New Catholic Encyclopedia, Vol. 9: Mab-Mor by Gale Group

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HEALY, Maynooth College: Its Centenary History (New York 1895) 622–624. [K. O’SULLIVAN] MACHALE, JOHN Archbishop of TUAM and Irish patriot; b. Tubbernavine, County Mayo, March 6, 1791; d. Tuam, County Galway, Nov. 4, 1881. He was the son of Patrick MacHale, a tenant farmer and innkeeper of Tirawley, County Mayo, and Mary (Mulchiarian) MacHale. His native tongue was Gaelic and his primary education was at the local hedge school. The uprising of 1798 in Ireland, particularly the execution of Andrew Conroy, the priest who had baptized him, fired young MacHale’s patriotism.

10, 1513): ‘‘Then I betake myself to the street and go to the inns. I talk with those who pass, asking them for news about their localities. I hear various things and I note the different tastes and diverse thoughts of men’’ (Letter 137). Some of the embassies exercised a decisive influence on Machiavelli’s mind, such as the two (June and October 1502) to Cesare Borgia (Il Valentino), the astute and unscrupulous prince in whom the young secretary saw the type of statesman needed in a divided Italy overrun by foreigners, or the two missions to the Court of Rome (1503, 1506), which gave him an opportunity to study the temporal government of the Church.

15, 1842, Fitzroy (near Melbourne), Australia; d. Aug. 8, 1909, Sydney, New South Wales. The daughter of Highland Scottish immigrants, she was working as a governess when in 1861 she met Father Julian Tenison Woods, a missionary from England and one of the chief architects of Australia’s Catholic education system. He inspired her to dedicate her life to teaching the children of the bush. In 1865, Mary and two younger sisters began teaching in an abandoned stable at Penola, South Australia. Moving to Adelaide, Mary MacKillop and Father Woods founded the Institute of the Sisters of St.

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