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John Donne (/ d ĘŚ n / DUN; 1571 or 1572 [a] – 31 March 1631) was an English poet, scholar, soldier and secretary born into a recusant family, who later became a cleric in the Church of England. [2]
John Donne, English poet and priest [24] Dermot Dunne, Dean of Christ Church, Dublin [25] Matthew Fox, scholar, priest, former Dominican friar [26] Bernard Kenny, American politician, president of the New Jersey Senate [27] Joanna Manning, priest, author, feminist, former Roman Catholic nun [28] Jim McGreevey, Governor of New Jersey [29]
St. Sebastian Roman Catholic Church (1896) -- A Catholic church in Woodside, Queens, New York. The parish was founded May 1894 [ 43 ] by Charles McDonnell, Bishop of Brooklyn , and the first building was dedicatedJune 14, 1896.
The dating of the poems' composition has been tied to the dating of Donne's conversion to Anglicanism. His first biographer, Izaak Walton, claimed the poems dated from the time of Donne's ministry (he became a priest in 1615); modern scholarship agrees that the poems date from 1609 to 1610, the same period during which he wrote an anti-Catholic polemic, Pseudo-Martyr.
Sir John kneels at left, Lady Donne and a daughter at right. Sir John Donne (c.1420s – January 1503) [1] was a Welsh courtier, diplomat and soldier, a notable figure of the Yorkist party. In the 1470s, he commissioned the Donne Triptych, a triptych altarpiece by Hans Memling now in the National Gallery, London. It contains portraits of him ...
The complex consists of the church, rectory / parsonage, school, and cloister. The church was designed in 1916 by architect Thomas Henry Poole (1860–1919) and completed in 1919. It is a large brick Romanesque-style building in the basilican plan. It features a standing seam copper-roofed dome and a bell tower.
John Joseph Hughes (June 24, 1797 – January 3, 1864) was an Irish-born Catholic prelate who served as Bishop (and later Archbishop) of New York from 1842 until his death. [1] In 1841, he founded St. John's College, which would later become Fordham University .
The Archdiocese of New York had operated a seminary at Fordham, once affiliated with what is now Fordham University, staffed by diocesan and, later, Jesuit priests. The main building of St. Joseph's Seminary and College at Dunwoodie, Yonkers. In 1864 Archbishop McCloskey established St. Joseph's Provincial Seminary in Troy, New York.