IRELAND, JOHN


Meaning of IRELAND, JOHN in English

born c. 1435 died c. 1500 also called Johannes de Irlandia Scottish writer, theologian, and diplomatist, whose treatise The Meroure of Wyssdome is the earliest extant example of original Scots prose. Ireland left the University of St. Andrews without taking a degree and attended the University of Paris (licentiate, 1460). He lived in France until 148384, becoming a doctor of theology and being sent on several diplomatic missions by Louis XI. On Louis's death he returned to Scotland and became private chaplain to James III. He was rector of Yarrow and sat in the Scottish parliament. When James died in 1488, he continued as chaplain to the young James IV, and wrote for his edification, in 1490, the work which is his chief claim to fame, The Meroure of Wyssdome, a hortatory and pious treatise on the value of wisdom to temporal rulers. born Sept. 11, 1838, Burnchurch, County Kilkenny, Ire. died Sept. 25, 1918, St. Paul, Minn., U.S. first archbishop of St. Paul; head of the liberal Roman Catholic clergy who promoted the integration of predominantly immigrant parishes into the life of the U.S. church (and society as a whole)in opposition to the separatist tendency of many ethnic groups to preserve their European-style churches, with priests of their own nationalities. Ireland emigrated to the United States in 1849 with his parents, who settled at St. Paul, Minnesota Territory. Later educated in France, he was ordained priest at St. Paul in 1861. In 1862 he was chaplain for the 5th Minnesota Volunteer Infantry during the American Civil War. Ireland was rector of St. Paul Cathedral when he was appointed bishop-coadjutor in 1875. He subsequently became bishop (1884) and archbishop (1888). Ireland's liberal views also gave him a wide influence and reputation outside of the church. Many Europeans considered him the chief Catholic intellectual leader in the U.S. His ideas on social reform and the relation of the church to a democratic society were prophetic. Through the Catholic Colonization Bureau, he encouraged the founding of Catholic colonies in the northwest. In 1889 he helped establish the Catholic University of America, in Washington, D.C., and founded (1894) St. Paul Seminary. He published The Church and Modern Society in 1896. Additional reading James H. Moynihan, Life of Archbishop John Ireland (1953, reprinted 1976).

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