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{{For|other '''Scots Colleges'''|Scots College (disambiguation)}} |
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| name = Pontifical Scots College, Rome |
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| native_name = |
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'''The Scots College''' (or '''The [[Pontifical]] Scots College''') in [[Rome]] is the main seminary for the training of men for the priesthood from the [[Bishops' Conference of Scotland|dioceses]] of the [[Roman Catholic Church in Scotland]]. |
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| latin_name = Pontificium Collegium Scotorum de Urbe |
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| image = |
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| established = {{start date and age|5 December 1600}} |
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| motto = ''Salva me Bona Crux'' |
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| founder = [[Pope Clement VIII]] |
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| rector = Fr Mark Cassidy |
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| students = |
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| dean = |
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| affiliations = [[Jesuits]] (1615–1773) |
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| religious_affiliation = [[Roman Catholic]] |
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| type = [[Seminary]] |
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| former_names = |
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| nickname = The Scots College |
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| city = [[Rome]] |
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| country = [[Italy]] |
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| website = {{url|scotscollege.org}} |
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| address = |
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| telephone = |
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}} |
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'''The Pontifical Scots College''' ([[Italian language|Italian]]: ''Il Pontificio Collegio Scozzese'') in [[Rome]] is the main seminary for the training of men for the priesthood from the [[Bishops' Conference of Scotland|dioceses]] of the [[Catholic Church in Scotland|Roman Catholic Church in Scotland]]. It was established by a [[Papal bull|bull]] of [[Pope Clement VIII]] on 5 December 1600. |
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==History== |
==History== |
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{{See also|Scottish Reformation}} |
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[[File:Henry-benedict-stuart-cardinal-york.jpg|thumb|Henry Benedict Stuart, Cardinal Duke of York from a picture in the Scots College]] |
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The Scots College was established by [[Clement VIII]] on 5 December 1600, when it was assigned the revenue of the old Scots' hospice.<ref>{{CathEncy|wstitle=Roman Colleges}}</ref> At first the college was sited in a little house in what is known today as Via del Tritone, opposite the church of [http://www.romeartlover.it/Vasi168.htm#Old%20Churches S. Maria di Costantinopoli]. In 1604 it was transferred to Via Felice, now called [[Quattro Fontane|Via delle Quattro Fontane]], and there it remained until 1962.<ref>{{cite web|last=Scots College Rome|title=History|url=http://www.scotscollege.org/about/history/summary.aspx|accessdate=11 April 2012}}</ref> |
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=== Foundations === |
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From 1615 to 1773, the Rectors of the Scots College were drawn from the ranks of the [[Society of Jesus]].<ref>{{cite book|last=McCluskey|first=Raymond|title=The Scots College Rome 1600-2000|year=2000|publisher=Birlinn Ltd|location=Edinburgh|isbn=0 85976 524 5}}</ref> After the Jesuits were [[Suppression of the Society of Jesus|suppressed in 1773]] by [[Clement XIV]], by his brief [[Dominus ac Redemptor]], the College was administered by a series of Italian clerics until 1800 and the arrival of [[Paul MacPherson]], a Scot, as Rector; he was to serve in that role for a total of 38 years.<ref name="List of Rectors of the Scots College">{{cite book|last=McCluskey|first=Raymond|title=The Scots College Rome 1600-2000|year=2000|publisher=Birlinn Ltd|location=edinburgh|isbn=0 85976 524-5|pages=169}}</ref> Since then the Rectors have all been drawn from the ranks of Scotland's secular clergy. |
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In 1560, the [[Scottish Reformation Parliament|Scottish reformation parliament]] introduced a [[Scots Confession|Protestant confession of faith]] and [[Papal Jurisdiction Act 1560|abolished papal authority]] in Scotland. Priests who continued the old religion in Scotland slowly began to die out. [[Catholic Church in Scotland|Catholicism]] all but disappeared aside from in the north-east and south-west of the country, or in hubs where local noblemen held on to the old faith.<ref name=":5">{{Cite book |title=The Scots College, Rome, 1600 - 2000 |date=2000 |publisher=Donald |isbn=978-0-85976-524-4 |editor-last=MacCluskey |editor-first=Raymond |location=Edinburgh |pages=19–22}}</ref> At this time, exiled clergy attempted to recover and reform existing Scottish ecclesiastical institutions abroad, or establish new ones, in accordance with the [[Counter-Reformation|counter-reformation]] ethos of the [[Council of Trent]] (1545–63), which recommended the training of diocesan priests within [[Seminary|seminaries]]. Petitioning began for such a Scots institution to be established in the central location of [[Rome]] where there was already an existing medieval Scots Hospice.<ref name=":5" /> |
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The Scots College was established by [[Pope Clement VIII]] on 5 December 1600, when it was assigned the revenue of the old Scots' hospice.<ref>{{CathEncy|wstitle=Roman Colleges}}</ref> It was placed under the of a [[List of Cardinal protectors of Scotland|Cardinal protector]], the first of whom was [[Camillo Borghes|Camillo Borghese]].<ref name=":5" /> At first the college was sited in a little house in what is known today as the ''Via del Tritone'', opposite the church of [[Santa Maria Odigitria al Tritone|Santa Maria di Costantinopoli]].<ref>[http://www.romeartlover.it/Vasi168.htm#Old%20Churches S. Maria di Costantinopoli]</ref> The college opened in 1602 with only eleven students, but was not at first constituted solely for the training of priests to return to Scotland as missionaries.<ref name=":0" /> In 1604 it was transferred to Via Felice, now called [[Quattro Fontane|Via delle Quattro Fontane]].<ref name="college">{{cite web|last=Scots College Rome|title=History|url=http://www.scotscollege.org/about/history/summary.aspx|accessdate=11 April 2012|url-status=dead|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20141113001310/http://www.scotscollege.org/about/history/summary.aspx|archivedate=13 November 2014}}</ref> The first Rector was a papal official, Monsignor Paolini, who died in 1612. After petition by the students themselves, administration was handed over to the Jesuits in 1615.<ref name=":2">{{cite book |last=McCluskey |first=Raymond |title=The Scots College Rome 1600-2000 |publisher=Birlinn Ltd |year=2000 |isbn=0-85976-524-5 |location=Edinburgh |pages=}}</ref> The martyrdom of [[John Ogilvie (saint)|Saint John Ogilvie]] in [[Glasgow]] compelled the students to take a mission oath whence the sole purpose of the College became the training of priests. The foundation of the [[Propaganda Fide|Congregation ''De Propaganda Fide'']] proved a significant turning point for missionary efforts in Scotland. At this time the College also became strongly linked with the powerful [[Barberini family]]. A church, [[Sant'Andrea degli Scozzesi]], was constructed in the 1640s adjacent to the buildings of the college for the celebration of feasts and burial of the dead.<ref>{{Cite book |title=The Scots College, Rome, 1600 - 2000 |date=2000 |publisher=Donald |isbn=978-0-85976-524-4 |editor-last=MacCluskey |editor-first=Raymond |location=Edinburgh |pages=23}}</ref> |
