter de Regalado

 Peter de Vinea

 Bl. Peter Faber

 St. Peter Fourier

 Peter Fullo

 St. Peter Gonzalez

 Bl. Peter Igneus

 Peter Lombard (2)

 Bl. Pierre-Louis-Marie Chanel (1)

 Peter Mongus

 St. Peter Nolasco

 St. Peter of Alcántara

 St. Peter of Alexandria

 Peter of Aquila

 St. Peter of Arbues

 Peter of Auvergne

 Peter of Bergamo

 Peter of Poitiers

 St. Peter of Sebaste

 St. Peter of Verona

 Peterspence

 Gerlac Peterssen

 Peter the Hermit

 St. Peter Urseolus

 Petinessus

 Matthieu Petit-Didier

 Petitions to the Holy See

 Petra

 Francesco Petrarch

 Family of Petre

 Petrobrusians

 St. Petronilla

 St. Petronius

 Diocese of Petropolis

 Ottavio dei Petrucci

 Petrus Alfonsus

 Petrus Bernardinus

 Petrus Diaconus

 Petrus de Natalibus

 Petun Nation

 George von Peuerbach

 Conrad Peutinger

 William Peyto

 Pez

 Franz Pfanner

 Johannes Pfefferkorn

 Adolf Pfister

 Julius von Pflug

 Pforta

 Phacusa

 Pharao

 Pharbætus

 Pharisees

 Pharsalus

 Phaselis

 Phasga

 Phenomenalism

 Philadelphia

 Archdiocese of Philadelphia

 Philanthropinism

 St. Philastrius

 Philemon

 St. Philip the Apostle

 Volume 13

 Philip II (Augustus)

 Philip II

 Philip IV

 St. Philip Benizi

 St. Philip of Jesus

 Philip of the Blessed Trinity

 Philippi (1)

 Philippi (2)

 Epistle to the Philippians

 Philippine Islands

 Philippopolis (1)

 Philippopolis (2)

