Misplaced Pages

Robert Dalby

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
(Redirected from Robert Dalby (Blessed)) English Roman Catholic priest and martyr For Robert Dalby (MP), see Wallingford (UK Parliament constituency).
Blessed
Robert Dalby
John Amias and Robert Dalby, "At the place of Execution." Illustration for Memoirs of Missionary Priests by Bishop Challoner (Jack, 1878)
BornHemingbrough, West Riding of Yorkshire
Died16 March 1589
Outside the city of York
Beatified15 December 1929 by Pope Pius XI
Feast16 March

Robert Dalby (died 1589) was an English Catholic priest and martyr.

Life

Robert Dalby (sometimes called Drury), came from Hemingbrough in the West Riding of Yorkshire (now North Yorkshire) lived at first as a Protestant minister. Becoming a Catholic, he entered the English College at Rheims on 30 September 1586 to study for the priesthood. He was ordained a priest at Châlons on 16 April 1588. It was on 25 August that year that he set out for England. He was arrested almost immediately upon landing at Scarborough on the Yorkshire coast and imprisoned in York Castle. Given the 1585 Act making it a capital offence to be a Catholic priest in England the terrible sentence of hanging, drawing and quartering was inevitable. It was carried out outside the city of York on 16 March 1589. His fate was shared by a fellow priest, known to us as John Amias. On arrival at the place of execution the prisoners prostrated themselves in prayer. Robert Dalby had to watch his fellow priest be hanged and quartered before his own turn came, but he displayed no hesitation in going to his death.

Both priests were declared "Blessed" by Pope Pius XI on 15 December 1929.

See also

References

  1. Stanton, Richard. A Menology of England and Wales, Burns & Oates, Ltd. London 1892
  2. ^ "Blessed Robert Dalby", The Newman Connection
  3. Bean, Dan. "York martyrs remembered at ceremony", York Press, 17 August 2012
  4. Pollen, John Hungerford. "English Confessors and Martyrs (1534–1729)." The Catholic Encyclopedia. Vol. 5. New York: Robert Appleton Company, 1909. 10 Apr. 2013

Sources

Anstruther, Godfrey Anstruther. Seminary Priests, St Edmund's College, Ware, vol. 1, 1968, p. 96.

Portals: Categories: