Diocese of Haarlem

 Habacuc (Habakkuk)

 William Habington

 Habit

 Habor

 Haceldama

 Bl. Hadewych

 Publius Ælius Hadrian

 Hadrian

 Hadrumetum

 Benedict van Haeften

 Gottfried Hagen

 Haggith

 Hagiography

 The Hague

 Ida Hahn-Hahn

 Herenaus Haid

 Hail Mary

 Karl von Haimhausen

 Hair (in Christian Antiquity)

 Hairshirt

 Haiti

 Haito

 Diocese of Hakodate

 Hakon the Good

 Halicarnassus

 Archdiocese of Halifax

 Margaret Hallahan

 Karl Ludwig von Haller

 Jean-Baptiste-Julien D'Omalius Halloy

 Nicholas Halma

 Hamatha

 Ven. John Hambley

 Hamburg

 Diocese of Hamilton

 John Hamilton

 Joseph, Baron von Hammer-Purgstall

 Hammurabi

 Adrian Hamsted

 Daniel Bonifacius von Haneberg

 Hanover

 Bl. Everald Hanse

 Markus Hansiz

 Chrysostomus Hanthaler

 Johann Ernst Hanxleden

 Happiness

 Diocese of Harbor Grace

 William J. Hardee

 Mary Aloysia Hardey

 Thomas Harding

 Mary Juliana Hardman

 Jean Hardouin

 John Hardyng

 Hare Indians

 Family of Harlay

 Charles-Joseph de Harlez de Deulin

 Harmony

 Harney

 Francis Harold

 Harold Bluetooth

 Harpasa

 Thomas Morton Harper

 Ven. William Harrington

 Joel Chandler Harris

 Diocese of Harrisburg

 James Harrison

 William Harrison

 Harrowing of Hell

 Diocese of Hartford

 Ven. William Hartley

 Georg Hartmann

 Hartmann von Aue

 Vincenz Hasak

 Lorenz Leopold Haschka

 Johann Simon (Joachim) Haspinger

 John Rose Greene Hassard

 Peter Hasslacher

 Hatred

 Hatto

 Edward Anthony Hatton

 Hauara

 Haudriettes

 Jean-Barthélemy Hauréau

 Hautecombe

 Jean de Hautefeuille

 Hauteserre

 Haüy

 Mathias Hauzeur

 Diocese of Havana (San Cristóbal de la Habana)

 Bernhard Havestadt

 Edward Hawarden

 Stephen Hawes

 Robert Stephen Hawker

 Sir Henry Hawkins

 Hay

 George Hay

 Johann Michael Haydn

 Franz Joseph Haydn

 Ven. George Haydock

 George Leo Haydock

 Haymo

 Haymo of Faversham

 Lajos Haynald

 Cornelius Hazart

 George Peter Alexander Healy

 Tenebrae Hearse

 Devotion to the Heart of Jesus

 Congregations of the Heart of Mary

 Devotion to the Heart of Mary

 Ven. Henry Heath

 Nicholas Heath

 Heaven

 Hebrew Bible

 Hebrew Language and Literature

 Epistle to the Hebrews

 Hebron

 Isaac Thomas Hecker

 Hedonism

 St. Hedwig

 Cornelius Heeney

 Freiherr von Heereman von Zuydwyk

 Heeswijk

 Karl Joseph von Hefele

 Hegelianism

 St. Hegesippus

 Pseudo-Hegesippus

 Alexander Hegius

 University of Heidelberg

 Heiligenkreuz

 Heilsbronn

 Monk of Heilsbronn

 François Joseph Heim

 Heinrich der Glïchezäre

 Heinrich von Ahaus

 Heinrich von Laufenberg

 Heinrich von Meissen

 Heinrich von Melk

 Heinrich von Veldeke

 Joseph Heinz

 Eduard Heis

 Heisterbach

 St. Helena

 Diocese of Helena

 St. Helen of Sköfde

 Helenopolis

 Heli

 Paul Heliae

 Heliand

 Hélinand

 Heliogabalus

 Hell

 Maximilian Hell

 Helmold

 Jan Baptista van Helmont

 Society of the Helpers of the Holy Souls

 Flavius Rusticius Helpidius

 Pierre Hélyot

 Felix Hemmerlin

 Isaac Austin Henderson

 Lawrence Hengler

 Louis Hennepin

 Henoch

 Henoticon

 Henri de Saint-Ignace

 Mathieu-Richard-Auguste Henrion

 Crisóstomo Henríquez

 Enrique Henríquez

 Henry II

 Henry VIII

 Henry IV (1)

 St. Henry II

 Henry III

 Henry IV (2)

 Henry V

 Henry VI

 Henry of Friemar

 Henry of Ghent

 Henry of Herford

 Henry of Huntingdon

 Henry of Kalkar

 Henry of Langenstein

 Henry of Nördlingen

 Henry of Rebdorf

 Bl. Henry of Segusio

 Robert Henryson

 Bl. Henry Suso

 Henry the Navigator

 Godfrey Henschen

 Luise Hensel

 John Henten

 Heortology

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 Ecclesiastical Heraldry

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 John Rogers Herbert

 Herbert of Bosham

 St. Herbert of Derwentwater

 Johann Georg Herbst

 Alejandro Herculano de Carvalho e Araujo

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 Christian Wolfgang Herdtrich

