Patrick Dorrian (1814–1885) was an Irish Roman Catholic Prelate and 23rd Lord Bishop of Down and Connor.


Patrick Dorrian
Bishop of Down and Connor
ChurchCatholic
SeeDiocese of Down and Connor
In office1865–1885 (died)
PredecessorCornelius Denvir
SuccessorPatrick MacAlister
Orders
Ordination1837
Consecration19 August 1860
by Joseph Dixon
RankArchbishop of Armagh
Personal details
Born
Died3 Nov 1885
Belfast

Early life and education edit

Dorrian was born in Downpatrick on 29 March 1814,[1] one of four sons of Patrick Dorrian and his wife Rose (née Murphy), and was educated first by a Unitarian minister in the classical school in the town, where he excelled, and then in St Patrick's College, Maynooth, where he was ordained in 1833.[2]

Priestly ministry edit

His first appointment was as a curate in the then developing town of Belfast, attached to St Patrick's Church, Belfast, where he ministered for ten years. At a relatively young age he was appointed parish priest in Loughinisland, (from 1847 to 1860) at which time he became Bishop of Gabala (Qabala) and Coadjutor Bishop of Down and Connor to assist the ailing, frail and irenic Bishop Cornelius Denvir.[3]

Episcopal ministry edit

Dorrian was consecrated bishop on 19 August 1860, in St Malachy's Church, Belfast, and eventually succeeded as bishop five years later on 4 May in 1865. Dorrian was known for his authoritarian style of leadership, referred to as "Cullenite".[4] As the post-Famine population of Belfast grew, so too did sectarian attitudes, especially among those moving into the city from rural districts all over Ulster looking for work. Dorrian sought to defend Catholic interests, insisting on the necessity of separate Catholic education and seeking, where possible, to influence the social and political interests of his church.[5]

In this respect historians Sean Connolly (academic) and Gillian McIntosh refer to Dorrian's "pugnacious" presiding over the rapid expansion in priests, churches and religious houses in contrast to the "scholarly but ineffective" Bishop Denvir.[6]

It is estimated he was responsible for doubling the number of Catholic churches in the city of Belfast, and in 1866, early in his episcopate, St Peter's Cathedral, Belfast in Derby St in the Lower Falls area was first used as a pro-cathedral. His episcopal chair, placed in that church for the occasion, is still in use by the bishops of the Diocese of Down and Connor.[7] He attended the First Vatican Council and was one of the leading Irish delegation to the event.[citation needed]

Dorrian died at the Episcopal Palace, Chichester Park, Belfast, on 3 November 1885, at 7 a.m., the Feast of Saint Malachy, Patron of the Diocese; his remains were interred within the chancel of St Patrick's Church, Belfast, on Friday 6 November.[citation needed]

At a meeting of the parish priests held in the chapel of the Diocesan College, 6 November 1885, immediately after the funeral of Dorrian, Patrick MacAlister was elected Vicar Capitular of Down and Connor. McAllister was then named by Pope Leo XIII as Dorrian's successor as the 24th Lord Bishop of Down and Connor.[citation needed]

In November 2017 the historic chapel of Belfast's Mater Infirmorum Hospital was re-opened after extensive refurbishment. It has, as a result of its connection with Dorrian, become known as the Dorrian Chapel.[8][9]

References edit

  1. ^ Canning, Bernard (1988). Bishops of Ireland 1870-1987. Ballyshannon: Donegal Democrat. pp. 112–115. ISBN 1870963008.
  2. ^ MacAulay, Ambrose (2004). "Dorrian, Patrick (1814–1885), Roman Catholic bishop of Down and Connor | Oxford Dictionary of National Biography". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/52695. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  3. ^ "Bishop Patrick Dorrian [Catholic-Hierarchy]".
  4. ^ Magee, Jack (2001). Barney: Bernard Hughes of Belfast, 1808-1878 : Master Baker, Liberal and Reformer. Ulster Historical Foundation. p. 112. ISBN 9781903688052.
  5. ^ Hepburn, Anthony C. (1996). A Past Apart: Studies in the History of Catholic Belfast, 1850-1950. ISBN 9780901905727.
  6. ^ "Belfast 400 people, place and history" (PDF). Queen's University Belfast. Archived from the original (PDF) on 6 April 2018. Retrieved 6 April 2018.
  7. ^ "St Peter's Cathedral, Belfast". 14 September 2008.
  8. ^ "Dorian Chapel refurbishment, Mater Hospital Belfast". 31 August 2017.
  9. ^ "The Mater Chapel - Restored and Renewed".

External links edit