The Scotsman

Archbishop Philip Tartaglia

Scottish Roman Catholic leader who took a hard line against changing Society

- GORDON CASELY

Archbishop Philip Tartaglia, Metropolit­an Archbishop of Glasgow. Born: January 11 1951, in Glasgow. Died: January 13 2021, in Glasgow, aged 70.

Archbishop Philip Tartaglia, who died on the Feast Day of St Mungo, patron saint of the city in which he was born, was possessed of firmly conservati­ve views, but described by those with whom he came into contact as a “gentle, caring and warm-hearted pastor”.

His appointmen­t in 2012 as archbishop and spiritual leader of the largest Catholic community in Scotland marked a joyous homecoming for this son of Glasgow, intellectu­al and one-time footballer. After Archbishop Emeritus Mario Conti, he was the second Scots archbishop of Italian stock to inherit the legacy of Charles Eyre, the churchman who, with the restoratio­n of the Catholic hierarchy in Scotland in 1878, had been the first Catholic Archbishop of Glasgow since the Reformatio­n of 1560. Like Eyre, Archbishop Tartaglia was a keen patron of Celtic football club.

The Eighth Archbishop of Glasgow in modern times, he was the eldest son of Guido Tartaglia and Annita Bertolacci, enjoying a happy childhood in Dennistoun in the east of Glasgow. Of his eight siblings, one followed him into the priesthood. Philip’s mettle showed early when at 28 his mother died, and as local priest he had to celebrate her Requiem Mass.

His love of football shone through primary schooling at St Thomas's, Riddrie, and secondary education at St. Mungo's Academy, Glasgow. A keen goalkeeper, his formidable size and ability to keep the opposition at bay earned him the sobriquet“Tank Tartaglia”.

Called to the priesthood, he studied at St Vincent's College, Langbank, and Blairs College, Aberdeen, with ecclesiast­ical studies completed at the Pontifical Gregorian University in Rome. His ordination was carried out at his local church in Dennistoun by then Archbishop of Glasgow Thomas Winning.

A return to Rome saw him gain his doctorate, his chosen research being the mystery of the Eucharist. When he was granted a coat-of-arms by Lord Lyon Robin Blair in 2007, the story illustrate­d by his heraldry

pre figured that of the eucharist – the miracle of five loaves and two fishes. Two salmon occupy the centre of the shield, with five loaves (cleverly “Scottified” as bannocks by designer Monsigner Charles Burns) forming a border. Not coincident­ally, the colours of the shield reflect those of Italy – white, red and green. He took as his motto Do Rob ur, fer aux ilium( thin e aid supply, thy strength bestow) from the latin hymnosa lu tar is ho s ti a by st thomas aquinas.

The future archbishop’s telling intellect consolidat­ed his career, with swift moves after Rome to his first pastoral assignment as assistant priest at Our Lady of Lourdes in Cardonald, Glasgow, a post he held con currently with that of extramural lecture rat st. peter' s college, new lands, glasgow. a year later he took up a lectureshi­p at St. Peter's College, becoming director of studies in 1983. When Chesters College, Bearsden, opened in 1985 he was made vice-rector, and rector two years after that.

Moves to Dumbarton and Duntocher followed, with a request in 2004 from the Bishops' Conference of Scotland to return to seminary as rector of the Pontifical Scots College, Rome. Yet a year later he was home again, this time as bishop of paisley in succession to fellow

Glaswegian John Mone, consecrate­d in his position by the Most Rev Mario Conti, Archbishop of Glasgow.

Unafraid of controvers­y, the Archbishop will be remembered for his stance against the Family Law Act in 1996, stating that the Church’s face was set forever against civil partnershi­ps and same-sex marriages and objecting to the easing of divorce. Going on the attack once more a decade later, he emphasised his views that the 1996 Act – quicker and easier divorce, and giving homosexual relationsh­ips legal status through civil partnershi­ps, plus the Act allowing people to change gender designatio­n -undermined the family in society.

He went on: "The minds of many have been so darkened by hubris and by the selfish pursuit of their own gratificat­ion that they have lost sight of the natural law which God has written into his creation...".

He tackled the Prime Minister himself, writing to David Cameron in 2010 in uncompromi­sing terms to insist that "…the Catholic Church will not register civil partnershi­ps nor celebrate same-sex unions: not now, not in the future, not ever, no matter what legislatio­n or regulation­s your government enacts or endorses”.

In 2008, the Archbishop, as president of the National Communicat­ions Commission of the Bishops' Conference of Scotland, wrote to every parish, decrying the media for pushing a "secular and humanistic agenda". Arguing his belief that "over two-thirds" of Scots are Christians, and that the “proportion of people who work in the media does not reflect this”, he emphasised that this led to a "fundamenta­l disconnect­ion between the provider and the consumer".

His readiness to engage at top most levels–he did not shirk from criticisin­g the decision of the UK government to upgrade nuclear weapons capability – saw him mooted by some commentato­rs in 2008 as a possible successor to Archbishop Cormac Murphy-o’connor in the See of Westminste­r.

Throughout his career, his personal mission echoed that of Glasgow itself. In the words of St Mungo, he “Let Glasgow flourish by the preaching of Thy word and the praising of Thy name”.

Archbishop Tartaglia suffered heart trouble some years ago. He had been self-isolating at his home in Glasgow after testing positive for Covid in December. He died two days after his 70th birthday.

 ??  ?? 0 Archbishop Philip Tartaglia pictured in 2015 in Glasgow
0 Archbishop Philip Tartaglia pictured in 2015 in Glasgow

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