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Dominican Letters

II—A Chaplain to the Forces, 1632

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 September 2024

Extract

The letter printed, below is a reminder of how sketchy is our knowledge of the English Dominicans during the half-century prior to the foundation of Bornhem in 1658 and the start of the registers of clothing and profession. Englishmen who joined the order joined abroad, and their particulars were recorded in the registers of foreign convents, registers that for the most part are no longer extant. In 1615 these scattered members were formed into an English Congregation, but without a house of its own and without even the most rudimentary archives. Thus any chance reference to a Dominican at this dark period is a find of some importance, and this letter is a fair example of what we may still hope to unearth in some archive in almost any part of western Europe.

All that is known of the writer of this letter is what he tells us himself. He is writing to the master-general, Nicholas Ridolfi. The dispensation he asks for was beyond the powers of the master-general, and a copy of his letter was therefore sent to Propaganda. It is this copy only that has survived. It is here translated from the Latin.

Type
Other
Copyright
Copyright © 1959 Provincial Council of the English Province of the Order of Preachers

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References

1 Propaganda Archives, vol. 74. Lettere di Germnnin, Colunia, . . . Fiandra, etc. 1632, f.266.

2 Robert Armstrong took his brother’s name, Thomas, as his religious name. He studied at the college of the Minerva and left for England 22 October 1633. (Arch. of Minerva, Acta Collegii S. Tlwmne, p. 101.)

3 He left the English College in Rome to join the order, 22 January 1632. (CRS, 40, p. 2.)

4 CRS, 39. p. 202.

5 CRS, 10, p. 234.

6 West. Cath. Arch., B. 47. no. 120.

7 Cal. S. P. Dom., 1619-23, p. 511.

8 Propaganda Archives, l.c., f. 275.

9 ib. Acts Congregationis 8 (1632-3), p. 175.

10 Minerva, Liber Collegii S. Thomae, p. 42.

11 ib. Libro dell’uscita, f. 5.