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The other long serving Rector of the College, who also served for 38 years was Rt Rev. Mgr William Canon Clapperton (1886-1969) who served as Rector from 1922-1960. After his retirement he remained in Rome as canon of [[St John Lateran]] and is buried in the college plot at the [[Campo Verano]] cemetery in Rome. |
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=== 17th century === |
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The College was for many centuries located in the centre of Rome on the Via delle Quattro Fontane, where a [http://www.jacobite.ca/gazetteer/Rome/FormerScotsCollege.htm bust] of the last of the Stuarts, [[Henry Benedict Stuart|Henry Cardinal Duke of York]] can be seen. |
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The College of the mid seventeenth century was at times embroiled in conflict between the [[secular clergy]] and [[Jesuits]], the latter being accused of recruiting students for their own number. In 1645 [[Pope Innocent X]] ruled that the mission oath was a commitment of life-long service to the Scottish mission, even if a student decided to enter a religious order. A meeting of Scots seculars in [[Paris]] during the winter of 1649–50 decided that a mission of secular priests should formally be set up with a superior, and one of their own remaining in Rome as an agent to protect its interests. The first of these agents sent to Rome was William Leslie, who was to become a significant figure in the history of the College. He kept a watchful eye over its affairs. Disputes with the Jesuits continued, they argued that the oath deterred students and desired full control over the College, but Leslie was able to persuade the [[Congregation of the Propaganda|Propaganda]] to rule the oath perpetually binding in 1660.<ref name=":2" /> |
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In the latter half of the seventeenth century, the college became a centre for the promotion of the cult of [[Saint Margaret of Scotland]], having been gifted some relics. William Leslie, along with his relative the Rector William Aloysius Leslie, petitioned for the Saint to be added to the universal calendar of the Church, accepted by [[Pope Clement X]] in 1673. A [[relic]] was obtained from the [[Scots College, Douai|Scots College Douai]], until then the main centre of devotion to the Saint, with the altar of St Margaret in ''Sant'Andrea degli Scozzese'' being provided with a painting. William Aloysius was able to have her patronage of the Scots Colleges, and of Scotland recognised by the Church.<ref>{{Cite book |title=The Scots College, Rome, 1600 - 2000 |date=2000 |publisher=Donald |isbn=978-0-85976-524-4 |editor-last=MacCluskey |editor-first=Raymond |location=Edinburgh |pages=33–34}}</ref> During the [[Glorious Revolution]] of 1688, the students remained loyal supporters of the Catholic [[James II of England|King James]]. This was controversial in Rome due to the decision of the latter to seek refuge with [[Louis XIV|Louis XIV of France]], an enemy of the Pope. |
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The College moved to its current location on the [[Via Cassia]] some 4 miles from the city centre in 1962. The new College was officially opened by [[Pope Paul VI]] on 18 November 1964. |
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=== 18th century === |
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==Notable alumni== |
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[[File:Henry-benedict-stuart-cardinal-york.jpg|thumb|[[Henry Benedict Stuart]], Cardinal Duke of York and great benefactor of the Scots College, from a painting in possession the Scots College.]] |
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*[[Alexander Dunbar Winchester]], (1625–1708) [[Apostolic Prefect]] for Scotland |
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*[[Charles Erskine (cardinal)|Charles Erskine]], Cardinal and Vatican diplomat |
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*[[Thomas Winning]], (1925–2001) Cardinal, Archbishop of [[Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Glasgow|Glasgow]] (1974-2001) |
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*[[Mario Conti]], Archbishop emeritus of Glasgow |
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*[[Joseph Devine]], Bishop of [[Diocese of Motherwell|Motherwell]] |
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*[[Philip Tartaglia]], appointed [[Archbishop of Glasgow]] in July 2012 |
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*[[Frederick Rolfe]] (Baron Corvo), (1860 - 1913) writer |
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*[[Adrian Fortescue]], (1874 – 1923) |
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William Leslie died in 1707, having seen in his lifetime the College become the focal point for the training of priests to return home to the Mission, and in the early eighteenth century the College enjoyed relative prosperity. In 1724, the administration was turned over to Italian Jesuits at the request of the Scottish clergy due to their discontent with the administration.<ref name=":3" /> The College was not untouched by the [[Jansenism|Jansenist]] crisis which embroiled the Scottish Church in the 1730s and 1740s.<ref name=":3">{{Cite book |title=The Scots College, Rome, 1600 - 2000 |date=2000 |publisher=Donald |isbn=978-0-85976-524-4 |editor-last=MacCluskey |editor-first=Raymond |location=Edinburgh |pages=46–50}}</ref> Happy years followed under the rector-ship of Lorenzo Alticozzi, who cleared debts and was able to refurbish and enlarge the college villa at [[Marino, Lazio|Marino]]. Notable students of this era included [[George Hay (bishop)|George Hay]], [[John Geddes (bishop)|John Geddes]] and [[Charles Erskine (cardinal)|Charles Erskine]]. The students were educated in philosophy and theology by the Jesuits at the [[Roman College]].<ref name=":3" /> However, the Alticozzi era came to a dramatic end in 1766 whereupon the death of the [[Old Pretender]], the rectors of the British colleges in the city, with [[Cardinal York]] and others, chose to recognise [[Charles Edward Stuart]] as Charles III against the policy of the Pope. All the British Rectors, including Alticozzi, were removed from office and banished by Papal order.<ref>{{Cite book |title=The Scots College, Rome, 1600 - 2000 |date=2000 |publisher=Donald |isbn=978-0-85976-524-4 |editor-last=MacCluskey |editor-first=Raymond |location=Edinburgh |pages=52}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book |last=Kelly |first=Bernard W. |title=Life of Henry Benedict Stuart Cardinal Duke of York |publisher=R. & T. Washbourne |year=1899 |location=London |pages=54–55}}</ref> The Jesuit period of the college came to an end soon afterward when the society was [[Suppression of the Society of Jesus|suppressed in 1773]] by [[Clement XIV]], by his brief ''[[Dominus ac Redemptor]],'' and the administration was passed to the Italian secular clergy.{{sfn|McCluskey|2000|p=169}} During this time the college suffered, the maintenance of discipline failing with some administrators viewing it as a mere [[sinecure]]. Following visitation by Bishop Hay, John Thomson was sent as Scottish agent and was eventually replaced by [[Paul MacPherson]] upon the latter's death in 1792. MacPherson worked towards the College being handed over to Scottish superiors, however these efforts were interrupted by the [[Roman Republic (1798–1799)|French invasion of Rome in February 1798]]. The College was occupied by the French and MacPherson fled with the students, including those from the English and Irish Colleges who had been abandoned by their own superiors. The group of twenty-two arrived in [[London]] in June 1798 and were presented to [[George IV|the Prince of Wales]] and government ministers.<ref>{{Cite book |title=The Scots College, Rome, 1600 - 2000 |date=2000 |publisher=Donald |isbn=978-0-85976-524-4 |editor-last=MacCluskey |editor-first=Raymond |location=Edinburgh |pages=56–61}}</ref> |
