Saturday, 17 October 2015

Blessed Titus Brandsma, behind the scenes photograph, Dutch priest and Martyr

Behind the scenes photograph of a scene filmed on Saturday October 10th 2015 for Blessed Titus Brandsma, a Dutch priest who was martyred in the Dachau Concentration Camp in 1942.
This scene shows Blessed Titus with his superior as he is arrested.
The set was built to give a simple backdrop for several scenes throughout the day and was constructed in the barn attached to English Martyrs Catholic Church in Goring-by-Sea, home of Mary's Dowry Productions and the Sistine Chapel Reproduction.
Our film about Blessed Titus Brandsma is due for release within the next few months.

In 2007 Mary’s Dowry productions created a new form of film media to present the lives of the saints. Mary’s Dowry Productions recreates stunning silent visuals, informative, devotional narration, and original contemplative music that touches your spirit to draw you into a spiritual encounter with the saint. Watch with your spiritual eye, listen with your spiritual ear. Our films seek to offer a window into the lives of our saints. Using your spiritual senses we invite you to shut out the world, sit prayerfully and peacefully and go on a journey of faith, history and prayer with our inspiring Saints.
For a full listing of films:

Filming for Saint Edith Stein, production photograph, behind-the-scenes

Saturday October 10th, in the barn, English Martyrs Church, Goring, home of Mary's Dowry Productions (and the Sistine Chapel Ceiling Reproduction).
A behind the scenes photograph during production on our upcoming DVD.
In this new film we will present the life of Saint Edith Stein.
We hope to release the film within the next few months.
The above scene shows Saint Edith Stein and her sister Rosa with the Gestapo in the convent in Echt.


In 2007 Mary’s Dowry productions created a new form of film media to present the lives of the saints. Mary’s Dowry Productions recreates stunning silent visuals, informative, devotional narration, and original contemplative music that touches your spirit to draw you into a spiritual encounter with the saint. Watch with your spiritual eye, listen with your spiritual ear. Our films seek to offer a window into the lives of our saints. Using your spiritual senses we invite you to shut out the world, sit prayerfully and peacefully and go on a journey of faith, history and prayer with our inspiring Saints.
Visit our website for other DVDs about the Saints and Martyrs:
 

Thursday, 15 October 2015

Filming day for Saint Maximilian Kolbe, Saint Edith Stein and Blessed Titus Brandsma.

Mary's Dowry Productions had a busy but successful day on Saturday October 10th filming for three future DVDs about Saint Maximilian Kolbe, Saint Edith Stein and Blessed Titus Brandsma. Filming took place in 'the barn' at English Martyrs Church near Worthing, West Sussex where we built three simple backdrops. We also used the courtyard and locations around the barn and our usual style of costumed visuals to represent the Saints and various historical people. The films will continue to be produced over the next few months. Many thanks to everyone who was able to take part.


Friday, 24 July 2015

The English Martyrs and the Rosary

Anne Howard, the wife of Saint Philip Howard, praying the rosary
Screenshot taken from 'Saint Robert Southwell' film
© Mary's Dowry Productions

From the start of Saint Henry Garnet's missionary work to defend and preserve the Catholic Faith in England in Penal times, he had encouraged Catholics to enrol themselves in a pious sodality known as the Confraternity of the Rosary.  At no time did he doubt that the fight for the old religion was to be won mainly by spiritual weapons.

From his own experience, Saint Henry Garnet set great store by the merits and prayers of the martyred priests, and it was this that made him their first and most detailed historian.  He treasured also the prayers of his Roman friends.  Whenever he wrote to Acquaviva he included a petition for his prayers and the prayers of his Roman friends.

Saint Henry Garnet and Saint Robert Southwell
Screenshot taken from our film 'Saint Robert Southwell'
© Mary's Dowry Productions

In Rome, Saint Henry Garnet had witnessed a growing devotion to the Rosary.  When Pope Pius V had called for a crusade against the Turks he urged all Catholics to support it with the regular recital of the rosary.  Devout persons in all countries attributed the victory of Lepanto to the widespread use of the rosary in the churches of Rome and Italy.  Garnet himself had witness the inauguration of the feast of the Rosary by Pope Gregory XIII in 1573.  Before leaving for England he had received from the Dominican General special faculties, reserved normally to the friars of that Order, to admit English Catholics into the Confraternity.  A crusader at heart, Saint Henry Garnet believed that prayer would be effective against heresy in England as it had been in the time of Saint Dominic against the Albigenses.

While Saint Robert Southwell was engaged writing the Supplication, Saint Henry Garnet wrote his first published English work, The Societie of the Rosary.  The title page explains his intention.  There the antiphon of the office of Our Lady is printed - Gaude Virgo Maria, cunctas hereses sola intermisti in universe mundo: Rejoice Virgin Mary, since thou alone hast crushed all heresies throughout the world.

