Wednesday, March 24, 2010

Three more photos...

... of Paolo Cardinal Marella (1895 - 1984)...




... and them I'm out of here for the Easter-break!

Have a Blessed rest of Lent, Holy Week and Easter everybody!

See you again mid-April!

Thursday, March 18, 2010

A little coffee-break


Thanks to reader Fintan who sent in this nice snapshot of Cardinal Agagianian and Archbishop Mcquaid enjoying a cup of coffee during the "Patrician Congress" in Ireland in 1961.

Saturday, March 13, 2010

Karel Cardinal Kašpar (1870-1941)


He served as Archbishop of Prague from 1931 until his death, and was elevated to the cardinalate in 1935.



Trivia-fact: On the occasion of the visit of King Carol II of Romania to Prague in 1936, Kašpar allowed his flock to eat meat on one Friday, as you can read in this TIME-article.


"Who's got a sweet ride? Thaaaaaaat's right!"

P.S.: Sorry for only posting every couple of days recently. I really have to start spreading my photos if I don't want to run out of material within weeks.

Monday, March 8, 2010

Sunday, March 7, 2010

Karl Joseph Kardinal Schulte (1871-1941)

He was bishop of Paderborn from 1910 until 1920 and archbishop of Cologne from 1920 until his death.



During the dark years, Schulte took a decidedly anti-Nazi-position and especially fought against the so-called "immorality trials", which were set up as a tool by the anti-Christian and anti-Catholic government to exploit some 0.2 % suspect-cases of priests that provoked "scandal". The Nazis had imprisoned 915 priests and lay-brothers, although in the whole "Reich" not more than 58 of could be suspected of immorality.

Here is an excerpt from the TIME:
    In Munich after services some priests led their congregations out to defy the noisy Hitler Youth. Fist fights ensued, ten more priests were bundled into jail. In Cologne 60,000 Catholics thronged the Cathedral Square, wildly cheered Cologne's anti-Nazi Archbishop, Joseph Cardinal Schulte.
Schulte also took a firm stand against the government's attempts to deny the Church her right to educate her own flock.



Cardinal Schulte died of a heart-attack during a heavy air-raidon Cologne in 1941.

Thursday, March 4, 2010

French Bishops

Sorry for not posting for a week!

Reader JL sent in these nice portraits of French Bishops. Sometimes the perspective is a bit weird, but I think you still get the general idea.


Cardinal de la Tour d'Auvergne, Bishop of Arras. Ahh, glorious cappa (** sigh **)...


Bishop Leconte of Amiens


An unidentified bishop of Amiens


Cardinal Binet, Archbishop of Besancon


An unidentified Bishop of Troyes

Wednesday, February 24, 2010

Photos from Belgium

Reader Carl from Belgium - one of the most loyal sender-inners - mailed me some great photos of bishops, canons and manlace.


Cardinal van Roey


Cardinal van Roey


Bishop Coppieters


Bishop Coppieters


Bishop Stillemans


Canon van Necke


Canon Dekeyzer


Canon de Haerne


Canon Nachtergaele


Canon von Necke


Canons during the funeral of Cardinal Mercier


Canons in procession


Unidentified canon


Unidentified canon


Unidentified canon


Unidentified canon


Canons with Queen Elisabeth in 1935


This looks like a French canon.


Lace close-up


Thanks for the photos, Carl, also in the name of all "Far Sight" readers!

Monday, February 22, 2010

Canons from England

Thanks to Fr. Selvester, who pointed out to me that English canons have some intersting habits. Here are examples:

Westminster:







Lancaster:





Southwark:

Friday, February 19, 2010

Some 18th-Century Cappae

Henry Benedict Stuart, Cardinal Duke of York, the Last of the Royal Stuarts


Francesco Saverio Cardinal de Zelada by Anton Raphael Mengs


Louis René Édouard Cardinal de Rohan of "affair of the necklace"-fame


Silvio Cardinal Valenti Gonzaga, patron of the arts and manic collector.


Giovanni Andrea Cardinal Archetti


I don't know who that is. The face looks familiar somehow. Anybody?