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==See also== |
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*[[Sant'Andrea degli Scozzesi]] |
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=== 19th–20th century === |
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MacPherson returned in the summer of 1800 that he could recover the College properties, and found them in a state of disrepair. He was thereafter made Rector, albeit without students, and remained in Rome throughout the quarrels between [[Pius VII]] and [[Napoleon]], protecting the properties until he was expelled by the French in June 1811. He returned to Rome in 1812 where the defeat of Napoleon at [[Battle of Waterloo|Waterloo]] in 1815 relieved some pressure, and after much petitioning, students finally returned in 1820.<ref>{{Cite book |title=The Scots College, Rome, 1600 - 2000 |date=2000 |publisher=Donald |isbn=978-0-85976-524-4 |editor-last=MacCluskey |editor-first=Raymond |location=Edinburgh |pages=61–63}}</ref> MacPherson was eventually replaced as Rector in 1826 by Angus MacDonald, however the latter's death and subsequent crisis warranted his return in 1834. He died in 1846 and was succeeded by his Vice-Rector, Alexander Grant. Grant set about renovating the buildings, and began with the refurbishment of [[Sant'Andrea degli Scozzesi]], reopened on [[Saint Andrew's Day]] 1847. [[John Henry Newman]] sang the High Mass of dedication.<ref name=":4">{{Cite book |title=The Scots College, Rome, 1600 - 2000 |date=2000 |publisher=Donald |isbn=978-0-85976-524-4 |editor-last=MacCluskey |editor-first=Raymond |location=Edinburgh |pages=83–86}}</ref> In 1861, funds given in compensation for the loss of the [[Scots Monastery, Regensburg|Scots Monastery in Ratisbon]] made possible an entire reconstruction of the College itself. Demolition of the buildings began in 1864, and the new building was completed in 1869 under the direction of [[Luigi Poletti (architect)|Luigi Poletti]]. Busts of notable Scottish Catholics can still be seen on the façade of the building, including{{cn|date=June 2020}} the last of the Stuarts, [[Henry Benedict Stuart|Henry Cardinal Duke of York]]. The building was solemnly inaugurated on Saint Andrew's Day 1869.<ref name=":4" /> |
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*[[Scotus College]] founded in 1993 at [[Bearsden]], [[Glasgow]] and closed in 2009<ref>[http://www.indcatholicnews.com/semia324.html Independent Catholic News report]</ref> |
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*The [[Royal Scots College]] - located at [[Salamanca, Spain]] since 1988; formerly at [[Madrid]] and [[Valladolid]] |
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* [[St Andrew's College, Drygrange]] in the Scottish Borders. Closed 1986 |
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The first half of the 20th century saw two Rectors appointed directly to the [[episcopate]]; [[Robert Fraser (bishop)|Robert Fraser]], who had seen the institution through its tercentenary celebrations, and [[Donald Mackintosh (bishop)|Donald Mackintosh]] who oversaw the years during the [[First World War]].<ref>{{Cite book |title=The Scots College, Rome, 1600 - 2000 |date=2000 |publisher=Donald |isbn=978-0-85976-524-4 |editor-last=MacCluskey |editor-first=Raymond |location=Edinburgh |pages=92–99}}</ref> MacKintosh was succeeded as Rector by his Vice-rector, Father William Clapperton, who was to become another long term Rector and significant figure in the College's history. In the early years of his rector-ship he saw to the reconstruction of the College villa at [[Marino, Lazio|Marino]] as well as seeking the addition of a [[Spiritual direction|spiritual director]] to the staff, and saw the rise of [[Benito Mussolini]] in Italy - under whom the College building on the ''Via Quattro Fontane'' was threatened by radical plans for the city.<ref name=":6">{{Cite book |title=The Scots College, Rome, 1600 - 2000 |date=2000 |publisher=Donald |isbn=978-0-85976-524-4 |editor-last=MacCluskey |editor-first=Raymond |location=Edinburgh |pages=114–126}}</ref> When Italy entered the [[Second World War]], Clapperton decided that staff and students should return home. Seminarians studying philosophy were sent to [[Blairs College]] while those in theology were transferred to [[St Peter's Seminary, Cardross|St Peter's College, Bearsden]]. Clapperton was kept up to date with College affairs from his temporary posting in [[Banff, Aberdeenshire|Banff]] was kept up to date with the College affairs which were managed by an administrator. Students and staff finally returned in 1946.<ref name=":6" /> |
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==== Via Cassia ==== |
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In 1959, the Scottish Bishops decided to build a new college on the outskirts of the city and a location was chosen on the [[Via Cassia]] some 4 miles from the city centre. Clapperton wished not to oversee the move, given his age and long tenure, and was released from his office in 1960. He was named a [[Canon (clergy)|Canon]] of [[John Lateran|St John Lateran]] and remained in Rome until his death in 1969. In 1962, the old college was vacated and the seminarians spent the interim years at the college villa in [[Marino, Lazio|Marino]]. The new college was designed by Renato Costa and was officially opened by [[Pope Paul VI]] on 16 November 1964.<ref name=":2" /> |
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The chapel of the new college was designed an in the shape of an irregular heptagon complete with [[high altar]], an altar to Saint Andrew, Lady altar, choir stalls and pipe organ. Beneath the chapel there is a crypt, the main body of which was dedicated to [[Saint Margaret of Scotland|Saint Margaret]], with altarpiece by [[Arthur Fleischmann]]. In addition, there were altars of [[Saint Patrick]], [[Saint Ninian]] and [[Saint Columba]], each with their own mosaics. Fixed to the walls of the crypt were the original tombstones of [[James Francis Edward Stuart]], [[Charles Edward Stuart]] and [[Henry Benedict Stuart]]. The stairways around the chapel and crypt were decorated with twenty stained glass windows created by Giovanni D'Aloisio depicting scenes from the history of the Church in Scotland. The subjects of these windows were suggested by Mgr [[David McRoberts]] while Mgr Charles Burns acted as historical adviser to the artists. The windows were accompanied by Latin inscriptions narrating the story of each scene.<ref name=":0">{{Cite book |title=The Pontifical Scots College, Rome 1600-2000 A History and a Guide |year=2000}}</ref><ref name=":2" /> In 1984, [[Pope John Paul II]] visited the college and celebrated [[Mass in the Catholic Church|Mass]] in the chapel. |
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=== Recent History === |
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Seminarians at the Pontifical Scots College in Rome spend their first two years studying Philosophy at the [[Pontifical University of Saint Thomas Aquinas|Angelicum]]. After completion of Philosophy, and depending on their fluency in Italian, they take up the study of theology either at the [[Pontifical Gregorian University]] or the Angelicum, where theology is also offered in English. Priests taking part in postgraduate theology courses continue to stay at the College.<ref name="college" /> The celebration of the Feast of St Andrew is a high point of the Scots College year.<ref>[https://blogs.fco.gov.uk/nigelbaker/2015/11/30/celebrating-st-andrew-scotland-in-rome/ Fitzpatrick, Daniel. "Celebrating St. Andrew, Scotland in Rome", Foreign and commonwealth Office]</ref> |