 Heredity

 Ancient Diocese of Hereford

 St. Hereswitha

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 Joseph Hergenröther

 St. Heribert

 Heribert

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 William Herincx

 Hermann I

 Hermann Contractus

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 Francisco Herrera

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 Antonio de Herrera y Tordesillas

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 Lorenzo Hervás y Panduro

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 Jean Hessels

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 Franz Hettinger

 Pierre Heude

 John Hewett

 Augustine Francis Hewit

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 Diocese of Hexham and Newcastle

 Johann Heynlin of Stein

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 Antony Hickey

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 Hierapolis (1)

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 Ranulf Higden

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 Ven. Richard Hill

 Hillel

 Walter Hilton

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 Johann Baptist von Hirscher

 Ecclesiastical History

 Melchior Hittorp

 Franz von Paula Hladnik

 Archdiocese of Hobart

 Sydney Hodgson

 Andreas Hofer

 Konstantin von Höfler

 John Baptist Hogan

 Moritz Hohenbaum van der Meer

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 Alexander Leopold Hohenlohe-Waldenburg-Schillingsfürst

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 Henry Holden

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 Ven. Thomas Holland

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 John Holmes

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 Luke Joseph Hooke

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 James Robert Hope-Scott

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 John Joseph Hornyold

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 St. Hospitius

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 Johann Host

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 Charles François Houbigant

 Jean-Antoine Houdon

 Vincent Houdry

 William Houghton

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 Mary Howard, of the Holy Cross

 Philip Thomas Howard

 Ven. Philip Howard

 Ven. William Howard

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 Joseph Hyrtl

 Hyssop

Philip Thomas Howard


Dominican and cardinal, commonly called the "Cardinal of Norfolk"; born at Arundel House, London, 21 September, 1629; died at Rome, 17 June, 1694. He was the third son of Henry Frederick Howard, afterwards Earl of Arundel and Surrey and head of the House of Norfolk (the dukedom of Norfolk being forfeited, though restored in 1660). The mother of Philip was Elizabeth, daughter of the Duke of Lennox; he was thus allied to the reigning sovereign of England. At the age of sixteen he joined the Dominican Order in Italy, was professed at Rome, 1646, and took the name of Thomas in religion. Residing at Naples for his studies, he was chosen to deliver a Latin address to the general chapter of his order in Rome. He justified the choice delivering a fervent address on the conversion of England, which led to a decree being passed by the chapter, urging provincials and priors to do all they could to receive English, Irish, and Scotch novices into the order, with a view to its preservation in those countries. He was thenceforth wholly devoted to the conversion of England and to the progress of his order in that country. He was ordained priest in 1652, and with the sanction of his superiors set himself to carry out the ideas he had matured in his mind. He founded the priory of Bornhem in Flanders, with a college for English youths attached to it, and was himself the first prior and novice master. He also founded at Vilvorde a convent of nuns of the Second Order of St. Dominic, now at Carisbrooke.

In the reign of Charles II Father Howard was made grand almoner to Queen Catherine of Braganza. He resided at St. James's Palace, with a salary of 500 pounds a year, and had a position of influence at Court. An outbreak of Puritan violence compelling him to leave England, he resumed his position as prior at Bornhem. He was made cardinal in 1675, by Pope Clement X, being assigned the title of S. Cecilia trans Tiberim, exchanged later for the Dominican church of S. Maria supra Minervam. He now took up his residence at Rome and entered into the service of the Universal Church, especially watching over the interests of the Catholic faith in England. In 1672 he was nominated by the Holy See as Vicar Apostolic of England with a see in partibus, but the appointment, owing to the opposition of the "English Chapter" to his being a vicar Apostolic, and the insistence that he should be a bishop with ordinary jurisdiction, was not confirmed. He was to have been Bishop of Helenopolis. In 1679 he was made Protector of England and Scotland. At his instance the Feast of St. Edward the Confessor was extended to the whole Church. He rebuilt the English College in Rome, and revised the rules of Douai College,

Cardinal Howard cooperated later with James II in the increase of vicars Apostolic in England from one to four, an arrangement which lasted till 1840, when the number was increased to eight by Gregory XVI. Burnet shows in his "History" that Cardinal Howard regretted the steps which led to the crisis in the reign of James II and which his counsels sought to avert. The cardinal's plans were thwarted and the ill-starred mission of the Earl of Castlemaine to Rome showed the rise of another spirit which he did not share. When the crisis he foresaw came, he had the consolation at least of knowing that his foundation at Bornhem was beyond the grasp of the new persecutors. Cardinal Howard assisted at three conclaves, for the election of Innocent XI in 1676, Alexander VIII in 1689, and Innocent XII in 1691. He died in the twentieth year of his cardinalate, at the age of 64, and was buried in his titular church of S. Maria supra Minervam at Rome.

His foundations in Flanders flourished till the French Revolution, when they were despoiled to a great extent, and were eventually transferred to England. The English Dominican Province looks to him as its father and restorer, and the American Province also regards him to a great extent in the same light. After his death the Master General, Father Antoninus Cloche, addressed a letter to the whole order, lamenting the loss of one who had done so great a work for the English Church and the order.

WILFRID LESCHER