In October 1591 Saint Henry Garnet wrote urgently to Acquaviva reminding him that he had already asked him for a renewal of his special privileges regarding the Confraternity of the Rosary, for he feared that they had lapsed with the death of the Dominican General Sixtus Fabri, in 1589.  Now he added a request for the new Master General to grant a dispensation from the rule that the names of members should be inscribed in a book. 

It was one thing to allow Catholics to risk arrest by keeping rosary beads secretly in their homes, another to draw up a list of members which if they fell into the hands of the priest-hunters would bring ruin to their homes.  To spread the devotion more quickly, Saint Henry Garnet was anxious that more English priests should be given the faculties that he himself had been granted.

Anne Howard, wife of Saint Philip Howard, praying the rosary
Screenshot taken from our film 'Saint Robert Southwell'
© Mary's Dowry Productions

Saint Henry Garnet's book on the rosary was widely diffused.  When the stock of the first edition was seized in a raid on Saint Henry Garnet's press a second edition was out within a year.  An engraving of the Virgin with her infant son appeared on the new title page.  This was Saint Henry Garnet's hope against heresy.  He was "fully persuaded" that Catholics should enlist on their side the power of Our Lady's intercession and "obtain from her a new rainbow, which being a sign of God, cannot signify falsely, but (must) most certainly foretell our comfort and relief"'

Taken from 'A study in Friendship - Saint Robert Southwell and Saint Henry Garnet' by Philip Caraman, S.J.  

Screenshots from our filming day of SAINT JOHN HOUGHTON, English Martyr

St. John Houghton prepares for his execution
© Mary's Dowry Productions
 
Alongside filming visuals for our film about Saint Robert Southwell which took place in the Barn attached to our parish church of the English Martyrs in Goring-by-Sea, we also filmed some visuals of Saint John Houghton.
Saint John Houghton is the protomartyr of the English Reformatio'.  He was prior of the London Carthusian Charterhouse and when he was called upon to take the Oath of Supremacy he refused. 
 
Saint John Houghton during his trial
© Mary's Dowry Productions
 
At the Tyburn Gallows Saint John Houghton was permitted to speak.  He said:
"I call Almighty God to witness, and I beseech all here present to attest for me on the dreadful day of judgement, that being about to die in public, I declare that I have refused to comply with the will of His Majesty the King (Henry VIII), not from obstinacy, malice or a rebellious spirit, but solely for fear of offending the Supreme Majesty of God.  Our holy mother the Church has decreed and enjoined otherwise than the King and Parliament have decreed. I am therefore bound in conscience, and am ready and willing to suffer every kind of torture rather than deny a doctrine of the Church. Pray for me and have pity on me, my brethren, of whom I have been the unworthy prior. In Thee, O Lord I have hoped; let me never be confounded."
 
Saint John Houghton at the Tyburn gallows
© Mary's Dowry Productions
 
For our film presentation of Saint John Houghton's life we recreated some visuals of key moments such as his trial, his death and his time in prison.  We also portrayed moments from his life in the monastery such as his teaching novices and the three days preparation that he and his monks underwent before the Royal Commissioners returned.

In 2007 Mary’s Dowry productions created a new form of film media to present the lives of the saints. Mary’s Dowry Productions recreates stunning silent visuals, informative, devotional narration, and original contemplative music that touches your spirit to draw you into a spiritual encounter with the saint. Watch with your spiritual eye, listen with your spiritual ear. Our films seek to offer a window into the lives of our saints. Using your spiritual senses we invite you to shut out the world, sit prayerfully and peacefully and go on a journey of faith, history and prayer with this inspiring Tudor Saint.
 
At the gallows, when the executioner groped for Saint John Houghton's heart, Saint John looked upon it and said:
"Good Jesus, what will You do with my heart?"
 
There is a famous painting of Saint John Houghton holding his heart and we recreated that image for our film.  Our DVD about Saint John Houghton is due out in 2015, visit our website for its release:
 
Saint John Houghton holds his heart
© Mary's Dowry Productions
 

Wednesday, 22 July 2015

Filming for 'Saint Robert Southwell', English Martyr.

Richard Topcliffe tortures St. Robert Southwell using the infamous 'Wall Torture'
Screenshot © Mary's Dowry Productions
We spent Saturday filming visuals for an upcoming DVD production on the life, mission and Martyrdom of Saint Robert Southwell.  The film is currently in production and will be released this year.  Saint Robert Southwell was a Catholic priest who ministered to the persecuted Catholics in Elizabethan England.  St. Robert offered the outlawed Mass, travelled throughout the country and was Anne Howard's spiritual director - Anne Howard being the wife of Saint Philip Howard, the Earl of Arundel.  Saint Robert was eventually captured, tortured, tried and executed for his priesthood and holding firm to the Catholic Faith. 
'St. Robert Southwell' - COMING SOON from Mary's Dowry Productions.
Visit our online shop for current DVDs about the Saints and English Martyrs:

Monday, 22 June 2015

Saint Etheldreda, Abbess of Ely, her life on DVD.

