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Philip Cardinal Howard.
'Philip Howard' (
September 21,
1629 -
June 17,
1694) was an
English Roman Catholic cardinal. Born the third son of
Henry Frederick Howard (afterwards
Earl of Arundel and Surrey and head of the House of Norfolk) and his wife, Elizabeth Stuart (daughter of
Esme Stuart, the
Duke of Lennox), Howard was a member of the premier Catholic family in England. At the age of sixteen he joined the
Dominican Order in
Cremona, and was ordained in
1652. He founded the priory of
Bornem in
Flanders, with a college for English youths attached to it, and was himself the first prior and novice master.
[1] He also founded at
Vilvoorde a convent of nuns of the Second Order of
Saint Dominic, now at
Carisbrooke on the
Isle of Wight.
In the reign of
Charles II, Father Howard was made grand almoner to Queen
Catherine of Braganza and was one of the few who attended the royal wedding, according to the Catholic rite, celebrated privately in
Winchester. He resided at
St. James's Palace, with a salary of 500 pounds a year, and had a position of influence at Court.
Following an outbreak of anti-Catholic sentiment, he left England and resumed his position as prior at Bornhem. In
1672 he was nominated as
Vicar Apostolic of England with a see ''in partibus'', but the appointment, owing to the opposition of the "English Chapter" to his being a vicar Apostolic, and the insistence that he should be a bishop with ordinary jurisdiction, was not confirmed. He was made cardinal in
1675, by
Pope Clement X, being assigned the title of
Santa Cecilia trans Tiberim, exchanged later for the Dominican church of
Santa Maria sopra Minerva. He now took up his residence at
Rome, especially watching over the interests of the Catholic faith in England. He was to have been Bishop of Helenopolis. In
1679 he was made Protector of England and
Scotland. At his insistence the Feast of
St. Edward the Confessor was extended to the whole Church. He rebuilt the English College in Rome, and revised the rules of
Douai College.
Howard cooperated later with
James II in the increase of Vicars Apostolic in England from one to four, one of whom was his former secretary,
John Leyburn. This arrangement that lasted until
1840, when
Pope Gregory XVI increased the number to eight.
Gilbert Burnet wrote in his ''History'' that Cardinal Howard regretted the steps which led to the crisis in the reign of James II and which Howard sought to avert. The cardinal's plans were thwarted and the mission of
Roger Palmer, Earl of Castlemaine to Rome showed the rise of another spirit that he did not share. When the crisis he foresaw came, he had the consolation at least of knowing that his foundation at Bornhem was beyond the grasp of the anti-Catholic reaction in England. Cardinal Howard assisted at three
conclaves, for the election of
Innocent XI in
1676,
Alexander VIII in
1689, and
Innocent XII in
1691, and held the position of
camerlengo of the
College of Cardinals. He died in the twentieth year of his cardinalate, at the age of 64, and was buried in his titular church of S. Maria Sopra Minerva at Rome. A monument of white marble with the arms of the Howards honours his memory.
References
1.