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Topic: Paul Cardinal Cullen


  
  PAUL CULLEN - LoveToKnow Article on PAUL CULLEN
(1803-1878), cardinal arid archbishop of Dublin, was born near Ballytore, Co. Kildare, and educated first at the Quaker school at Carlow and afterwards at Rome, where he joined the, Urban College of the Propaganda and, after passing a brilliant course, was ordained in 1829.
In 1849, on the strong recommendation of Archbishop John MacHale of Tuam, Cullen was~ nominated as successor to the primatial see of Armagh; and, on his return to Ireland, presided as papal delegate at the national council of Thurles in the August of 1850.
Three of the four judges allowed the defence of the cardinal to be valid; but it was held that the papal rescript upon which he relied for his extraordinary powers as delegate was illegal under statute; and the lord chief justice decided that the plaintiff could not renounce his natural and civil liberty.
www.1911encyclopedia.org /C/CU/CULLEN_PAUL.htm   (551 words)

  
 CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: Paul Cullen
Cardinal, Archbishop of Dublin, born at Prospect, Co. Kildare, Ireland, 29 April, 1803; died at Dublin, 24 October, 1878.
Cullen was promoted to the primatial See of Armagh on 19 December, 1849 and was consecrated by the Cardinal Prefect of Propaganda at the church of the Irish College, Rome, 24 February, 1850.
In political matters Cardinal Cullen was quite heedless of popularity, and he made it a rule to support every measure from whatever political party it came that he considered conducive to the interests of Ireland.
www.newadvent.org /cathen/04564a.htm   (2058 words)

  
 Papal conclave, 1878 - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
However the Camerlengo, Gioachino Cardinal Pecci, advocated otherwise, with an initial vote among cardinals to move to Spain being overturned in a later vote.
The election of Cardinal Pecci, who took the regnal name of Pope Leo XIII was a victory for the liberals.
Paul Cardinal Cullen, Archbishop of Dublin (Primate of Ireland)
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Papal_conclave,_1878   (840 words)

  
 CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: Rome
This was the titular church of Edward Cardinal Howard, afterwards Cardinal-Bishop of Frascati (died 1892).
It was the titular church of Paul Cardinal Cullen Archbishop of Dublin.
It was the titular church of Cardinal Moran, Archbishop of Sydney.
www.newadvent.org /cathen/13164a.htm   (14300 words)

  
 Genealogy of Cardinal Paul Cullen (1803-1878)
Descendants of Hugh Cullen of Prospect: Hugh Cullen of Prospect, Co Kildare, was the father of Cardinal Cullen.
Descendants of Garrett Cullen of Craan: Garrett Cullen of Crann, Co Carlow, was the brother of the above Hugh Cullen and an uncle to Cardinal Cullen.
Paul Cullen, Bishop of Armagh (1849), Archbishop of Dublin (1852), and Ireland's first Cardinal (1866), was born near Ballitore in County Kildare, Ireland on the 29'th of April 1803.
www.lrbcg.com /jtcullen/CardCull.htm   (1562 words)

  
 Santa Susanna   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-12)
For Cardinals of the Roman Catholic Church are clerics who are taken from one place and "attached to another, "in order that their service might be of use to the Pope, to provide the Holy Father "greater flexibility" as he administers the world church.
From the reign of Leo IX (1048-1054), cardinals were the principal counselors of the pope, and by naming reformed minded clerics to this position, popes began to transform the pastoral life of the church in Rome.
Cardinals are created in consistories, and the present pope has created 121 members of the College of Cardinals in six consistories over the last 18 years.
www.santasusanna.org /ourUniqueHistory/cardinals.html   (4291 words)

  
 New Catholic Dictionary: Cullen, Paul   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-12)
Cardinal, Archbishop of Dublin, born Prospect, Ireland, 1802; died Dublin, Ireland, 1878.
From 1832 to 1850 he was rector of the Irish College and during the Roman Revolution saved the College of Propaganda from dissolution by placing it under the protection of the United States, on account of the American students.
He was consecrated Archbishop of Armagh, 1850, transferred to Dublin, 1852, and in 1867 was made the first Irish cardinal.
www.catholic-forum.com /Saints/ncd02514.htm   (231 words)

