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The main page for this category is Holy Name Seminary. Pages in category "Holy Name Seminary alumni" The following 15 pages are in this category, out of 15 total.
Clonliffe College (Holy Cross College), for the Archdiocese of Dublin was founded in 1859, [59] opened in 1861 and closed as a seminary in June 2000. [ 60 ] Mungret College , Limerick, was a Limerick diocesan seminary until 1888 and a Jesuit school from 1882 until 1974.
In the great houses of the eighteenth, nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, the housekeeper could be a woman of considerable power in the domestic arena. [citation needed] The housekeeper of times past had her room (or rooms) cleaned by junior staff, her meals prepared and laundry taken care of, and with the butler presided over dinner in the Servants' Hall.
Malpan Seminary with University status in Kottapuram/ Pallipuram Established by Patriarch of Church of The East in AD 450 for Malabar, later seminary was shifted to Mananam and dissolved in St.Joseph's Seminary of Syro - Malabar Church CMI fathers
Membership includes priests, seminarians and brothers. Servants of the Holy Family (SHF) was the first traditional Latin Mass religious community for men begun in the United States. [1] The introduction of the Mass of Paul VI was a catalyst for such foundations in the Church. [2]
Rev. Dr. Robert Skeris, [217] [218] A founding member of the Church Music Association of America and a Knight Commander of the Equestrian Order of the Holy Sepulchre. Fr. Robert Smith, [219] Chaplain with the Cornell Catholic Community. Msgr. William Smith, [220] Taught at Saint Joseph's Seminary in Dunwoodie and associated to EWTN.
Born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania and educated through high school in Hungary, Magyar was a graduate of the University of Pittsburgh, Columbia University, the General Theological Seminary of the Episcopal Church, and Savonarola Theological Seminary in Scranton, Pennsylvania. He was ordained to the priesthood on May 14, 1933 and appointed PNCC ...
He was a graduate of the Duquesne University Prep School, [2] [note 1] and of the university itself, though at the time of his graduation in 1897 it was still known as the Pittsburgh Catholic College. [5] After his graduation, he studied for the priesthood at St. Vincent's Seminary in Latrobe, Pennsylvania. [1]