David Rothe
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David Rothe (1573 – 20 April 1650), was a Roman Catholic Bishop of Ossory, central Ireland.
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[edit] Life
He was born at Kilkenny, of a distinguished family. Having studied at the Irish College, Douai, and at the University of Salamanca, where he graduated doctor in civil and canon law, he was ordained in 1600, and proceeded to Rome. From 1601 to 1609 he was professor of theology and secretary to Archbishop Lombard, and on 15 June, 1609, was appointed Vice-Primate of Armagh.
He arrived in Ireland in 1610, having been made prothonotary Apostolic, and held a synod for the Ulster Province at Drogheda, in February, 1614, and a second synod in 1618. Though appointed Bishop of Ossory on 10 October, 1618, he had, owing to the severity of the penal laws, to seek consecration in Paris, where he was consecrated early in 1620; he returned to Ireland in the winter of 1621.
In 1624 Rothe presided over a synod at Kilkenny, and he labored zealously during a trying period. He joined the Confederates in 1642, and welcomed the papal nuncio, Rinuccini, to Kilkenny, on 14 November, 1645. Three years later, he refused to acknowledge the validity of the censures issued by Rinuccini, believing that the Supreme Council were acting in the best interests of the country.
Although seriously ill in 1649, he continued to minister to the plague-stricken citizens of Kilkenny. He was compelled by the Cromwellians to leave his episcopal city on 28 March, 1650, but, being robbed on the way, he was permitted to return. His remains were interred in St. Mary's Church, but there is a cenotaph to his memory in St. Canice's Cathedral.
[edit] Works
As early as 1616, Rothe had published the first part of his Analecta and the completed work was issued at Cologne (1617-19); a new edition was brought out by Cardinal Moran in 1884. In 1620 he published "Brigida Thaumaturga", at Paris, followed by "Hiberniae sive Antiquioris Scotiae" in 1621 at Antwerp, and "Hibernia Resurgens" at Paris, in the same year.
Other works of his except some few fragments have long since disappeared.
[edit] References
- Lynch, De praesulibus Hiberniae (1672)
- Ware, De praesulibus Hiberniae (Dublin, 1665)
- Meehan, Franciscan Monasteries (Dublin, 1872)
- Moran, Spicilegium Ossoriense (Dublin, 1874-84)
- William Carrigan, History of Ossory (Dublin 1905); Report on Franciscan MSS. in Hist. MSS. Com. (Dublin, 1906)
[edit] External links
- "David Rothe". Catholic Encyclopedia. (1913). New York: Robert Appleton Company.
This article incorporates text from the entry David Rothe in the public-domain Catholic Encyclopedia of 1913.