June 23rd is the Feast of Saint Etheldreda.
To learn about her fascinating life be sure to see our film available on DVD through www.marysdowryproductions.org

In 2007 Mary’s Dowry productions created a new form of film media to present the lives of the saints. Mary’s Dowry Productions recreates stunning silent visuals, informative, devotional narration, and original contemplative music that touches your spirit to draw you into a spiritual encounter with the saint. Watch with your spiritual eye, listen with your spiritual ear. Our films seek to offer a window into the lives of our saints. Using your spiritual senses we invite you to shut out the world, sit prayerfully and peacefully and go on a journey of faith, history and prayer with this inspiring Saxon Saint.
Saint Etheldreda in contemplation
© 2009 Mary's Dowry Productions
Screenshot from 'Saint Etheldreda: Abbess of Ely' DVD

Saint Etheldreda was a princess, Queen and Abbess who gave an inspiring example of prayer, purity and unworldliness even amidst the difficult societal demands of her life. We filmed key moments from Saint Etheldreda's life in 2009 at various locations. The narration that overlays these silent and mystical moving images is told in her own words. Contemplative and uplifting music accompanies the narration and film. We invite you to prayerfully and peacefully take a journey with Saint Etheldreda: Abbess of Ely. As seen on EWTN.

Tuesday, 2 June 2015

Saint Winifred and her Wall, a film of her life, Holywell, Wales

Produced in 2010 our film about Saint Winifred remains a spiritually absorbing way to learn the story of this 7th century Saint. 
'Saint Winifred and her Well' is available worldwide on DVD from Mary's Dowry Productions.
The films runs for half an hour and has featured on EWTN.
Useful for schools, parishes, families and friends.
The spiritual aspect and content assures that this film is not just for entertainment or information but a meaningful encounter with one of our inspiring Saints.
OUT NOW ON DVD


Saturday, 30 May 2015

Saint Margaret Clitherow.

English Martyr Saint Margaret Clitherow tells her story in this hour long presentation of her life in Elizabethan York, England.

In the historical context of Saint Margaret's time in history, the spiritual aspects of her faith bore fruit in her simple daily tasks, fulfilled in her intention of serving her fellow York citizens, sheltering hunted priests and making sure that her children received a proper Catholic education in a climate of Elizabethan hostility.  Her conflict with the Earl of Huntington, Queen Elizabeth I's cousin, culminated in a poignant and moving witness for the Catholic Church in England.  She is held up and remembered inspiringly for Christians today. 
 
Saint Margaret Clitherow and her butcher's shop in The Shambles, York
© 2009 Mary's Dowry Productions
Screenshot from 'Saint Margaret Clitherow' DVD

In 2007 Mary’s Dowry productions created a new form of film media to present the lives of the saints. Mary’s Dowry Productions recreates stunning silent visuals, informative, devotional narration, and original contemplative music that touches your spirit to draw you into a spiritual encounter with the saint. Watch with your spiritual eye, listen with your spiritual ear. Our films seek to offer a window into the lives of our saints. Using your spiritual senses we invite you to shut out the world, sit prayerfully and peacefully and go on a journey of faith, history and prayer with Saint Margaret Clitherow. Closing the distance of time between Elizabethan England and the present day, encounter this inspiring young wife and mother. 

Length and Format: 

The film runs for one hour and is available on Region Free DVD worldwide.

 
This 2009 film is available on DVD through
Mary's Dowry Productions online shop.
www.marysdowryproductions.org
We ship worldwide and in all region formats.

Mary's Dowry Productions was created in 2007 and has featured on EWTN.
We are dedicated to bringing the lives of the Saints and English Martyrs especially in English history to people.


Saint Henry Morse, English Martyr, Priest of the Plague, a film of his life and mission, Catholic Saint, Mother Teresa, missionary

Like Mother Teresa, Saint Henry Morse went among the most forgotten of society during a troubled time in England's history.
Saint Henry Morse was a priest who loved God and those around him very deeply. His joy and kindness radiated from him, affecting those especially in most need. He was known as the priest of the plague due to his missions among the sick and suffering people of England. Even though he contracted the illness himself, he was cured from the plague through prayer and continued his mission of love and service. He has left us a beautiful story of faith very relevant today.

