Richard Smith (bishop)
The Right Reverend Richard Smith | |
---|---|
Vicar Apostolic of England | |
Appointed | 29 November 1624 |
Term ended | 1632 |
Predecessor | William Bishop |
Successor | John Leyburn |
Other posts | Titular Bishop of Chalcedon |
Orders | |
Ordination | 7 May 1592 |
Consecration |
12 January 1625 by Bernardino Spada |
Personal details | |
Born |
November 1568 Hamworth, England |
Died | 18 March 1655 86) | (aged
Nationality | English |
Denomination | Roman Catholic |
Alma mater |
Richard Smith (b. Hanworth, England, November 1568 - d. Paris, 18 March 1655), (officially the Bishop of Chalcedon), was the second Catholic bishop for England, Wales and Scotland after Catholicism was banned in England in 1559. He followed William Bishop, who died in 1624.
Early life
Richard Smith was born in Lincolnshire, England. He studied at Trinity College, Oxford University and in Rome, where he was admitted to the English College in 1586.
Priesthood
In 1592 Smith was ordained as a priest. Between 1598 and 1603 he spend some time in Valladolid, where he became a Doctor of Theology, and in Seville.
Smith served as a priest in England at a time when Catholicism was officially banned, and could have faced death if caught and tried. From 1603 to 1609 he was chaplain to Viscountess Montague, wife of Anthony-Maria Browne, 2nd Viscount Montagu, at Battle Abbey in Sussex, England. He left Sussex in 1609 to go to Paris to study and write at Arras College, which had been founded for English priests.
Bishopric
Smith was appointed Apostolic Vicar for the whole of England, Wales and Scotland in 1625. He followed William Bishop, who had held the post for less than a year. As Catholicism was illegal in England at the time, his episcopal title was Titular bishop of Chalcedon. He arrived in England in April 1625, and stayed in Turvey, Bedfordshire, at the house of Lord Montagu. In 1628 a warrant was issued for his arrest. He resigned his post in 1631, when he fled to Paris.
Death
In Paris Smith lived at first with Cardinal Richelieu until the latter's death in 1642. He held the title of commendatory abbot of Charroux Abbey, resigning that title in 1648. He died at the Paris priory of English Canonesses Regular of the Lateran, whose founding, under Mother Lettice Mary Tredway, C.R.L. (formally called Lady Treadway), he had supported.
Works
Smith authored:
- "An answer to T. Bel's late Challenge" (1605), against Thomas Bell;
- "The Prudentiall Ballance of Religion", (1609);
- "Vita Dominae Magdalenae Montis-Acuti" i.e., Viscountess Montagu (1609);
- "De auctore et essentia Protestanticae Religionis" (1619), English translation, 1621;
- "Collatio doctrinae Catholicorum et Protestantium" (1622), tr. (1631);
- "Of the distinction of fundamental and not fundamental points of faith" (1645);
- "Monita quaedam utilia pro Sacerdotibus, Seminaristis, Missionariis Angliae" (1647);
- "A Treatise of the best kinde of Confessors" (1651);
- "Of the all-sufficient Eternal Proposer of Matters of Faith" (1653);
- "Florum Historiae Ecclesiasticae gentis Anglorum libri septem" (1654).
See also
References
- Leys, M. D. R., Catholics in England 1559-1829: A social history (London : Camelot Press Ltd., 1961)
- Herbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). "Richard Smith (1)". Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company.
- Attribution
This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Herbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). "Richard Smith (1)". Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton.
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