Henry Edward Manning
His Eminence Henry Edward Manning | |
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Cardinal, Archbishop of Westminster | |
Cardinal Manning | |
Province | Westminster |
Diocese | Westminster |
Appointed | 16 May 1865 |
Term ended | 14 January 1892 |
Predecessor | Nicholas Wiseman |
Successor | Herbert Vaughan |
Other posts | Cardinal-Priest of Santi Andrea e Gregorio al Monte Celio |
Orders | |
Ordination |
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Consecration |
8 June 1865 by William Bernard Ullathorne |
Created Cardinal | 15 March 1875 |
Rank | Cardinal-Priest |
Personal details | |
Born |
Totteridge, Hertfordshire, England | 15 July 1808
Died |
14 January 1892 83) London, England | (aged
Buried | Westminster Cathedral |
Nationality | British |
Denomination | Roman Catholic |
Parents | William and Mary (née Hunter) Manning |
Spouse | Caroline Sargent |
Previous post |
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Styles of Henry Edward Manning | |
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Reference style | His Eminence |
Spoken style | Your Eminence |
Informal style | Cardinal |
Henry Edward Manning (15 July 1808 – 14 January 1892) was an English Cardinal of the Roman Catholic church, and the second Archbishop of Westminster from 1865 until his death in 1892.[2]
Early life
Manning was born on 15 July 1808 at his grandfather's home, Copped Hall, Totteridge, Hertfordshire. He was the third and youngest son of William Manning, a West India merchant, who served as a director and (1812–1813) as a governor of the Bank of England[3] and also sat in Parliament for 30 years, representing in the Tory interest Plympton Earle, Lymington, Evesham and Penryn consecutively. Manning's mother, Mary (died 1847), daughter of Henry Leroy Hunter, of Beech Hill, and sister of Sir Claudius Stephen Hunter, 1st Baronet, came of a family said to be of French extraction.
Manning spent his boyhood mainly at Coombe Bank, Sundridge, Kent, where he had for companions Charles Wordsworth and Christopher Wordsworth, later bishops of St Andrews and Lincoln respectively. He attended Harrow School (1822–1827) during the headmastership of George Butler, but obtained no distinction beyond playing for two years in the cricket eleven.[4] However, this proved to be no impediment to his academic career.
Manning matriculated at Balliol College, Oxford in 1827 and soon made his mark as a debater at the Oxford Union, where William Ewart Gladstone succeeded him as president in 1830. At this date he had ambitions of a political career, but his father had sustained severe losses in business and, in these circumstances, having graduated with first-class honours in 1830, he obtained the year following, through Frederick John Robinson, 1st Viscount Goderich, a post as a supernumerary clerk in the Colonial Office.[3]
Manning resigned from this position in 1832, his thoughts having turned towards a clerical career under Evangelical influences, including his friendship with Favell Lee Mortimer, which affected him deeply throughout life.
Anglican cleric
Returning to Oxford in 1832, he gained election as a fellow of Merton College and received ordination as a deacon in the Church of England. In January 1833 he became curate to John Sargent, Rector of Lavington-with-Graffham, West Sussex. In May 1833, following Sargent's death, he succeeded him as rector[5] due to the patronage of Sargent's mother.
Manning married Caroline, John Sargent's daughter,[5] on 7 November 1833, in a ceremony performed by the bride's brother-in-law, the Revd Samuel Wilberforce, later Bishop of Oxford and Winchester. Manning's marriage did not last long: his young and beautiful wife came of a consumptive family and died childless on 24 July 1837. When Manning died many years later, for decades a celibate Roman Catholic cleric, a locket containing his wife's picture was found on a chain around his neck.
Though he never became an acknowledged disciple of John Henry Newman (later Cardinal Newman), the latter's influence meant that from this date Manning's theology assumed an increasingly High Church character and his printed sermon on the "Rule of Faith" publicly signalled his alliance with the Tractarians.
In 1838 he took a leading part in the church education movement, by which diocesan boards were established throughout the country; and he wrote an open letter to his bishop in criticism of the recent appointment of the ecclesiastical commission. In December of that year he paid his first visit to Rome and called on Nicholas Wiseman in company with Gladstone.
In January 1841 Philip Shuttleworth, Bishop of Chichester, appointed Manning as the Archdeacon of Chichester,[6] whereupon he began a personal visitation of each parish within his district, completing the task in 1843. In 1842 he published a treatise on The Unity of the Church and his reputation as an eloquent and earnest preacher being by this time considerable, he was in the same year appointed select preacher by his university, thus being called upon to fill from time to time the pulpit which Newman, as vicar of St Mary's, was just ceasing to occupy.
Four volumes of Manning's sermons appeared between the years 1842 and 1850 and these had reached the 7th, 4th, 3rd and 2nd editions respectively in 1850, but were not afterwards reprinted. In 1844 his portrait was painted by George Richmond, and the same year he published a volume of university sermons, omitting the one on the Gunpowder Plot. This sermon had annoyed Newman and his more advanced disciples, but it was a proof that at that date Manning was loyal to the Church of England.
Newman's secession in 1845 placed Manning in a position of greater responsibility, as one of the High Church leaders, along with Edward Bouverie Pusey, John Keble and Marriott; but it was with Gladstone and James Robert Hope-Scott that he was at this time most closely associated.
Conversion to Catholicism
Manning's belief in Anglicanism was shattered in 1850 when, in the so-called Gorham judgement, the Privy Council ordered the Church of England to institute an Evangelical cleric who denied that the sacrament of baptism had an objective effect of baptismal regeneration. The denial of the objective effect of the sacraments was to Manning and many others a grave heresy, contradicting the clear tradition of the Christian Church from the Fathers of the Church on. That a civil and secular court had the power to force the Church of England to accept someone with such an unorthodox opinion proved to him that, far from being a divinely created institution, that church was merely a man-made creation of the English Parliament.