Saint Henry Morse sits at the bedside of a sick woman
© 2014 Mary's Dowry Productions
Screenshot from 'Saint Henry Morse: Priest of the Plague'

In 2014, Mary's Dowry Productions filmed key moments from the life of Saint Henry Morse, who is one of the English Martyrs and an English Catholic Saint. We were able to recreate scenes from his life and present them prayerfully and silently beneath a narrative that is informative and devotional. Our film about Saint Henry Morse offers a prayerful and contemplative journey with Saint Henry Morse into England's Catholic past.

Saint Henry Morse prays in prison
© 2014 Mary's Dowry Productions
Screenshot from 'Saint Henry Morse: Priest of the Plague', DVD

In 2007 Mary’s Dowry productions created a new form of film media to present the lives of the saints. Mary’s Dowry Productions recreates stunning silent visuals, informative, devotional narration, and original contemplative music that touches your spirit to draw you into a spiritual encounter with the saint. Watch with your spiritual eye, listen with your spiritual ear. Our films seek to offer a window into the lives of our saints. Using your spiritual senses we invite you to shut out the world, sit prayerfully and peacefully and go on a journey of faith, history and prayer with this inspiring Elizabethan Saint.
 
Available on DVD through Mary's Dowry Productions.
www.marysdowryproductions.org

Born a Protestant in 1595 at his mothers house at Brome in the English county of Suffolk, Henry Morse converted to Roman Catholicism and attended the The English College, Douay on 5 June 1614. After various journeys he was ordained at Rome and left for the English Catholic Mission on 19 June 1624. He was admitted to the Society of Jesus at Heaton where he was arrested and then imprisoned for three years in York Castle. He completed his novitiate under his fellow prisoner, Father John Robinson, and took simple vows as a Jesuit. After three years in prison he was banished from the country and served as a missionary to the English regiments in the Low Countries.
Returning to England at the end of 1633 he laboured in London, and in 1636 is reported to have received about ninety Protestant families into the Church. He himself contracted the plague but recovered. Arrested 27 February 1636, he was imprisoned in Newgate.

Saint Henry Morse
© 2014 Mary's Dowry Productions
Screenshot from 'Saint Henry Morse: Priest of the Plague' DVD

 On 22 April he was brought to the bar charged with being a priest and having withdrawn the king's subjects from their faith and allegiance. He was found guilty on the first count, not guilty on the second, and sentence was deferred. On 23 April he made his solemn profession of the three vows to Father Edward Lusher. He was released on bail for 10,000 florins, 20 June 1637, at the insistence of Queen Henriette Maria. In order to free his sureties he voluntarily went into exile when the royal proclamation was issued ordering all priests to leave the country before 7 April 1641, and became chaplain to Gage's English regiment in the service of Spain.
In 1643 he returned to England; arrested after about a year and a half he was imprisoned at Durham and Newcastle, and sent by sea to London. On 30 January he was again brought to the bar and condemned on his previous conviction. On the day of his execution his hurdle was drawn by four horses and the French ambassador attended with all his suite, as also did Lois, Count of Egmont and the Portuguese Ambassador. Morse was allowed to hang until he was dead. At the quartering the footmen of the French Ambassador and of the Count of Egmont dipped their handkerchiefs into the martyr's blood.
Venerated from 8 December 1929, and beatified 15 December 1929 he was made one of the Forty Martyrs of England and Wales in 1970.
In 2012, a Catholic church dedicated to St. Henry Morse was built on Shelfanger Road in Diss, replacing the church of the Most Holy Trinity.

Saint Francis of Assisi, founder of the Franciscan order, Seraphic Saint, FILM

Although his life is well known, in this film Saint Francis tells his own journey of conversion and profound sacrifice and love. We look especially at his stigmata and present his story using new media.
The film is not to be viewed with secular expectations but in an atmosphere of silence and prayer.
We made our films as a spiritual encounter with the Saint using our spiritual eyes and spiritual ears.
The visuals have been recreated to represent a window into the life of the Saint which should be absorbed prayerfully with the contemplative music and narration to make this a special encounter.
This 2011 film is available worldwide on DVD through
Mary's Dowry Productions:
www.marysdowryproductions.org
Mary's Dowry Productions was created in 2007 and brings the lives of the Saints, English Martyrs and history to film in a new way especially for Catholics of faith.


Catholic woman hanged for her faith, Saint Anne Line, English Martyr, DVD

When her husband was exiled, Anne Line dedicated her young life to providing safe houses for priests in Elizabethan England. 

Saint Anne Line arrives at a safe house
© 2010 Mary's Dowry Productions
Screenshot from 'Saint Anne Line' DVD
 
Saint Anne Line:
A very atmospheric film that draws you into the heart and mind of a young Elizabethan woman with a deep love of the Mass and her fellow people.  The interesting visuals capture life in that Era but in a contemporary style, showing the beauty of the faith, fellowship and love that breaches the boundaries of time. 

