Siméon-François Berneux

Siméon-François Berneux

Bishop Berneux was tortured and then beheaded on March 8, 1866.
Korean name
Hangul 장경일
Hanja 張敬一
Revised Romanization Jang Gyeong-il
McCune–Reischauer Chang Kyŏngil

Siméon-François Berneux (14 May 1814 8 March 1866) was a French Catholic missionary to Asia, and a member of the Paris Foreign Missions Society who was canonized as a saint. Berneux was executed in the anti-Christian purges at Saenamteo, Seoul, Korea, in 1866. His death provoked the French campaign against Korea the same year.

The questioning of Siméon Berneux.

Biography

Siméon-François Berneux was born in Château-du-Loir on May 14, 1814, and entered the Seminary of Foreign Missions in 1831 at the age of seventeen. In 1843 he entered the Seminary of Le Mans to complete his studies. He was ordained on May 20, 1837, and appointed as Professor of Theology at the Foreign Missions Seminary in October 1838.

Berneux departed from Le Havre on February 12, 1840, and arrived at Anyer in Java on May 31. He spent the summer in Manila before sailing to Macau. In January 1841 he sailed to Tonkin. In Vietnam he was imprisoned and taken to Huế for trial, where he arrived on May 28. In 1842 he was convicted of proselytism and sentenced to death, a sentence which was indefinitely postponed. He was released on March 12, 1843, and set sail to return to France. However, at the Isle of Bourbon (now Réunion), he received permission to return to Macao. He was appointed to begin missions in Manchuria, and arrived in the Liaodong Peninsula on March 15, 1844.

Berneux was consecrated as bishop on December 27, 1854, appointed titular bishop of Gafsa[1] and Apostolic Vicar of Korea. The previous Apostolic Vicar of Korea, Jean-Joseph-Jean-Baptiste Ferréol, had been consecrated in 1843 and ministered in Korea from 1845 until his death in 1853. Berneux sailed from Shanghai to Korea in January 1856 on a Chinese ship, arriving in Korean waters on March 15. They met a vessel owned by Korean Christians on Good Friday and were landed near Seoul. Entering the city on foot, Berneux and his company were taken to the house of Marie-Nicolas-Antoine Daveluy, a French priest who had come to Korea along with Bishop Ferréol. Berneux set up a residence in Seoul, living and working secretly.

In 1866 Berneux was arrested and put on trial. In February 1866 he was repeatedly interrogated under torture, and sentenced to death. He was executed by decapitation on March 8, 1866 at Saenamteo outside Seoul. Daveluy served as Apostolic Vicar for a short time until he was also executed on March 30. The deaths of Berneux and other Catholic missionaries in Korea was followed by a French punitive expedition which reinforced the Korean policy of isolationism.

Canonization

Berneux was beatified by Pope Paul VI on October 6, 1968, and canonized on May 6, 1984 by Pope John Paul II.[2] His feast day is March 7,[3] and he is also venerated along with the rest of the 103 Korean Martyrs on September 20.

His relics were brought to Berlin in 2001 and are held in the Institut St. Philipp Neri in Berlin, Germany.

References

  1. Pratt, Keith; Rutt, Richard (December 16, 2013). Korea: A Historical and Cultural Dictionary. Routledge. p. 35. ISBN 9781136794001. Retrieved 17 August 2015.
  2. "Saint Siméon-François Berneux". CatholicSaints.Info. Retrieved 18 August 2015.
  3. "Roman Martyrology" (in Italian). The Vatican.

Bibliography

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