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Roman Catholic Diocese of Nottingham

The Diocese of Nottingham(Latin: Dioecesis Nottinghamensis) is a Latin Church diocese of the Catholic church in England. and a suffragan in the ecclesiastical province of the Metropolitan Diocese of Westminster.

Diocese of Nottingham

Dioecesis Nottinghamensis
Location
CountryEngland
Territory Derbyshire (without parts of High Peak & Chesterfield)
 Leicestershire
 Lincolnshire
 Nottinghamshire (without Bassetlaw)
 Rutland
Ecclesiastical provinceWestminster
MetropolitanDiocese of Westminster
Deaneries13
Statistics
Area13,000 km2 (5,000 sq mi)
Population
- Total
- Catholics
(as of 2013)
4,500,000
155,000 (3.4%)
Parishes108
Information
DenominationCatholic
Sui iuris churchLatin Church
RiteRoman Rite
CathedralNottingham Cathedral
Secular priests130
Current leadership
PopeFrancis
BishopPatrick McKinney
Metropolitan ArchbishopCardinal Vincent Nichols
Vicar GeneralVery Rev. Canon Edward Jarosz VG
Very Rev. Fr. Joseph Wheat VG
Episcopal VicarsVery Rev. Fr. Paul Chipcase
Very Rev. Fr. Martin Hardy
Very Rev. Fr. Michael Moore
Sr. Susan Richert
Judicial VicarVery Rev. Fr Peter Vellacott
Map

Diocese of Nottingham within the Province of Westminster
Website
dioceseofnottingham.uk

The diocese covers an area of 13,074 square kilometres (5,048 sq mi), taking in the English counties of Nottinghamshire (now excluding the district of Bassetlaw), Leicestershire, most of Derbyshire, Rutland and Lincolnshire. The episcopal seat is the Cathedral Church of St Barnabas in Nottingham.

The Right Reverend Patrick McKinney is the 10th Bishop of Nottingham.

History Edit

 
Nottingham Cathedral

It was one of twelve English dioceses created at the restoration of the hierarchy by Pius IX in 1850, embracing the counties of Nottingham, Leicester, Derby, Lincoln and Rutland. These had comprised part of the Apostolic Vicariate of the Midland District, when at the request of King James II in 1685, the Holy See divided England into four vicariates: the London, the Northern, the Midland and the Western. Before 1840, when the number of vicars apostolic was increased from four to eight, the Midland District consisted of fifteen counties.[1]

In 1850 Nottingham had 24 permanent missions, many of these little better than villages. For the most part they originated from chaplaincies which had through penal times been maintained by the Catholic nobility and gentry, or had been founded independently by them. Among these there existed foundations of several religious orders. In Derbyshire the Jesuits had missions at Chesterfield and Spinkhill, in Lincolnshire at Lincoln, Boston and Market Rasen. The Dominican Order was settled in Leicester, the Fathers of Charity carried on several missions in Leicestershire, and the Cistercians occupied Mount St Bernard Abbey in Charnwood Forest.[1]

From the appearance of the Jesuits in England in 1580 at the special request of Dr William Allen, they had done much by their labours to keep alive the Catholic faith in the Nottingham diocese. Of their missions mentioned above some were among the earliest of the Society of Jesus in England dating back some three hundred years. Derby was included in the district or college of the Society called the "Immaculate Conception", founded by Father Richard Blount, about 1633, first provincial superior of the English Province. Extinct for many years, it was partially revived in 1842 as Mount St Mary's College, when the new college and convictus was established by the then provincial, Father Randall Lythgoe.[1]

After the Reformation, the English Province of the Friars Preachers ceased to exist, until resuscitated at Bornem in Flanders by Philip Howard, later cardinal, who became the first prior of the Dominicans in 1675. The first introduction of the English Dominicans from Bornem was at Hinckley, whence for many years Leicester was served by them at intervals. Their mission at Leicester was put on a permanent basis in 1798 by the purchase of a house by Father Francis Xavier Choppelle. Holy Cross Priory, Leicester was begun by Father Benedict Caestryck in 1815 and was opened in 1819. The dedication under the title of Holy Cross was adopted on account of the celebrated relic of the Holy Cross brought from Bornem.