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On 14 April 2016, the community of the Scots College were granted a private audience with [[Pope Francis]] at the Apostolic Palace to mark the 400th anniversary of its becoming a seminary.<ref>{{cite web|title=Pope Francis to Scots College: be courageous, merciful priests|url=http://en.radiovaticana.va/news/2016/04/14/pope_to_scots_college_be_courageous,_merciful_priests/1222696|website=Vatican Radio|accessdate=23 February 2017}}</ref> In 2017, seminarians from the college were invited to serve at the Easter Vigil at St. Peter's Basilica.<ref>[http://www.dunkelddiocese.co.uk/scots-college-seminarians-to-serve-at-papal-easter-vigil/ "Scots College Seminarians to Serve at Papal Easter Vigil", Diocese of Dunkeld, April 3, 2017]</ref><ref>[http://scotinrome.blogspot.com/ Black, Ryan. "A Scotsman in Rome", 5 June 2017]</ref> After a 2020 review projected unaffordable upgrade costs for the Via Cassia seminary, the Scottish Bishops announced a plan to relocate to a more central location in Rome beginning in 2021.<ref>[http://www.dunkelddiocese.co.uk/changes-are-planned-at-scots-college-rome/ "Changes are planned at Scots College, Rome", Diocese of Dunkeld, December 5, 2020]</ref> A temporary move was announced in May 2023 to the [[Beda College]] in September 2023, until a permanent location is found.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Meade |first=Matthew |date=2023-05-12 |title=Scots College to close as city centre location sought |url=https://archedinburgh.org/scots-college-to-close-as-city-centre-location-sought/ |access-date=2023-05-18 |website=Archdiocese of Edinburgh |language=en-GB}}</ref> |
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== Rectors == |
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{{div col|colwidth=10em}} <!-- column width of 10em --> |
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* Bernardino Paolini (1600–12) |
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* [[Patrick Anderson (Jesuit)|Patrick Anderson]] {{post-nominals|post-noms=[[Society of Jesus|SJ]]}} (1615) |
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* Carlo Venozzi {{post-nominals|post-noms=[[Society of Jesus|SJ]]}} (1615–19) |
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* Giovanni Antonio Marietti {{post-nominals|post-noms=[[Society of Jesus|SJ]]}} (1619–22) |
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* George Elphinstone {{post-nominals|post-noms=[[Society of Jesus|SJ]]}} (1622–44) |
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* William Christie {{post-nominals|post-noms=[[Society of Jesus|SJ]]}} (1644–46) |
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* Francis Dempster {{post-nominals|post-noms=[[Society of Jesus|SJ]]}} (1646–49; 1658–63) |
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* Andrew Leslie {{post-nominals|post-noms=[[Society of Jesus|SJ]]}} (1649–52) |
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* Adam Gordon {{post-nominals|post-noms=[[Society of Jesus|SJ]]}} (1652–55) |
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* Gilbert Talbot (alias George Bissett) {{post-nominals|post-noms=[[Society of Jesus|SJ]]}} (1655–58; 1663–70) |
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* John Strachan {{post-nominals|post-noms=[[Society of Jesus|SJ]]}} (1670–71) |
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* Ettore Carolo de Marini {{post-nominals|post-noms=[[Society of Jesus|SJ]]}} (1671–74) |
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* William Aloysius Leslie {{post-nominals|post-noms=[[Society of Jesus|SJ]]}} (1674–83; 1692–95) |
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* Andrew MacGhie {{post-nominals|post-noms=[[Society of Jesus|SJ]]}} (1683–90) |
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* James Forbes {{post-nominals|post-noms=[[Society of Jesus|SJ]]}} (1695–1701) |
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* Diego Calcagni {{post-nominals|post-noms=[[Society of Jesus|SJ]]}} (1701–04) |
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* Giovanni Battista Naselli {{post-nominals|post-noms=[[Society of Jesus|SJ]]}} (1704–08) |
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* Thomas Fyffe {{post-nominals|post-noms=[[Society of Jesus|SJ]]}} (1708–12) |
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* William Clark {{post-nominals|post-noms=[[Society of Jesus|SJ]]}} (1712–21) |
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* Alexander Ferguson {{post-nominals|post-noms=[[Society of Jesus|SJ]]}} (1721–24) |
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* Luca Maria Gritta {{post-nominals|post-noms=[[Society of Jesus|SJ]]}} (1724–29) |
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* Francesco Marini {{post-nominals|post-noms=[[Society of Jesus|SJ]]}} (1729–31) |
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* Giovanni Maria Morici {{post-nominals|post-noms=[[Society of Jesus|SJ]]}} (1731–38) |
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* Livio Benedetto Urbani {{post-nominals|post-noms=[[Society of Jesus|SJ]]}} (1738–47) |
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* Lorenzo Alticozzi {{post-nominals|post-noms=[[Society of Jesus|SJ]]}} (1747–66) |
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* Giovanni Battista Corsedoni {{post-nominals|post-noms=[[Society of Jesus|SJ]]}} (1766–73) |
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* Vincenzo Massa (1773) |
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* Lorenzo Antonini (1773–74) |
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* Alessandro Marzi (1774–77) |
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* Ignazio Ceci (1777–81) |
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* Francesco Marchioni (1781–98) |
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* [[Paul MacPherson]] (1800–26; 1833–46) |
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* Angus MacDonald (1826–33) |
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* Alexander Grant {{post-nominals|post-noms=[[Doctor of Divinity|DD]]}} (1846–78) |
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* James A. Campbell (1878–97) |
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* [[Robert Fraser (bishop)|Robert Fraser]] {{post-nominals|post-noms=DD}} (1897–1913) |
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* [[Donald Mackintosh (bishop)|Donald Mackintosh]] (1913–22) |
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* William R. Clapperton (1922–60) |
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* Philip Flanagan {{post-nominals|post-noms=[[Doctor of Philosophy|PhD]] [[Doctor of Divinity|DD]]}} (1960–67) |
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* Daniel P. Boyle (1967–73) |
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* Sean O'Kelly (1973–81) |
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* James Clancy {{post-nominals|post-noms=PhL}} (1981–86) |
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* [[John Fitzsimmons]] {{post-nominals|post-noms=PhL [[Licentiate of Sacred Theology|STL]] LSS}} (1986–89) |
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* John McIntyre {{post-nominals|post-noms=[[Licentiate of Sacred Theology|STL]] [[Master of Arts|MA]]}} (1989–95) |
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* Christopher J. McElroy {{post-nominals|post-noms=STL}} (1995–2004) |
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* [[Philip Tartaglia]] {{post-nominals|post-noms=[[Doctor of Sacred Theology|STD]]}} (2004–05) |
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* Paul Milarvie (2005–09) |
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* John A. Hughes (2009–15) |
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* Daniel Fitzpatrick (2015–22)<ref>{{Cite web |date=2015-07-16 |title=Former trainee surgeon appointed rector at Pontifical Scots College |url=https://catholicherald.co.uk/former-surgeon-appointed-rector-at-pontifical-scots-college/ |access-date=2022-07-15 |website=Catholic Herald |language=en-GB}}</ref> |
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* Mark J. Cassidy (2022–present)<ref>{{Cite web |last=Mitchell |first=Andrew |date=2022-07-09 |title=Fr Cassidy is appointed Rector at Scots College Rome |url=https://www.dunkelddiocese.co.uk/fr-cassidy-is-appointed-rector-at-scots-college-rome/ |access-date=2022-07-15 |website=DIOCESE of DUNKELD |language=en-GB}}</ref> <!-- {{sfn|McCluskey|2000|pp=169–170}} This seems misplaced --> |