In 2007 Mary’s Dowry productions created a new form of film media to present the lives of the saints. Mary’s Dowry Productions recreates stunning silent visuals, informative, devotional narration, and original contemplative music that touches your spirit to draw you into a spiritual encounter with the saint. Watch with your spiritual eye, listen with your spiritual ear. Our films seek to offer a window into the lives of our saints. Using your spiritual senses we invite you to shut out the world, sit prayerfully and peacefully and go on a journey of faith, history and prayer with this young and inspiring Elizabethan Englishwoman.


Saint Anne Line prepares a room for Mass
© Mary's Dowry Productions 2010
Screenshot from 'St. Anne Line' DVD

Length and Format:
The film runs for 30 minutes and is available on Region Free DVD worldwide.

 
Available on DVD through Mary's Dowry Productions
Ships worldwide in all region formats.


Exiled Bishop, Saint Wilfrid, Celtic Christianity and the history of the Faith in England

Looking at the life of Saint Wilfrid, known as the Apostle of Sussex, this film offers a way to encounter the life of one of our early Catholic Saints.

In 2009 Mary's Dowry Productions filmed key moments from the life of Saint Wilfrid which run silently beneath the narrative of his life, told in his own words. Original contemplative and uplifting music offers a blend of Celtic and contemporary themes, a key part in the presentation.

Beautiful scenes of Sussex compliment Saint Wilfrid's story
© Mary's Dowry Productions 2009
Screenshot from 'Saint Wilfrid: Apostle of Sussex'

In 2007 Mary’s Dowry productions created a new form of film media to present the lives of the saints. Mary’s Dowry Productions recreates stunning silent visuals, informative, devotional narration, and original contemplative music that touches your spirit to draw you into a spiritual encounter with the saint. Watch with your spiritual eye, listen with your spiritual ear. Our films seek to offer a window into the lives of our saints. Using your spiritual senses we invite you to shut out the world, sit prayerfully and peacefully and go on a journey of faith, history and prayer with this inspiring Saxon Saint.

Saint Wilfrid with King Ecgfrith at court
© Mary's Dowry Productions 2009
Screenshot from 'Saint Wilfrid: Apostle of Sussex'


Available worldwide on DVD through Mary's Dowry Productions
www.marysdowryproductions.org

Wilfrid (originally spelled Wilfrith; 633 – c. 709) was an English bishop and saint. Born a Northumbrian noble, he entered religious life as a teenager and studied at Lindisfarne, at Canterbury, in Gaul, and at Rome; he returned to Northumbria in about 660, and became the abbot of a newly founded monastery at Ripon. In 664 Wilfrid acted as spokesman for the Roman position at the Synod of Whitby, and became famous for his speech advocating that the Roman method for calculating the date of Easter should be adopted. His success prompted the king's son, Alhfrith, to appoint him Bishop of Northumbria. Wilfrid chose to be consecrated in Gaul because of the lack of what he considered to be validly consecrated bishops in England at that time. During Wilfrid's absence Alhfrith seems to have led an unsuccessful revolt against his father, Oswiu, leaving a question mark over Wilfrid's appointment as bishop. Before Wilfrid's return Oswiu had appointed Ceadda in his place, resulting in Wilfrid's retirement to Ripon for a few years following his arrival back in Northumbria.

Saint Wilfrid and the South Saxons
© 2009 Mary's Dowry Productions
Screenshot from 'Saint Wilfrid: Apostle of Sussex' DVD

After becoming Archbishop of Canterbury in 668, Theodore of Tarsus resolved the situation by deposing Ceadda and restoring Wilfrid as the Bishop of Northumbria. For the next nine years Wilfrid discharged his episcopal duties, founded monasteries, built churches, and improved the liturgy. However his diocese was very large, and Theodore wished to reform the English Church, a process which included breaking up some of the larger dioceses into smaller ones. When Wilfrid quarrelled with Ecgfrith, the Northumbrian king, Theodore took the opportunity to implement his reforms despite Wilfrid's objections. After Ecgfrith expelled him from York, Wilfrid travelled to Rome to appeal to the papacy. Pope Agatho ruled in Wilfrid's favour, but Ecgfrith refused to honour the papal decree and instead imprisoned Wilfrid on his return to Northumbria before exiling him.
Wilfrid spent the next few years in Selsey, where he founded an episcopal see and converted the pagan inhabitants of the Kingdom of Sussex to Christianity. Theodore and Wilfrid settled their differences, and Theodore urged the new Northumbrian king, Aldfrith, to allow Wilfrid's return. Aldfrith agreed to do so, but in 691 he expelled Wilfrid again. Wilfrid went to Mercia, where he helped missionaries and acted as bishop for the Mercian king. Wilfrid appealed to the papacy about his expulsion in 700, and the pope ordered that an English council should be held to decide the issue. This council, held at Austerfield in 702, attempted to confiscate all of Wilfrid's possessions, and so Wilfrid travelled to Rome to appeal against the decision. His opponents in Northumbria excommunicated him, but the papacy upheld Wilfrid's side, and he regained possession of Ripon and Hexham, his Northumbrian monasteries. Wilfrid died in 709 or 710. After his death, he was venerated as a saint.
Historians then and now have been divided over Wilfrid. His followers commissioned Stephen of Ripon to write a Vita Sancti Wilfrithi (or Life of Wilfrid) shortly after his death, and the medieval historian Bede also wrote extensively about him. Wilfrid lived ostentatiously, and travelled with a large retinue. He ruled a large number of monasteries, and claimed to be the first Englishman to introduce the Rule of Saint Benedict into English monasteries. Some modern historians see him mainly as a champion of Roman customs against the customs of the British and Irish churches, others as an advocate for monasticism.
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Saint Edmund Arrowsmith - Exorcisms in Northern England, English Martyr.


