Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-t8hqh Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-25T08:11:39.226Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The English College, Douai, 1750–1794

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  16 September 2015

Extract

This paper is based primarily on the Prefect of Studies Book which records the names of the staff and the students of the English College at Douai between the years 1750 and 1794. But before dealing with this period it is necessary to sketch in the background by giving a short account of the history of the College during the first half of the eighteenth century.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Catholic Record Society 1969

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

1. Guilday, 332-4; 7th D.D., viii.

2. 7th D.D., viii.

3. Kirk, 253; 7th D.D., x, xi.

4. Guilday, 338-40.

5. 7th D.D., xi.

6. 7th D.D., 177-91.

7. U.M., vol. 14 (1904), 1844.Google Scholar

8. 7th D.D., 263, 264.

9. Kirk, 105-6.

10. P.S.B., 38-41, 42-6, 47-52.

11. P.S.B., 117-8.

12. P.S B., 148-54.

13. 7th D.D., 300-8.

14. P.S.B., 42-6.

15. Kirk, 181-2.

16. Kirk, 152.

17. 7th D.D., 203; Kirk, 250.

18. Kirk, 228.

19. C.R.S., vol. 40, 209.Google Scholar

20. Kirk, 144.

21. 7th D.D., 214.

22. 7th D.D., 220.

23. Kirk, 116.

24. Kirk, 15.

25. Kirk, 141; 7th D.D., 297.

26. 7th D.D., 248.

27. P. S. B., 43 103

28. Hoban, B., “The Philosophical Tradition of Douai”, in U.M., vol. 63 (1953), 145–59.Google Scholar

29. Malone, J. S., “The Doway-Ushaw Tradition”, in U.M., vol. 78 (1968), 5460.Google Scholar

30. U.M., vol. 14 (1904), 42.Google Scholar

31. 7th D.D., 297.

32. Guilday, 342.

33. P.S.B., 222.

34. T.B., 27, 29.

35. Ward, 77.

36. Guilday, 342; Chadwick, H., St. Omers to Stony hurst (1962), 281, 304; Ward, 63, 62.Google Scholar

37. Burton, E. H., The Life and Times of Bishop Challoner (1909), vol. 2, 101–13.Google Scholar

38. C.R.S., vol. 30, xlviii.

39. P.S.B., 202-3.

40. P.S.B., 219.

41. P.S.B., 216.

42. P.S.B., 222.

43. 7th D.D., 224; Croke, Sir A., The Genealogical History of the Croke Family (1823), vol. 2, 275;Google Scholar C.R.S., vol. 19, 153;Google Scholar Menology of St. Edmund's College. Ed. by Ward, B. (1909), 148.Google Scholar

44. T.B., 11, 31.

45. T.B., 13.

46. Kirk, 17.

47. T.B., 22.

48. T.B., 26.

49. Milburn, D., “William Gibson, President of Douai”, in U.M., vol. 66 (1956), 6979, 134-47; vol. 67 (1957), 11-24.Google Scholar

50. Milburn, 19; P.S.B., 389.

51. P.S.B., 396; Kirk, 146.

52. P.S.B., 396.

53. Gillow, J., The Haydock Papers (1888), 129.Google Scholar

54. P.S.B., 404-10.

55. Milburn, 22.

56. Biographical notes on all those who were at Douai in October 1792 are to be found in Gillow, J., The Haydock Papers (1888), 129–41.Google Scholar

57. U.M., vol. 14 (1904), 30–1.Google Scholar

58. Ibid., 36.

59. The figures for those who began their training after 1750, and for those who completed their training after 1750, have been calculated from the P.S.B. The figure of 38 ordinations from June 1741 to December 1749 is derived from the 7th D.D. It should be noted that Thornburgh's figure of 2000 missionaries from 1568 to 1741 is, by his own admission, a guess.

60. Ward, 77; Milburn, 22.

61. P.S.B., 411-17.

62. Ibid.

63. P.S.B., 418-19.

64. P.S.B., 404.

65. P.S.B., 419 (J. Lopez, A. Amerigo, M. Langton, T. Murphy), 410.

66. Milburn, 24-5.

67. P.S.B., 419.

68. Milburn, 122-3.