Hochstift


In the Holy Roman Empire, the German term Hochstift referred to the territory ruled by a bishop as a prince, as opposed to his diocese, generally much larger and over which he exercised only spiritual authority. The terms prince-bishopric and ecclesiastical principality are synonymous with Hochstift. Erzstift and Kurerzstift referred respectively to the territory ruled by a prince-archbishop and an elector-archbishop while Stift referred to the territory ruled by an imperial abbot or abbess, or a princely abbot or abbess. Stift was also often used to refer to any type of ecclesiastical principality.
The Hochstift was made of land mostly acquired in the Middle Age through donations by the king/emperor, bequests by local lords or through purchase. It was often made of non-contiguous parts, some of which could be located outside the bishop’s diocese. The prince-bishop, elected by the canons of the cathedral chapter and often belonging to the high nobility, enjoyed imperial immediacy; he wielded the same authority over his principality as any secular prince, such as a duke or a margrave, over his. He had seat and vote at the Imperial Diet.
From a high of approximately 40 in the late Middle Ages, the number of Hochstifte was down to 26 by the late 18th century. They had all been secularized and their territory absorbed by secular states by the time the Holy Roman Empire was dissolved in 1806.

Etymology and related and derived terms

Das Stift /het sticht , denotes in its original meaning the donated or else acquired fund of estates whose revenues are taken to maintain a college and the pertaining church and its collegiate canons or canonesses. If the Stift as a fund served to maintain the specific college of a cathedral then the Stift was often called das Domstift.
Hochstift is a compound with hoch used for a prince-bishopric, meaning literally a "high donation ". Whereas Erzstift, a compound with Erz…, was the corresponding expression for a prince-archbishopric. For the three prince-electorates of Cologne, Mainz and Trier, which were simultaneously archbishoprics the corresponding term is Kurerzstift. The adjective pertaining to Stift as a territory is stiftisch. As a compound, the term Stift today usually takes the copulative "s" when used as a preceding compound, such as in Stiftsadel, Stiftsamtmann, Stiftsmann, Stiftssasse, Stiftsstände, or Stiftstag.
Specific prince-bishoprics were often called Hochstift/Erzstift X, as in Hochstift Ermland or in Erzstift Bremen, with stiftbremisch meaning of/pertaining to the Prince-Archbishopric of Bremen, as opposed to stadtbremisch. By contrast, the spiritual entities, the dioceses, are called Bistum or Erzbistum in German. The difference between a Hochstift/Erzstift and a Bistum/Erzbistum is not always clear to authors so that non-scholarly texts often translate Hochstift or Erzstift incorrectly simply as diocese/bishopric or archdiocese/archbishopric, respectively.