Saint Edmund Arrowsmith:
In a medieval tavern, a holy priest could often be found, captivating ordinary people and converting the most hardened sinners.  For fifteen years he travelled England, pursued across counties by those who would stop him, bringing God to the outskirts, radiating holiness and thus inspiring many.  Closing the distance of time between seventeenth century England an the present day, this Lancashire man can be held up as a light in the darkness of our time.  The atmospheric music draws out the contemplative spirit of Saint Edmund Arrowsmith.

In 2007 Mary’s Dowry productions created a new form of film media to present the lives of the saints. Mary’s Dowry Productions recreates stunning silent visuals, informative, devotional narration, and original contemplative music that touches your spirit to draw you into a spiritual encounter with the saint. Watch with your spiritual eye, listen with your spiritual ear. Our films seek to offer a window into the lives of our saints. Using your spiritual senses we invite you to shut out the world, sit prayerfully and peacefully and go on a journey of faith, history and prayer with Saint Edmund Arrowsmith. 
Length and Format:
The film runs for 45 minutes and is available on Region Free DVD worldwide.
 
Screenshot from 'Saint Edmund Arrowsmith' DVD
© 2012 Mary's Dowry Productions
We ship worldwide, region free.

Saint Edmund was born at Haydock, Lancashire, England in 1585, the eldest child of Robert Arrowsmith, a yeoman farmer, and Margery Gerard, a member of an important Lancashire Catholic family. Among his mother's relations was Father John Gerard, who wrote The Diary of an Elizabethan Priest, as well as another martyr, the Blessed Miles Gerard. He was baptised Brian, but always used his confirmation name of Edmund. The family was constantly harassed for its adherence to Roman Catholicism. One of his grandfathers, died a confessor in prison. His parents were taken to Lancaster jail; the four children, were cared for by neighbours.
In 1605, at the age of twenty, Edmund left England and went to the English College, Douai to study for the priesthood. He was soon forced to return to England due to ill health, but recovered and returned to Douai in 1607.
He was ordained in Arras on 9 December 1612, and sent on the English mission a year later. He ministered to the Catholics of Lancashire without incident until around 1622, when he was arrested and questioned by the Anglican Bishop of Chester. Edmund was released when King James I of England ordered all arrested priests be freed. He joined the Jesuits in 1624.

Saint Edmund Arrowsmith
© 2015 Mary's Dowry Productions
Screenshot from 'Saint Edmund Arrowsmith' DVD

In the summer of 1628, Fr. Edmund was reportedly betrayed by a man named Holden, who denounced him to the authorities. He was convicted of being a Roman Catholic priest in England. He was sentenced to death, and hung, drawn and quartered at Lancaster on 28 August 1628. His final confession was heard by Saint John Southworth, who was imprisoned along with Edmund.
Arrowsmith ministered to Catholics of Lancashire at the still-standing Arrowsmith House, located in Hoghton before being arrested and questioned on Brindle Moss where his horse refused to jump a ditch.

Saint Edmund Arrowsmith and Saint John Southworth
© 2015 Mary's Dowry Productions
Screenshot from 'Saint Edmund Arrowsmith' DVD

Edmund Arrowmith's beatification occurred in 1929. He was canonized as one of the Forty Martyrs of England and Wales by Pope Paul VI in 1970. His feast days are 28 August alone and 25 October with 39 others. His hand was preserved and kept by the Arrowsmith family as a relic until he was beatified and it now rests in the Catholic Church of St Oswald and St Edmund Arrowsmith, Ashton-in-Makerfield.
Lancaster Cathedral celebrates St Edmund as one of the Lancashire Martyrs, whose feast is kept throughout the diocese on 7 August each year.
St Edmund Arrowsmith Catholic High School is located in Ashton-in-Makerfield, Greater Manchester, England. There is also St Edmund Arrowsmith Catholic Centre for Learning in Whiston, Merseyside.

