- IE / CMI
- Fonds
- 1700 - 2000
The collections in the Vincentian Provincial Archive
Irish Vincentian Province
5 results with digital objects Show results with digital objects
The collections in the Vincentian Provincial Archive
Irish Vincentian Province
Please visit our Archive website at : https://glenstalarchives.ie/
Description of collections:
Non-monastic collection:
Carbery papers, 1658-1759.
Sir Thomas Hackett papers, 1688-1720.
Cloncurry papers, 1880-1909.
Correspondence between Mother Mary Martin and Bede Lebbe, 1930s.
John Sweetman papers, 1911-1923.
Diaries of Richard Hobart (1784-1802), Sir Thomas Kane (1837) and J. Grene Barry (1869-76).
Gaelic League Ard-Craomh minute book, 1907-15.
Monastic collection:
Foundation correspondence.
Legal and administrative documents.
Financial, farm and school records.
Seniorate minute books, 1927-80.
Material relating to congresses, 1952 onwards.
Material relating to the foundation in Nigeria, 1974 onwards.
Private papers of deceased monks.
Glenstal Abbey Auth Rec
Sisters of St. Joseph Chambery
Sisters of St. Joseph of Chambery Auth Rec
Rosminian Congregation Ireland & USA
History of the Rosminians for the province of Ireland and the United States of America
Rosminian Congregation Ireland
Sisters of Our Lady of Apostles, District of Ireland
Records relating to the archival heritage of the Missionary Sisters of Our Lady of Apostles, Ireland, their members, communities, ministries, and institutions, as well as records of related entities.
The Irish Province is a self-governing part of the OLA institute under the authority of a provincial superior and provincial council of which she is a member. According to Canon 621 of the 1983 Code of Canon Law, "A grouping of several houses which constitutes an immediate part of the same institute under the same superior and has been canonically erected by legitimate authority is called a province." According to OLA Constitutions 1985, revised edition (1995), Section 133, “A Province is the union of several communities which together form from a direct part of the Institute and which has been canonically erected by the General Chapter (Can. 621 - Constitutions n° 621 -Constitutions n° 95). / It is under the authority of a Major Superior (Can. 620).'
The Irish Province was founded by a decree of the Sacred Congregation for the Propagation of the Faith on 25 November 1930, and comprised of the OLA houses in Ireland, the Vicariate of Benin and the Vicariate of Niger, the latter two in present day Nigeria. Sometime between 1930 and 1938 the OLA communities in the Gold Coast (modern day Ghana) were included in the Irish Province.
The Irish Province includes the OLA communities on the island of Ireland and Tanzania. It formerly included the OLA communities in England, the United States and in Zambia until these missions were discontinued. It formerly included the OLA communities in Nigeria and Ghana up until the OLA communities in these countries formed their own respective provinces in 1990 and 1996 respectively.
In 2024 the Irish Province transitions, becoming an District.
Sisters of Our Lady of Apostles
Passionists Congregation, St. Patricks Province
The documents of the Archives of the Passionist Congregation in Scotland and Ireland.
Material that is outside the scope of GDPR concerns has been made available on the public facing side of the catalogue.
There is a private catalogue which contains information that can be released, but needs to be assessed by the archivist, on a case by case basis before doing so. If researchers wish to access any information from the 20th century onwards, they need to contact the archivist beforehand.
The Passionist Congregation, St. Patrick's Province