College of the Immaculate Conception, Prague

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

College of the Immaculate Conception, Prague, was a Franciscan College, founded in 1629 by Irish Franciscan priests from Louvain.[1] Instrumental in its foundation was its first Rector Patrick Fleming from Leuven, also involved was Fr Malachy Fallon,[2] the Professor of Theology in Louvain, who persuaded the Holy Roman Emperor Ferdinand II to permit foundation of an Irish College in Prague. The establishment was seen as being part of a re-catholicisation of Bohemia, by the Habsburgs, but also to provide clergy for Ireland. Shortly after its foundation, Bohemia was invaded during the thirty-years war, Rector of the college Fleming and another Irish friar Mathew Hoare were captured and murdered by Calvinists.

The College was suppressed in 1786 by Habsburg Emperor Joseph II, following his Secularization Decrees.

Most of the house and the church are still standing on Hybernska (Hibernian) Street, in Prague, Czech Republic.[3] The building became a Tax office.[4]

People Associated with the College[]

  • Fr. James Taafe as papal nuncio to Ireland
  • Fr. Francis Harold O.F.M, a historian who was professor of theology in prague
  • Bishop Anthony MacGeoghegan OFM, served as bishop of Meath and Clonmacnoise
  • Fr. Proinsias Ó Doibhlin, Franciscan friar poet and scribe, also lectured in Prague.
  • Bishop James Louis O'Donel OFM, taught theology and philosophy in Prague prior to going to Newfoundland.
  • Fr. Anthony O’Neill as guardian in Armagh
  • Fr. Philip O’Reilly O.F.M., guardian of the Irish Franciscan house in Prague
  • Bishop , STL, O.F.M. served as Bishop of Killala
  • Anthony Bruodin, Irish Franciscan Friar and theologian who taught in Prague

See also[]


References[]

  1. ^ 'College of the Immaculate Conception, Prague- The Irish Franciscans, 1651-1665' By B. Millet.
  2. ^ Prague www.franciscans.ie
  3. ^ ‘Unruly, fractious, disreputable’ – Irish Franciscans in Prague by Andy Pollak, Irish Times, April 28, 2015.
  4. ^ 'The Irish Franciscans in Prague' by Brendan Jennings OFM, An Irish Quarterly Review, Vol. 28, No. 110, p. (210-222), June 1939.
Retrieved from ""