  
 Cover story: FALL FROM GRACE
All priests were considered chaste, they were celibate, they were “pure” and had a “higher” calling than their departed brothers who were left with rue in their hearts for leaving the seminary for a lesser life.
Or, as the late Cardinal John Krol, in a phrase that captures the vulgar triumphalism of the day, described resigned priests when the study of the priesthood commissioned by the bishops was released in 1971, “They want to change their power over the Body of Christ for power over the body of a woman.”
Eugene Cullen Kennedy is emeritus professor of psychology at Loyola University, Chicago, and author of The Unhealed Wound: The Church and Human Sexuality, published by St. Martin’s Press.
www.natcath.com /NCR_Online/archives/030802/030802a.htm   (4140 words)

  
 Passionist History   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-12)
John and Paul in Rome, with the large house annexed to it on Monte Celio, and this remains the motherhouse of the congregation to the present day.
Paul had as cooperatrix in the foundation of the Passionist nuns, a religious, known as Mother Mary of Jesus Crucified, whose secular name was Faustina Gertrude Constantini.
Paul, detained by illness, was represented by the first consultor general of the order, Father John Mary.
www.ourladyofflorida.org /passhist.htm   (3447 words)

  
 Boston Globe / Spotlight / Abuse in the Catholic Church / Scandal and coverup
Cardinal Bernard Law promoted a Quincy pastor to the position of area vicar with oversight of 19 parishes in 1996, after the pastor had admitted to an allegation of sexual misconduct.
Cardinal Bernard Law engaged in a ''civil conspiracy'' to conceal the sexual abuse of three young brothers in Mississippi in the early 1970s, according to a lawsuit filed yesterday.
The roots of Cardinal Bernard Law's demise lay in his admissions in sworn testimony that he was aware of abuse allegations against Boston priests when he approved their reassignments.
www.boston.com /globe/spotlight/abuse/extras/coverups_archive.htm   (1651 words)

  
 Scotland’s Red Prince - [Sunday Herald]
The influential Cardinal Paul Cullen festooned the British Empire with his nephews, cousins and friends in bishoprics, committed to keeping Irish clerics in the optimum church positions at the expense of all other ethnic groups.
Cullen and his patron Pius IX died in 1878 before the Scots got their Catholic bishops back in the pre- Reformation diocese.
John Paul II lived much of his life under Polish regimes that found it advisable to conclude that the Russians knew more than they did, and had to follow their leadership for that reason.
www.sundayherald.com /37278   (1317 words)

  
 Dictionary of Canadian Biography
The Irish Franciscans lobbied hard to continue their unbroken line as vicars apostolic and bishops of Newfoundland since 1784, but Power, a secular priest and protégé of Cardinal Cullen, was elected to the see on 8 May 1870.
Cullen urged Power to leave soon for Newfoundland in order to correct what the cardinal perceived to be intolerable conditions among the clergy there, conditions that had developed because of the absence of episcopal leadership in St John’s.
Power’s association with Paul Cardinal Cullen is documented in Paul Cullen and his contemporaries: with their letters from 1820—1902, ed.
www.biographi.ca /EN/ShowBioPrintable.asp?BioId=40496   (1234 words)

  
 The courage to be Catholic when wise men say no
By the time those Cullen Catholics appeared in New York, the American Church itself was beginning to be recognized worldwide for what Vatican II later called its “works of charity, piety, and the apostolate.” The timing was Ireland’s gift to American Catholicity.
Cullen’s “devotional revolution,” as Emmet Larkin dubbed it, made it a bit easier for the American bishops who between 1900-1920 became pastors to 900,000 of the Cullen kind of Catholic.
So, John Cardinal Farley of New York (1902-1918) became the beneficiary of what he received from Ireland in the person of Paul Cullen, but also from what he inherited from John Hughes, who a dozen years earlier than Cullen (1838), took over New York in similarly troublesome circumstances.
www.catholic.net /RCC/Periodicals/Homiletic/Feb98/courage.html   (2802 words)

  
 Thomas Croke - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Matthew and of the Gaelic League from its foundation in 1893.
Within Catholicism he was a supporter of Gallicanism, as opposed to the Ultramontanism favoured by the Cardinal Archbishop of Dublin, Paul Cardinal Cullen.
His support of nationalism caused successive British governments and Lord Lieutenant of Ireland's governments in Dublin to be deeply suspicious of him, as were some less politicially-aligned Irish bishops.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Thomas_Croke   (403 words)