After the lapse of three centuries a monastery of the Cistercian Order was resuscitated in England by the foundation of the Abbey of Mount St Bernard in Leicestershire, made possible by the assistance of Ambrose Phillips de Lisle of Grace Dieu Manor, who after his conversion in December 1825, devoted his energies to the spread of the Catholic faith in England by the re-establishment in the country of monastic institutions. In 1835 he purchased about 227 acres (0.92 km2) of wild uncultivated land in Charnwood Forest and presented it to the Cistercians.[2]

Beginning with one brother who lived alone in a four-roomed cottage, the community rapidly increased, and a larger building was erected as well as a small chapel, opened by Dr Walsh on 11 October 1837. In a short time this proved insufficient and John Talbot, 16th Earl of Shrewsbury offered them £2,000, on condition that a new monastery should be erected, choosing for that purpose the present site of the abbey. It was built from designs by Augustus Pugin. In 1848 by Papal Brief of Pius IX the monastery of Mount St Bernard was raised to the dignity of an abbey, and Father Bernard, the first mitred abbot in England since the Reformation, was consecrated on 18 February 1849.

In introducing the Cistercians into England, de Lisle had hoped that they would undertake missionary work and with this view he had built three chapels: at Grace-Dieu, Whitwick and the abbey. On the score of their rule, they declined to take charge permanently of the missions. De Lisle then decided to bring from Italy members of the Institute of Charity. After much negotiation with the head of the order, Father Gentili came to Grace Dieu as chaplain. This was the commencement of the settlement of the Rosminians in the diocese. In 1841 Dr Walsh made over to them the secular mission of Loughborough founded in 1832 by Father Benjamin Hulme. The buildings were too small to permit of a novitiate and a college of their own which they were desirous to establish. To carry out this twofold object, about 9 acres (36,000 m2) were purchased; the foundation stone of the new buildings was laid in May 1843 and in 1844 was opened the first college and novitiate house of the institute in England. The Sisters of Mercy had come to Nottingham in 1844, and in 1846 entered their convent in close proximity to the cathedral.

The first Bishop of Nottingham was the Rt Rev. Joseph William Hendren, O.S.F. (born 1792), consecrated on 10 September 1848, as Vicar Apostolic of the Western District, transferred to the bishopric of Clifton on 29 September 1850, and to Nottingham on 22 June 1851. The cathedral church of St Barnabas, of the lancet style of architecture, is considered one of the best specimens of the work of Pugin.

Owing to ill-health Dr Hendren resigned in 1853 and was succeeded by Dr Richard Roskell, born at Gateacre, near Liverpool, in 1817. He was sent to Ushaw College and afterwards to Rome, where he took his degree and was ordained in 1840. He was consecrated in the cathedral by Cardinal Wiseman on 21 September 1853. During his episcopate a number of missions were founded in the counties of the diocese. In Lincolnshire, through the generosity of Thomas Arthur Young of Kingerby Hall, not only was there a church and presbytery built at Gainsborough and Grimsby, but the Premonstratensian order was re-introduced into England at Crowle and Spalding. Thomas Young also planned to build a church in Lincoln, but it was not until 1893 that St Hugh's Church, Lincoln was opened.[3]

In 1874, owing to Dr Roskell's ill-health, the pope appointed the Rev. Edward Gilpin Bagshawe of the London Oratory his coadjutor. The same year, Dr Roskell tendered his resignation and Dr Bagshawe was consecrated at the London Oratory on 12 November 1874. Numerous missions necessitated by the development of the mining industry were opened during his administration, and communities of nuns introduced into the diocese, which he served for 27 years. He resigned in 1901 and in 1904 was transferred to the titular Archbishopric of Seleucia.

The Rt Rev. Robert Brindle, Bagshawe's successor, was born at Liverpool on 4 November 1837. The first Roman Catholic chaplain to receive the pension for distinguished and meritorious service, as well as Turkish and Egyptian orders and medals, he was, after his retirement from the army in 1899, on the petition of Cardinal Herbert Vaughan, third Archbishop of Westminster, appointed his assistant, and on the resignation of Dr Bagshawe, received his Brief to the See of Nottingham on 6 November 1901.

In 1910 there were in the diocese 32,000 Catholics; 84 secular and 44 regular priests; 75 churches with missions attached, 31 without missions; 6 convents for men and 9 for women.

In 1980, 16 parishes were transferred to the newly created Diocese of Hallam; this resulted in Bassetlaw in Nottinghamshire and parts of Chesterfield and the High Peak in Derbyshire ceasing to be part of the diocese.

