Prefecture Apostolic of Kafiristan and Kashmir
Prefecture Apostolic of Kaiserwilhelmsland
Vicariate Apostolic of Kamerun
Prefecture Apostolic of Southern Kan-su
Vicariate Apostolic of Northern Kan-su
Prefecture Apostolic of Upper Kassai
Francis Patrick and Peter Richard Kenrick
Joseph-Marie-Bruno-Constantin Kervyn de Lettenhove
Wilhelm Emmanuel, Baron von Ketteler
Vicariate Apostolic of Kiang-nan
Vicariate Apostolic of Eastern Kiang-si
Vicariate Apostolic of Northern Kiang-si
Vicariate Apostolic of Southern Kiang-si
Diocese of Kildare and Leighlin
Benedictine Abbey of Kilwinning
Vicariate Apostolic of Kimberley
Vicariate of Kimberley in Orange
First and Second Books of Kings
Third and Fourth Books of Kings
Prefecture Apostolic of Kwango
Prefecture Apostolic of Kwang-si
Prefecture Apostolic of Kwang-tung
(KIMRACHA, KINRECHTIN, or MAKENRACHTUS; in Irish MACIONNRACHTAIGH, anglicized HANRATTY and ENRIGHT).
Irish priest, d. 30 April, 1585, at Clonmel, Co. Tipperary. He was the son of a silversmith at Kilmallock, embraced the ecclesiastical state, studied abroad, and graduated bachelor in theology. Returning to Ireland, he became chaplain to Gerald, sixteenth Earl of Desmond, and shared the fortunes of his patron's struggle against Queen Elizabeth. In September, 1583, a fugitive with the earl, he was surprised on Sliabh Luachra by Lord Roche's gallowglasses, and handed over to the Earl of Ormond. By Ormond's command he was chained to one Patrick Grant, and sent to prison at Clonmel. Here he lay in irons, exhorting, instructing, and hearing confessions at his prison grate until April, 1585. His jailer was then bribed by Victor White, a leading townsman, to release the priest for one night to say Mass and administer the Paschal Communion in White's house on Passion Sunday. The jailer secretly warned the President of Munster to take this opportunity of apprehending most of the neighbouring recusants at Mass. In the morning an armed force surrounded the house, arrested White and others seized the sacred vessels, and sought the priest everywhere. He had been hidden under straw at the first alarm, and, though wounded when the heap was probed, ultimately escaped to the woods. Learning, however, that White's life could not be saved but by his own surrender, he gave himself up, and was at once tried by martial law. Pardon and preferment were offered him for conforming, but he resolutely maintained the Catholic Faith and the pope's authorlty, and was executed as a traitor. His head was set up in the market-place, and his body, purchased from the soldiers, was buried behind the high altar of the Franciscan convent. He is one of the Irish martyrs whose cause of canonization is now in progress.
O'REILLY, Memorials of those who suffered for the Catholic Faith in Ireland (London, 1868); MURPHY, Our Martyrs (Dublin, 1896); Calendar of State papers, Ireland, 1574-1585 (London, 1867); O'SULLEVAN BEARR, Patriciana Deccas (Madrid, 1629); Holding in Spicilegium Ossoriense, Ist ser. (Dublin, 1874).
Charles McNeill.