English College, Valladolid

The Royal English College (Spanish: Real Colegio de Ingleses) is a Catholic Seminary located in Valladolid, Spain, for the training of priests in England and Wales. It is under the patronage of St Alban.

Royal English College of St Alban
The front view of the College
The façade of the College
TypeSeminary
Established1589; 435 years ago (1589)
Religious affiliation
Roman Catholic
RectorFr John Flynn
Location,
Websitehttp://www.sanalbano.org/

Men of varying ages and backgrounds spend an introductory year in Valladolid to discern their vocation and begin spiritual and human formation for Catholic priesthood. After their year in Valladolid, students typically proceed to seminaries in the United Kingdom and Ireland or to Rome.

History

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Robert Persons, an English Jesuit priest, founded the College in 1589, during the English Reformation, with the permission of King Philip II of Spain.[1]

The College was run by the Jesuits until their expulsion from Spain in 1767. This created a crisis for the College, which was bereft of faculty and students in one blow. Bishop Richard Challoner, Vicar Apostolic in London, was instrumental in securing the future of the College by amalgamating the three existing English Colleges in Madrid, Seville, and Valladolid, and securing staff from the English Mission and students from the English College at Douai.[2] The College inherited the assets of the English College of St Gregory in Seville: it had been founded by Persons in 1592 and had become bankrupt by 1645.[3]

In 1998, the Catholic Bishops’ Conference of England and Wales endorsed the College as its Propaedeutic Seminary, following the encouragement for such seminaries promulgated by Pope John Paul II in his Pastores dabo vobis (1992).[4][5] This endorsement established the introductory year of studies and formation at the College.[5]

Our Lady Vulnerata

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The Vulnerata on a paso before a procession

The image of Our Lady venerated in the College Chapel is that of La Vulnerata, or The Wounded One. The story of the Vulnerata goes back centuries; but in 1596, as Spain was gathering a fleet in the city of Cadiz, the Earl of Essex together with Sir Walter Raleigh led an English fleet into the harbour, defeated the Spanish navy and sacked the city. During the sack of Cadiz, English troops dragged a statue of the Virgin Mother and Child from a church to the market square where they removed both of the statue's arms; all that remained of the child were parts of his tiny feet on his mother’s knee.

The mutilated statue was taken to Madrid, and given a place of honour in a private chapel of a Countess. The priests and seminarians of the English College in Valladolid asked the Countess if they might make reparation for the behaviour of their fellow countrymen who had desecrated the statue. She agreed and the statue was brought to Valladolid and installed with great solemnity in the College Chapel in 1600.

Every year during Holy Week the statue is processed along the street, where it is met by a huge paso or float, which has a large depiction of the Crucified Christ resting on top of it. The two images meet, and dance to each other for a brief period—then the Vulnerata comes back to the College. [6]

College Martyrs

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The following alumni of the College were martyred during the Protestant Reformation in England and Wales:

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "College History". Royal English College, Valladolid. Retrieved 25 November 2015.
  2. ^ Burton, Edwin H. (1909). The Life and Times of Bishop Challoner (1691-1781). London: Longmans & Co. pp. 102–107.
  3. ^ Martin Murphy, St Gregory's College, Seville 1592-1767, Catholic Record Society, 1992
  4. ^ Kendall, Edward (21 September 2018). "Royal English College of Valladolid reflects on historical contribution to church". The Tablet. Retrieved 26 June 2023.
  5. ^ a b "A Charter for Priestly Formation for England and Wales" (PDF). Catholic Bishops' Conference of England and Wales. February 2015.
  6. ^ Williams, M., St Alban's College, Valladolid: Four Centuries of English Catholic Presence in Spain (London: C Hurst & Co, 1986)
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41°39′01″N 4°43′04″W / 41.65028°N 4.71778°W / 41.65028; -4.71778