Gerhard (fl 946) was from 932 to 946 the 14th Bishop of Passau. [1] [2] [3]
Gerhard was perhaps Abbot of Metten, and was probably elevated to Bishop of Passau by Arnulf, Duke of Bavaria. He was regarded as a pious, virtuous, and erudite bishop, whom the annals of Reichersberg called saints.
He probably undertook a trip to Rome in 937. His report of ecclesiastical abuses in Germany led Pope Leo VII to send him back as papal legate, with full powers to restore discipline. [4]
The Diocese of Passau is a Roman Catholic diocese in Germany that is a suffragan of the Archdiocese of Munich and Freising. The Prince-Bishopric of Passau was an ecclesiastical principality that existed for centuries until it was secularized in 1803. The diocese covers an area of 5,442 km².
Vivilo was the first bishop of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Passau after the reorganization of the Bavarian Catholic church, appointed by Saint Boniface in 739. Vivilo is the only one of four new bishops mentioned in a letter by Pope Gregory III confirming the establishments of four dioceses in Bavaria—that of Passau, Regensburg, Salzburg, and Freising.
Gerhard Merkl was the Domkapellmeister at the St. Stephen's Cathedral in Passau from 2000 until 2016.
Sidonius was the third Bishop of Passau from about 754 to 763–764.
Wisurich of Passau (777) was the 5th Bishop of Passau from 770 to 777.
Reginhar was the 9th Bishop of Passau.
Hartwig was the tenth Bishop of Passau from 840 to 866.
Ermanrich or Ermenrich was a Benedictine monk and court chaplain, who became Bishop of Passau from 866 to 874. He supported East Francia's expansion to the east, and likewise the expansion of the eastern bishoprics, and opposed the missionary efforts of Cyril and Methodius, who he considered intruders. This brought him into conflict with the Papacy, which supported the brother missionaries.
Gumpold (fl.932) was from 915 to 932 the 15th bishop of Passau.
Adalbert was the 17th Bishop of Passau from 946 to 970.
Egilbert was the 21st Bishop of Passau from 1045 to 1065.
Berengar of Passau was the Bishop of Passau from 1013 to 1045.
Hermann von Eppenstein was a Passau councilor from 1085 to 1087.
Ulrich I of Passau, also called Udalrich, was a monastery founder and bishop of the diocese of Passau.
Diepold Count von Berg, also: Theobald, was the 11th Bishop of Passau from 1172 to 1190.
Albo(no) (year of birth unknown - after 1177 in Freising) was from 1165 to 1169 the 28th Bishop of Passau.
Rüdiger von Bergheim was Bishop of Chiemsee from 1216 to 1233 and Bishop of Passau from 1233 to 1250.
Wichard von Pohlheim was Bishop of Passau from 1280 to 1282.
Gottfried von Passau also Gottfried I was the 41st bishop of Passau from 1283 to 1285.
Otto von Lonsdorf was a 13th-century Bishop of Passau.