(Thanks to Charles George Herbermann for the guest post. Herbermann emigrated from Prussia to the United States in childhood and became a prominent scholar of Catholicism at the institution now known as New York University. Herbermann was the chief editor of the gigantic originally published in a volume of Catholic Encyclopedia in the early 20th century, where this text originally appeared; many other contributors were involved, and it’s impossible to tell . -ed.)
Christopher Bales. Priest and martyr, b. at Coniscliffe near Darlington, County Durham, England, about 1564; executed 4 March, 1590. He entered the English College at Rome, 1 October, 1583, but owing to ill-health was sent to the College at Reims, where he was ordained 28 March, 1587. Sent to England 2 November, 1588, he was soon arrested, racked, and tortured by Topcliffe, and hung up by the hands for twenty-four hours at a time; he bore all most patiently. At length he was tried and condemned for high treason, on the charge of having been ordained beyond seas and coming to England to exercise his office. He asked Judge Anderson whether St. Augustine, Apostle of the English, was also a traitor. The judge said no, but that the act had since been made treason by law. He suffered 4 March, 1590, “about Easter”, in Fleet Street opposite Fetter Lane. On the gibbet was set a placard: “For treason and favouring foreign invasion”. He spoke to the people from the ladder, showing them that his only “treason” was his priesthood. On the same day Venerable Nicholas Horner suffered in Smithfield for having made Bales a jerkin, and Venerable Alexander Blake in Gray’s Inn Lane for lodging him in his house.
On this day..
- 1859: Pleasant M. Mask, wreck and ruin
- 1957: Larbi Ben M'Hidi, in the Battle of Algiers
- 1685: Thomas Fallowfield at Leicester Square and numerous others at Tyburn
- 1864: Three Idaho robbers, choked on gold
- 1852: "Brown", lynched in California
- 2009: Abdullah Saleh Al-Kohali
- 1656: The Chief Black and White Eunuchs of Topkapi Palace
- 1561: Cardinal Carlo Carafa, papal nephew
- 1780: The slave Violet, her head stuck on a pole
- 1771: Green Tea Hag, the beginning of Dutch Learning
- 1870: Thomas Scott, "take me out of here or kill me"
- 1388: Thomas Usk, leaving "The Testament of Love"
- Themed Set: The Written Word