Kendrick, Sir, Thomas Downing, 1895-1979, archaeologist and art historian
- Person
- 1 April 1895-2 November 1979
Kendrick, Sir, Thomas Downing, 1895-1979, archaeologist and art historian
Clarke, Harry, 1889-1931, stained-glass and graphic artist
Bodkin, Matthias McDonnell, 1849-1933, journalist and lawyer
Royal University of Ireland, 1879-1909
The Royal University of Ireland was the successor to the Queen's University of Ireland, dissolved in 1882, and the graduates, professors, students and colleges of that predecessor were transferred to the new university. The Royal University was a degree awarding body, which operated on St Stephen’s green between 1880 and 1909. It was succeeded by the National University of Ireland in 1909. It awarded degrees to University College, Dublin with which it was shared premises on St Stephen’s Green as well as to other colleges and schools. University College was the successor to the Catholic University, established by Cardinal Newman and from 1882-1908, it was administered by the Jesuits.
The examinations and the awarding of degrees were carried out by the fellows (teachers) of University College on behalf of the Royal University.
Mount St Mary’s College, 1842-
Gwynn, Edward Lucius, 1890-1919, historian
Burke, Edmund, 1730-97, politician and philosopher
Tynan, Katharine, 1859-1931, novelist, poet, and journalist
MacGennis, Edward, 1847-1906, Roman Catholic Bishop of Kilmore
Dezza, Paolo,1901-1999, Jesuit priest and Cardinal
Mungret Apostolic School, 1880-1969
Founded by Fr William Ronan SJ, at a house adjoining the Jesuit College of the Sacred Heart (Crescent), Limerick in September 1880. Moved to Mungret College in 1882.
Moran, Patrick, 1823-1895, Roman Catholic Bishop of Dunedin
Tyrrell, Robert Yelverton, 1844-1914, Irish classical scholar
Patmore, Henry, 1860-1883, poet
Patmore, Coventry, 1823-1896, English poet and critic
Shakespeare, William, 1564-1616, playwright, poet, and actor
Schlatter, Fredric W., 1926-2016, Jesuit priest
Cunnane, Joseph, 1913-2001, Roman Catholic Archbishop of Tuam
Strickland, Sir, Edward, 1821-1889, army officer
Loftus, Nicholas, 1687-1763, 1st Viscount Loftus of Ely
Dugré, Adélard, 1881-1970, Jesuit priest
Doorley, Edward, 1868-1950, Roman Catholic Bishop of Elphin
Keane, David, 1871-1945, Roman Catholic Bishop of Limerick
Fenning, Hugh, 1935-2018, Dominican priest, archivist and historian
Edwards, Francis, 1922-2006, Jesuit priest
British Province Archivist & Writer of the History of the Society of Jesus, 1960-1986
Canisius College, Pymble, New South Wales, 1938-
Russell, Charles William, 1812-1880, priest and historian
Cunich, Raimondo, 1719-1794, Jesuit priest, Greek and Latin humanist
Roman Catholic association whose members serve it on a voluntary basis.
Ganss, George, 1905-2000, Jesuit priest
Ó Bruadair, Dáibhí, 1625-1698, Irish language poet
Walford, John, 1834-1894, Jesuit priest
à Kempis, Thomas, c.1380-1471, writer
Jordan, Gregory, 1930-2015, Jesuit priest
Milltown Institute of Theology and Philosophy, 1968-2015
In 1880, a school of Philosophy was established by the Society of Jesus in Milltown Park, Dublin. In 1889, a school of Theology was added. In 1932, Milltown became a Jesuit ecclesiastical facility, with power to grant degrees.
In 1932, the school of Philosophy transferred to St Stanislaus College, Tullamore, County Offaly. It became a Jesuit ecclesiastical facility in 1948, however it closed in 1962, and returned to Milltown in 1966. In 1968, on the basis of these two faculties, Milltown Institute was established.
In 1974, the Congregation for Catholic Education recognised the Institute as a Pontifical Athenaeum.
In 1989, the Institute was approved for NCEA awards.
2002-2006, Milltown Institute granted awards in collaboration with the University of Wales, Lampeter.
