Drogheda Independent

Drogheda pilgrims visiting site of St Oliver remains

- FIONA MAGENNIS

A group of pilgrims from Drogheda, led by Archbishop Eamon Martin, are visiting a town in Germany where Saint Oliver Plunkett’s remains were smuggled two years after his death.

The delegation of 20 pilgirms are visiting Lamspringe in Germany. Lamspringe, part of the Diocese of Hildesheim, is about sixty kilometres south of Hanover.

It is his first such pilgrimage undertaken as Archbishop of Armagh in honour of his predecesso­r, Saint Oliver Plunkett. In 1681 Saint Oliver was hung, drawn and quartered for the faith in Tyburn, England, and his remains – minus head and forearms – were smuggled two years later to Lamspringe. While awaiting martyrdom in England, Saint Oliver befriended Father Maurus Corker, President of the English Benedictin­es in Newgate Prison in London. Father Corker proved very helpful to Saint Oliver enabling him, to his great joy, celebrate daily Mass for the last fortnight of his life as well as hearing his Confession. Father Corker arranged to have Saint Oliver’s remains exhumed in 1683 and it is recorded that they were translated with great reverence to the crypt of the Benedictin­e monastery in Lamspringe where they remained for two hundred years. Since that time the Benedictin­e order has held a special place in the saint’s extraordin­ary story. Over the centuries, as Catholics in Ireland were experienci­ng suppressio­n under penal laws and harsh famine times, Hildesheim diocese and Lamspringe parish continued to faithfully venerate his memory and this continues up to the present with the annual Saint Oliver Fest in Lamspringe. Saint Oliver is an adopted patron saint of the diocese. Archbishop Martin and pilgrims will take part in a procession with Saint Oliver’s relics and he will celebrate Mass in the Abbey at 5.00pm on Tuesday. Prayers will be offered for peace and reconcilia­tion in Ireland and across Europe at this time. Archbishop Martin will also encourage German families to consider coming to Ireland next August to participat­e in the World Meeting of Families 2018.

2017 commemorat­es the 97th anniversar­y of the beatificat­ion of Saint Oliver by Pope Benedict XV in 1920, as well as the 42nd anniversar­y of his canonisati­on as a martyred saint.

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