Saint Arthur of Glastonbury
Saint Arthur of Glastonbury (died November 15, 1539), according to some French sources,[1] was an English Roman Catholic faithful in the sixteenth century. He was martyred during the period of King Henry VIII's suppression of the Catholic Church due to his refusal to accept the king's claim to spiritual leadership of the Church in England.
English Catholic sources lack information on St. Arthur of Glastonbury's martyrdom under Henry VIII. It is possible that the legendary King Arthur of Camelot, believed to have been connected with Glastonbury, and the story of a local martyr[2] may have been conflated in Breton oral tradition; there were a number of Catholic martyrs during the English Reformation who hailed from the region including Richard Whyting of Glastonbury Abbey. Martyred with Whyting was John Arthur Thorne, treasurer of the abbey and owner of the original Glastonbury chair.
St. Arthur's feast-day is celebrated regionally on 15 November[3] in Brittany.
See also
- Blessed Arthur Bell Catholic martyr of the English Reformation
- Christian martyrs
- St. Thomas More
Notes
- ↑ "À Glastonbury, l’an 1539, les bienheureux martyrs Richard Whiting, abbé, Roger James et Jean Thorne, prêtres, moines de l’abbaye de ce lieu.", accessed 25 August 2011
- ↑ "Richard Whiting (WHTN505R)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
- ↑ " Il est fêté le 15 novembre.", accessed August 25, 2011