The college was founded in the late sixteenth century as a seminary to train priests for England and Wales, because they couldn’t have their own seminaries due to the Elizabethan persecution. St. Robert Southwell, the poet, was educated here.
It became known as the "Venerable" English College because of the many alumni who were martyred or tortured, imprisoned and exiled for the Faith.
The age of the martyrs was 1581–1679. 44
students were martyred for the Faith, and 130 suffered imprisonment and exile.
This is why it is called the Venerable English College.
The College's first martyr was St. Ralph Sherwin. "His name stands first in the famous Liber Ruber (a list of students who took the missionary oath in Rome before returning to England), where he is recorded as saying that he was ready, 'today rather than tomorrow, at a sign from his superiors to go into England for the helping of souls'." (found online)
After four months in his mission in England, he was captured, and then tortured and killed at Tyburn on December 1, 1581. Many others followed. It became the custom for a student from this college to preach before the Pope every St. Stephen's Day (feast of the first Christian martyr) on the topic of Martyrdom.
St. Philip Neri, who lived across the way from the college would greet the students saying, "Hail, Flowers of the Marytrs!"
The painting shown above is referred to as "The Marytrs' Picture". It was painted by Durante Alberti in 1580. In the lower left forefront, we see two early English martyrs, St. Thomas Beckett on the left, and St. Edmund, King of East Anglia, on the right. A cherub is holding up the college motto, "I have come to bring fire to the earth."
You'll notice that Our Lord is *not* hanging on the Cross, though we can tell He's been crucified. Someone referred to it as "another Pieta" because it is God the Father, holding the Body of His Crucified Son. Alberti painted the Precious Blood falling from His Side onto England on the globe. What a beautiful image!
As I mentioned on Instagram, whenever the instructors and seminarians received notification that one of their alumni had been martyred, they would gather before this painting, and sing the "Te Deum" in thanksgiving.
Above the painting is the gallery filled with frescoes of Niccolo Circignani, showing the history of the Catholic Church in England from the very beginning, through the stories of the college students who were martyred during the Elizabethan persecution.
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Here is a list of the martyrs (not including those who were imprisoned, tortured, and/or exiled) that are honored as alumni of the Venerable English College at Rome. We prayed it as a litany while we were there....
·
Ralph Sherwin, 1581
·
Thomas Cottam, 1582
·
Luke Kirby, 1582
·
John Shert, 1582
· William
Lacey, 1582
·
William Hart, 1583
·
John Munden, 1584
·
Thomas
Hemerford,
1584
·
George
Haydock, 1584
·
John Lowe, 1586
·
Christopher Buxton, 1588
·
Edward James, 1588
·
Richard Leigh, 1588
·
Robert Morton, 1588
·
Edmund Duke, 1590
·
Christopher
Bales, 1590
·
Polydore
Plasden, 1591
·
Eustace
White, 1591
·
Joseph
Lambton, 1592
·
Thomas
Pormort, 1592
·
John
Cornelius S.J.,
1594
·
John Ingram, 1594
·
Edward
Thwing, 1594
·
Robert Southwell S.J., 1595
·
Henry
Walpole S.J., 1595
·
Robert Middleton, 1601
·
Thomas
Tichborne,
1602
·
Robert
Watkinson,
1602
·
Edward
Oldcorne,
1606
·
John Almond, 1612
·
Richard Smith, 1612
·
John
Thules, 1616
·
John Lockwood, 1642
·
Edward Morgan, 1642
·
Brian Tansfield S.J., 1643
·
Henry
Morse S.J., 1645
·
John Woodcock O.F.M., 1646
·
Edward Mico S.J., 1678
·
Anthony Turner S.J., 1679
·
David
Lewis S.J., 1679
·
John Wall O.F.M., 1679
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