RM2AM4RFG–Chronological notes [electronic resource]: containing the rise, growth and present state of the English congregation of the Order of StBenedict drawn from the archives of the houses of the said congregation at Douay in Flanders, Dieulwart in Lorraine, Paris in France, and . still held upin stridt observance. Yet our ancestors who were always mostobedient to the orders of the See Apostolic humbly submitted toBenedicts alterations, and united their two Innocentian Provincesinto one, governed by two President Generals and a determinatenumber of Definitors and Visitors to be renewed every threeyea
RM2AM4NJT–Chronological notes [electronic resource]: containing the rise, growth and present state of the English congregation of the Order of StBenedict drawn from the archives of the houses of the said congregation at Douay in Flanders, Dieulwart in Lorraine, Paris in France, and . l (Worcester College)and another at Cambridge called Monks College and Bucking-ham College (St. Peters) because the Duke of Buckingham hadbeen a great benefactor to it. These Colleges were common tothose houses of the Congregation which had not places of studyin those Universities. The Congregation frequented for its Genera
RM2AM4RT3–Chronological notes [electronic resource]: containing the rise, growth and present state of the English congregation of the Order of StBenedict drawn from the archives of the houses of the said congregation at Douay in Flanders, Dieulwart in Lorraine, Paris in France, and . 22. CHAPTER THE EIGHTH. SEVERAL AGES OF THE CONGREGATION. The first age therefore or rather infancy of the Congregationwas under the government of St. Augustine and his successors,when that great Apostle and DocTior of our English Churcheffected what the great St. Augustine and Dodtor of the CatholicChurch attempted but uns
RM2AM4F1X–Chronological notes [electronic resource]: containing the rise, growth and present state of the English congregation of the Order of StBenedict drawn from the archives of the houses of the said congregation at Douay in Flanders, Dieulwart in Lorraine, Paris in France, and . fDouay), it went harder, for he was irremissibly executed, a poorharmless soul, whom those miscreants wickedly impeached ofhaving designed the Kings death, which the King himselfopenly declared he was convinced was false. But so violent 220 CHAPTER THE FIFTV-EIGHTH. were those times, that he himself was constrained for a ti
RM2AM4R25–Chronological notes [electronic resource]: containing the rise, growth and present state of the English congregation of the Order of StBenedict drawn from the archives of the houses of the said congregation at Douay in Flanders, Dieulwart in Lorraine, Paris in France, and . 29. CHAPTER THE ELEVENTH. the English Benedictines re-established byQueen Mary. —>—^&^ ^ The pious and virtuous Mary had no sooner succeeded him,but her first care was to reduce her people to the obedienceof the Church, her next to re-establish the dispersed andafflidted Benedictine Order as the best means to keep hersub
RM2AM4NPA–Chronological notes [electronic resource]: containing the rise, growth and present state of the English congregation of the Order of StBenedict drawn from the archives of the houses of the said congregation at Douay in Flanders, Dieulwart in Lorraine, Paris in France, and . put to death, to make the nation remember how itreceived the said holy faith and manifest the secrets of his heartand intentions in regard of the Benedictine Order, he chose to bedrawn to Tyburn in the Benedictine habit which by some means hehad provided or gotten, and had his tonsure accordingly made ; con-founding by that
RM2AM4K1X–Chronological notes [electronic resource]: containing the rise, growth and present state of the English congregation of the Order of StBenedict drawn from the archives of the houses of the said congregation at Douay in Flanders, Dieulwart in Lorraine, Paris in France, and . bscribed, proofs may andought to be exacted ; and that against this signify nothing theobjections of some under the name of John Andrew, or Exami-nation of the trophies of the English Congregation, or Gram-matopoeia or Syllabus, whether they be in Latin or French,we know and declare; as also we testify this to be our sentim
RM2AM4PFM–Chronological notes [electronic resource]: containing the rise, growth and present state of the English congregation of the Order of StBenedict drawn from the archives of the houses of the said congregation at Douay in Flanders, Dieulwart in Lorraine, Paris in France, and . Allen, the new Seminary of Dowaywas begun in 1562. The Council of England informed of this,fell to persecuting it by all the ways they could devise, andtherefore first endeavoured to set the Catholics in Englandagainst it, as a thing that would exasperate the State and hindertheir peace in England; and afterwards by the reb
RM2AM4YJX–Chronological notes [electronic resource]: containing the rise, growth and present state of the English congregation of the Order of StBenedict drawn from the archives of the houses of the said congregation at Douay in Flanders, Dieulwart in Lorraine, Paris in France, and . asoncraves it, your undaunted fidelity in the performance of your ho-nourable charge which neither the vexations of the seas or theinconveniences or dangers of the armies on land have been ableto hinder in its progress, your just regulations in your Visitswhich when exactly remembered and followed will ever prove amain supp
RM2AM4N17–Chronological notes [electronic resource]: containing the rise, growth and present state of the English congregation of the Order of StBenedict drawn from the archives of the houses of the said congregation at Douay in Flanders, Dieulwart in Lorraine, Paris in France, and . be the same with that of the restoration of the Abbeyby D. Feckenham in the time of Queen Mary on which circum-stance none of them thought or reflected till all the ceremonyand business was over. Moreover he protests that the good oldFather Sigebert, though almost consumed with misery and ageyet enjoyed his sight to the end
RM2AM4P46–Chronological notes [electronic resource]: containing the rise, growth and present state of the English congregation of the Order of StBenedict drawn from the archives of the houses of the said congregation at Douay in Flanders, Dieulwart in Lorraine, Paris in France, and . ardinals of the Inquisition appre-hended that a higher title might give too great an alarm to theState), the said English Clergy fell absolutely from the Jesuits,esteeming them to be the only persons that thwarted their desires 38 CHAPTER THE FIFTEENTH. and designs, to make all things depend on their secret ordersand intent
RM2AM4M23–Chronological notes [electronic resource]: containing the rise, growth and present state of the English congregation of the Order of StBenedict drawn from the archives of the houses of the said congregation at Douay in Flanders, Dieulwart in Lorraine, Paris in France, and . a man.And though he may pretend his disgrace at Court was on goodaccount, his bloody barbarity is easily answered. Had he been a 84 CHAPTER THE TWENTY-SEVENTH. harmless, innocent soul such sufferings might have brought hima crown of justice; but to him an alien from the Church, andshedding the blood of the Priests of the Ch
RM2AM4HNF–Chronological notes [electronic resource]: containing the rise, growth and present state of the English congregation of the Order of StBenedict drawn from the archives of the houses of the said congregation at Douay in Flanders, Dieulwart in Lorraine, Paris in France, and . has any rapport to it. Behold the words of the decree. Ut ritum et quodcumque aliud ad mancipatum ejusmodipertinens statim rejiciant. Ut novus hie Beatae Virginis mancipatus omnino aboleaturcontrariis quibuscumque non obstantibus. We are not properly to call ourselves the slaves of anycreature not even of the most glorious