 St. Philip Romolo Neri

 Peter Philips

 Philip the Arabian

 Philistines

 Robert Phillip

 George Phillips

 Philo Judæus

 Philomelium

 St. Philomena

 Philosophy

 Philoxenus

 Phocæa

 Phœnicia

 Photinus

 Photius of Constantinople

 Phylacteries

 History of Physics

 Physiocrats

 Physiologus

 Diocese of Piacenza

 Giambattista Pianciani

 Giovanni da Pianô Carpine

 Piatto Cardinalizio

 Diocese of Piauhy

 Diocese of Piazza Armerina

 Giuseppe Piazzi

 Ven. John Pibush

 Jean Picard

 Alessandro Piccolomini

 Jacopo Piccolomini-Ammannati

 Pichler

 Vitus Pichler

 Ven. Thomas Pickering

 Bernardine a Piconio

 François Picquet

 Louis-Edouard-Désiré Pie

 Piedmont

 Peter Piel

 Pie Pelicane, Jesu, Domine

 Pierius

 Bl. Pierre de Castelnau

 Pierre de Maricourt

 Jean Pierron

 Philippe Pierson

 Pietism

 Albert (Pigghe) Pighius

 Ven. Giuseppe Maria Pignatelli

 Ven. William Pike

 Nuestra Señora Del Pilar

 Pontius Pilate

 Ven. Thomas Pilchard

 Pilgrimage of Grace

 Pilgrimages

 Piligrim

 Pillar of Cloud

 Pima Indians

 Pinara

 Diocese of Pinar del Rio

 Ippolito Pindemonte

 John de Pineda

 Diocese of Pinerolo

 Alexandre Guy Pingré

 Mattheus Pinna da Encarnaçao

 Fernão Mendes Pinto

 Pinturicchio

 Martín Alonso Pinzón

 Sebastiano del Piombo

 St. Pionius

 Pious Fund of the Californias

 Pious Society of Missions

 Giambattista Piranesi

 Ernricus Pirhing

 Pirkheimer

 Piro Indians

 Archdiocese of Pisa

 University of Pisa

 Council of Pisa

 Piscataway Indians

 Piscina

 Charles Constantine Pise

 Pisidia

 Synod of Pistoia

 Diocese of Pistoia and Prato

 Johann Pistorius

 Pierre Pithou

 Joseph Pitoni

 Jean-Baptiste-François Pitra

 John Pitts

 Diocese of Pittsburg

 Pityus

 Pope St. Pius I

 Pope Pius II

 Pope Pius III

 Pope Pius IV

 Pope St. Pius V

 Pope Pius VI

 Pope Pius VII

 Pope Pius VIII

 Pope Pius IX

 Pope Pius X

 Piusverein

 Francisco Pizarro

 Galla Placidia

 St. Placidus

 Plagues of Egypt

 Plain Chant

 Henry Beaufort Plantagenet

 Christophe Plantin

 Plants in the Bible

 Diocese of Plasencia

 Bartolomeo Platina

 Plato and Platonism

 Pierre-Guillaume-Frédéric Le Play

 Plegmund

 Plenarium

 Plenary Council

 Joseph-Octave Plessis

 Georgius Gemistus Plethon

 Diocese of Plock

 Charles Plowden

 Edmund Plowden

 Francis Plowden

 Robert Plowden

 Thomas Plowden

 Thomas Percy Plowden

 Charles Plumier

 Ven. Oliver Plunket

 Pluscarden Priory

 Diocese of Plymouth

 Plymouth Brethren

 Pneumatomachi

 Hebrew Poetry of the Old Testament

 Giovanni Francesco Poggio Bracciolini

 Diocese of Poggio Mirteto

 Pogla

 Diocese of Poitiers

 Poland

 John Bede Polding

 Reginald Pole

 Polemonium

 Giovanni Poleni

 Poles in the United States

 Diocese of Policastro

 Melchior de Polignac

 Lancelot Politi

 Politian

 Science of Political Economy

 Antonio and Piero Benci Pollajuolo

 Marco Polo

 Polybotus

 St. Polycarp

 Polycarpus

 Polyglot Bibles

 Polystylum

 Polytheism

 Pomaria

 Marquis de Pombal

 Pomerania

 Pompeiopolis

 Pietro Pomponazzi

 John Ponce

 Juan Ponce de León

 Joseph Anthony de la Rivière Poncet

 Archdiocese of Pondicherry

 Pontefract Priory

 Pope St. Pontian

 Pontifical Colleges

 Pontificale

 Pontificalia

 Pontifical Mass

 Abbey of Pontigny

 Pontius Carbonell

 Diocese of Pontremoli

 Pontus

 Pools in Scripture

 Diocese of Poona

 Care of Poor by the Church

 Little Sisters of the Poor

 Poor Brothers of St. Francis Seraphicus

 Poor Catholics

 Sisters of the Poor Child Jesus

 Poor Clares

 Poor Handmaids of Jesus Christ

 Poor Laws

 Sisters of the Poor of St. Francis

 Poor Servants of the Mother of God

 Archdiocese of Popayán

 Alexander Pope

 Pope

 Election of the Popes

 Chronological Lists of Popes

 The List of Popes

 St. Poppo

 Popular Devotions

 Theories of Population

 Giovanni Antonio Pordenone

