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History
The Irish College, Rome was founded on January 1st 1628 by
the Irish Franciscan, Fr. Luke Wadding O.F.M. and the Italian Cardinal, Ludivico
Ludovisi, a nephew of Pope Gregory XV, who died three years before the College
was established. Having been appointed Cardinal Protector of Ireland, Ludovisi
was concerned that his title would not be an empty one and when he was
approached by Luke Wadding to help educate Irish priests in Rome, he readily
undertook the task of founding the Irish College.

Cardinal Ludovico
Ludovisi
(courtesy Vatican Library)
The College was under the care of the Franciscans at the
beginning. An Irish priest, Eugene Callanan, became the first Rector of the
College. When he died in July 1629, the Franciscans became Rectors of the
College until a dispute with the Jesuits for care of the College was decided at
the Sacred Roman Rota in 1635. From then onwards, until the visitation of
Cardinal Marafoschi in 1772, the Irish College was run by the Jesuits and by
Irish secular priests. It was situated in the street which to this day is known
as Via degli Ibernesi.
Many manuscripts from this era of the history of the College
are preserved in the College Archive. Among the most important of these is a
manuscript history of the College written in 1678 by the Jesuit priest, Father
James O`Reilly. The artistic and historic patrimony of the College was
collected, for the greater part, during these years also. Among the most notable
seminarians educated during this period of the College were St.Oliver Plunkett,
the martyred Archbishop of Armagh, his close friend Archbishop James Brennan of
Cashel and many other famous bishops and priests of the seventeenth and
eighteenth centuries.

Fr Luke Wadding, OFM
The anti-Jesuit campaign of the mid-eighteenth century was
felt in the Irish College also. Some student unrest led to the visitation of
Cardinal Marefoschi and the subsequent placement of the College under the care
of an Italian secular priest, Luigi Cuccagni. Despite many efforts to have an
Irish Rector installed in the College, Cuccagni served his rectorate until the
French entered Rome in June 1798. The College was closed for twenty eight years
during the French Invasion and the Napoleonic Wars. Once they were over,
however, the need to re-open the College was felt and in October 1826 the first
students of the restored College arrived in Rome. Having lost the property in
Via degli Ibernesi to some Sisters, Pope Leo XII granted the Umbrian College
onto Father Michael Blake, a priest of the Archdiocese of Dublin, who came to
Rome for the purpose of trying to re-establish the College.
Within six years the two of the most famous Rectors of the
College entered the pages of it's history. Paul Cullen became Rector for
seventeen years, before going to Armagh as Archbishop and subsequently to Dublin
as Archbishop and eventually as Ireland's first Cardinal. He was succeeded by
Tobias Kirby, a priest of the Diocese of Waterford and Lismore, who served as
Rector for forty-one years from 1850 until he retired in 1891. The College
archive contains his entire collection of letters, one of the most important
private collections for the history of the nineteenth century in the English
speaking world.
The early twentieth century saw the College under the care
of two Rectors known for their nationalistic fervour, Michael O`Riordan from
Limerick and John Hagan from Dublin. In 1926 Hagan decided to leave the site of
the old College at the Church of St.Agatha dei Goti and move to the present site
of the College, on the Via S.S.Quattro.
After almost four hundred years, the Irish College continues
to fulfil the purpose for which it was founded, the education of students for
the priesthood in Ireland. Today it also accommodates Irish priests who are
doing postgraduate studies in Rome, as well as seminarians and priests from
other parts of the world. In particular, in recent years, students from the
Orthodox Churches have studied at the College under the auspices of the
Pontifical Council for Christian Unity.
When Pope Leo XII re-opened the College in 1826 he remarked
that the College had a two-fold purpose, the education of students in Rome and
the mission to Ireland. With the revolution in modern means of travel, the
second part of the mission of the College is fulfilled nowadays by providing
accommodation for pilgrims to Rome, especially during the summer months when the
seminarians and priests are away from Rome. The College becomes a Pilgrim Centre
during the months of July, August and September, a place where people can come
to find rest, visit the historic sites of Rome, attend the many liturgical
functions provided by the College and also benefit from the direction which is
provided for them

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