12 October 2017

Reflections at the
end of the day
on ‘A Song of Love’

‘Belov’d, since God loved us so much, we ought also to love one another’ (Photograph: Patrick Comerford)

Patrick Comerford

The conference in Galway is punctuated each day with prayer, at the beginning, in the middle of the day, and at the end of each working day.

Throughout each day of the conference, we are being challenged too to reflect on Scripture in the context of ministry and mission.

These two elements of prayer and Scripture study complement each other and come together in surprising ways.

As I come to the end of this day, this is a Canticle we prayed together at the closing worship yesterday. Our second Canticle, ‘A Song of Love,’ is based on I John 4: 7-11:

A Song of Love

1 Belov’d, let us love one another, for love is of God;
everyone who loves is born of God and knows God.
2 Whoever does not love does not know God,
for God is love.
3 In this the love of God was revealed among us,
that God sent his only Son into the world,
so that we might live through him.
4 In this is love, not that we loved God but that he loved us
and sent his Son to be the expiation for our sins.
5 Belov’d, since God loved us so much,
we ought also to love one another.
6 For if we love one another, God abides in us,
and God’s love will be perfected in us.

– I John 4: 7-11

‘If we love one another, God abides in us’ (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2017)

Why would clergy
meet in a room
named after Herod?

The stairs leading up to the Tetrarch in the Ardilaun Hotel in Galway (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2017)

Patrick Comerford

The conference sessions in the Ardilaun Hotel in Galway this week are taking place in the Tetrarch Suite.

At first, some people were asking what the name meant. But others wanted to know whether the room was named after Herod the Tetrach. Who could imagine a group of priests and bishops meeting in a place named after Herod?

On the other hand, I am also familiar with the statue of the Four Tetrarchs at a corner of the facade of Saint Mark’s Basilica in Venice. Which of these four rulers could have given their name to a room in an hotel in the west of Ireland?

The statue of the Four Tetrarchs at a corner of the facade of Saint Mark’s Basilica in Venice

The term tetrarchy, from the Greek τετραρχία (tetrarchia), means the rule of or by four people,’ describes a form of government in which power is shared among four rulers.

Herod the Tetrarch should not be confused with Herod the Great. Saint Matthew and Saint Luke date the birth of Christ to the reign of Herod the Great (see Matthew 2: 1-12, 19; Luke 1: 5), who was the King of Judea and a large swathe of Palestine from 40 to 4 BC. It was he who tried to beguile the Magi on their way to Bethlehem, and he who ordered the slaughter of the innocent children.

But the other Gospel references to Herod are to Herod the Tetrarch. For example, Saint Luke sets the scene for the story of John the Baptist by recording that the events took place ‘In the fifteenth year of the reign of Emperor Tiberius, when Pontius Pilate was governor of Judea, and Herod was ruler [tetrarch] of Galilee, and his brother Philip [tetrarch] of the region of Ituraea and Trachonitis, and Lysanias ruler [tetrarch] of Abilene …’ (Luke 3: 1).

Herod the Tetrarch of Galilee and Perea ruled from 4 BC to 39 AD. So, his father Herod the Great is blamed for the slaughter of the innocents, while Herod the Tetrarch is anti-hero in other Gospel passages.

On the other hand, Saint Mark portrays Herod as a somewhat fearful and conflicted ruler who is easily manipulated by others (see Mark 6: 14-29).

Saint Luke records how Herod arrests and beheads Saint John the Baptist (Luke 3: 20; 9: 9) for being an outspoken critic of the tetrarch. This Herod directs similar animosity toward Christ, whom he seeks to kill (Luke 13: 31). Finally, when he meets Christ in Jerusalem, Herod mocks him and dresses him up in royal attire before returning him to Pilate (Luke 23: 6-12).

The word tetrarch suggests four rulers, although Josephus only mentions three. So, who were the four tetrarchs?

Because of Judea’s status as a Roman client kingdom, when Herod the Great died in 4 BC his plans for succession had to be ratified by the Emperor Augustus, and his three heirs travelled to Rome to make their claims.