 Odoric of Pordenone

 Ven. Thomas Pormort

 Porphyreon

 St. Porphyrius

 Serafino Porrecta

 Carlo Porta

 Giacomo della Porta

 Diocese of Portalegre

 Diocese of Port Augusta

 Archdiocese of Port-au-Prince

 Porter

 Francis Porter

 George Porter

 Portiuncula

 Diocese of Portland

 Diocese of Port Louis

 Archdiocese of Porto Alegre

 Diocese of Porto Alegre

 Diocese of Porto and Santa-Rufina

 Archdiocese of Port of Spain

 Porto Rico

 Diocese of Portoviejo

 Portraits of the Apostles

 Port-Royal

 Diocese of Portsmouth

 Portugal

 Portuguese East Africa

 Portuguese West Africa

 Diocese of Port Victoria

 Positivism

 Demoniacal Possession

 Antonius Possevinus

 St. Possidius

 Postcommunion

 Ven. Nicholas Postgate

 Postulant

 Postulation

 Potawatomi Indians

 Robert Joseph Pothier

 Jean-François-Albert du Pouget

 Thomas Pounde

 Nicolas Poussin

 Poverty

 Poverty and Pauperism

 Ven. Philip Powel

 William Poynter

 Andreas Pozzo

 Diocese of Pozzuoli

 Jean-Martin de Prades

 Jerome de Prado

 Praelatus Nullius

 Pragmatic Sanction

 Pragmatism

 Archdiocese of Prague

 University of Prague

 Praxeas

 Praxedes and Pudentiana

 George Pray

 Prayer

 Prayer-Books

 Feast of the Prayer of Christ

 Preacher Apostolic

 Order of Preachers

 Preadamites

 Prebend

 Precaria

 Precedence

 Precentor

 Canonical Precept

 Precious Blood

 Archconfraternity of the Most Precious Blood

 Congregation of the Most Precious Blood

 Congregations of the Precious Blood

 Count Humbert-Guillaume de Precipiano

 Preconization

 Predestinarianism

 Predestination

 Preface

 Prefect Apostolic

 Prelate

 Joseph Henri Marie de Prémare

 Premonstratensian Canons

 Abbey of Prémontré

 Presbyterianism

 Presbytery

 Prescription

 Presence of God

 Order of the Presentation

 Religious Congregations of the Presentation

 Right of Presentation

 Presentation Brothers

 Congregation of the Presentation of Mary

 Feast of the Presentation of the Blessed Virgin Mary

 Prester John

 Thomas Preston

 Thomas Scott Preston

 Presumption

 Presumption (in Canon Law)

 Pretorium

 Pride

 Priene

 Priest

 Assistant Priest

 High Priest

 Priesthood

 Confraternities of Priests

 Priests' Communion League

 Priests' Eucharistic League

 Primacy

 Primate

 Prime

 The Primer

 Primicerius

 Sts. Primus and Felician

 Diocese of Prince Albert

 Prior

 Prioress

 Priory

 St. Prisca

 Priscianus

 Priscillianism

 Prisons

 Ecclesiastical Prisons

 Privilege

 Ecclesiastical Privileges

 Faltonia Proba

 Probabilism

 Marcus Aurelius Probus

 Roman Processional

 Processions

 Sts. Processus and Martinian

 St. Proclus

 Proconnesus

 Procopius of Caesarea

 Adelaide Anne Procter

 Procurator

 Religious Profession

 Divine Promise (in Scripture)

 Promotor Fidei

 Promulgation

 Proof

 Sacred Congregation of Propaganda

 Society for the Propagation of the Faith

 Property

 Property Ecclesiastical

 Ecclesiastical Property in the United States

 Prophecy

 Prophecy, Prophet, and Prophetess

 Proprium

 Franz Isidor Proschko

 Proselyte

 Prose or Sequence

 Karl Proske

 Tiro Prosper of Aquitaine

 Protectorate of Missions

 Protectories

 Protestant Episcopal Church in the United States of America

 Protestantism

 Prothonotary Apostolic

 Protocol

 Protopope

 Sts. Protus and Hyacinth

 Father Prout

 Léon Abel Provancher

 Book of Proverbs

 Congregations of Providence

 Diocese of Providence

 Divine Providence

 Ecclesiastical Province

 Provincial

 Provincial Council

 Canonical Provision

 Statute of Provisors

 Provost

 Prudence

 Aurelius Clemens Prudentius

 Prudentius

 Prüm

 Prusias ad Hypium

 Prussia

 Diocese of Przemysl

 Diocese of Przemysl, Sambor, and Sanok

 Psalms

 Alphabetic Psalms

 Psalterium

 Nicholas Psaume

 Michael Psellus

 Psychology

 Psychotherapy

 Ptolemais

 Ptolemais (Saint-Jean d'Acre)