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==Alumni== |
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{{See also|Category:Alumni of the Scots College, Rome}} |
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The careers of some of the early students at the college demonstrate the opportunities available to educated Scottish Catholics on the continent in the 17th century. Former students [[Robert Phillip]], later joined the [[French Oratory]], and William Thomson, later a [[Franciscans|Franciscan]], were [[confessor|confessors]] to [[Henrietta Maria of France]]. Another George Strachan of the Mearns became a [[Humanism|Humanist scholar]], [[Islamic studies|Orientalist]] and traveller.<ref>{{Cite web |title=George Strachan of the Mearns |url=https://edinburghuniversitypress.com/book-george-strachan-of-the-mearns.html |access-date=2023-10-16 |website=Edinburgh University Press Books |language=en}}</ref> Daniel Colville became a notable linguist and librarian at [[El Escorial]]. George Conn, who arrived in 1619 and left in the same year, later became a [[Franciscans|Franciscan]], canon of [[San Lorenzo in Damaso]], secretary to [[Francesco Barberini (1597–1679)|Cardinal Francesco Barberini]] and honorary chamberlain of [[Pope Urban VIII]]. Conn also acted as papal agent at the court of [[Queen Henrietta Maria]]. Thomas Chalmers, a student from 1630 to 1637, was almoner to [[Cardinal Richelieu|Cardinals Richelieu]] and [[Cardinal Mazarin|Mazarin]].<ref name=":2" /><ref name=":1">{{Cite book |title=Records of the Scots Colleges at Douai, Rome, Madrid, Valladolid and Ratisbon |year=1906 |location=Aberdeen}}</ref> |
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[[William Ballantine (priest)|William Ballantine]], a student from 1641 to 1646, was named the first [[Apostolic prefecture|Prefect]] of the Scottish Mission in 1653 and was imprisoned in [[London]] for two years by order of [[Oliver Cromwell]]. Ballantine was later succeeded by another former student of the college, [[Alexander Dunbar Winchester]]. During the fabricated [[Popish Plot]], which gripped the kingdoms of [[England]] and [[Scotland]], Alexander Lumsden, a former student of the college and [[Dominican Order|Dominican Friar]], was condemned to death in [[London]]. He was later acquitted on the grounds of his nationality and could not be said to have "acted as a priest in England" within the meaning of the [[Jesuits, etc. Act 1584]].<ref name=":1" /> [[John Paul Jameson]] ({{circa|1659}}–1700) was a priest and [[antiquarian]] who studied at the college in the latter half of the seventeenth century. |
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[[Charles Erskine (cardinal)|Charles Erskine]] was educated at the college under the protection of [[Henry Benedict Stuart]] from 1748 until 1753. Erskine became a papal diplomat and was named [[Cardinal (Catholic Church)|Cardinal]] in 1801. [[Walter Lovi]] (1796–1878) was a priest and architect active in the mid-nineteenth century who studied at the college from 1823 until 1825.<ref name=":1" /> |
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In the late nineteenth and twentieth centuries there were several notable students. [[Frederick Rolfe]] (1860–1913), better known as Baron Corvo; a writer, artist, photographer and eccentric, was expelled from the college without receiving ordination.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Canon MacWilliam |first1=Alexander |year=1970 |title=Fr. Rolfe and the Scots College, Rome |journal=Innes Review |volume=21 |issue=2 |pages=124–139 |doi=10.3366/inr.1970.21.2.124}}</ref> [[John Gray (poet)|Canon John Gray]] (1866–1934), English poet and founding parish priest of [[St Peter's Church, Edinburgh|St Peter's Morningside Edinburgh]], studied at the college from 1898 until 1901. [[Adrian Fortescue]] (1874–1923), priest and polymath, studied at the college from 1891 until 1894.<ref>[https://books.google.com/books?id=zPQFBAAAQBAJ&dq=Scots+College+%28Rome%29&pg=PA17 Nichols, Aidan. ''The Latin Clerk: The Life, Work, and Travels of Adrian Fortescue'', Casemate Publishers, 2011], {{ISBN|9780718892746}}</ref> [[George Thompson (Scottish National Party politician)|George Thompson]] (1928–2016) entered the college in the 1950s and left without completing his studies. He later became a teacher and then a [[Scottish National Party]] politician and [[Member of Parliament (United Kingdom)|Member of Parliament]]. Later he resumed studies for the priesthood at [[St John's Seminary, Wonersh]] and was ordained in 1989. [[Paul Laverty]] (born 1957), a [[Scriptwriter|screenwriter]] and lawyer, studied for priesthood but did not continue to ordination and obtained a degree in philosophy from the [[Pontifical Gregorian University]].<ref>[https://www.misacor.org.au/index.php/emagazine/current-news/774-msc-latin-america "Tambien la Lluvia"] |
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</ref> |
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==See also== |
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{{div col}} <!-- default width is 30em --> |
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*[[Sant'Andrea degli Scozzesi]] |
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*[[Royal Scots College|Royal Scots College, Salamanca]] |
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*[[Scots College (Paris)|Scots College, Paris]] |
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*[[Scots College, Douai]] |
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*[[English College, Rome]] |
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*[[List of Jesuit sites]] |
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{{div col end}} |
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==References== |
==References== |
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{{reflist}} |
{{reflist}} |
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==Further reading== |
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* Abbe Paul Macpherson, ''History of the Scots College, Rome, 1600-1792'', John S. Burns, 1961 |
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==External links== |
==External links== |
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*{{official website|http://www.scotscollege.org/}} |
*{{official website|http://www.scotscollege.org/}} |
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*[http://www.scmo.org/bishops_conference/seminaries/seminaries.htm Seminaries associated with the Roman Catholic Bishops' Conference of Scotland] |
*[https://web.archive.org/web/20060513164454/http://www.scmo.org/bishops_conference/seminaries/seminaries.htm Seminaries associated with the Roman Catholic Bishops' Conference of Scotland] |
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*[https://w2.vatican.va/content/francesco/en/speeches/2016/april/documents/papa-francesco_20160414_pont-collegio-scozzese-roma.html Address of Pope Francis to the Staff and Students of the Pontifical Scots College, 14 April 2016] |
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[[Category:Educational institutions established in the 1600s|Scots School]] |
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[[Category:Seminaries and theological colleges in Italy]] |
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[[Category:Scots College, Rome]] |
Latest revision as of 10:06, 21 October 2024
Latin: Pontificium Collegium Scotorum de Urbe | |
Motto | Salva me Bona Crux |
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Type | Seminary |
Established | 5 December 1600 |
Founder | Pope Clement VIII |
Religious affiliation | Roman Catholic |
Rector | Fr Mark Cassidy |
Location | , |
Nickname | The Scots College |
Affiliations | Jesuits (1615–1773) |
Website | scotscollege |
The Pontifical Scots College (Italian: Il Pontificio Collegio Scozzese) in Rome is the main seminary for the training of men for the priesthood from the dioceses of the Roman Catholic Church in Scotland. It was established by a bull of Pope Clement VIII on 5 December 1600.
