Irish College of St Anthony | |
Native Name: | Coláiste Naomh Antaine i Lobháin / An Coláiste Éireannach, Lobháin |
Native Name Lang: | Irish |
Latin Name: | Hibernorum Collegii S. Antonii de Padua Lovanii |
Other Name: | The Irish College in Leuven |
Former Names: | --> |
Motto: | Dochum Glóire Dé agus Ónóra na hÉireann. |
Motto Lang: | Irish |
Mottoeng: | For the Glory of God and the Honour of Ireland |
Type: | Franciscan house of studies |
Religious Affiliation: | Catholic |
Academic Affiliation: | Old University of Leuven, Catholic University of Leuven, Katholieke Universiteit Leuven |
City: | Leuven |
Country: | Belgium |
Coor: | 50.8761°N 4.6969°W |
Campus: | Urban |
Colours: | --> |
Mascots: | --> |
The Irish College of St Anthony, in Leuven, Belgium, known in Irish: Coláiste na nGael i Lobháin, Latin: Hibernorum Collegii S. Antonii de Padua Lovanii, French: Collège des Irlandais à Louvain and Dutch; Flemish: Iers College Leuven, has been a centre of Irish learning on the European Continent since the early 17th century. The college was dedicated to St. Anthony of Padua.
The college was founded in 1607 by Florence Conry, Archbishop of Tuam, and Irish Franciscan Hugh MacCaghwell (Lecturer at the University of Salamanca, later Archbishop of Armagh),[1] with the support of Philip III of Spain, as an exile institution for the training of Irish Franciscan priests.[2] A bull of foundation was acquired from Pope Paul V on 3 April 1607. The foundation stone of the current building was laid in 1617.[3] Funding came from Isabella Clara Eugenia, wife and co-ruler with Archduke Albert. It was one of the main centres of Irish learning and the preservation of Irish intellectual culture during penal times.[4] The Irish language was used in the college, and Irish was read during meals. The monks preserved and translated many Irish language documents.
Following the Flight of the Earls, many of the O'Neill and O'Donnell clans stayed in Louvain. In October 1610, two young O'Donnell nobles, Hugh Albert, son of the Earl of Tyrconnell, and Hugh, son of Cathbarr, were sheltered at the college by MacCaghwell.[5] 7 O'Donnell clan members were also buried there.[6]
College of the Immaculate Conception, Prague was founded in 1629 by Irish Franciscan priests from Louvain, including Patrick Fleming and Malachy Fallon (both Professors in Louvain).[7] In 1787 following the suppression by the Habsburgs, of the College of the Immaculate Conception, Prague, students were transferred to Louvain.
The Pastoral Irish College, Louvain (French: Collège pastoral irlandais / Collège des Hibernois / Latin: Collegium pastorale Hibernorum) established in 1622, by the archbishop of Dublin Eugene Matthews (and sanctioned in 1624 by a papal charter and financially by Pope Urban VII),[8] was under the supervision of the Franciscans, and affiliated to the university.[9] It was based in Rue des Orphelins, Presidents/Rectors of the Irish Pastoral college Louvain include Nicholas Aylmer, John Sullivan (from Kerry who set up a bursary for Louvain), Florence Sullivan and Dr. John Kent (served from 1732-1778). The Pastoral College closed in 1795 following French occupation. Thomas Stapleton also served as Rector of the pastoral college as well as of the University of Louvain.
The Irish Dominican College, Louvain (Irish Dominican College of Holy Cross), founded in 1620's, a priory built in 1650 and chapel in 1659, also in 1659 the College was fully incorporated into the University of Louvain. With the other colleges it was also suppressed in 1795, the property sold and buildings destroyed in 1799–1800, the street name in La Rue des Dominicains Irlandais now in Flemish Ierse Predikherenstraat (Irish Preachers' Street) is all that remains.
See also: Irish Dominican College, Louvain.