Bishops Edit

Past and present ordinaries Edit

Coadjutor bishops Edit

Other priests of this diocese who became bishops Edit

Sexual abuse in the diocese Edit

In 2014, 85-year-old Father Francis Paul Cullen, who had served as a priest in the parishes of Hyson Green and Mackworth and Buxton in the diocese, admitted 21 sexual assault charges against two young girls and five altar boys. He had been on the run in Tenerife for 20 years. The offences took place over a 34-year period from 1957 to 1991 and involved children aged from six to sixteen.[4] A police spokesperson said that it was “inconceivable” that Cullen had not abused more children during his time as a priest. During the court case the diocese insisted there were no records of anybody complaining to the Church at the time, however at least one victim said their parents did report the abuse to the Church.[5]

In 2011 the Diocesan Safeguarding Co-ordinator reported that there had been "12 new concerns/allegations which needed to be dealt with" during the previous year, and that he welcomed the paring back of a Government Vetting and Barring Scheme.[6]

Environmental policy Edit

The and its seven constituent charitable trusts have adopted an Environmental Policy Framework which commits the diocese to eight points of action covering formation, decarbonisation, biodiversity, use of resources, ethics, conformity, resilience and advocacy.[7]

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ a b c Croft, William. "Diocese of Nottingham." The Catholic Encyclopedia Vol. 11. New York: Robert Appleton Company, 1911. 27 February 2019
  2. ^ Purcell, Edmund Sheridan. Life and Letters of Ambrose Phillipps de Lisle, p.66, Macmillan and Co., Ltd., London, 1900
  3. ^ Lincoln - St Hugh of Lincoln from English Heritage, retrieved 20 December 2015
  4. ^ The Times; 25 February 2014, page 14
  5. ^ Former Hyson Green priest Francis Cullen admits sexually abusing children from Nottingham Post, 24 February 2014, retrieved 1 May 2015
  6. ^ 2010 Annual Report to Inter Commissions Group from the Safeguarding Commission from Diocese of Nottingham archives retrieved 14 May 2015
  7. ^ Diocese of Nottingham, Environmental Policy Framework, accessed 21 July 2022
  •   This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainHerbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). "Diocese of Nottingham". Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company.

