Aodh Mac Cathmhaoil

The Most Reverend
Aodh Mac Cathmhaoil
(anglicised: Hugh McCaghwell)

O.F.M.
Archbishop of Armagh
and Primate of All Ireland

Aodh Mac Cathmhaoil (anglicised Hugh McCaghwell)

Aodh "McAingil" MacCathmhaoil (anglicised: Hugh McCaghwell) by an unknown artist, painted sometime between 1596 and 1626.
Church Roman Catholic Church
Archdiocese Armagh
Appointed 17 March 1626
Term ended 22 September 1626
Predecessor Peter Lombard
Successor Hugh O'Reilly
Orders
Consecration 7 June 1626
by Gabriel de Trejo
Personal details
Born 1571[1]
Dunen (Downpatrick), County Down, Ireland
Died 22 September 1626 (aged 55)
College of St. Isidore, Ludovisi, Rome
Buried Church of St. Isidore, Ludovisi, Rome
Nationality Irish
Denomination Roman Catholic

Aodh Mac Cathmhaoil, O.F.M., (Latin: Hugo Cavellus; anglicised: Hugh MacCaghwell) (1571 – 22 September 1626), was an Irish Franciscan theologian and Archbishop of Armagh. He was known by Irish speakers at Louvain by the honorary name Aodh Mac Aingil ("Mac Aingil" is Irish for "Son of an Angel"), and it was under this title that he published the Irish work Scáthán Shacramuinte na hAthridhe.

Life

Mac Cathmhaoil was born at Saul, County Down, and received his earliest education in his native place, trained at one of the bardic schools still operating in Ulster[2] and then passed to a famous school in the Isle of Man. On his return to Ireland he was selected by Hugh O'Neill, The O'Neill, 2nd Earl of Tyrone, as tutor to his sons Henry and Hugh.

Mac Cathmhaoil was sent by the Earl as special messenger to the Court of Spain to solicit aid for the Ulster forces. During his stay at Salamanca, where the Court then resided, he frequented the schools of the university and took doctor's degrees in divinity. Soon afterwards he entered the Order of Friars Minor. He enjoyed a great reputation as a theologian, and his commentaries on the theologian Duns Scotus (1266–1308) were held in high repute. It was principally due to his great influence at the Spanish Court that the Irish Franciscan College of St. Anthony was founded at Leuven (Louvain).

After his admission into the Order, Mac Cathmhaoil taught for some time in the University of Salamanca, then he was appointed superior and lecturer at St. Anthony's, Leuven. Among his pupils were John Colgan, Patrick Fleming, Hugh Ward, and Antony Hickey. He was summoned to Rome to lecture in the convent of Aracoeli; but his energies were not limited to his work as professor. He was employed by the pope on several commissions. He carried out a papal mission to Ulster in 1613 and over the next three decades Louvain produced a remarkable outpouring of Gaelic scholarship and devotional texts in Irish. In scouring the north and midlands of Ireland for all available manuscripts, to produce an ecclesiastical history of Ireland, his associates (Mícheál Ó Cléirigh, a trained historian) and Aodh Mac an Bhaird (Hugh Ward) are credited with saving many of the Irish manuscripts now in existence.

Mac Cathmhaoil was elected Definitor General of the Friars Minor of the Strict Observance, which gave him authority over all the friars in Europe who followed that branch of the Reform within Order. In that capacity, he gave substantial help to Friar Luke Wadding in founding and developing the College of San Isidore and Ludovisi's Pontifical Irish College in Rome, for Irish students. On 17 March 1626, Pope Urban VIII, passing over all the other candidates, nominated Mac Aingil Archbishop of Armagh and Primate of All Ireland; the consecration took place on 7 June, in the church of St. Isidore. Thomas Walsh, Archbishop of Cashel, was consecrated at the same time. The consecrating prelate was Cardinal Gabriel de Trejo, a great friend of the Irish.

Mac Cathmhaoil's health had been much weakened by his duties and the austerities he practised. In making the visitations of the provinces of the Order he had always travelled on foot, and passed much time in prayer and fasting. While making preparation for his departure for his arduous mission he was seized with fever and died.

Mac Cathmhaoil was buried in the Church of St. Isidore, and his friend John O'Neill, 3rd Earl of Tyrone, had a monument placed over his grave.The Latin playwright, Nicolaus Vernulæus (1583–1649), delivered a panegyric before the university commemorating the virtues and learning of the archbishop, saying that he was conspicuous for his virtues and that his holiness of life and profound learning made him the miracle of his time. This address was later published in Cologne in 1657.

Works

Mac Cathmhaoil composed four Christmas carols in Irish, and wrote Latin and theological works. In his Apologia pro Johanne Duns-Scoto, he engaged in Franciscan defence of Duns Scotus against the Dominican-inspired attacks of Bovius and Cornelius Jansen, claiming Scotus as an Irishman. He also wrote a work in Irish, which was printed at the Irish press in the college of St. Anthony's, Leuven, in 1618, entitled Scáthán Shacramuinte na hAthridhe, or Tractatus de poenitentia et indulgentiis, that is, The Mirror of the Sacrament of Penance. (The Latin title appears nowhere in the text and was used for cataloguing purposes in Latin libraries.)

Criticism

References

  1. "Archbishop Hugh McCaughwell, O.F.M.". Catholic-Hierarchy.org. David M. Cheney. Retrieved 21 June 2013.
  2. The Catholics of Ulster: A History by Marianne Elliot (pages75-76)
Attribution

 This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Herbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). "Hugh MacCaghwell". Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton. 

External links

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