  
 Celtic Culture in America   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-12)
Cullen took upon himself the task of re-organizing the Irish clergy, including education, and professionalizing their status in Irish society even to the point of mandating the wearing of clerical dress and the Roman collar.
Cardinal Cullen was able to merge Irish Catholicism with nationalism.
Paul, Minnesota, and Southern Illinois University in Carbondale.
www.op.org /domcentral/library/celticculture.htm   (1911 words)

  
 C Society, Directory
Crescens A companion of St. Paul during his second Roman captivity, appears but once in the New Testament, when he is mentioned as having left the Apostle to go into Galatia.
Cullen, Paul Cardinal, Archbishop of Dublin, born at Prospect, Co. Kildare, Ireland, 29 April, 1803; died at Dublin, 24 October, 1878.
Cardinal Virtues The four principal virtues upon which the rest of the moral virtues turn or are hinged.
www.indiapolicyinstitute.org /aW5kXzM5NTg2.aspx   (12110 words)

  
 CULLEN, PAUL (1803–1878) - Online Information article about CULLEN, PAUL (1803–1878)   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-12)
Cullen, therefore, while an ardent patriot, was consistently an opponent of Fenianism.
account of two sentences of ecclesiastical censure pronounced by the cardinal as papal delegate.
defence of the cardinal to be valid; but it was held that the papal rescript upon which he relied for his extraordinary See also:
encyclopedia.jrank.org /CRE_DAH/CULLEN_PAUL_18031878_.html   (774 words)

  
 Paul Cullen --  Encyclopædia Britannica
Educated at the Quaker School, Carlow, Cullen joined the Urban College of Propaganda, Rome, and was ordained priest in 1829.
U.S. poet Countee Cullen was one of the finest voices of the Harlem Renaissance.
Paul Gaugin briefly joined van Gogh in the town of Arles, but left after the artist cut off part of his own ear.
www.britannica.com /eb/article-9028152?tocId=9028152   (612 words)

  
 Cardinal Men & Women Capture NCAA Titles :: Stanford runners score dramatic victories at NCAA's.
Following Hall across the finish line and contributing significantly to the remarkable performance by the Cardinal was Grant Robison in fourth place (29:19.2), Ian Dobson in fifth place (29:24.7) and Louis Luchini in sixth place (29:28.2).
Adam Tenforde concluded the team scoring for the Cardinal with a 12th place overall finish (29:44.9), while Donald Sage and Seth Hejny finished 13th (29:45.8) and 33rd (30:13.3), respectively.
The 150 margin of victory for the Cardinal was the largest in NCAA Division 1 history, besting the 122 point victory by Arkansas over BYU in 1993.
gostanford.collegesports.com /sports/c-xc/recaps/112403aaa.html   (957 words)

  
 Boston Globe / Spotlight / Abuse in the Catholic Church / Cardinal Law and the laity
There was a growing sense among those critics that the cardinal had little choice but to resign, especially after Monday's extraordinary news conference, during which a series of documents were used to detail Law's failure to confront the child molestation accusations against the Rev. Paul R. Shanley.
Several other members of the group that met with the cardinal at the chancery said they, too, were stunned by the cardinal's statement, but none would speak publicly about it.
If the cardinal tries to remain, he said, ''He will be the archbishop of Lake Street alone,'' a reference to the 66-acre tract in Brighton that houses archdiocesan headquarters, Law's residence, and St. John's Seminary.
www.boston.com /globe/spotlight/abuse/stories/041302_leadersresponse.htm   (1214 words)

  
 The Cardinals of the Holy Roman Church - Biographical Dictionary - Consistory of July 27, 1885
Nephew of Cardinal Paul Cullen (1866) who was his mother's stepbrother.
Accompanied Cardinal Cullen to the Vatican Council, 1869-1870.
Biography, in English; biographical data, in English, on the page "Descendants of Hugh Cullen of Prospect, Co Kildare"; biography and bibliography, in English; image and biographical data, in English; biography and bibliography, in English; and his photograph and biography in English.
www.fiu.edu /~mirandas/bios1885.htm   (1439 words)

  
 Paul Cullen Biography / Biography of Paul Cullen Biography
Paul Cullen (1803-1878) was the first Irish cardinal, who fundamentally shaped modern Irish Catholicism by bringing its church, its hierarchy, and its practices firmly in line with the Vatican's teachings.
Born on April 29, 1803, on the 76-acre farm called Prospect in the parish of Narraghmore, County Carlow, Ireland, Paul Cullen was one of 16 children (six were from his father's first marriage).
Hugh Cullen owned about 700 acres when his son Paul was born.
www.bookrags.com /biography-paul-cullen   (231 words)

