Forty men and women who died for their faith

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Rob2

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English and Welsh Martyrs

Celebrated on May 4th

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These forty saints died for their faith between 1535 and 1679. They were selected from 200 already beatified by earlier popes. They were canonized by Pope Paul VI in 1970.

Thirteen were seminary priests, ten were Jesuits, three Benedictines, three Carthusian monks, one Brigettine, two Franciscans, and one Austin friar. The rest were lay people: four men and three women.

They are: Saint John Almond; Edmund Arrowsmith; Ambrose Barlow; John Boste; Alexander Briant; Edmund Campion; Margaret Clitherow; Philip Evans; Thomas Garnet; Edmund Gennings; Richard Gwyn; John Houghton; Phillip Howard; John Jones; John Kemble; Luke Kirby; Robert Lawrence; David Lewis; Anne Line; John Lloyd; Cuthbert Mayne; Henry Morse; Nicholas Owen; John Paine; Polydore Plasden; John Plessington; Richard Reynolds; John Rigby; John Roberts; Alban Roe; Ralph Sherwin; Robert Southwell; John Stone; John Wall; Henry Walpole; Margaret Ward; Augustine Webster; Swithun Wells and Eustace White.

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‘The Martyrs’ Picture’ (above) was painted by Durante Alberti in 1580, just after the foundation of the Venerable English College in Rome. It depicts the Blessed Trinity with two English martyrs: St Thomas of Canterbury on the left hand side and St Edmund, King of East Anglia, on the right.

Blood from Christ’s wounds falls onto a map of the British Isles, and from this blood fire is springing up. This ties in with the College motto, held by a cherub: Ignem veni mittere in terram - I have come to bring fire to the earth.

According to tradition, students gathered around this picture to sing a Te Deum whenever news reached Rome of the martyrdom of a former student. This custom continues today when the Te Deum is sung in front of the painting on 1st December, ‘Martyrs’ Day’, and the relics of the Martyrs are venerated by the students.

(from ICN)

Below is a photo of a rally I attended of 20 000 Catholics at Deepdale football ground of Preston North End FC on July 1st 1961 .
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The rally was to pray for and foster the cause for the canonization of the 40 Martyrs .
 
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Holy martyrs of England and Wales, pray for us!

I know that oftentimes Saint Thomas More gets the attention (and rightly so), but I rather fancy Saint John Fisher, Bishop and martyr.

I was fortunate enough to locate a 1955 copy of Lives of Saints, edited by Fr. Joseph Vann, OFM, for a song, as well as John J. Delaney’s Dictionary of Saints.

Reading of their heroic virtue is so inspiring - as it is intended to be.
 
Reading of their heroic virtue is so inspiring - as it is intended to be.
Yes , they are a mixed bunch , but all heroic and faithful @po18guy .

I am fond of St Margaret Clitherow . I live in the north of England and am just a 2 hour train drive from York . In the last 18 months I have stayed in York three times . Each morning I started the day with a visit to the Shrine of St Margaret Clitherow . It used to be her house where she sheltered priests . It’s very moving to be on hallowed ground . The bridge over the river in York where she was executed has a plaque marking the spot , again very special .

http://stmargaretclitherow.org/
 
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I like St Anne Line, when in court accused of hosting priests, she said ‘my lords, nothing grieves me more but that I could not receive a thousand more’. She spent her last days in Newgate prison, I wonder if that prison still stands and can be visited?
 
I like St Anne Line, when in court accused of hosting priests, she said ‘my lords, nothing grieves me more but that I could not receive a thousand more’. She spent her last days in Newgate prison, I wonder if that prison still stands and can be visited?
No @Dan_Defender , Newgate Prison was closed in 1902 and demolished two days later .
 
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