Edward Jones (martyr)
Template:Short description Template:Saint
Edward Jones (died 6 May 1590) was a Welsh priest and martyr of the Roman Catholic Church. He has been beatified in 1926 with the other Douai Martyrs.
Life
He was born in Llanelidan in Dyffryn Clwyd.[1] He was baptised an Anglican in the Diocese of St Asaph. He travelled around Europe, and during his travels he became a Catholic.
In 1587, in Reims, he was received into the Catholic Church. He studied to be a priest at Douai College. On 11 June 1588, he was ordained a priest in Loon. In December 1588, he returned to England and stayed for some time in a grocer's shop in Fleet Street.[1]
In 1590, he was arrested in that shop by Richard Topcliffe, "who pretended to be a Catholic."[1][2] He was taken to the Tower of London and tortured there. At the Old Bailey "he made a skillful and learned defense, pleading that a confession elicited under torture was not legally sufficient to ensure a conviction. The court complimented him on his courageous bearing".[2] Nevertheless, he was convicted of high treason. Together with Anthony Middleton, he was hanged, drawn and quartered on 6 May 1590, opposite the grocer’s shop where he had been captured; "over the gallows there was placed an inscription: 'For treason and favouring of foreign invasion'. When he [Jones] protested he was thrown off the scaffold ... and the butchery began".[3]
Beatification
He was beatified on 15 December 1929; his feast day is 6 May.[4]
See also
References
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- ↑ a b c School information Template:Webarchive from BlessedEdwardJones.eschools.co.uk, retrieved 31 October 2018
- ↑ a b Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
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- ↑ Catholic.org, retrieved 31 October 1590
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Further reading
- Pages with script errors
- 16th-century births
- 1590 deaths
- Converts to Roman Catholicism from Anglicanism
- Welsh beatified people
- People executed under Elizabeth I by hanging, drawing and quartering
- 16th-century Roman Catholic martyrs
- 16th-century venerated Christians
- People executed under the Tudors for treason against England
- 16th-century Welsh clergy
- Executed Welsh people
- One Hundred and Seven Martyrs of England and Wales