The following year, on 6 April 1851, Manning was received into the Catholic Church and soon afterwards, on 14 June 1851, was ordained a Catholic priest. Given his great abilities and prior fame, he quickly rose to a position of influence, and in 1865 he was appointed Archbishop of Westminster.
Among his accomplishments as head of the Catholic Church in England were the acquisition of the site for Westminster Cathedral and a greatly expanded system of Roman Catholic education, including the establishment of the short lived Catholic University College in Kensington. In 1875 Manning was created Cardinal-Priest of Ss Andrea e Gregorio al Monte Celio, becoming "His Eminence The Most Rev. Dr Henry Edward Cardinal Manning, Lord Archbishop of Westminster". Manning participated in the conclave that elected Pope Leo XIII in 1878.
Manning approved the founding of the Catholic Association Pilgrimage.
Influence on social justice teaching
Manning was very influential in setting the direction of the modern Catholic Church. His warm relations with Pope Pius IX and his ultramontane views gained him the trust of the Vatican, though "it was ordained that he should pass the evening of his days in England, and that he should outlive his intimacy at the Vatican and his influence on the general policy of the Church of Rome."[7]
Manning used this goodwill to promote a modern Roman Catholic view of social justice. These views are reflected in the papal encyclical Rerum novarum issued by Leo XIII which marks the beginning of modern Roman Catholic social justice teaching.
Manning was among the strongest supporters of the doctrine of papal infallibility, unlike Cardinal Newman who believed the doctrine but thought it might not be prudent to define it formally at the time. (For a comparison of Manning and Newman, see the section entitled "Newman and Manning" in the article on Cardinal Newman.)
Manning was instrumental in settling the London Dock Strike of 1889[3] at the behest of Margaret Harkness.[8] He had a significant role in the conversion of notable figures including Elizabeth Belloc, the mother of the famous British author Hilaire Belloc, upon whose thinking Manning had a profound influence.
When Manning died his estate was probated at £3,527. He received a formal burial at St Mary's Roman Catholic Cemetery in Kensal Green. Some years later, in 1907, his remains were transferred to the newly completed Westminster Cathedral.
Works
- Rule of Faith (1839)
- Unity of the Church (1842)
- A charge delivered at the ordinary visitation of the archdeaconry of Chichester in July (1843)
- Sermons 4 vols. (1842–1850)
- The Present Crisis of the Holy See (1861)
- The Glories of the Sacred Heart' (1876)[9]
- The Eternal Priesthood (1883)
See also
Notes
- ↑ "Archdeacons of Chichester". British History Online. Retrieved 15 April 2009.
- ↑ Miranda, Salvador. "Henry Edward Manning". The Cardinals of the Holy Roman Church. Retrieved 9 April 2009.
- 1 2 3 Kent, William. "Henry Edward Manning." The Catholic Encyclopedia. Vol. 9. New York: Robert Appleton Company, 1910. 29 December 2015
- ↑ Russell, G.W., Collections & Recollections (Revised edition, Smith Elder & Co, London, 1899), at page 42
- 1 2 Cross, F. L., ed. (1957) The Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church. London: Oxford University Press; p. 849-50
- ↑ "Classical Victorians: Scholars, Scoundrels and Generals in Pursuit of Antiquity" Richardson,E p196: Cambridge, CUP, 2013 ISBN 978-1-107-02677-3
- ↑ G.W.Russell, Collections & Recollections (Revised edition, Smith, Elder & Co, London, 1899), at page 47.
- ↑ John Lucas, ‘Harkness, Margaret Elise (1854–1923)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004; online edn, May 2005 accessed 29 Dec 2015
- ↑ Manning, Henry Edward. The Glories of the Sacred Heart, London: Burns & Oates, 1876
References
- This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Manning, Henry Edward". Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.
Further reading
- McClelland, Vincent Alan. Cardinal Manning: the Public Life and Influences, 1865–1892. London: Oxford University Press, 1962. xii, 256 p.
- Player, Robert. Lets Talk of Graves, of Worms, of Epitaphs, a fictionalised version of Manning's life, largely based on the polemic of Lytton Strachey.
External links
Wikiquote has quotations related to: Henry Edward Manning |
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Henry Edward Manning. |
- Henry Edward Cardinal Manning www.catholic-hierarchy.org
- Works by or about Henry Edward Manning at Internet Archive
- Works by Henry Edward Manning at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)
- "Manning, Henry Edward". The Nuttall Encyclopædia. 1907.
- Henry Edward Manning Papers (letters, sermons, and transcriptions) at Pitts Theological Library
- Individual works
- The rule of faith: a sermon, preached in the cathedral church of Chichester, June 13, 1838; at the primary visitation of the right Reverend William, Lord Bishop of Chichester (1839)
- Sermons on ecclesiastical subjects: with an introduction on the relations of England to Christianity (1869)
- The fourfold sovereignty of God (1872)
- Lytton Strachey's essay on Manning from Eminent Victorians is available at http://www.bartleby.com/189/100.html
- "Cardinal Manning" poem by Dunstan Thompson
Church of England titles | ||
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Preceded by Charles Webber |
Archdeacon of Chichester 1840–1851 |
Succeeded by James Garbett |
Catholic Church titles | ||
Preceded by Nicholas Wiseman |
Archbishop of Westminster 1865–1892 |
Succeeded by Herbert Vaughan |
Preceded by Angelo Quaglia |
Cardinal Priest of Ss. Andrea e Gregorio al Monte 1875–1892 |
Succeeded by Herbert Vaughan |