Owen Lewis (bishop)


Owen Lewis, also known as Lewis Owen was a Welsh Roman Catholic priest, jurist, administrator and diplomat, who became Bishop of Cassano all'Jonio.

Early life

Born on 28 December 1532 in Wales in the hamlet of Bodeon, Llangadwaladr, Anglesey, he was the son of a freeholder. He became a scholar of Winchester College in 1547, and a perpetual fellow of New College, Oxford, in 1554; and was admitted to the degree of B.C.L. 21 February 1558–59.
Opposed to Protestantism, he left the university in about 1561 and went to the University of Douai, where he completed degrees in law and divinity and was appointed regius professor of law. He was also made a canon of Cambrai Cathedral, chapter official, and Hainaut archdeacon.

Curialist

A lawsuit of the chapter of Cambrai occasioned Lewis's going to Rome. Popes Sixtus V and Gregory XIII each made him Referendary of signatures and secretary to the several congregations and consultations concerning the clergy and regulars.
Lewis helped set up the English Colleges of Douai
and Rome with William Allen. In 1578, he had Morys Clynnog brought in as warden to that in Rome. Nationalist feelings, however, came to the fore, and the English students agitated for a Jesuit to be put in charge. This incident has been identified as the beginning of the 'Jesuit and secular' divide in the English mission.

In Milan

Lewis was an administrator in Milan from 1580 to 1584. Charles Borromeo, as archbishop of Milan, brought in outsiders; he appointed Lewis one of the vicars-general of his diocese and took him into his family. Borromeo died in Lewis's arms. Gruffydd Robert assisted Lewis in his work.

Later life

In Rome, Lewis took on the Papal Curia policy concerning the English College, Reims and Mary Queen of Scots.
By the joint consent of Sixtus V and Philip II of Spain, Lewis was promoted to the bishopric of Cassano in the Kingdom of Naples on 3 February 1588; and was consecrated at Rome 14 February 1588 by Nicolás de Pellevé, Archbishop of Sens, with Giovanni Battista Albani, Titular Patriarch of Alexandria, and Fabio Biondi, Titular Patriarch of Jerusalem, serving as co-consecrators. At the time of the Spanish Armada, he was supported to be made archbishop of York in the event of the enterprise succeeding. However, Allen disapproved of the idea, so the proposal became available to other bishoprics. Lewis continued to reside in Rome, and the pope appointed him one of the apostolic visitors of that city and sent him to Switzerland as nuncio.
He died in Rome on 14 October 1594, and was buried in the chapel of the English College, where a monument with a Latin epitaph was erected to his memory. Lewis's old schoolfellow Thomas Stapleton dedicated to him his Promptuarium Catholicum, Paris, 1595.