Antipas argued that he ought to inherit the whole kingdom, but the others argued that Herod’s final should be honoured.

Augustus largely confirmed the division of territory set out by Herod in his final will. Archelaus, however, had to content himself with the title of ethnarch rather than king, while Herod Antipas and Philip were tetrarchs in inheritance, and Herod’s sister Salome I ruled as Queen of Jamnia.

When Salome I died in 10 CE, her domain was incorporated into Judea. But other parts of the Herodian Tetrarchy continued to function under the Herodian dynasty, so that Philip the Tetrarch ruled Batanea, with Trachonitis, as well as Auranitis until 34 AD, while Herod Antipas ruled Galilee and Perea until 39 AD.

The term not only describes different governments, but also different systems of government.

Historically, the term refers especially to the system introduced by Roman Emperor Diocletian in 293. This tetrarchy lasted until 313, when conflicts within the empire eventually left Constantine in control of the western half of the empire, and Licinius in control of the eastern half. However, the term tetrarch was never used during the reign of Diocletian.

During the system introduced by Diocletian, the four tetrarchs were based not at Rome but in other cities closer to the frontiers with bordering rivals and barbarians.

These four centres, or the tetrarchic capitals, were:

● Nicomedia in north-west Asia Minor, which is modern Izmit in Turkey.

●Sirmium, which is modern Sremska Mitrovica in the Vojvodina region of Serbia, near Belgrade on the Danube border. This was the capital of Galerius, the eastern Caesar, and would become the Balkans-Danube prefecture of Illyricum.

● Mediolanum, which is modern Milan, was near the Alps and was the capital of Maximian, the western Augustus. His domain was known as Italia et Africa.

● Augusta Treverorum is modern Trier in Germany. This was the capital of Constantius Chlorus, the western Caesar, near the strategic Rhine border. It had been the capital of Gallic emperor Tetricus I, and this quarter became the prefecture Galliae.

But there was no precise division between the four tetrarchs, and during this period the Roman state was not split up into four distinct sub-empires. But later writers misunderstood the tetrarchic system and believed it involved a stricter division of territories between the four emperors.

But, after exploring the concept of tetrarchy, and distinguishing between Herod the Great and Herod the Tetrarch, I found the room in the Ardilaun Hotel where we are meeting was called after none of these figures from antiquity.

The house was originally built in the 1840s for the Persse family, and was originally known as Glenarde.

The Persse family claimed kinship with the powerful Percy family of Northumberland. They were descended from the Revd Robert Persse, who came to Ireland at the end of the 16th century and lived in Bodenstown, Co Kildare. The family survived the 1641 rebellion and his grandson, the Very Revd Dudley Persse, was Dean of Kilmacduagh and Archdeacon of Tuam.

Dudley Persse was granted an estate in Co Galway by Charles II in 1677. By the 19th century, his descendants held lands in Galway, Offaly, Kilkenny, Mayo and Roscommon.

By the 19th century too, family members were prominent in the commercial, maritime, political, social and sporting life of Galway. Prominent family members included Isabella Augusta Persse, Lady Gregory (1852-1932), dramatist and co-founder of the Abbey Theatre; Henry Stratford Persse (1838-1900) of Glenarde, manager of the distillery at Nun’s Island, Galway; his daughter Sarah Persse, the Irish suffragist; and Henry Seymour (‘Atty’) Persse (1869-1960), a champion trainer.

The Tetrarch (1911-1935) was one of the great thoroughbred racehorses owned by Atty Persse over 100 years ago, and has given his name to the Tetrarch Stakes at the Curragh. The Tetrarch was undefeated in a racing career of seven starts and was voted the best two-year-old of the 20th century.

With Steve Donoghue (1884-1945) in the saddle, the Tetrarch won all of his seven two-year-old races in 1914. But, because of doubts about his fitness, the Tetrarch was retired to Atty Persse’s cousin, Major Dermot McCalmot, and his stud in Mount Juliet, Co Kilkenny, where he sired many winners, including Tetramina, who in turn sired Mr Jinks, a maverick TD who was the only member of the Dail for the National League Party.

