Pierre Le Moyne, Sieur d'Iberville
St. Ignatius of Constantinople
Congregation of the Immaculate Conception
Innocenzo di Pietro Francucci da Imola
Incardination and Excardination
Sisters of Charity of the Incarnate Word
Order of the Incarnate Word and Blessed Sacrament
Civil Incorporation of Church Property
Bureau of Catholic Indian Missions
Patriarchate of the East Indies
Asylums and Care for the Insane
Institute of Mission Helpers of the Sacred Heart
Irish Institute of the Blessed Virgin Mary
Institute of the Brothers of the Christian Schools
Vicariate Apostolic of Intendencia Oriental y Llanos de San Martín
Irish, in Countries other than Ireland
Irish Colleges, on the Continent
English martyr, born at Stoke Edith, Herefordshire, in 1565; executed at Newcastle-on-Tyne, 26 July, 1594. He was probably the son of Anthony Ingram of Wolford, Warwickshire, by Dorothy, daughter of Sir John Hungerford. He was educated first in Worcestershire, then at the English College, Reims, at the Jesuit College, Pont-a-Mousson, and at the English College, Rome. Ordained at Rome in 1589, he went to Scotland early in 1592, and there frequented the company of Lords Huntly, Angus, and Erroll, the Abbot of Dumbries, and Sir Walter Lindsay of Balgavies. Captured on the Tyne, 25 November, 1593, he was imprisoned successively at Berwick, Durgam, York, and in the Tower of London, in which place he suffered the severest tortures with great constancy, and wrote twenty Latin epigrams which have survived. Sent north again, he was imprisoned at York, Newcastle, and Durgam, where he was tried in the company of John Bostle (q. v.) and George Swalwell, a converted minister. He was convicted under 27 Eliz. c. 2 (which made the mere presence in England of a priest ordained abroad high treason), though there was no evidence that he had ever exercised any priestly function in England. It appears that some one in Scotland in vain offered the English Government a thousand crowns for his life.
John B. Wainewright.