From Rothe’s Analecta, p. 456 and O’Sullevan’s Cath. Hist., p. 298 CORNELIUS O’DEVANY was born in 1533. He entered the Order of St. Francis. He went to Rome & on the 18th, of April, 1582, he was appointed to the united Sees of Down and Connor. He returned soon after. He discharged the duties of his office as a good pastor should. He was one of the prelates who in 1587 solemnly promulgated the Council of Trent. 5 years after, he was imprisoned in the Dublin Castle. He was set free after an imprisonment that lasted three years, Only a short time elapsed when the Queen’s ministers repented of what they had done, and tried every art and means to get him again into their power. He was seized in June, 1611. The priest Patrick was seized the same month in Cork, having returned from Belgium. He confessed that he had been the companion to those exiled lords, whom fear for their own safety or their love of religion had made to fly from their lordships and wide domains. They were taken to Dublin. O’Devany was brought to trial on the 28th of January. The charge was that in the last war, he had joined the side of the Earl of Tyrone, and was consequently guilty of high treason and all the more because he had aided the Earl by his advice and help when he fled. He answered, that he was consecrated bishop & as his See lay in that part of Ulster which Earl Hugh ruled over, it was his office, to direct all people in the way of salvation. The true reason which was in the minds of the judge and jury was, that he was a Catholic, a religious, a Bishop, that he had administered the sacraments, preached the word of God, worn the religious habit which was hateful to them. They offered him his life if he would abandon the Catholic religion and pass over to their sect. When he heard this, he called the whole Christian world to bear witness that he wished to die in the Catholic faith and for its defence; that he would be unjust towards himself and deny God, if for such a trifling reward he abandoned the true faith. The crowd of people, closely packed together, filled the field in the northern part of the city. The moment the Bishop mounted the first step of the ladder, a great shout and a cry of lamentation was raised by the faithful. When he was thrown off the ladder the whole crowd gave one great shout of anguish, and then the place became as silent as if there were not a man there. The executioners took him down very soon. Then they cut off his head, opened his body, burned his bowels, and divided him into four quarters. One seized the head as soon as it was cut off, and rushed into the crowd; he was never found.The field was covered with men, women, and children, all wishing to be as near as possible that they might see and hear, and each strove and struggled to carry away some of his relics, a piece of his clothes or shoes, a portion of his hair, a fragment of bone or skin. The same day Patrick O’Loghran suffered death. The bodies of the martyrs were left on the scaffold during the night and were guarded by the Catholics. The next day the city was emptied of people who went to see them and commend themselves to them, to the rage of the heretics, and the Viceroy ordered them to be buried at the place of execution. The following night twelve Catholic youths disinterred and brought them to a decent place, where they were buried with other martyrs. The bodies of these holy men were buried in St. James church. See also Fitzimon, Copinger, O’Sullevan, Molanus, Ward, Wadding, O’Daiy, Lynch, Arsdeken, Porter, and Hueber. Please pray for final perseverance for all of us! May the martyrs of old inspire us all.