  
 Articles Concerning Relatives of Cardinal Cullen
This Fr Paul Cullen (1702-1783), Parish Priest of Leighlin, is said to be the uncle or great uncle of the Cardinal.
Deceased was highly connected, being a relative of the late Cardinal Paul Cullen, with whom he corresponded up to within a short time of the distinguished prelate's decease.
Michael Verdon, an Irishman, a nephew of Cardinal Cullen of Dublin and a cousin of Cardinal Moran of Sydney, was born in 1838, at Liverpool.
www.lrbcg.com /jtCullen/CardBios.htm   (1954 words)

  
 About the Catholic Archdiocese of Sydney   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-12)
Patrick Francis Moran was born at Leiglinbridge, Ireland on 17 September 1830 to Patrick Moran and Alicia Cullen.
Consecrated on 5 March 1872 by Cardinal Cullen at the Pro-Cathedral Dublin.
Cardinal Moran was a prolific writer of histories, including Persecutions of Irish Catholics, Church and Social Progress, History of the Catholic Church in Australasia, Reunion of Christendom, Capital and Labour, Mission of the Catholic Church, The Anglican Reformation, Catholics and Irishmen among many others.
www.sydney.catholic.org.au /Archdiocese/History/Moran.shtml   (216 words)

  
 The Cardinals of the Holy Roman Church - Consistory of March 27, 1882
In the diocese of Treviso again, judge of the ecclesiastical tribunal; director of the tertians; assistant and animator of the Conference of St. Vincent de Paul; archpriest of the cathedral chapter; chancellor and pro-vicar general, 1863.
Created cardinal priest in the consistory of March 27, 1882; received red hat and title of S. Agnese fuori le mura in the consistory of July 3, 1882.
Exposed in the metropolitan cathedral of Dublin and buried in Glasnevin Cemetery, Dublin, Ireland.
www.fiu.edu /~mirandas/bios1882.htm   (1193 words)

  
 Kilcullen Parish Centre   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-12)
A site was leased from John Harvey Lewis, Landlord, and the foundation stone was laid by Cardinal Cullen on August 9 1869.
Cardinal Paul Cullen dedicated and opened the church on September 6 1872.
The Cardinal gave a very leisurely address, which was quoted extensively in the Freeman's Journal.
kildare.ie /kilcullen/parishchurch.htm   (555 words)

  
 The Most Reverend Edward P. Cullen, D.D. - Bishop of Allentown
Bishop Cullen is the oldest son and second child of Edward P. Cullen, Sr.
Bishop Cullen's academic credentials include a Masters in Social Work from the University of Pennsylvania (1970), a Masters of Education from LaSalle University (1971) and a Masters of Divinity from St.
Within the Archdiocese of Philadelphia and the communities which comprise it, Bishop Cullen was known for his keen insight and vision of Church, his expertise in administration, and his deeply principled compassion toward those in need.
www.cathedral-church.org /bishop.html   (989 words)

  
 [No title]
Paul Cardinal Cullen said, "the learned Bishop's writings display a great power of reasoning, and great critical acumen, while they supply an inexhaustible mine of erudition and Scriptural knowledge".What follows is taken from pages 548 to 556 of his magnificent book, The Sincere Christian.
4:1) St. Paul, deploring the state of such souls, says that they "have their understandings darkened, being alienated from the life of God, through the ignorance: that is in them, because of the blindness of their hearts".
Paul, full of zeal for the good of souls, and solicitous to preserve us from all danger of losing our holy Faith, the groundwork of our salvation, renews the same command in his Epistle to the Romans, by way of entreaty, beseeching us to avoid all such communication with those of a false religion.
www.cfnews.org /Hay-Ecu.htm   (1720 words)

  
 Jim Roache's Family Matriarch Page
Cullen is the normal anglicized form of the name, but there are many variants in the spelling.
Several other minor Gaelic sept names have become Cullen by attraction, notably O Cuileamhain, recte Culloon or Culhoun of south Leinster, to which, according to O'Curry, Cardinal Paul Cullen (1803-78), also Archbishop of Dublin, belonged.
Jane Cullen, being from southwestern Co. Wexford, was undoubtedly of Cambro-Norman descent.
www3.sympatico.ca /jfroache/addR4.html   (5387 words)

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