St. Nicholas Owen - the priest hole maker, an ingenious English Martyr.

Saint Nicholas Owen:
Saint Nicholas Owen stands out from among a lot of the saints of his era as an ingenious priest-hole maker.  Travelling with Jesuit priests, even amidst the Gunpowder Plot, to build secret hiding places up and down Elizabethan and Jacobean England.  More than just a carpenter, Saint Nicholas had a deep faith which inspired him to become a Jesuit lay brother.
 
Saint Nicholas Owen enters one of his priest holes while the Jesuit priests
prepare to conceal themselves in another secret room
© 2010 Mary's Dowry Productions
Screenshot from 'Saint Nicholas Owen: the Priest Hole Maker' DVD

In 2007 Mary’s Dowry productions created a new form of film media to present the lives of the saints. Mary’s Dowry Productions recreates stunning silent visuals, informative, devotional narration, and original contemplative music that touches your spirit to draw you into a spiritual encounter with the saint. Watch with your spiritual eye, listen with your spiritual ear. Our films seek to offer a window into the lives of our saints. Using your spiritual senses we invite you to shut out the world, sit prayerfully and peacefully and go on a journey of faith, history and prayer with this inspiring and fascinating priest-hole maker.
Length and Format:
The film runs for 30 minutes and is available worldwide on Region Free DVD.
This DVD about Saint Nicholas Owen is available worldwide through
Mary's Dowry Productions.
www.marysdowryproductions.org
We ship worldwide and region free.

Saint Alexander Briant, a film about an English Martyr, Mary's Dowry Productions, Saints, England, Elizabethan

Saint Alexander Briant:
A touching and thought provoking journey with a very young and holy Catholic priest whose spiritual insight and wisdom of the Catholic Faith gave hope to the people of his day.  Although linked to St. Edmund Campion, his story stands alone, edged with the mystical.  From a young boy in Somerset to a young priest in the City of London, St. Alexander's story is filled with peace, encouragement and inspiration.
 
Saint Alexander Briant tutored by Robert Parsons
© 2012 Mary's Dowry Productions
Screenshot from 'Saint Alexander Briant' DVD
In 2012 we filmed some scenes from the life of Saint Alexander Briant. These included his early life of study, his work on the English Mission and his joyful spirit in prison and at trial. Saint Alexander Briant's story is one of inspiring hope especially living as a Catholic in troubled times.

Man of prayer - Saint Alexander Briant
© 2012 Mary's Dowry Productions
Screenshot from 'Saint Alexander Briant' DVD
In 2007 Mary’s Dowry productions created a new form of film media to present the lives of the saints. Mary’s Dowry Productions recreates stunning silent visuals, informative, devotional narration, and original contemplative music that touches your spirit to draw you into a spiritual encounter with the saint. Watch with your spiritual eye, listen with your spiritual ear. Our films seek to offer a window into the lives of our saints. Using your spiritual senses we invite you to shut out the world, sit prayerfully and peacefully and go on a journey of faith, history and prayer with this young and holy priest.
Length and Format:
The film runs for 30 minutes and is available worldwide on Region Free DVD.
www.marysdowryproductions.org

Saint Alexander Briant (17 August 1556 – 1 December 1581) was an English Jesuit and martyr, executed at Tyburn. He was born in Somerset, and entered Hart Hall, Oxford (now Hertford College), at an early age. While there, he became a pupil of Father Robert Parsons and he completed his studies with him at Balliol College, which, along with his association with Richard Holtby, led to his conversion.

Catching rain water in his hat in prison
© 2012 Mary's Dowry Productions
Screenshot from 'Saint Alexander Briant' DVD

After leaving university, he entered the English College at Reims then went to the English College, Douai, and was ordained priest on 29 March 1578. Assigned to the English mission in August of the following year he laboured with zeal in his own county of Somerset.
A party of the persecution, searching for Father Parsons, placed Alexander Briant under arrest on 28 April 1581, in the hope of extorting information. After fruitless attempts to this end at Counter Prison, London, he was taken to the Tower of London where he was subjected to torture. With six other priests he was arraigned on 16 November 1581, in Queen's Bench, Westminster, on the charge of high treason, and condemned to death.

