Siddhesh Joshi (Editor)

George Errington (martyr)

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Venerated in
  
Great Britain

Feast
  
4 May

Name
  
George Errington


George Errington (martyr) WN george errington

Died
  
29 November 1596, York, England

Martyred by
  
Queen Elizabeth I of England

Means of martyrdom
  
Hanging, drawing and quartering

Beatified
  
22 November 1987, by Pope John Paul II

The Blessed George Errington of Hurst Castle - from the minor gentry branch of Bingfield, St John Lee, Northumberland - was an English Roman Catholic layman who is honored as a martyr by the Catholic Church.

Errington was convicted of attempted conversion to the Catholic Church, in a plot by an Anglican minister who claimed interest in this. Convicted of treason for this under the Penal Laws enacted under Queen Elizabeth I, he was condemned to death. For this he suffered hanging, drawing and quartering at York on 29 November 1596. Two years before his own death, Errington had ridden with Father John Boste on his last journey from York to Durham.

Martyred with Errington were the Blesseds Henry Abbot, William Knight and William Gibson, who had all been caught up in the plot by the minister. Except for Abbot who was executed and beatified separately, they were all beatified by Pope John Paul II as among the Eighty-five martyrs of England and Wales.

References

George Errington (martyr) Wikipedia