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Sunday, April 3, 2016

The Former Bishop of St. Asaph Dies in Rome

Thomas Goldwell, the former Bishop of St. Asaph's in Wales (mostly) died on April 3, 1585 in Rome. He was the last surviving bishop of the Catholic hierarchy of England and had endured many dangers and changes in fortune, because he was true to his Catholic faith from the reign of Henry VIII to the reign of Elizabeth I. He was in exile during the reign of Henry VIII with Reginald Pole and then returned to England during the reign of Mary I before departing again after Elizabeth I's supremacy was legislated. Goldwell traveled with Edmund Campion and Robert Parsons on their mission to England in 1580, intending to return in spite of his age to minister to the Catholic underground. He became ill, however, while still on the Continent and so returned to Rome.

He was a Theatine, having joined the order founded by Gaetano dei Conti di Tiene, Paolo Consiglieri, Bonifacio da Colle, and Giovanni Pietro Carafa, afterwards Pope Paul IV while in exile with Pole, so when he went into exile the last time, he served that order at San Silvestro al Quirinale (pictured). The Catholic Encyclopedia describes his career in Italy:

He then became an active Catholic exile. He started at once for Rome, but was detained at Louvain by sickness. He refused the offer of an Italian bishopric, preferring to devote himself to his order (the Theatines) and to the conversion of England. In 1561 he was made superior of his old convent at Naples, and also warden of the English Hospital at Rome. He was the only English bishop at the Council of Trent, where he was treated with marked respect. He was there engaged in the revision of the Breviary and the Missal; and also urged the council to excommunicate Queen Elizabeth. . . . In 1563 Goldwell was vicar-general to the Archbishop of Milan, St. Charles Borromeo. In 1567 he was made vicar of the cardinal archpriest in the Lateran, and in 1574 the Cardinal Vicar Savelli made him his vicegerent; he thus became, so to speak, the "working" bishop of Rome. . . . One of the last acts of his long and strenuous career was to serve on the Congregation for the Revision of the Roman Martyrology, in 1582. On the death of the Bishop of Lincoln, in 1584, Goldwell became the sole survivor of the ancient English hierarchy. He died the next year, and was buried at St. Sylvester's.

The Bishop of Lincoln who died in 1584 was Thomas Watson. He was 69 years old when he died in captivity at Wisbech Castle on October 15, after spending 25 years in captivity during Elizabeth I's reign, including time in the Tower of London.

5 comments:

  1. Please tell me more about the Catholic underground during the reformation in England..sources?
    love you
    john
    ps never did hear your podcaste on radio is it on the radio site?

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    1. The Catholic Recusant Society has lots of information about the Catholic underground. You could also check out Jessie Child's book "God's Traitors"; she shows how one family was involved in helping missionary priests like Edmund Campion. I'm not sure which podcast you're referring to!

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  2. As a new follower of your site, a late in life convert to Catholicism, now a Traditional Catholic, with 4 centuries of protestant heritage back to Yorkshire in the 16th century, where can I find a source on just how many English bishops and abbots signed the Oath of Supremacy?

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    1. Of course that depends on which Oath of Supremacy you're referring to. All the bishops save one refused to sign Elizabeth I's Oath (Owen Oglethorpe of Carlisle); only one bishop refused to sign Henry VIII's (St. John Fisher). Among the abbots, most signed; even those who regretted it and refused to turn over their monasteries--you might check out the abbots involved in the Pilgrimage of Grace; I know of one who refused the Oath and he was executed. http://supremacyandsurvival.blogspot.com/2016/03/the-last-abbot-of-whalley-abbey-john.html

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    2. Oh, and the abbots or superiors of any monasteries or friaries re-opened during Mary I's reign, refused Elizabeth's Oath.

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