 Ptolemy the Gnostic

 Publican

 Public Honesty (Decency)

 Pueblo Indians

 Pierre Puget

 George Ellis Pugh

 Augustus Welby Northmore Pugin

 Victor-Alexandre Puiseux

 Casimir Pulaski

 Diocese of Pulati

 St. Pulcheria

 Luigi Pulci

 Robert Pullen

 Pulpit

 Capital Punishment

 Diocese of Puno

 John Baptist Purcell

 Purgatorial Societies

 Purgatory

 St. Patrick's Purgatory

 Purim

 Puritans

 Pusey and Puseyism

 Pustet

 Putative Marriage

 Erycius Puteanus

 Joseph Putzer

 Pierre Puvis de Chavannes

 Puyallup Indians

 Johann Ladislaus von Oberwart Pyrker

 Pyrrhonism

 Pythagoras and Pythagoreanism

 Pyx

Rhenish Palatinate


(Ger. Rheinpfalz).

A former German electorate. It derives its name from the title of a royal official in the old German Empire, the palsgrave (Pfalzgraf) or count palatine. In the Carlovingian period the count palatine was merely the representative of the king in the high court of justice. Otto the Great in 937 appointed a count palatine for Bavaria-and subsequently for other duchies also-who also had supervision of the crown lands situated in the duchy, as well as of the imperial revenues payable there, and had to see that the duke did not extend his powers at the king's expense. The palsgrave of Lorraine, who had his seat at Aachen, was later esteemed the foremost in rank. In 1155, after the death of the palsgrave Hermann of Stableck, Frederick Barbarossa transferred the countship to his half- brother Conrad (1155-95), who united the lands belonging to the office with his own possessions on the central Rhine, the inheritance of the Salic kings. He made his residence at Heidelberg, where he built a strong castle. Thus the palatinate of Lorraine advanced up the Rhine and became the palatinate "of the Rhine". Neither the lands of the palatinate, nor those which Conrad had inherited, formed a compact whole; but by further acquisitions which Conrad made, the foundation was laid for the principality to which the name Palatinate has clung. Conrad's daughter Agnes married Henry the Lion's son, the Guelph Henry the Long, who became palsgrave (1195-1211); in 1211 he resigned it to his son Henry the Younger, who d. childless (1214). The dignity passed to the Duke of Bavaria, Louis of Kelheim of the House of Wittelsbach; Louis's son, Otto the Illustrious, married Henry the Long's daughter, who also bore the name Agnes. In this way the Rhenish estates of the Hohenstaufen came to the House of Wittelsbach, in whose hands part of them remain to the present day.

Otto the Illustrious acquired in addition, one-half of the county of Katzenellenbogen; Louis II the Severe (1253-96) received from the last Hohenstaufen, Conradin, the latter's estates in the Nordgau, in the present Upper Palatinate (Oberpfalz, in Bavaria), as pledge. In the thirteenth century the dignity of palsgrave was raised form its original ministerial character to complete independence, and the count palatine, largely in consequence of the union with Bavaria, became one of the powerful territorial magnates, subsequently the foremost of the secular princes of the empire. The union with Bavaria was dissolved by Emperor Louis the Bavarian, who after 1319 governed the Palatinate also; in the family compact of Pavia, 1329, he divided the possessions of the Wittelsbachs so that he himself retained the old Bavarian lands, while he left to his nephews Radolf and Rupprecht the Rhenish Palatinate and the Upper Palatinate. This division existed until 1777. The electoral dignity, according to the compact, was to be exercised alternately by Bavaria and the Palatinate; but this provision was altered in the "Golden Bull" of Charles IV, to the effect that the electoral office was attached to the Palatinate alone, which on that account has since been called the Electorate of the Palatinate; in return the Palatinate had to relinquish the northern part of the Upper Palatinate to Charles. Of the nephews of Louis the Bavarian, Rudolf reigned until 1352, Rupprecht until 1390. Rupprecht was one of the foremost champions of the interests of the princes as opposed to the cities, and by his victory over the league of Rhenish cities at Alzei in 1388 again restored the princes' authority on the central Rhine. He founded the University of Heidelberg in 1386. His nephew Rupprecht II (1390-98) regained from King Wenzel part of the Upper Palatinate; the rest was won by Rupprecht III (1398-1410), who in 1400 was elected King of Germany.

