Education
Rieger studied at the Jesuit Gymnasium in Mannheim and Worms, and then studied philosophy in Heidelberg and theology in Mainz. On 19 December 1778 he was ordained as priest in Mainz.
Rieger studied at the Jesuit Gymnasium in Mannheim and Worms, and then studied philosophy in Heidelberg and theology in Mainz. On 19 December 1778 he was ordained as priest in Mainz.
Education Priesthood Rieger began his career in the church as parochial vicar in various places, including Marburg-Bauerbach, until he became chaplain in 1781 and then preacher at the court of Landgrave Frederick II in Kassel, and from 1795 on parson. Canon and Grand Almoner In 1798, Rieger became canon in Amöneburg, and in 1808 he was appointed Grand Almoner of France by King Jérôme Bonaparte of Westphalia. When the last abbot and Prince-Bishop of Fulda, Adalbert von Harstall, died in 1814, Fulda was without a successor until 1829.
Bishop On 23 June 1828 Rieger, at age 76, was appointed bishop of the newly established diocese of Fulda.
He was ordained on 21 September 1829 by Johann Baptist von Keller. He established some of his principles in his first pastoral letter.
During his short tenure as bishop, he acted contrary to the decisions of the Landgraviate of Hesse-Kassel on a number of occasions, including: In August 1830, when he declared himself against the government"s dictum on the right of patronage. In January 1831 he spoke against the constitution of 6 January 1831.
In July 1831 he fulminated against the establishment of a theological faculty at the University of Marburg.