2005-2015, the NUI Senate recognised Milltown Institute for college status.
Riverview Observatory, Sydney, 1908-
Ryan, Hugh Edward, 1888-1977, Roman Catholic Bishop of Townsville
Coffey, George, 1857-1916, archaeologist and nationalist
Halls of residence, established by the Jesuits, attached to the University of Hong Kong.
Mac Lochlainn, Val, 1930-2007, former Jesuit priest
Born: 11 June 1930, Fairview, Dublin, County Dublin
Entered: 07 September 1948, St Mary's, Emo, County Laois
Ordained: 31 July 1962, Milltown Park, Dublin
Final Vows: 02 February 1965, Sacred Heart College SJ, Limerick
Died: 2007, Edgworthstown, County Longford
Left Society of Jesus: 1995
by 1974 at Rome, Italy (DIR) sabbatical
by 1993 at Glasgow, Scotland (BRI) working
Interfuse No 139 : Easter 2009
Obituary
Fr Val Mac Lochlainn (1930-2007) : former Jesuit
Paul Andrews (Interfuse Obituarist) writes:
Because Val died as a married man, in Edgeworthstown in August 2007, we never had an obituary of him in Interfuse. That was an oversight, because he was an Irish Jesuit for 47 years, and remained a close friend after he left the Society in 1995. What follows is a memoir put together with the help of Tom McGivern in Zambia,
Val's education took him from “Joey's” CBS in Fairview through Emo, UCD (BA in Latin and Irish), philosophy in Tullabeg, theology in Milltown and tertianship in Rathfarnham. He then taught for two years in the Crescent, and three in Galway, where he had done his Regency. There followed four years in Gardiner Street church, a sabbatical in Rome, and then the work for which he is probably best remembered, nine years as National Promoter for the Christian Life Communities. There were 310 CLC groups in Ireland, and Val worked assiduously to encourage them all. When he left the job in 1983 he wrote in his CV of “mental exhaustion resulting from over zealous commitment to study while at secondary school”.
At the age of 53 he volunteered for Zambia, and he worked there for seven years, mostly in Charles Lwanga Teacher Training College. He suffered greatly from the fact that his mother had fallen into dementia, and in 1981 had to be put into a home; she died in 1988.
For Val the 1990s were years of uncertainty. He returned to Ireland in 1990, and while working as a priest - mostly in Scotland - he went through a period of painful discernment, with strong help from his Irish Jesuit director. In 1995 he decided to leave the Society and the priesthood. Through the remaining twelve years of his life, in England and Ireland, he stayed in close contact with Jesuit friends, especially Michael O. Gallagher who now holds Val's old post in CLC. Val married an old friend in 2000, and contributed energetically to the parish of Edgeworthstown where they lived.
Val was a good man, a zealous priest, a brilliant footballer who might well have made the Dublin team, a cherished husband, and, above all, a searcher. May he rest in peace, having reached his goal.
Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies, 1940-
Lenihan, Brian Patrick, 1930-1995, politician
Gury, Jean Baptiste, 1773-1854, Jesuit priest
Southwell, Saint Robert, c.1561-1595, Jesuit priest
Royal Hospital, Donnybrook, 1743-
Vitelleschi, Mutio, 1563-1645, Jesuit priest and Father General
Fr Mutio Vitelleschi SJ was an Italian Jesuit priest who served as the sixth Superior General (Father General) of the Society of Jesus (1615-1645).
Gonçalves da Costa, Manuel, 1910-1997, former Jesuit priest
By 1944, at Milltown Park, Dublin and studying at University College Dublin.
Muintir na Tíre, community development association, 1937-
General Secretary of Association of Secondary Teachers, 33 South Frederick Street, Dublin, 1938-1957.
Clongowes Social Services Club, 1914-
Oliver Freaney & Company, Chartered Accountants, Dublin
Congregation for Institutes of Consecrated Life and Societies of Apostolic Life
Piazza Pio XII, Rome, Italy
County Kildare Committee of Agriculture, County Offices, Naas, County Kildare
The Agricultural Credit Corporation Limited, Upper Hatch Street, Dublin