By the "Golden Bull" the division of a territory, to which the electoral dignity was attached, was forbidden; this provision was evaded by selecting special estates for the establishment of younger sons. Several lines were thus formed in the Palatinate after the death of Rupprecht III; the old electoral line; the line of Stephen, which in 1459 split into Simmern and Zweibrücken; the line of Neumarkt, extinct in 1448; and the line of Mosbach, extinct in 1499, whereupon the lands belonging to these two lines reverted to the electoral house. In the electoral line Rupprecht III was succeeded by his son Louis III (1410-36), one of the leading personalities at the Council of Constance; the deposed John XXIII was held in custody by him for three years at the Castle of Eichelsheim; his men carried out the execution of John Hus. He laid the foundation of the famous Palatine Library. Louis IV (1437-49) was succeeded by his brother Frederick the Victorious (1449-75), who governed for his nephew Philip, but wore the electoral cap himself. His reign is almost wholly taken up with wars, in which he was nearly always victorious. He is entitled to special credit for his services to the University of Heidelberg. From his marriage with Klara Tött (or Dett) of Augsburg the family of the princes Löwenstein is descended. After him his nephew Philip the Sincere (1475-1508) reigned alone. The Renaissance was zealously fostered; Heidelberg Castle, in which Johann Dahlberg, Rudolf Agricola, Johannes Reuchlin, Konrad Celtes and others were hospitably received, became the rallying point of the champions of a reform in literature and science, while the university remained unaffected. After the death of George the Rich of Bavaria-Landshut, he claimed for his second son Rupprecht, who had married George's daughter, the lands of Lower Bavaria; this led to a conflict with Albrecht, Duke of Upper Bavaria, who found in his brother-in-law, Emperor Maximilian, a powerful helper. For the Palatinate little was gained by the war, which lasted until 1505; only the city of Neuburg on the Danube with its environs was ceded to the sons of Rupprecht, who had fallen in battle, as the "New Palatinate", while the rest was given to Upper Bavaria.

In the Electorate of the Palatinate Louis V the Peaceable (1508-44) succeeded, a man of conservative views, who personally kept aloof from, and regretted the Reformation, but did nothing to withstand it. He added a number of buildings, the last of the Gothic period, to Heidelberg Castle. His brother Frederick II (1544-46), who for a time belonged to the Smalkaldic League, was more ready to give ear to innovations, but in many respects still wavered. Otto Henry, a son of that Rupprecht who had laid claim to Lower Bavaria, succeeded to the electoral dignity; the "New Palatinate", which he now held, was given by him to his relatives of the line of Zweibrücken. Otto Henry (1556-59) enforced the Lutheran Reformation in his lands resolutely and indiscriminately, and aided the new humanistic movement to victory in the University of Heidelberg. He added to Heidelberg Castle the building named for him, the Ottheinrichsbau, the most brilliant creation of the Renaissance on German soil. The electoral dignity and the lands passed to Frederick III (1559-76) of the Palatinate-Simmern line, a family who zealously championed Protestantism. Frederick's son John Casimir fought in France for the Protestant cause; his younger brother Christopher in the Netherlands, where he fell, 1574, on the Mooker Heath; John Casimir's son in 1654, as Charles X, ascended the Swedish throne, which the house of Palatinate- Zweibrücken occupied until 1751.

