Philip Hughes (historian)

Philip Hughes(11 May 1895 – 6 October 1967) was a Roman Catholic priest and Catholic ecclesiastical historian.[1]He taught post-graduate courses at theUniversity of Notre Dame.[2]

Monsignor Hughes

Early life

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Hughes was born inGorton,Manchester,on 11 May 1895. He received his early education at St Augustine's RC School, Manchester prior to being admitted toSt Bede's College, Manchesterin September 1907, graduating at midsummer 1912. He then studied atSt Cuthbert's College, UshawandLeeds Seminary,where he was ordained deacon on 16 June 1917, prior to continuing his studies atLouvain Universitywhere he received his degree in 1921. He was ordained as a priest in 1920.

Career

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After ordination Hughes spent three years in Rome, undertaking research. In 1923, he was appointed history professor atSt Thomas College in Minnesota,United States. The following year he was recalled to theDiocese of Salfordand began parish work as curate atSalford Cathedral,moving toSt Chad's, Cheetham Hillin 1925, St Anne, Fairfield in 1929 and finally to St Thomas of Canterbury, Higher Broughton in 1930.

In 1931, Hughes moved to London, to lecture at the new Catholic Centre for Higher Studies, founded byFrank Sheed.In 1934 he was appointed archivist for theArchdiocese of Westminster.He remained in London until 1955 when he was offered a post as professor of reformation history at theUniversity of Notre Dame.He was awarded the title ofMonsignorin 1957.

Hughes died in America on 6 October 1967, at 72, and was buried inSouth Bend,Indiana, United States.

Bibliography

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  • Hughes, Philip (1935-1947),A History of The Church: An Introductory Study,New York:Sheed and Ward(3 volumes)[3]
    • Volume I:The Church And The World In Which The Church Was Founded
    • Volume II:The Church And The World The Church Created. Augustine To Aquinas
    • Volume III:The Revolt Against The Church. Aquinas To Luther.
    • Hughes did not complete a planned fourth volume before his death.[3]
  • Hughes, Philip (1949),A Popular History of the Catholic Church(20 printings), New York: Macmillan. [An abridgment of his three-volume series, but running up to the mid-twentieth century, and published concurrently.]
  • Hughes, Philip (1929),The Catholic Question, 1688-1829: a Study in Political History,London: Sheed & Ward.
  • Hughes, Philip (1961).The Church in Crisis: A History of the General Councils, 325-1870.Garden City, NY: Hanover House.[4]
  • Hughes, Philip (1976),A History of the Church to the Eve of the Reformation,London: Sheed & Ward.[4]
  • Hughes, Philip (3 volumes, 1950–1954),The Reformation in England,New York: Macmillan.[5]
    • 1-vol. edition also available (1963), 8o,bound in red cloth.
  • Hughes, Philip (1935), "From St. Ignatius of Antioch to the Conversion of Constantine", in Cuthbert Lattey, ed.,The Pre-Nicene Church: Papers Read at the Summer School of Catholic Studies, Held at Cambridge, July 28th to August 6th, 1934,London: Burns, Oates.
  • Hall, Richard [supposed author] (1935), Philip Hughes, ed.,Saint John Fisher: The Earliest English Life,London: Burns, Oates.
  • Hughes, Philip (1937),Pope Pius the Eleventh,New York: Sheed & Ward.[6]
  • Hughes, Philip (1938),The Faith in Practice,New York: Longmans, Green.
  • Hughes, Philip (1938), trans.,Meditations for Lent from St. Thomas Aquinas,New York: Sheed & Ward.[7]
  • Hughes, Philip (1942),Rome and the Counter-Reformation in England,London: Burns, Oates.
  • Hughes, Philip (1943), ed.,The Popes' New Order: A Systematic Summary of the Social Encyclicals and Addresses, from Leo XIII to Pius XII,London: Burns, Oates.
  • Hughes, Philip (1957),A Popular History of the Reformation,1960 reprint, Garden City, NY: Image Books.
  • Hughes, Philip (1965)The Catholic Faith in Practice,Wilkes-Barre, PA: Dimension Books.
  • [A never-finished book in the series, "The Rise of Modern Europe",The Catholic Reformation,was replaced—O'Connell, Marvin (1974),The Counter Reformation,New York: Harper & Row.]
  • Philip Hughes papers (Notre Dame)[1]

References

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  1. ^ab"Notre Dame Archives Inventory: MPH".Archives.nd.edu.Retrieved13 January2018.
  2. ^"Irish Rover".Irishrover.net.Retrieved13 January2018.[permanent dead link]
  3. ^ab"Catholicism and Fundamentalism — Food for the Mind".Archived fromthe originalon 2012-11-12.Retrieved2012-06-24.
  4. ^ab"History and Biography".Catholicebooks.wordpress.27 March 2012.Retrieved13 January2018.
  5. ^"The Reformation in England by Philip Hughes, 1951".Archived fromthe originalon 2008-10-07.Retrieved2017-09-08.
  6. ^"Pope Pius XI Biography".Answers.Retrieved10 September2013.
  7. ^"Catholic eBooks Project".Catholic eBooks Project.Retrieved13 January2018.
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