Marie-Nicolas-Antoine Daveluy
Marie-Nicolas-Antoine Daveluy | |
---|---|
Martyr | |
Born | Amiens, France | 16 March 1818
Died | 30 March 1866 Galmaemot, Korea | (aged 48)
Venerated in | Roman Catholicism |
Beatified | 6 October 1968 |
Canonized | 6 May 1984, Seoul, South Korea by Pope John Paul II |
Major shrine | Galmaemot Martyrium, Boryeong, South Korea |
Feast | 30 March 20 September (along with other Korean Martyrs) |
Marie-Nicolas-Antoine Daveluy (16 March 1818 – 30 March 1866) was a French missionary and saint. His feast day is March 30,[1] and he is also venerated along with the rest of the 103 Korean martyrs on September 20.
Biography
Antoine Daveluy was born 16 March 1818 in Amiens, France. His father was a factory owner, town councilman, and government official. The members of his family were devout Catholics and two of his brothers became priests. He entered the St. Sulpice Seminary in Issy-les-Moulineaux himself in October 1834 and was ordained a priest on 18 December 1841.
His first assignment was as an assistant priest in Roye. Despite poor health, he joined the Paris Foreign Missions Society on 4 October 1843. He departed for East Asia on 6 February 1844, intending to serve as a missionary in the Ryukyu Islands of Japan. He arrived in Macau, where he was persuaded by the newly appointed apostolic vicar of Korea, Jean-Joseph-Jean-Baptiste Ferréol, to accompany him there instead. The two were joined by Andrew Kim Tae-gŏn, a Korean seminarian who had been studying for the priesthood in Macau. They first traveled to Shanghai, where Bishop Ferréol ordained Father Kim on 17 August 1845. The three priests then made a stormy crossing by sea to Korea, arriving in Chungcheong Province in October.
Father Daveluy began work as a missionary in Korea, becoming fluent in the language. He wrote a Korean-French dictionary and other books about the Catholic Church and its history in Korean. On 13 November 1855, Pope Pius IX appointed him titular bishop of Akka and coadjutor to Bishop Siméon-François Berneux,[2] who had been appointed apostolic vicar in 1854[3] after the death of Bishop Ferréol in 1853.[4] He was consecrated by Bishop Berneux on 25 March 1857.[2]
After Bishop Berneux was executed during a campaign by the Korean government against Christians, Bishop Daveluy became apostolic vicar on 8 March 1866. He was promptly arrested on 11 March. Imprisoned and tortured, he staunchly defended his Catholic faith. Sentenced to death, he asked to be executed on Good Friday 30 March. He was beheaded at a Korean naval base in Galmaemot (갈매못) near present-day Boryeong along with two French priests, Pierre Aumaître and Martin-Luc Huin, and two lay catechists, Lucas Hwang Sŏk-tu (Bishop Daveluy's personal assistant) and Joseph Chang Chu-gi.
All five were canonized on 6 May 1984 along with Father Kim, Bishop Berneux and 96 other Korean martyrs.
See also
References
Bibliography
- The Lives of the 103 Korean Martyr Saints: Bishop Marie Nicholas Antoine Daveluy (1818-1866), Catholic Bishops' Conference of Korea Newsletter No. 47 (Summer 2004).
- Template:La icon Remigius Ritzler and Pirminus Sefrin (1968). Hierarchia catholica medii et recentioris aevi, vol. 7. Il Messaggero di S. Antonio, Padua. ISBN 978-88-7026-057-1.
- Template:La icon Remigius Ritzler and Pirminus Sefrin (1978). Hierarchia catholica medii et recentioris aevi, vol. 8. Il Messaggero di S. Antonio, Padua. ISBN 978-88-7026-264-3.
- Bishop Anthony Daveluy, Pontifical Society of the Holy Childhood Bulletin 15 (24 March 2009), p. 11.
- Template:Fr icon Paul Le Gall (1966). Mgr Antoine Daveluy: témoin du Christ en Corée, 1818-1866. Les Auxiliaires du clergé, Saint-Riquier.
- Template:Fr icon Charles Salmon (1883). Vie de Mgr Daveluy: évêque d'Acônes, vicaire apostolique de Corée. Bray et Retaux, Paris.
External links
- 1818 births
- 1866 deaths
- Martyred Roman Catholic priests
- French Roman Catholic priests
- French Roman Catholic saints
- Korean Roman Catholic saints
- 19th-century Roman Catholic priests
- Paris Foreign Missions Society
- Archbishops of Seoul
- 19th-century Roman Catholic martyrs
- 19th-century Christian saints
- 19th-century executions by Korea
- People executed by Korea by decapitation
- French people executed abroad
- Christian martyrs executed by decapitation
- People from Amiens
- French people executed by decapitation
- Executed people from Picardy