Page:Catholic Encyclopedia, volume 14.djvu/246

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SPALDING


208


SPALDING


book of St. Augustine's " De Civitate Dei " ; an epistle from Gelasius I is addressed to Honorius; Honorius III conducted a synod in 530; Natalis at a Council in 590, unjustly deposed his archdeacon Honoratus, but Gregory the Great took the latter's part. In 639 Salona was destroyed by the Slavs. In 647 the city of Spalato began to arise from the ruin of Salona, and after an interregnum of eleven years its archbishops took over the territory of the archbishops of Salona. Out of the long series of its seventy-nine archbishops may be mentioned St. Rayner (d. 1180), and the unfor- tunate Marcus Antonius de Dominis, who was deprived of his office after having filled it for fourteen years and died an apostate at Rome in 1624; Thomas, who re- signed his office voluntarily (thirteenth century), is the author of a his- tory of the bishops of Salona and Spalato. The Gregorian re- form decrees were discussed at synods in Dalmatia as early as 1075 and executed in nil by ■Vuh bishop Ascentiu-- At the great pro\ni cial synod in i^t Andrew's Church ni 11S5, Archbishop Petrus VII excom- municated the here- tics and all who h id taken possession of church propert^ He also prescribed the daily chanting of the Office of theBlesstd Virgin. Inthe Coun- cil of 1292, John VII, Primateof Dalmatia, threatened to punish all bishops who inter- fered -n-ith other dio- ceses. Withthedeath


The Piazza del Dfomo, .Spalato The Great Court of the Palace of Diocletian, built a. d. 300. The Ai- cade sho^v's the earliest ascertained example of arches springing directly from column without entablature


(1850). The diocese, which then numbered over 30,000 Catholics, was well provided with schools for girls, but there were comparatively few schools for boys. To supply this need and to recruit the clergy, Bishop Spalding, shortly after the dedication of the cathedral in 1852, went to Europe and secured the services of the Xaverian Brothers who came to Louis- ville in 1854. During his visit to Belgium, the bishop conceived the idea of founding the American College at Louvain which, mainly through his efforts, was opened in 1857. Much of his time was devoted to lectures and controversial writings in defence of the Church, especially against the Know-Nothing move- ment and the common school system from which re- ligious instruction was excluded. He had already published "Evi-

dences of Catholic- ity", a series of lec- tures dehvered in 1844-5, and the " Life, 'Times and Character of Bene- dict Joseph Flaget" (LouisviUe, 1852); these were followed by his "Miscel- lanea" (1853) and his "History of the Protestant Reforma- tion" (1860) in which he enlairged his "Review of D'Au- bigne's 'History of the Reformation'", published in 1840. He also lectured at the Smithsonian In- stitute, Washington, and in Baltimore, New York, Brook- lyn, and other cities. In 1864, on the death of Archbishop Kenriek, Bishop the See of Balti-


of Archbishop La'lius Cippico (1807) began another Spalding succeeded him

interregnum which lasted twenty-three years. The more. Here he organized the St. Vincent de Paul

Church in Dalmatia was then reorganized, Macarsca Society, founded the House of the Good Shepherd


united with Spalato, and the latter as a simple bish- opric made subject to Zara. Paul Miossich was ap- pointed first bishop of the new diocese in 1830.

The See of Spalato-Macarsca numbers 199,800 Catholics; 231 secular priests; 91 male religious in 15 stations; and 125 nuns in 9 stations.

Farlati, lUirricum sacrum. I-III (Venice, 1751); Theiner. Mom,m. Slav, merid.. 4. 13, 15. 72, 113, 115, 161, 224 sq., 354, 358. 377.419. 442.495. 546-48, 63S sq., 651; Monum. Hungaria. I. 496, 521, 762; II, 374; Gams, Scries Epp., 419-21.

COLESTIN WOLFSGRUBER.

Spalding, M.vrtin John, seventh .\rchbishop of Baltimore, b. Bardstown, Kentucky, 23 May, 1810; d., at Baltimore, 7 Feb., 1872. His forbears came from England and settled in Maryland about the middU; of the seventeenth century; his grandfather removed to Kentucky in 1790. Martin Sp.alding entered St. Mary's College, Lebanon, Kentucky, in 1S21, taught mathematics there at the age of fourteen, was gradu- ated in 1826, and studied philosophy and theology during four years in the seminary at Bardstown. In 1830 he entered the Pro[)aganda, Rome, where after a brilliant course he was ord;iined lii .\ug., 1834, and received the doctorate in theology at the close of a public defence of 256 Iheses. Upon his return to Bardstown, he became pastor of the cathedral and editor of the "C;itholic Advocate", founded in 1835. After the transfer of the see to Louisville, he was ap- pointed vicar-general (1844), co;idjutor cum jure to Bishop Flaget (1848), and Bishop of Louisville


and St. Mary's Industrial School, and completed the cathedral. In October, 1866, the Second Plenary Council assembled at Baltimore; Archbishop Spald- ing arranged the details and presided o\'er the delib- erations. He had previously suggested the idea of a Catholic university, and it was chiefly due to his efforts that the project was endorsed by the council. In 1867 he again visited Rome and took part in the celebration of the centenary of St. Peter's martyrdom. As the American College in Rome was in need of funds. Archbishop Spalding issued an appeal, which resulted in placing the college on a sound financial basis. His labours in behalf of religion and the spreading of Catholic truth were incessant. In 1868 he consecrated Bishop Becker for the See of Wil- mington and Bishop Gibbons for the Vicariate Apos- tolic of North Carolina. Within one year (1868-9) he administered confirmation a hundred times, one eighth of the recipients being converts. He wel- comed the Little Sisters of the Poor to Baltimore (1869), invited Father Herbert Vaughan to evangelize the negroes (1871), and aided Father Hocker in estab- hshing the Catholic Publiciition Society of New York. At the Vatican Council he was a member of the Com- mission on Faith and of the Commission on "Postu- lata" which had to examine all the matters proposed for deliber.ation before they were presented to the council. He was a strong supporter of the doctrine of p.apal infallibility and he drew up a poslulalum in which he favoured a definition by implication in pref-