Christian Peter "Alphons" Maria Joseph Bellesheim (December 16, 1839 Monschau, Germany - February 5, 1912 Aachen, Germany) was a church historian. He also reviewed and collected books.
Alphons was the son of Heinrich "Wilhelm" Ludwig Joseph Bellesheim (December 26, 1801 Essen, Germany - 1867 Aachen, Germany) and Maria Anna "Margaretha" Dumesnil (March 15, 1797 Aachen, Germany - 1866 Aachen, Germany). His parents were married June 27, 1838 in Monschau, Germany. Alphons' paternal grandparents were Carl Anton Bellesheim and Maria Josepha Helena Hennekes. His maternal grandparents were Carl Dumesnil and Christina Windhagen.
Alphons had one known brother, Hugo Franz Julius Bellesheim. Hugo was born February 03, 1841 in Monschau and married to Hulda Caecilia Kelsch October 4, 1866 in Aachen. A Hugo Bellesheim, aged 27 years, arrived at the Port of New York August 30, 1867 having departed from Hamburg, Germany on the ship Germanic. It is unknown, but assumed that the two are the same.
Further research is being done into the family of Alphons Bellesheim. Please see the external link below for contact to the researcher.
The son of the pharmacist s Wilhelm Bellesheim (1801-1867) studied Roman Catholic theology at the universities of Bonn and Tübingen and attended thereafter the theological college of Cologne. After his ordination of priest s in the year 1862 he was assumed as chaplain at the Santa Maria dell'Anima, where he was active 1862 and where he obtained his doctorate in the last month of his time in Rome.
After his return to Germany he became vicar at the Cologne Cathedral and also secretary of the general vicariate. As a result of the Kulturkampf in the 1870th he had to quit his tasks. Subsequently in the following more than 25 years he was active in the scientific-theological research and published a lot of publications, including 10 books, 4 brochures, 148 essays and 77 inscriptions in dictionaries. One of his focus areas was the history of Christianity of the British Isles.
Finally in 1902 Bellesheim was appointed as provost at the Aachen Cathedral and he practised this ministry until his death in 1912 and was in the meantime honoured with the title as a Protonotary apostolic.