From 1545 to 1685 the ruling family of the Palatinate changed its creed no less than nine times. Frederick III was a zealous Calvinist; he made the Palatinate Calvinistic, caused the drawing-up, in 1562, of the Heidelberg Catechism, and sheltered French Huguenots. His son Louis VI (1576-83) brought about a Lutheran reaction; John Casimir, regent from 1573-92 for Louis's son Frederick IV, restored Calvinism. Frederick IV (1592-1610) attained the leadership of German Protestantism; he was the founder of the Evangelical Union, 1608. Frederick V (1610-23), the husband of the British Princess Elizabeth (daughter of James I), was a man of boundless self- confidence and ambition, and when he took the crown of Bohemia, offered him by the unsurgents, the Thirty Years' War broke out. The battle at Weissen Berg, near Prague (1620), cost Frederick not only the "Winter Kingdom" but also his Electorate of the Palatinate, which together with the electoral dignity and the Upper Palatinate was transferred in 1623 to Maximilian of Bavaria. The entire burden of the war rested for decades upon the Palatinate; the famous library of Heidelberg was presented to the pope by Tilly, who had captured the city in 1622. At the Peace of Westphalia Frederick's son, Charles Frederick (1648-80), received back the Rhenish Palatinate undiminished, but had to give up the Upper Palatinate and be content with a newly-created electoral vote. In spite of his diminished resources, he raised the country materially and intellectually to a highly-flourishing condition. In contrast with his predecessors he permitted the three great creeds of Germany to exist side by side, and received colonists from all lands without questioning them as to their religion. Church and schools found in him a zealous patron: the University of Heidelberg, deserted since 1630, was again opened by him in 1652, and renowned scholars such as Pufendorf were appointed to the professorships. In the wars between Germany and France he remained loyal to the emperor; as a consequence his lands suffered severely from the devastation of the French soldiers in the Wars for Reunion. With his incompetent son, Charles Louis (1680-88), the Palatinate-Simmern line became extinct.

With Philip William (1685-90) the government passed to the Catholic line of Palatinate-Neuburg, which by marriage (1614) had come into possession of Jülich- Berg, and in 1624 into that of Ravensberg. The allodial lands of the family, however, were claimed by Louis XIV for his brother the Duke of Orléans, who was wedded to the sister of Charles Louis, Elizabeth Charlotte. When his claims were rejected, Louis in revenge undertook a number of sanguinary expeditions into the Palatinate, particularly in 1688-89, and transformed it into a veritable desert. Heidelberg, with its castle, Mannheim, Sinsheim, Bretten, Bruchsal, Durlach, Pforzheim, Baden, Rastatt, and others, as well as numerous villages were given to the flames. Peace was not restored until 1697, at Ryswick. The son of Philip William, the ostentatious John William (1690-1716), resided at Düsseldorf; during the War of the Spanish Succession, he, for a short time, again obtained for his family the Upper Palatinate. His brother Charles Philip (1716-42), in consequence of friction with the Protestants of Heidelberg, transferred his residence to Mannheim (1720), where he erected a magnificent palace in the French style.

With him the Palatinate-Neuberg line ended; historians averse to Catholicism have painted the religious policy of these three Catholic electors in the blackest colours. In reality, if they gave Catholicism the opportunity to expand without hindrance, and reintroduced the Catholic Divine service in many places, they did nothing more than Protestant princes have at all times done in favour of Protestantism in their dominions, and, in accordance with the principle then in force, Cuius regio, eius est religio, they were just as much justified as Protestant rulers. The occupation of the Palatinate by the French (1688-89) was also to the advantage of the Catholics, as the French gave them complete or joint possession of a number of churches, and the title to the property thus attained by the Catholics in many places was upheld by the Peace of Ryswick. As the non-Catholics considered these conditions and the introduction of simultaneous services in many churches a great hardship and made complaint to Brandenburg, the leading Protestant power, who threatened reprisals, complete religious liberty was proclaimed for the three chief creeds (Catholics, Lutherans, and Reformed), in the declaration of 1705; the joint use of the churches was replaced (1706) by the division of the churches into a Catholic and a non-Catholic part. From 1686 Jesuit professors were appointed at Heidelberg; after their suppression Lazarists took their places.