History
[edit]Foundations
[edit]In 1560, the Scottish reformation parliament introduced a Protestant confession of faith and abolished papal authority in Scotland. Priests who continued the old religion in Scotland slowly began to die out. Catholicism all but disappeared aside from in the north-east and south-west of the country, or in hubs where local noblemen held on to the old faith.[1] At this time, exiled clergy attempted to recover and reform existing Scottish ecclesiastical institutions abroad, or establish new ones, in accordance with the counter-reformation ethos of the Council of Trent (1545–63), which recommended the training of diocesan priests within seminaries. Petitioning began for such a Scots institution to be established in the central location of Rome where there was already an existing medieval Scots Hospice.[1]
The Scots College was established by Pope Clement VIII on 5 December 1600, when it was assigned the revenue of the old Scots' hospice.[2] It was placed under the of a Cardinal protector, the first of whom was Camillo Borghese.[1] At first the college was sited in a little house in what is known today as the Via del Tritone, opposite the church of Santa Maria di Costantinopoli.[3] The college opened in 1602 with only eleven students, but was not at first constituted solely for the training of priests to return to Scotland as missionaries.[4] In 1604 it was transferred to Via Felice, now called Via delle Quattro Fontane.[5] The first Rector was a papal official, Monsignor Paolini, who died in 1612. After petition by the students themselves, administration was handed over to the Jesuits in 1615.[6] The martyrdom of Saint John Ogilvie in Glasgow compelled the students to take a mission oath whence the sole purpose of the College became the training of priests. The foundation of the Congregation De Propaganda Fide proved a significant turning point for missionary efforts in Scotland. At this time the College also became strongly linked with the powerful Barberini family. A church, Sant'Andrea degli Scozzesi, was constructed in the 1640s adjacent to the buildings of the college for the celebration of feasts and burial of the dead.[7]
17th century
[edit]The College of the mid seventeenth century was at times embroiled in conflict between the secular clergy and Jesuits, the latter being accused of recruiting students for their own number. In 1645 Pope Innocent X ruled that the mission oath was a commitment of life-long service to the Scottish mission, even if a student decided to enter a religious order. A meeting of Scots seculars in Paris during the winter of 1649–50 decided that a mission of secular priests should formally be set up with a superior, and one of their own remaining in Rome as an agent to protect its interests. The first of these agents sent to Rome was William Leslie, who was to become a significant figure in the history of the College. He kept a watchful eye over its affairs. Disputes with the Jesuits continued, they argued that the oath deterred students and desired full control over the College, but Leslie was able to persuade the Propaganda to rule the oath perpetually binding in 1660.[6]
In the latter half of the seventeenth century, the college became a centre for the promotion of the cult of Saint Margaret of Scotland, having been gifted some relics. William Leslie, along with his relative the Rector William Aloysius Leslie, petitioned for the Saint to be added to the universal calendar of the Church, accepted by Pope Clement X in 1673. A relic was obtained from the Scots College Douai, until then the main centre of devotion to the Saint, with the altar of St Margaret in Sant'Andrea degli Scozzese being provided with a painting. William Aloysius was able to have her patronage of the Scots Colleges, and of Scotland recognised by the Church.[8] During the Glorious Revolution of 1688, the students remained loyal supporters of the Catholic King James. This was controversial in Rome due to the decision of the latter to seek refuge with Louis XIV of France, an enemy of the Pope.
18th century
[edit]William Leslie died in 1707, having seen in his lifetime the College become the focal point for the training of priests to return home to the Mission, and in the early eighteenth century the College enjoyed relative prosperity. In 1724, the administration was turned over to Italian Jesuits at the request of the Scottish clergy due to their discontent with the administration.[9] The College was not untouched by the Jansenist crisis which embroiled the Scottish Church in the 1730s and 1740s.[9] Happy years followed under the rector-ship of Lorenzo Alticozzi, who cleared debts and was able to refurbish and enlarge the college villa at Marino. Notable students of this era included George Hay, John Geddes and Charles Erskine. The students were educated in philosophy and theology by the Jesuits at the Roman College.[9] However, the Alticozzi era came to a dramatic end in 1766 whereupon the death of the Old Pretender, the rectors of the British colleges in the city, with Cardinal York and others, chose to recognise Charles Edward Stuart as Charles III against the policy of the Pope. All the British Rectors, including Alticozzi, were removed from office and banished by Papal order.[10][11] The Jesuit period of the college came to an end soon afterward when the society was suppressed in 1773 by Clement XIV, by his brief Dominus ac Redemptor, and the administration was passed to the Italian secular clergy.[12] During this time the college suffered, the maintenance of discipline failing with some administrators viewing it as a mere sinecure. Following visitation by Bishop Hay, John Thomson was sent as Scottish agent and was eventually replaced by Paul MacPherson upon the latter's death in 1792. MacPherson worked towards the College being handed over to Scottish superiors, however these efforts were interrupted by the French invasion of Rome in February 1798. The College was occupied by the French and MacPherson fled with the students, including those from the English and Irish Colleges who had been abandoned by their own superiors. The group of twenty-two arrived in London in June 1798 and were presented to the Prince of Wales and government ministers.[13]
19th–20th century
[edit]MacPherson returned in the summer of 1800 that he could recover the College properties, and found them in a state of disrepair. He was thereafter made Rector, albeit without students, and remained in Rome throughout the quarrels between Pius VII and Napoleon, protecting the properties until he was expelled by the French in June 1811. He returned to Rome in 1812 where the defeat of Napoleon at Waterloo in 1815 relieved some pressure, and after much petitioning, students finally returned in 1820.[14] MacPherson was eventually replaced as Rector in 1826 by Angus MacDonald, however the latter's death and subsequent crisis warranted his return in 1834. He died in 1846 and was succeeded by his Vice-Rector, Alexander Grant. Grant set about renovating the buildings, and began with the refurbishment of Sant'Andrea degli Scozzesi, reopened on Saint Andrew's Day 1847. John Henry Newman sang the High Mass of dedication.[15] In 1861, funds given in compensation for the loss of the Scots Monastery in Ratisbon made possible an entire reconstruction of the College itself. Demolition of the buildings began in 1864, and the new building was completed in 1869 under the direction of Luigi Poletti. Busts of notable Scottish Catholics can still be seen on the façade of the building, including[citation needed] the last of the Stuarts, Henry Cardinal Duke of York. The building was solemnly inaugurated on Saint Andrew's Day 1869.[15]
