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| ~From "Catholic Encyclopedia" ~ http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/05165a.htm | |
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Ven.
Robert Drury The
results of the address were disappointing; Elizabeth died
within three months of its signature, and James I soon
proved that he would not be satisfied with any purely
civil allegiance. He thirsted for spiritual authority,
and, with the assistance of an apostate Jesuit, a new
oath of allegiance was drawn up, which in its subtlety
was designed to trouble the conscience of Catholics and
divide them on the lawfulness of taking it. It was
imposed 5 July, 1606, and about this time Drury was
arrested. He was condemned for his priesthood, but was
offered his life if he would take the new oath. A letter
from Father Persons, S.J., against its lawfulness was
found on him. The oath declared that the "damnable
doctrine" of the deposing power was "impious
and heretical", and it was condemned by Pope Paul V,
22 September, 1606, "as containing many things
contrary to the Faith and Salvation". This brief,
however, was suppressed by the archpriest, and Drury
probably did not know of it. But he felt that his
conscience would not permit him to take the oath, and he
died a martyr at Tyburn, 26 February, 1606-7. A curious
contemporary account of his martyrdom, entitled "A
true Report of the Arraignment . . . of a Popish Priest
named Robert Drewrie" (London, 1607), which has been
reprinted in the "Harleian Miscellany", calls
him a Benedictine, and says he wore his monastic habit at
the execution. But this "habit" as described
proves to be the cassock and cap work by the secular
clergy. The writer adds, "There were certain papers
shown at Tyburn which had been found about him, of a very
dangerous and traitorous nature, and among them also was
his Benedictine faculty under seal, expressing what power
and authority he had from the pope to make men, women,
and children here of his order; what indulgence and
pardons he could grant them", etc. He may have been
a confrater or oblate of the order. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ The webmaster's notes show two possible Robert Drury Martyrs: Robert Drury(b. 1567), son of Robert Drury of Hedgerley, who was a Catholic priest and was hanged, drawn, and quartered for refusing to condemn his faith on February 26, 1606/07; and also a Robert Drury, b. 1559, son of William Drury Esq. (1525-1585) and Alice Berkley; this Robert according to my notes was a Friar of the Order of St. Benadict and was executed in London for his Catholic faith on February 20, 1606/07. It is possible that researchers have confused the two Robert Drurys; or also possible that both Robert Drurys, who were 3rd cousins once removed, were martyred within days of each other, a sign of the times in early 1600's England. Ironically, sixteen years later on 26 October, 1623, yet another Robert Drury, the "young, celebrated, and proscribed Jesuit Scholar Robert Drury" was killed while serving a forbidden mass, at a time when a faint hope of religious freedom was in the air. The tragedy of that day was perhaps a crucial turning point in the events of the time. For this story, see the next Drury biography. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
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