Charles Mahoney (martyr)
Charles Mahoney (or Mahony; alias Charles Meehan; c. 1640 – 12 August 1679) was an Irish Franciscan friar. He is consideres a martyr by the Roman Catholic Church, one of the Eighty-five martyrs of England and Wales beatified by Pope John Paul II in 1987. Their feast day is celebrated on 4 May. LifeMahoney belonged to the Irish Province of the Order of Friars Minor and spent some of 1676 at Saint Isidore's College in Rome, headquarters of the province in exile. Attempting to return to Ireland from the continent where he had been ordained to priesthood, he was shipwrecked and landed in Wales. He was arrested in 1678 and imprisoned at Denbigh. He went on trial the following year at Ruthin in northern Wales where he was condemned and hanged. The documentary evidence is scanty. The British Museum has a copy of a single sheet entitled The Last Speeches of Three Priests that were Executed for Religion, Anno Domini 1679, from which the following transcript is made:
Richard Challoner based his account on this single sheet, but may have had another source, now lost.[1] References
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