The first half of the 20th century saw two Rectors appointed directly to the episcopate; Robert Fraser, who had seen the institution through its tercentenary celebrations, and Donald Mackintosh who oversaw the years during the First World War.[16] MacKintosh was succeeded as Rector by his Vice-rector, Father William Clapperton, who was to become another long term Rector and significant figure in the College's history. In the early years of his rector-ship he saw to the reconstruction of the College villa at Marino as well as seeking the addition of a spiritual director to the staff, and saw the rise of Benito Mussolini in Italy - under whom the College building on the Via Quattro Fontane was threatened by radical plans for the city.[17] When Italy entered the Second World War, Clapperton decided that staff and students should return home. Seminarians studying philosophy were sent to Blairs College while those in theology were transferred to St Peter's College, Bearsden. Clapperton was kept up to date with College affairs from his temporary posting in Banff was kept up to date with the College affairs which were managed by an administrator. Students and staff finally returned in 1946.[17]
Via Cassia
[edit]In 1959, the Scottish Bishops decided to build a new college on the outskirts of the city and a location was chosen on the Via Cassia some 4 miles from the city centre. Clapperton wished not to oversee the move, given his age and long tenure, and was released from his office in 1960. He was named a Canon of St John Lateran and remained in Rome until his death in 1969. In 1962, the old college was vacated and the seminarians spent the interim years at the college villa in Marino. The new college was designed by Renato Costa and was officially opened by Pope Paul VI on 16 November 1964.[6]
The chapel of the new college was designed an in the shape of an irregular heptagon complete with high altar, an altar to Saint Andrew, Lady altar, choir stalls and pipe organ. Beneath the chapel there is a crypt, the main body of which was dedicated to Saint Margaret, with altarpiece by Arthur Fleischmann. In addition, there were altars of Saint Patrick, Saint Ninian and Saint Columba, each with their own mosaics. Fixed to the walls of the crypt were the original tombstones of James Francis Edward Stuart, Charles Edward Stuart and Henry Benedict Stuart. The stairways around the chapel and crypt were decorated with twenty stained glass windows created by Giovanni D'Aloisio depicting scenes from the history of the Church in Scotland. The subjects of these windows were suggested by Mgr David McRoberts while Mgr Charles Burns acted as historical adviser to the artists. The windows were accompanied by Latin inscriptions narrating the story of each scene.[4][6] In 1984, Pope John Paul II visited the college and celebrated Mass in the chapel.
Recent History
[edit]Seminarians at the Pontifical Scots College in Rome spend their first two years studying Philosophy at the Angelicum. After completion of Philosophy, and depending on their fluency in Italian, they take up the study of theology either at the Pontifical Gregorian University or the Angelicum, where theology is also offered in English. Priests taking part in postgraduate theology courses continue to stay at the College.[5] The celebration of the Feast of St Andrew is a high point of the Scots College year.[18]
On 14 April 2016, the community of the Scots College were granted a private audience with Pope Francis at the Apostolic Palace to mark the 400th anniversary of its becoming a seminary.[19] In 2017, seminarians from the college were invited to serve at the Easter Vigil at St. Peter's Basilica.[20][21] After a 2020 review projected unaffordable upgrade costs for the Via Cassia seminary, the Scottish Bishops announced a plan to relocate to a more central location in Rome beginning in 2021.[22] A temporary move was announced in May 2023 to the Beda College in September 2023, until a permanent location is found.[23]
Rectors
[edit]- Bernardino Paolini (1600–12)
- Patrick Anderson SJ (1615)
- Carlo Venozzi SJ (1615–19)
- Giovanni Antonio Marietti SJ (1619–22)
- George Elphinstone SJ (1622–44)
- William Christie SJ (1644–46)
- Francis Dempster SJ (1646–49; 1658–63)
- Andrew Leslie SJ (1649–52)
- Adam Gordon SJ (1652–55)
- Gilbert Talbot (alias George Bissett) SJ (1655–58; 1663–70)
- John Strachan SJ (1670–71)
- Ettore Carolo de Marini SJ (1671–74)
- William Aloysius Leslie SJ (1674–83; 1692–95)
- Andrew MacGhie SJ (1683–90)
- James Forbes SJ (1695–1701)
- Diego Calcagni SJ (1701–04)
- Giovanni Battista Naselli SJ (1704–08)
- Thomas Fyffe SJ (1708–12)
- William Clark SJ (1712–21)
- Alexander Ferguson SJ (1721–24)
- Luca Maria Gritta SJ (1724–29)
- Francesco Marini SJ (1729–31)
- Giovanni Maria Morici SJ (1731–38)
- Livio Benedetto Urbani SJ (1738–47)
- Lorenzo Alticozzi SJ (1747–66)
- Giovanni Battista Corsedoni SJ (1766–73)
- Vincenzo Massa (1773)
- Lorenzo Antonini (1773–74)
- Alessandro Marzi (1774–77)
- Ignazio Ceci (1777–81)
- Francesco Marchioni (1781–98)
- Paul MacPherson (1800–26; 1833–46)
- Angus MacDonald (1826–33)
- Alexander Grant DD (1846–78)
- James A. Campbell (1878–97)
- Robert Fraser DD (1897–1913)
- Donald Mackintosh (1913–22)
- William R. Clapperton (1922–60)
- Philip Flanagan PhD DD (1960–67)
- Daniel P. Boyle (1967–73)
- Sean O'Kelly (1973–81)
- James Clancy PhL (1981–86)
- John Fitzsimmons PhL STL LSS (1986–89)
- John McIntyre STL MA (1989–95)
- Christopher J. McElroy STL (1995–2004)
- Philip Tartaglia STD (2004–05)
- Paul Milarvie (2005–09)
- John A. Hughes (2009–15)
- Daniel Fitzpatrick (2015–22)[24]
- Mark J. Cassidy (2022–present)[25]
Alumni
[edit]The careers of some of the early students at the college demonstrate the opportunities available to educated Scottish Catholics on the continent in the 17th century. Former students Robert Phillip, later joined the French Oratory, and William Thomson, later a Franciscan, were confessors to Henrietta Maria of France. Another George Strachan of the Mearns became a Humanist scholar, Orientalist and traveller.[26] Daniel Colville became a notable linguist and librarian at El Escorial. George Conn, who arrived in 1619 and left in the same year, later became a Franciscan, canon of San Lorenzo in Damaso, secretary to Cardinal Francesco Barberini and honorary chamberlain of Pope Urban VIII. Conn also acted as papal agent at the court of Queen Henrietta Maria. Thomas Chalmers, a student from 1630 to 1637, was almoner to Cardinals Richelieu and Mazarin.[6][27]
William Ballantine, a student from 1641 to 1646, was named the first Prefect of the Scottish Mission in 1653 and was imprisoned in London for two years by order of Oliver Cromwell. Ballantine was later succeeded by another former student of the college, Alexander Dunbar Winchester. During the fabricated Popish Plot, which gripped the kingdoms of England and Scotland, Alexander Lumsden, a former student of the college and Dominican Friar, was condemned to death in London. He was later acquitted on the grounds of his nationality and could not be said to have "acted as a priest in England" within the meaning of the Jesuits, etc. Act 1584.[27] John Paul Jameson (c. 1659–1700) was a priest and antiquarian who studied at the college in the latter half of the seventeenth century.
