Joseph Dixon (bishop)

Styles of
Joseph Dixon
Reference style The Most Reverend
Spoken style Your Grace or Archbishop

Joseph Dixon (born at Coalisland, Co. Tyrone, in 1806; died at Armagh, 29 April 1866) was an Irish Roman Catholic Archbishop of Armagh.

Life

Having entered Maynooth College at the age of sixteen he was ordained priest in 1829. He was initially appointed as Junior Dean of the College, rising to Senior Dean in 1833. In 1834 he was appointed to the chair of Sacred Scripture and Hebrew, a post he occupied for the next eighteen years. His class had an average of 200 students, amongst whom was John McEvilly, afterwards Archbishop of Tuam.

As Primate of Armagh he held an important synod in 1854, at which all the bishops of the northern province assisted with their theologians. In the same year he began completing the unfinished cathedral of Armagh and almost accomplished the work before his death. In 1856 he formed the diocesan chapter consisting of thirteen members.

During his incumbency he brought some religious congregations into the diocese, viz. the Sisters of Charity of St. Vincent de Paul (1855), who opened a house in Drogheda; the Marist Fathers (1851) who opened a college and novitiate in Dundalk, and the Vincentian Fathers who were placed in charge of the ecclesiastical seminary the same year. The primate was a defender of the Holy See and at a public meeting in Drogheda denounced Napoleon III for complicity in the acts of the Italian revolutionists. His speech and subsequent letter to the Freeman's Journal created a sensation and the emperor made them a subject of complaint to Pope Pius IX. Dixon was the organizer of the Irish Brigade in the papal service.

Works

Dixon's professorship was signalized by his "Introduction to the Sacred Scriptures", a work praised by Cardinal Wiseman. The first edition appeared in 1852 and a second in 1875.

References

    Attribution
    Catholic Church titles
    Preceded by
    Paul Cullen
    Archbishop of Armagh
    and Primate of All Ireland

    1852–1866
    Succeeded by
    Michael Kieran


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