- Maurice Eustace (priest)
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Maurice Eustace (executed November 1581) was an Irish soldier, secretly ordained a Roman Catholic priest, and hanged as a traitor.
Life
He was the eldest son of Sir John Eustace, Castlemartin, County Kildare. He was sent to be educated at the Jesuit college at Bruges in Flanders. There, after the completion of his secular studies, he desired to enter the Society of Jesus. His father, however, wrote to the superiors of the college to send him home.
Maurice returned to Ireland. After a brief stay, during which he tried to dissuade his father from opposing his vocation, he went back to Flanders. His old masters, at the college of Bruges, advised him to return to Ireland and devote himself in the world to the service of religion.
Shortly after his arrival in Ireland he got an appointment as captain of horse. He never abandoned the idea of becoming a priest, and secretly took Holy Orders. His servant, who was aware of the fact, told his father, who had his son immediately arrested and imprisoned in Dublin. A younger brother, desiring to inherit the family estates, also reported Maurice to be a priest, a Jesuit, and a friend of the Queen's enemies.
As a consequence he was put on trial for high treason. During his imprisonment Adam Loftus, Archbishop of Dublin, offered him his daughter in marriage, and a large dowry if he would accept the reformed religion. Eustace was sentenced to public execution, and was hanged.
External links
This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Herbermann, Charles, ed (1913). Catholic Encyclopedia. Robert Appleton Company.
Categories:- 1581 deaths
- Irish Roman Catholic priests
- Irish soldiers
- 16th-century soldiers
- 16th-century Irish people
- People of Elizabethan Ireland
- Clergy of the Tudor period
- People executed under the Tudors
- People executed by hanging
- 16th-century Jesuits
- Irish Jesuits
- People executed for treason
- People from County Kildare
- Executed Irish people
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