Charles Erskine was educated at the college under the protection of Henry Benedict Stuart from 1748 until 1753. Erskine became a papal diplomat and was named Cardinal in 1801. Walter Lovi (1796–1878) was a priest and architect active in the mid-nineteenth century who studied at the college from 1823 until 1825.[27]
In the late nineteenth and twentieth centuries there were several notable students. Frederick Rolfe (1860–1913), better known as Baron Corvo; a writer, artist, photographer and eccentric, was expelled from the college without receiving ordination.[28] Canon John Gray (1866–1934), English poet and founding parish priest of St Peter's Morningside Edinburgh, studied at the college from 1898 until 1901. Adrian Fortescue (1874–1923), priest and polymath, studied at the college from 1891 until 1894.[29] George Thompson (1928–2016) entered the college in the 1950s and left without completing his studies. He later became a teacher and then a Scottish National Party politician and Member of Parliament. Later he resumed studies for the priesthood at St John's Seminary, Wonersh and was ordained in 1989. Paul Laverty (born 1957), a screenwriter and lawyer, studied for priesthood but did not continue to ordination and obtained a degree in philosophy from the Pontifical Gregorian University.[30]
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ a b c MacCluskey, Raymond, ed. (2000). The Scots College, Rome, 1600 - 2000. Edinburgh: Donald. pp. 19–22. ISBN 978-0-85976-524-4.
- ^ Herbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company. .
- ^ S. Maria di Costantinopoli
- ^ a b The Pontifical Scots College, Rome 1600-2000 A History and a Guide. 2000.
- ^ a b Scots College Rome. "History". Archived from the original on 13 November 2014. Retrieved 11 April 2012.
- ^ a b c d e McCluskey, Raymond (2000). The Scots College Rome 1600-2000. Edinburgh: Birlinn Ltd. ISBN 0-85976-524-5.
- ^ MacCluskey, Raymond, ed. (2000). The Scots College, Rome, 1600 - 2000. Edinburgh: Donald. p. 23. ISBN 978-0-85976-524-4.
- ^ MacCluskey, Raymond, ed. (2000). The Scots College, Rome, 1600 - 2000. Edinburgh: Donald. pp. 33–34. ISBN 978-0-85976-524-4.
- ^ a b c MacCluskey, Raymond, ed. (2000). The Scots College, Rome, 1600 - 2000. Edinburgh: Donald. pp. 46–50. ISBN 978-0-85976-524-4.
- ^ MacCluskey, Raymond, ed. (2000). The Scots College, Rome, 1600 - 2000. Edinburgh: Donald. p. 52. ISBN 978-0-85976-524-4.
- ^ Kelly, Bernard W. (1899). Life of Henry Benedict Stuart Cardinal Duke of York. London: R. & T. Washbourne. pp. 54–55.
- ^ McCluskey 2000, p. 169.
- ^ MacCluskey, Raymond, ed. (2000). The Scots College, Rome, 1600 - 2000. Edinburgh: Donald. pp. 56–61. ISBN 978-0-85976-524-4.
- ^ MacCluskey, Raymond, ed. (2000). The Scots College, Rome, 1600 - 2000. Edinburgh: Donald. pp. 61–63. ISBN 978-0-85976-524-4.
- ^ a b MacCluskey, Raymond, ed. (2000). The Scots College, Rome, 1600 - 2000. Edinburgh: Donald. pp. 83–86. ISBN 978-0-85976-524-4.
- ^ MacCluskey, Raymond, ed. (2000). The Scots College, Rome, 1600 - 2000. Edinburgh: Donald. pp. 92–99. ISBN 978-0-85976-524-4.
- ^ a b MacCluskey, Raymond, ed. (2000). The Scots College, Rome, 1600 - 2000. Edinburgh: Donald. pp. 114–126. ISBN 978-0-85976-524-4.
- ^ Fitzpatrick, Daniel. "Celebrating St. Andrew, Scotland in Rome", Foreign and commonwealth Office
- ^ "Pope Francis to Scots College: be courageous, merciful priests". Vatican Radio. Retrieved 23 February 2017.
- ^ "Scots College Seminarians to Serve at Papal Easter Vigil", Diocese of Dunkeld, April 3, 2017
- ^ Black, Ryan. "A Scotsman in Rome", 5 June 2017
- ^ "Changes are planned at Scots College, Rome", Diocese of Dunkeld, December 5, 2020
- ^ Meade, Matthew (2023-05-12). "Scots College to close as city centre location sought". Archdiocese of Edinburgh. Retrieved 2023-05-18.
- ^ "Former trainee surgeon appointed rector at Pontifical Scots College". Catholic Herald. 2015-07-16. Retrieved 2022-07-15.
- ^ Mitchell, Andrew (2022-07-09). "Fr Cassidy is appointed Rector at Scots College Rome". DIOCESE of DUNKELD. Retrieved 2022-07-15.
- ^ "George Strachan of the Mearns". Edinburgh University Press Books. Retrieved 2023-10-16.
- ^ a b c Records of the Scots Colleges at Douai, Rome, Madrid, Valladolid and Ratisbon. Aberdeen. 1906.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - ^ Canon MacWilliam, Alexander (1970). "Fr. Rolfe and the Scots College, Rome". Innes Review. 21 (2): 124–139. doi:10.3366/inr.1970.21.2.124.
- ^ Nichols, Aidan. The Latin Clerk: The Life, Work, and Travels of Adrian Fortescue, Casemate Publishers, 2011, ISBN 9780718892746
- ^ "Tambien la Lluvia"
Further reading
[edit]- Abbe Paul Macpherson, History of the Scots College, Rome, 1600-1792, John S. Burns, 1961