Jump to content

Edward Jones (martyr)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Blessed Edward Jones)
Blessed

Edward Jones
Statue of Edward Jones in the church of St Etheldreda, Ely Place, London
Martyr
BornLlanelidan in Dyffryn Clwyd, Wales
Died6 May 1590
London
Beatified15 December 1929 by Pope Pius XI
Feast6 May

Edward Jones (died 6 May 1590) was a Welsh martyr of the Roman Catholic Church. He has been beatified in 1926 with the other Douai Martyrs.

Life

[edit]

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

[edit]

He was beatified on 15 December 1929; his feast day is 6 May.[4]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c School information Archived 2018-11-01 at the Wayback Machine from BlessedEdwardJones.eschools.co.uk, retrieved 31 October 2018
  2. ^ a b "CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: Ven. Edward Jones".
  3. ^ Wittich, John (1988). Catholic London. Herefordshire: Fowler Wright Books. p. 122.
  4. ^ Catholic.org, retrieved 31 October 1590

Further reading

[edit]