A notice outside the door of the conference room says Atty Persse remained convinced that the Tetrarch would never have been beaten over any distance such was his phenomenal speed.

The Tetrarch was sired by Roi Herode (France). His male line died out with the death of Kilmore, who won the Grand National in 1962. Undoubtedly his name referred to Herod’s abilitity to ‘kill more.’ So, indirectly, I suppose, the Tetrarch Suite owes its name to both King Herod and Herod the Tetrarch.

A few days in Galway
at a clergy conference

Walking through the wooded grounds and gardens of the Ardilaun Hotel in Galway (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2017)

Patrick Comerford

I am in Galway for these two or three days taking part in the annual clergy conference. This year it is a joint conference for the clergy of both the Diocese of Limerick, Killaloe and Ardfert and the Diocese of Tuam, Killala and Ardfert.

Our conference is taking place in the Ardilaun Hotel in the Taylor’s Hill area of Galway, and our speaker this year is Bishop Gregory Cameron of St Asaph in the Church in Wales.

Ardilaun, or Glenarde House as it was then known, was built around 1840 as a townhouse for the Persse Family, who had large estates in south Galway. Many of the Persse family members hold a place in local history, including Burton Persee, a founder of the Galway Blazers, and Augusta Persee, who as Lady Gregory was a co-founder of the Abbey Theatre.

In 1922, Glenarde House was sold to Patrick Boland, a member of the Boland biscuit-making family. The Boland family lived at Glenarde until 1961, when the house and five acres surrounding it were bought by Patrick D Ryan and his wife.

The Ryan family soon began to convert the house into one a four-star hotel, at a time when the Salthill area was developing as a popular holiday resort.

When Ardilaun House opened as an hotel on Saint Patrick’s Day, 17 March 1962, the former Persse and Boland family mansion had been entirely redecorated and refurbished to include all the modern amenities, but care had been taken to preserve as much of the original character of the old house as possible.

There were 18 bedrooms, each with its own distinctive theme, which was considered modern at the time. It is a sign of how quickly standards were changing then that within 15 years all the original bedrooms had been phased because they were no longer adequate and had become unacceptable.

Since those early days, there have been many developments at the Ardilaun. The first wing with 14 guest bedrooms and six staff rooms was built in 1962. Another 34 bedrooms with additional kitchen and staff facilities were added in 1969, and in 1975 the bar was extended and the reception area was improved.

By 1977, there was an obvious need for further expansion, and in two developments an additional 40 bedrooms were added, all with bathrooms en-suite. A new dining room was also added with doors leading onto a patio where dining was possible outdoors in the summer months. The lands and woods surrounding the hotel were landscaped and have since provided pleasant woodland walks.

A major investment and upgrading of the hotel and its facilities was undertaken in 1999. A new leisure club was added, with an 18-metre deck level swimming pool, jacuzzi, sauna, steam room, gymnasium and aerobics studio. This redevelopment Included a health salon and renovations took place in the public and conference areas with the addition of a new meeting room and a boardroom. The hotel was then relaunched as the Ardilaun House Hotel, Conference Centre and Leisure Club.

The Ardilaun now had 89 bedrooms to include a number of suites. A further redevelopment completed in 2006 saw the addition of 36 luxury new rooms, two tiers of underground parking, garden suites, and extensions to the restaurant, bar, foyer and ballroom. At the same time, the grounds were fully landscaped.

The hotel was rebranded in 2007 as the Ardilaun Hotel, marking the hotel’s 45th Anniversary celebration. More recent developments include the redevelopment of Blazers Bar and Bistro and the transformation of more rooms.

The hotel has received awards as a wedding venue and many other accolades as a four-star hotel.

This morning I hope to go for a swim or for a walk in the grounds. This afternoon there may be time to get into Galway city.

Despite its modern appearance, the Ardilaun Hotel in Galway dates back to the 1840s (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2017)