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Księża diecezjalni z Galicji i Śląska Cieszyńskiego - doktorzy teologii Uniwersytetu Wiedeńskiego 1809-1918

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dc.contributor.author Piech, Stanisław
dc.date.accessioned 2023-07-14T08:23:09Z
dc.date.available 2023-07-14T08:23:09Z
dc.date.issued 2003
dc.identifier.citation Analecta Cracoviensia, 2003, T. 35, s. 359-379. pl_PL
dc.identifier.issn 0209-0864
dc.identifier.uri http://repozytorium.theo-logos.pl/xmlui/handle/123456789/9228
dc.description Zawiera tabele. pl_PL
dc.description.abstract In the 19th century, a considerable number of diocesan priests from the Polish lands, being under the Austrian partition, studied at the University of Vienna. Many of them received Doctor’s Degree in Theology. On the basis of documents preserved in the Archives of the University of Vienna it was possible to define 128 names of priests from Galicia and the Duchy of Cieszyn, their dioceses, dates of their doctoral promotions, titles of almost all dissertations and the posts they held during their doctoral studies. They were often graduates of the Vienna theological institutions: the Imperial-Royal City School (Wiener k.k. Stadtconvict) or the Greek Catholic Central Seminary (Das griechisch-katholische Zentralseminar), ln 1916, the elitist Higher Educational Institute for Diocesan Priests called Augustineum (das höhere Priester-Bildungs-Institut für Weltpriester zum hl. Augustin) was founded in the capital of the Austrian Empire by Francis II, due to the efforts of Father Jakob Frint, priest at the Castle of Vienna, who was influenced by Saint Clement Maria Hofbauer. The objective of the Institute was to educate, in the spirit of Catholic Restoration and overcoming Josephism, the elite of clergy, future bishops, university professors, lecturers and educators of major seminaries as well as senior officers of the Church administration. Father Frint was director of the Institute for the first 10 years till he was appointed Bishop of Sankt Pölten. The Institute was also named after Father Frint, in recognition of his merits in the fields of formation and education of clergy. The educational objective of the ‘Frintaneum’ was to confer after at least three-year studies a doctor’s degree on students coming from various countries of the Habsburgs’ Empire. The graduates of the Educational Institute achieved the biggest number of the Doctorate in Theology of the University of Vienna. At first, in order to earn a doctor’s degree one had to write a scholarly dissertation or to take examinations, the so-called corollarium, in theology as a whole. From 1777, dissertations and four examinations in biblical hermeneutics, dogmatic and polemical theology, moral and pastoral theology as well as Church history and canon law, were required. A doctoral student had to defend in public 50 theses chosen from obligatory theological disciplines. In the 19th century the requirements were: four-year theological studies completed with a good result and four examinations called ‘rigours’ in four groups of theological subjects: Old Testament and New Testament studies, dogmatic theology, moral and pastoral theology as well as Church history and canon law. After passing these examinations a doctoral student submitted a dissertation in Latin. The next step was a public defense (dispute) of the 50 theses in question. The dispute was given up in 1873. A larger doctoral dissertation was required instead. From 1903, dogmatic theology and apologetics were taken as an oral examination. The dissertation was to be written on a theme freely chosen from one of the three groups of subjects: biblical studies, moral and pastoral theology, and Church history and canon law. From that time students had to take three examinations. There was no examination concerning the group of subjects the dissertation was written upon. Later, numerous doctors of theology of the University of Vienna became bishops and university professors in Cracow and Lvov (the Polish Lwów). Some of them made an outstanding contribution to European science and culture. pl_PL
dc.language.iso pl pl_PL
dc.publisher Wydawnictwo Naukowe Papieskiej Akademii Teologicznej w Krakowie pl_PL
dc.rights Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Poland *
dc.rights.uri http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/pl/ *
dc.subject kapłani pl_PL
dc.subject duchowieństwo pl_PL
dc.subject diecezje pl_PL
dc.subject księża diecezjalni pl_PL
dc.subject Galicja pl_PL
dc.subject Śląsk Cieszyński pl_PL
dc.subject historia pl_PL
dc.subject XIX w. pl_PL
dc.subject XX w. pl_PL
dc.subject teologia pl_PL
dc.subject teolodzy pl_PL
dc.subject teologowie pl_PL
dc.subject doktorzy teologii pl_PL
dc.subject Uniwersytet Wiedeński pl_PL
dc.subject Wiedeń pl_PL
dc.subject szkolnictwo wyższe pl_PL
dc.subject uniwersytety pl_PL
dc.subject seminaria pl_PL
dc.subject studia teologiczne pl_PL
dc.subject Frintaneum pl_PL
dc.subject Augustineum pl_PL
dc.subject priesthood pl_PL
dc.subject clergy pl_PL
dc.subject dioceses pl_PL
dc.subject diocesan priests pl_PL
dc.subject Galicia pl_PL
dc.subject Cieszyn Silesia pl_PL
dc.subject history pl_PL
dc.subject theology pl_PL
dc.subject theologians pl_PL
dc.subject doctors of theology pl_PL
dc.subject University of Vienna pl_PL
dc.subject Vienna pl_PL
dc.subject higher education pl_PL
dc.subject universities pl_PL
dc.subject seminaries pl_PL
dc.subject studies in theology pl_PL
dc.title Księża diecezjalni z Galicji i Śląska Cieszyńskiego - doktorzy teologii Uniwersytetu Wiedeńskiego 1809-1918 pl_PL
dc.title.alternative Diocesan Priests from Galicia and the Duchy of Cieszyn, Doctors of Theology of the University of Vienna 1809-1918 pl_PL
dc.type Article pl_PL


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