External links Edit

  • Diocese of Nottingham website

52°57′16″N 1°09′26″W / 52.9545°N 1.1572°W / 52.9545; -1.1572

roman, catholic, diocese, nottingham, diocese, nottingham, latin, dioecesis, nottinghamensis, latin, church, diocese, catholic, church, england, suffragan, ecclesiastical, province, metropolitan, diocese, westminster, diocese, nottinghamdioecesis, nottinghamen. The Diocese of Nottingham Latin Dioecesis Nottinghamensis is a Latin Church diocese of the Catholic church in England and a suffragan in the ecclesiastical province of the Metropolitan Diocese of Westminster Diocese of NottinghamDioecesis NottinghamensisLocationCountryEnglandTerritory Derbyshire without parts of High Peak amp Chesterfield Leicestershire Lincolnshire Nottinghamshire without Bassetlaw RutlandEcclesiastical provinceWestminsterMetropolitanDiocese of WestminsterDeaneries13StatisticsArea13 000 km2 5 000 sq mi Population Total Catholics as of 2013 4 500 000155 000 3 4 Parishes108InformationDenominationCatholicSui iuris churchLatin ChurchRiteRoman RiteCathedralNottingham CathedralSecular priests130Current leadershipPopeFrancisBishopPatrick McKinneyMetropolitan ArchbishopCardinal Vincent NicholsVicar GeneralVery Rev Canon Edward Jarosz VGVery Rev Fr Joseph Wheat VGEpiscopal VicarsVery Rev Fr Paul ChipcaseVery Rev Fr Martin HardyVery Rev Fr Michael MooreSr Susan RichertJudicial VicarVery Rev Fr Peter VellacottMapDiocese of Nottingham within the Province of WestminsterWebsitedioceseofnottingham ukThe diocese covers an area of 13 074 square kilometres 5 048 sq mi taking in the English counties of Nottinghamshire now excluding the district of Bassetlaw Leicestershire most of Derbyshire Rutland and Lincolnshire The episcopal seat is the Cathedral Church of St Barnabas in Nottingham The Right Reverend Patrick McKinney is the 10th Bishop of Nottingham Contents 1 History 2 Bishops 2 1 Past and present ordinaries 2 2 Coadjutor bishops 2 3 Other priests of this diocese who became bishops 3 Sexual abuse in the diocese 4 Environmental policy 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksHistory Edit nbsp Nottingham CathedralIt was one of twelve English dioceses created at the restoration of the hierarchy by Pius IX in 1850 embracing the counties of Nottingham Leicester Derby Lincoln and Rutland These had comprised part of the Apostolic Vicariate of the Midland District when at the request of King James II in 1685 the Holy See divided England into four vicariates the London the Northern the Midland and the Western Before 1840 when the number of vicars apostolic was increased from four to eight the Midland District consisted of fifteen counties 1 In 1850 Nottingham had 24 permanent missions many of these little better than villages For the most part they originated from chaplaincies which had through penal times been maintained by the Catholic nobility and gentry or had been founded independently by them Among these there existed foundations of several religious orders In Derbyshire the Jesuits had missions at Chesterfield and Spinkhill in Lincolnshire at Lincoln Boston and Market Rasen The Dominican Order was settled in Leicester the Fathers of Charity carried on several missions in Leicestershire and the Cistercians occupied Mount St Bernard Abbey in Charnwood Forest 1 From the appearance of the Jesuits in England in 1580 at the special request of Dr William Allen they had done much by their labours to keep alive the Catholic faith in the Nottingham diocese Of their missions mentioned above some were among the earliest of the Society of Jesus in England dating back some three hundred years Derby was included in the district or college of the Society called the Immaculate Conception founded by Father Richard Blount about 1633 first provincial superior of the English Province Extinct for many years it was partially revived in 1842 as Mount St Mary s College when the new college and convictus was established by the then provincial Father Randall Lythgoe 1 After the Reformation the English Province of the Friars Preachers ceased to exist until resuscitated at Bornem in Flanders by Philip Howard later cardinal who became the first prior of the Dominicans in 1675 The first introduction of the English Dominicans from Bornem was at Hinckley whence for many years Leicester was served by them at intervals Their mission at Leicester was put on a permanent basis in 1798 by the purchase of a house by Father Francis Xavier Choppelle Holy Cross Priory Leicester was begun by Father Benedict Caestryck in 1815 and was opened in 1819 The dedication under the title of Holy Cross was adopted on account of the celebrated relic of the Holy Cross brought from Bornem After the lapse of three centuries a monastery of the Cistercian Order was resuscitated in England by the foundation of the Abbey of Mount St Bernard in Leicestershire made possible by the assistance of Ambrose Phillips de Lisle of Grace Dieu Manor who after his conversion in December 1825 devoted his energies to the spread of the Catholic faith in England by the re establishment in the country of monastic institutions In 1835 he purchased about 227 acres 0 92 km2 of wild uncultivated land in Charnwood Forest and presented it to the Cistercians 2 Beginning with one brother who lived alone in a four roomed cottage the community rapidly increased and a larger building was erected as well as a small chapel opened by Dr Walsh on 11 October 1837 In a short time this proved insufficient and John Talbot 16th Earl of Shrewsbury offered them 2 000 on condition that a new monastery should be erected choosing for that purpose the present site of the abbey It was built from designs by Augustus Pugin In 1848 by Papal Brief of Pius IX the monastery of Mount St Bernard was raised to the dignity of an abbey and Father Bernard the first mitred abbot in England since the Reformation was consecrated on 18 February 1849 In introducing the Cistercians into England de Lisle had hoped that they would undertake missionary work and with this view he had built three chapels at Grace Dieu Whitwick and the abbey On the score of their rule they declined to take charge permanently of the missions De Lisle then decided to bring from Italy members of the Institute of Charity After much negotiation with the head of the order Father Gentili came to Grace Dieu as chaplain This was the commencement of the settlement of the Rosminians in