Closed down by the French invaders on 8 January 1797, the buildings were sold by public auction, later they were bought by the guardian Fr. James Gowan in 1822, since the university was closed he disposed of it in 1830 becoming a boys' school for the duration of the 19th century. In 1925 the Irish Franciscans again acquired the site (technically it was owned until 1973 by the Catholic University to issues of foreign organisation ownership), it needed repairs since it had been damaged during the great war, helped by Rev James J. Ryan and his friend from his University days Cardinal Désiré-Joseph Mercier,[10] and helped by funding from Irish-born American philanthropist Marquis Martin Maloney.[11] In 1927 the college reopened.
From the 1920's, many Irish students would have studied in St. Anthony's College, taking a undergraduate degree in University College Galway, before moving to Louvain.
Following the German invasion in 1940, students were transferred to the Franciscan (St. Anthony's,) College in Galway, where an extra wing was built to accommodate them (and students who would have otherwise gone to Rome)[12] and the Louvain college was entrusted to Belgian friars, with the Irish province resuming control in 1948, using it for their own educational purposes until 1983.
2007 saw a celebration of the 400th anniversary of the foundation of St Anthony's, the Irish Franciscan College, in Louvain, with events in Ireland[13] [14] and Leuven to commemorate it.[15] [16] A commemorative stamp was issued by the Irish post office to celebrate the 400th anniversary.[17]
A project to provide online access to the Irish manuscripts of the Irish College in Leuven is a collaboration between the Center for Irish Studies (KU Leuven), KBR, the Irish Embassy in Belgium and Irish Script on Screen (Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies).[18]
in 1984 the Irish Franciscans, before leaving the college, established the Leuven Institute of Ireland in Europe, a not for profit organisation which operates the former college as an international residential centre for education, training and research in European and international affairs, in fulfilment of its mission to maximise promotion, positive exposure and opportunities for the island of Ireland.[19] In keeping with its local identity, The Leuven Institute for Ireland in Europe uses the familiar brand of Irish College Leuven.
In 2010, a collaboration between the Institute and the Catholic University of Leuven launched The Leuven Centre for Irish Studies (LCIS) [20] The Irish College in Leuven is also the centre for the European Federation of Associations and Centres of Irish Studies (EFACIS).[21] Part of the mission is to promote Irish Culture, and as a result, it hosts performances, concerts, recitals and exhibitions, one of the initiatives is the Writer in residence at the Irish College.[22]
In 1972 the Irish Franciscans began to minister to English speakers in the Kraainem parish in Brussels,[2] following the accession of Ireland and the UK to the EEC, and a request from Cardinal Suenans to the Irish Franciscans, already present at the Irish College, who appointed Fr. Michael Bailey to a new English-speaking chaplaincy in 1973. The order purchased a house on Avenue l’Oiseau Bleu as the chaplain's residence and parish centre, and in 1983 bought the present property which is now the St. Anthony's Parish.[23] Edmund Dougan OFM, (former professor and guardian of the Irish College) served as Parish Priest at St. Anthony's from 1987 to 1995.
Amongst the most notable Irish scholars associated with the college were, in alphabetical order: Bishop Dominic de Burgo (Burke), John Colgan, Aodh Mac Cathmhaoil (also known as Aodh Mac Aingil), Mícheál Ó Cléirigh, Giolla Brighde Ó hEódhasa (also known as Bonaventura Ó hEodhasa) and Flaithrí Ó Maol Chonaire.
The head of the college was the Guardian the equivalent of a college rector or president, with the Vicar being the effective deputy.
A number of people who are buried at the college include founder Archbishop Florence Conry, Bishop Dominic de Burgo and Dominic Lynch.
Many Gaelic nobles of the exiled O'Neill and O'Donnell clans are buried at the college, including Rosa O’Doherty, wife of Owen Roe O’Neill, and Nuala O'Donnell, sister to Hugh Roe O'Donnell.
Rev. Dr. Hugh Ward is also buried in the college.