Armagh, Bishopric of
ARMAGH, BISHOPRIC OF: An ancient
episcopal see in Ireland, traditionally reputed to have been
founded by St. Patrick about 445, and now existing
in connection with both the Roman Catholic and the
Anglican Churches. It had exclusive metropolitan
jurisdiction over the whole of Ireland until 1152,
when a national council at Kells provided for the
elevation of three other sees, those of Cashel,
Dublin, and Tuam, to archiepiscopal rank, Armagh
still holding the primacy. Of the earlier archbishops
the most famous was St. Malachy (d. 1148; see
Malachy O’Morgair, St.);
the friend of St. Bernard and reformer of the
Irish Church. Edward VI., in the course of his
efforts to establish
Protestantism, attempted to transfer the primacy
to Dublin, and the Protestant Archbishop of Dublin
is at present designated as “primate of Ireland,” while his colleague of Armagh has been known as
“primate of all Ireland” since the beginning of
the eighteenth century. The Roman Catholic
succession was maintained with the greatest
difficulty in the later sixteenth and seventeenth
centuries; one archbishop was assassinated, another
died in the Tower of London, and a third (Plunket)
was executed in 1681 on the charge of complicity
in the “Popish Plot.” The diocese comprises
Louth, the greater part of Armagh and Tyrone,
and a section of Derry. The Anglican diocese
included that of Clogher from 1850 to 1886 when
Clogher was restored as a separate jurisdiction.
For additional details on the earlier history, see
Celtic Church in Britain and Ireland.