- Dermot Clifford
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The Most Reverend
Dr. Dermot Clifford, Ph.D., D.D.Archbishop of Cashel and Emly Archdiocese Cashel and Emly Enthroned 12 September 1988
(23 years, 65 days)Predecessor Thomas Morris Other posts Apostolic Administrator of Cloyne (since 7 March 2009) Orders Ordination 22 February 1964 Consecration 9 March 1986 Personal details Born 25 January 1939
Ballymacelligott, County Kerry, IrelandNationality Irish Denomination Roman Catholic Previous post Coadjutor Archbishop of Cashel and Emly (1985–1988) Dermot Clifford, Ph.D., D.D. (born 25 January 1939), is the Archbishop of Cashel & Emly and the Apostolic Administrator of the Diocese of Cloyne, Ireland.[1]
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Early life and education
Archbishop Clifford was born in Ballymacelligott, County Kerry, Ireland, on 25 January 1939. He was educated at Clogher National School and St Brendan's College, Killarney. Among his teachers at St. Brendan's was the late Bishop of Kerry, Dr. Diarmaid Ó Súilleabháin. From Killarney, he moved to St Patrick's College, Maynooth, where he graduated with a B.Sc. Degree in 1960. After Maynooth, he went to the Irish College in Rome, where he was to study for the next four years and was ordained priest on 22 February 1964. Whilst in Rome, he studied at the Lateran University and obtained a Licentiate in Sacred Theology, being in Rome for the first two sessions of Vatican Council II. As a student, he was given the responsibility of looking after the Irish bishops who stayed in the Irish College.
Priesthood
Dr. Clifford's first post after ordination was as a teacher and Dean of Discipline in St Brendan's College, Killarney, where he taught from 1964 to 1972. He commuted to Cork five days per week (1965–1966) for his Higher Diploma in Education. He was later to lecture on a part-time basis in University College Cork in Social Science (1975–1981). He is now a member of the Governing Body representing north and south Tipperary.
Dr. Clifford then studied Social Administration at the London School of Economics (1972–1974), where he was conferred with a Master's Degree with distinction. From London, he returned to his native Kerry in August 1974 to become Diocesan Secretary. During that time he also served as Chaplain to St. Mary of the Angels, Beaufort, a home for children with learning disabilities.
Archbishop of Cashel and Emly
Styles of
Dermot CliffordReference style The Most Reverend Spoken style Your Grace Religious style Archbishop The Holy See chose him as Coadjutor Archbishop of Cashel and Emly on 17 December 1985. The Principal Consecrator was Archbishop Thomas Morris; his Principal Co-Consecrators were Archbishop Gaetano Alibrandi and Bishop Diarmaid O'Súilleabháin, the Bishop of Kerry. He was parish priest of Tipperary town for two and a half years. On 12 September 1988 he was installed as Archbishop of Cashel and Emly in a ceremony in Thurles Cathedral, presided over by the late Cardinal Tomás Ó Fiaich.
A keen footballer in his earlier years, he became the first Kerryman to hold the office of Patron of the Gaelic Athletic Association, in 1989. That same year he was awarded a Ph.D. degree for a thesis on Carers of the Elderly and Handicapped at Loughborough University; this was based on studies he conducted in Kerry just before he left.
Archbishop Clifford has served on the Emigrant Commission of the Bishops' Conference and he helped to set up the Chaplaincy Scheme to the young emigrants in the USA in 1987. He is currently Chairman of the Irish Bishop's Research and Development Commission. He is a Trustee of the Bóthar project, which sends livestock to Uganda and other countries recovering from the effects of war and famine.
On 24 March 2010 it was announced by the Holy See that Bishop Magee had formally resigned from his duties as Bishop of Cloyne and was now bishop emeritus and that Archbishop Clifford, already apostolic administrator there, will remain as such until the appointment of a full time successor to the Cloyne diocese.[2]
Apostolic visitation
In October 2010, Archbishop Michael Neary of Tuam, along with Cardinal Brady, Archbishops Diarmuid Martin of Dublin and Dermot Clifford of Cashel and Emly for high-level talks with heads of Vatican congregations over the apostolic visitation of Irish dioceses in the wake of the Murphy and Ryan reports. While in Rome, the Irish churchmen will come face to face with a team of investigators appointed by Pope Benedict to examine the four Irish archdioceses and "some other as yet unspecified dioceses".
These will include Cardinal Cormac Murphy-O'Connor, Archbishop emeritus of Westminster, who will inspect Cardinal Brady's archdiocese of Armagh, and Cardinal Seán O'Malley, Archbishop of Boston, who is to inspect the Dublin diocese. Toronto's Archbishop Thomas Christopher Collins will investigate Cashel, while Ottawa's Archbishop Terrence Prendergast will look at the west of Ireland archdiocese of Tuam. An investigation of the state of Irish seminaries will be conducted by Archbishop Timothy Dolan of New York. The investigators, known as apostolic visitors, will report their findings directly to Pope Benedict XVI.[3]
References
- ^ Archbishop Dermot Clifford at Catholic-Hierarchy. Retrieved on 11 August 2011.
- ^ Press Office of the Holy See
- ^ Bishops summoned to Rome for abuse crisis talks
Categories:- 1939 births
- Alumni of Loughborough University
- Living people
- People from County Kerry
- Roman Catholic archbishops of Cashel
- Religion in North Tipperary
- Pontifical Lateran University alumni
- Irish Roman Catholic archbishops
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