the diocese In 1841 Dr Walsh made over to them the secular mission of Loughborough founded in 1832 by Father Benjamin Hulme The buildings were too small to permit of a novitiate and a college of their own which they were desirous to establish To carry out this twofold object about 9 acres 36 000 m2 were purchased the foundation stone of the new buildings was laid in May 1843 and in 1844 was opened the first college and novitiate house of the institute in England The Sisters of Mercy had come to Nottingham in 1844 and in 1846 entered their convent in close proximity to the cathedral The first Bishop of Nottingham was the Rt Rev Joseph William Hendren O S F born 1792 consecrated on 10 September 1848 as Vicar Apostolic of the Western District transferred to the bishopric of Clifton on 29 September 1850 and to Nottingham on 22 June 1851 The cathedral church of St Barnabas of the lancet style of architecture is considered one of the best specimens of the work of Pugin Owing to ill health Dr Hendren resigned in 1853 and was succeeded by Dr Richard Roskell born at Gateacre near Liverpool in 1817 He was sent to Ushaw College and afterwards to Rome where he took his degree and was ordained in 1840 He was consecrated in the cathedral by Cardinal Wiseman on 21 September 1853 During his episcopate a number of missions were founded in the counties of the diocese In Lincolnshire through the generosity of Thomas Arthur Young of Kingerby Hall not only was there a church and presbytery built at Gainsborough and Grimsby but the Premonstratensian order was re introduced into England at Crowle and Spalding Thomas Young also planned to build a church in Lincoln but it was not until 1893 that St Hugh s Church Lincoln was opened 3 In 1874 owing to Dr Roskell s ill health the pope appointed the Rev Edward Gilpin Bagshawe of the London Oratory his coadjutor The same year Dr Roskell tendered his resignation and Dr Bagshawe was consecrated at the London Oratory on 12 November 1874 Numerous missions necessitated by the development of the mining industry were opened during his administration and communities of nuns introduced into the diocese which he served for 27 years He resigned in 1901 and in 1904 was transferred to the titular Archbishopric of Seleucia The Rt Rev Robert Brindle Bagshawe s successor was born at Liverpool on 4 November 1837 The first Roman Catholic chaplain to receive the pension for distinguished and meritorious service as well as Turkish and Egyptian orders and medals he was after his retirement from the army in 1899 on the petition of Cardinal Herbert Vaughan third Archbishop of Westminster appointed his assistant and on the resignation of Dr Bagshawe received his Brief to the See of Nottingham on 6 November 1901 In 1910 there were in the diocese 32 000 Catholics 84 secular and 44 regular priests 75 churches with missions attached 31 without missions 6 convents for men and 9 for women In 1980 16 parishes were transferred to the newly created Diocese of Hallam this resulted in Bassetlaw in Nottinghamshire and parts of Chesterfield and the High Peak in Derbyshire ceasing to be part of the diocese Bishops EditPast and present ordinaries Edit Joseph William Hendren O F M Rec 1851 1853 Richard Butler Roskell 1853 1874 Edward Gilpin Bagshawe C O 1874 1901 Robert Brindle 1901 1915 Thomas Dunn 1916 1931 John Francis McNulty 1932 1943 Edward Ellis 1944 1974 James Joseph McGuinness 1974 2000 Malcolm Patrick McMahon O P 2000 2014 appointed Archbishop of Liverpool Patrick Joseph McKinney 2015 Coadjutor bishops Edit James Joseph McGuinness 1972 1974 Other priests of this diocese who became bishops Edit William Eric Grasar appointed Bishop of Shrewsbury in 1962 John Francis Sherrington appointed auxiliary bishop of Westminster in 2011 Cyril Edward Restieaux appointed Bishop of Plymouth in 1955Sexual abuse in the diocese EditIn 2014 85 year old Father Francis Paul Cullen who had served as a priest in the parishes of Hyson Green and Mackworth and Buxton in the diocese admitted 21 sexual assault charges against two young girls and five altar boys He had been on the run in Tenerife for 20 years The offences took place over a 34 year period from 1957 to 1991 and involved children aged from six to sixteen 4 A police spokesperson said that it was inconceivable that Cullen had not abused more children during his time as a priest During the court case the diocese insisted there were no records of anybody complaining to the Church at the time however at least one victim said their parents did report the abuse to the Church 5 In 2011 the Diocesan Safeguarding Co ordinator reported that there had been 12 new concerns allegations which needed to be dealt with during the previous year and that he welcomed the paring back of a Government Vetting and Barring Scheme 6 Environmental policy EditThe and its seven constituent charitable trusts have adopted an Environmental Policy Framework which commits the diocese to eight points of action covering formation decarbonisation biodiversity use of resources ethics conformity resilience and advocacy 7 See also EditNotable churches in the diocese are listed at List of Catholic churches in Nottingham Catholic Church in England and WalesReferences Edit a b c Croft William Diocese of Nottingham The Catholic Encyclopedia Vol 11 New York Robert Appleton Company 1911 27 February 2019 Purcell Edmund Sheridan Life and Letters of Ambrose Phillipps de Lisle p 66 Macmillan and Co Ltd London 1900 Lincoln St Hugh of Lincoln from English Heritage retrieved 20 December 2015 The Times 25 February 2014 page 14 Former Hyson Green priest Francis Cullen admits sexually abusing children from Nottingham Post 24 February 2014 retrieved 1 May 2015 2010 Annual Report to Inter Commissions Group from the Safeguarding Commission from Diocese of Nottingham archives retrieved 14 May 2015 Diocese of Nottingham Environmental Policy Framework accessed 21 July 2022 nbsp This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Herbermann Charles ed 1913 Diocese of Nottingham Catholic Encyclopedia New York Robert Appleton Company External links EditDiocese of Nottingham website 52 57 16 N 1 09 26 W 52 9545 N 1 1572 W 52 9545 1 1572 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Roman Catholic Diocese of Nottingham amp oldid 1179795905, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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