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Camoys, an investment banker, in 1998 became the first Catholic since the Reformation to be appointed Lord Chamberlain, a senior royal official, and he is a financial adviser to the Vatican. The family chapel, still open under a license granted by King Edward III in 1349, is a touchstone of his faith, he says. "It's the chapel, the existence of the chapel, the continuity of that chapel
-- that is the thing that is foremost in our minds and keeps us going," Camoys said. "It is an amazing fact that only about three Catholic chapels survived through it all." The chapel boasts a Stations of the Cross carved from wood and presented to Camoys' parents by Graham Greene, the late Catholic novelist. Laws restricting Catholic rights were enacted in every reign from Elizabeth I to George II, who died in 1760. In 1832, Catholics won the right to vote, and one of the first to benefit was Thomas Stonor. He moved easily into the establishment, serving Queen Victoria as Lord-in-Waiting for 28 years. For ordinary Catholics, the most significant date was 1791, when they were allowed to celebrate Mass openly. The ban on Catholics entering Oxford or Cambridge universities remained in force until the 1870s, during the lifetime of Cardinal Newman, the convert from the Church of England who is to be beatified by Benedict on Sept. 19. Newman, born in 1801, saw the early years of the 19th century as a dark time for the faith, reduced in his eyes to "but a few adherents of the old religion, moving silently and sorrowfully about, as memorials of what had been." In contrast, Camoys pointed to a portrait of an 18th century ancestor, his proud, almost haughty face framed in a long wig. "They don't look downtrodden, do they?" Camoys said. Other Catholic noble families survived, including the Dukes of Norfolk who are the pre-eminent nobles of England, though the fourth duke was beheaded for plotting against Queen Elizabeth. Ordinary Catholics shared in the suffering. Margaret Clitherow, a butcher's wife from York, was executed in 1586 by being pressed to death with heavy weights. A convert to Catholicism during Elizabeth's reign, Clitherow sheltered priests in her home. The faithful risked prison to gather up relics, or even a scrap of bloody fabric, after the execution of a Catholic, she said. After it emerged from the shadows, the English Catholic Church grew rapidly as Irish immigrants flooded into Britain. Today's church is even more diverse; Archbishop Vincent Nichols says he knows of parishes whose members represent more than a hundred languages. Occasionally, though, one hears echoes of the old nervousness about being associated with the Roman church: Former Prime Minister Tony Blair waited until he had left office to convert to Catholicism.
[Associated
Press;
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