Robert Southwell | |
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Martyr | |
Born | c. 1561 Norfolk, England |
Died | Tyburn, London, England | 21 February 1595
Venerated in | Catholic Church |
Beatified | 15 December 1929, Rome by Pope Pius XI |
Canonized | 25 October 1970, Vatican City, by Pope Paul VI |
Feast | 21 February |
Robert Southwell, SJ (c. 1561 – 21 February 1595), also Saint Robert Southwell, was an English Catholic priest of the Jesuit Order. He was also an author of Christian poetry in Elizabethan English, and a clandestine missionary in Elizabethan England.
After being arrested and imprisoned in 1592, and intermittently tortured and questioned by priest hunter Sir Richard Topcliffe, Southwell was eventually tried and convicted of high treason against Queen Elizabeth I, but in reality for refusing to take the Oath of Supremacy, renounce his belief in the independence of the English Church from control by the State, and similarly repudiate the authority of the Holy See. On 21 February 1595, Southwell was hanged at Tyburn. In 1970, he was canonised by Pope Paul VI as one of the Forty Martyrs of England and Wales.