Jump to content

Richard Thirkeld

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Blessed

Richard Thirkeld
Richard Thirkill, Guarded by the Sheriff and his men (Illustration for the Memoirs of Missionary Priests, 1878)
Martyr
BornConiscliffe, Durham, England
Died29 May 1583
York, England
Beatified29 December 1886 by Pope Leo XIII
Feast29 May

Richard Thirkeld (died 29 May 1583) was an English Roman Catholic priest. He is a Catholic martyr beatified by Pope Leo XIII in 1886.

Life

[edit]

Thirkeld was born at Coniscliffe, Durham, England. From Queen's College, Oxford, where he was in 1564–5, he went to Reims, where he was ordained priest, 18 April 1579.[1]

He left 23 May for the English mission, where he ministered in or about York, and acted as confessor to Margaret Clitheroe. On the eve of the Annunciation, 1583, he was arrested while visiting one of the Catholic prisoners in the Kidcote on Ouse bridge. He at once confessed his priesthood, both to the pursuivants, who arrested him, and to the mayor before whom he was brought, and for the night was lodged in the house of the high sheriff. The next day his trial took place, at which he managed to appear in his cassock, which made him appear all the more venerable.[2]

The charge was one of having reconciled the Queen's subjects to the Church of Rome. He was found guilty on 27 May and condemned 28 May. He was executed at York on 29 May 1583,[3] secretly because authorities feared that his public execution would have caused a public demonstration.[4]

Six of his letters survive, and were summarized by Bede Camm.[5]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Wainewright, John. "Bl. Richard Thirkeld." The Catholic Encyclopedia Vol. 13. New York: Robert Appleton Company, 1912. 28 March 2020Public Domain This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  2. ^ Challoner, Richard. Memoirs of Missionary Priests, Thomas Richardson & son, 1843, p. 146Public Domain This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  3. ^ Questier, Michael C., Catholics and Treason Martyrology, Memory, and Politics in the Post-Reformation, OUP, 2022, p. 131 ISBN 9780192847027
  4. ^ "Blessed Rickard Thirkeld", Catholic News Agency
  5. ^ Camm, Bede. Lives of the English Martyrs Declared Blessed by Pope Leo XIII in 1886 and 1895, Vol. 2, Burns and Oates, 1905, p. 647