Charles Theodore (1742-99), of the Palatinate-Sulzbach line, succeeded; he promoted the arts and sciences at great expense, so that his reign was later regarded as the Golden Age in the Palatinate. In 1777 Charles Theodore inherited Bavaria; the Palatinate electorate thereupon became extinct. Mannheim was given up, and Munich became the seat of the court. In 1794 the French entered the Palatinate and took possession of Mannheim, which they were compelled to surrender to the imperial troops under General Wurmser in 1795, after a prolonged siege. The armistice of 1796 practically decided the cession to France of that portion of the Palatinate lying on the left bank of the Rhine, which was actually carried out by the Peace of Luneville in 1801. The successor of Charles Theodore, Max Joseph (1799-1803) of the Palatinate-Zweibrücken line, afterwards King of Bavaria, in August, 1801, formally renounced all claim to the left bank of the Rhine, for which he was to receive indemnity in the form of secularized church lands. The Palatinate on the right bank of the Rhine by the decision of the deputation of the estates, 1803, was taken from Bavaria and divided between Baden and Hesse, so that the greater part fell to Baden. After the yoke of Napoleon had been thrown off, the Palatinate on the left bank of the Rhine together with the territory of the former Bishopric of Speyer (so far as this lay to the left of the Rhine) with somewhat modified boundaries was restored to Bavaria, 1815, and at the present time forms the administrative District of Pfalz (Palatinate), which in 1905 had 885,833 inhabitants (391,200 Catholics, 470,694 Protestants, and 9606 Jews). The part of the former Electorate of the Palatinate situated on the right bank of the Rhine, however, in spite of the protest of Bavaria, was retained by Baden and Hesse and the Congress of Aachen recognized, 1818, the right of succession of the Baden- Hochberg line, descended from the second marriage of the Margrave of Baden, Charles Frederick, with a woman below him in rank, to that part which had been added to Baden, although Louis of Bavaria laid claim to these parts of Baden and maintained this claim until 1827. The name Palatinate has since then been confirmed to that administrative district of Bavaria, which in ecclesiastical affairs forms the Bishopric of Speyer. (See GERMANY, map; SPEYER.

MAYS,Pfälzische Bibliographie (Heidelberg, 1886); HÄBERLE,Pfälzische Bibliographie (3 vols., Munich, 1909-11); IDEM,Pfälzische Heimatkunde (1910); HÄUSSER,Geschichte der rhenischen Pfalz (2 vols., Heidelberg, 1844-45); PFAFF,Geschichte des Pfalzgrafenamtes (Halle, 1847); SCHMITZ,Geschichte der lothringischen Pfalzagrafen (Bonn, 1878); KOCH AND WILLE,Regesten der Pfalzgrafen am Rhein (Innsbruck, 1884); GÜMBEL,Die Geschichte der protestantischen Kirche der Pfalz (Kaiserslautern, 1885); GLASSCHRÖDER,Urkunden zur pfälzischen Kirchengeschichte im Mittelalter (Munich and Freising, 1903); ROTT,Friedrich II von der Pflaz und die Reformation (Heidelberg, 1904); LOSSEN,Staat und Kirche in der Pfalz im Ausgang des Mittelalters (Münster, 1907); BERINGER,Kurpfälzische Kunst und Kultur (Frieburg, 1907); Neues Archiv für Geschichte der Stadt Heidelberg und der Pfalz (Heidelberg, 18-); Zeitschrift für Geschichte des Oberrheins 9Karlsruhe, 1850-).

JOSEPH LINS