Saint Alexander Briant at his trial
© 2012 Mary's Dowry Productions
Screenshot from 'Saint Alexander Briant' DVD
In his letter to the Jesuit Fathers he says that he felt no pain during the various tortures he underwent, and adds: "Whether this that I say be miraculous or no, God knoweth." He was twenty-five years old when he was executed by being hanged, drawn and quartered on 1 December 1581; Edmund Campion and Ralph Sherwin were also executed with him.
Alexander Briant was declared venerable on 8 December 1921 by Pope Pius XI and beatified one week later on 15 December. Blessed Alexander Briant was canonized nearly forty-nine years later in 1970 by Pope Paul VI as one of the Forty Martyrs of England and Wales with a common feast day of 25 October. His feast day is celebrated on 1 December, the day of his martyrdom.

Saint Alexander Briant's example of prayer and peace at the Tyburn gallows
© 2012 Mary's Dowry Productions
Screenshot from 'Saint Alexander Briant' DVD
 

Saint Thomas More, a film on DVD about Saint Thomas More, Tudor, No compromise

A film that presents the life and martyrdom of Saint Thomas More.
In 2007 Mary’s Dowry productions created a new form of film media to present the lives of the saints. Mary’s Dowry Productions recreates stunning silent visuals, informative, devotional narration, and original contemplative music that touches your spirit to draw you into a spiritual encounter with the saint. Watch with your spiritual eye, listen with your spiritual ear. Our films seek to offer a window into the lives of our saints. Using your spiritual senses we invite you to shut out the world, sit prayerfully and peacefully and go on a journey of faith, history and prayer with Saint Thomas More.
Saint Thomas More watches as King Henry VIII speaks with Anne Boleyn
© 2012 Mary's Dowry Productions
Screenshot from 'Saint Thomas More' DVD
No Compromise
Taken from 'Mementoes of the Martyrs and Confessors of England and Wales'
by Henry Sebastian Bowden of the Oratory
Reading for July 5th

During his imprisonment in the Tower, Sir Thomas More's keenest trial arose from the endeavour of his beloved daughter Margaret to persuade him to take the oath, as she had done herself. She urged that he was more to the king than any man in England, and therefore ought to obey him in what was not evidently repugnant to God's law. That in favour of the oath of supremacy were all the learned men of England, and nearly all the bishops and doctors, save Fisher.

Margaret Rope, Saint Thomas More's daughter, tries to speak with
him as he is led from Westminster to the Tower of London
© 2012 Mary's Dowry Productions
Screenshot from 'Saint Thomas More' DVD
Thomas More answered that he condemned no one for taking the oath, "for some may do it upon temporal hopes, or fear of great losses, for which I will never think any have taken it; for I imagine that nobody is so frail and fearful as myself. Some may hope that God will not impute it unto them for a sin, because they do it by constraint. Some may hope to do penance presently after, and others are of the opinion that God is not offended with out mouth, so our heart is pure; but as for my part, I dare not jeopardy myself upon these vain hopes." As to the numbers against him, he had on his side many more in other parts of Christendom, and all the doctors of the Church.

"He that is not with Me is against Me; and he that gathereth not with Me scattereth." - Matt. 12, 30.

'Saint Thomas More' by Mary's Dowry Productions is available now on DVD:
www.marysdowryproductions.org
We ship worldwide, region free.

Saint John Fisher, English Martyr, Mary's Dowry Productions, Catholic Saint, Tudors, 1935

A DVD presenting the life of Saint John Fisher.

A Martyr's Sleep
St. John Fisher - Bishop of Rochester

On the day of execution, the lieutenant of the Tower came at 5am and woke Bishop Fisher from his sleep to signify to him that the king's pleasure was that he should suffer death that forenoon. "Well," quoth this blessed father, "if this be your errand, you bring me no great news, for I have long time looked for this message. And I most humbly thank the king's Majesty that it pleaseth him to rid me from all this worldly business, and I thank you, Mr Lieutenant, when is mine hour that I must go hence?" "Your hour," said the lieutenant, "must be nine of the clock." "And what hour is it now?" said he. "It is now about five," said the lieutenant. "Well, then," said he, "let me by your patience sleep an hour or two, for I gave slept very little this night; not for any fear of death, I thank God, but by reason of my great infirmity." "The king's further pleasure is," said the lieutenant, "that you use as little speech as may be, especially of anything touching his Majesty which might cause the people to think of him or his proceedings otherwise than well." The bishop replied that he would speak in a way that could not be misunderstood; and so, falling again to rest, he slept soundly two hours or more."

"Thou shalt rest, and thy sleep shall be sweet." - Prov. 3, 24.

Reading from 'Mementoes of the Martyrs and Confessors of England and Wales' for June 19th.

Saint John Fisher was keen to serve all even during ill health
© 2012 Mary's Dowry Productions
Screenshot from 'Saint John Fisher' DVD

In our film about Saint John Fisher, we begin with Saint John Fisher's early life and see the holy Bishop of Rochester during one of the most turbulent periods of England's history.  We learn about his profound and inspiring example of love and piety, sacrifice and prayer, the attempts upon his life, culminating in his stand against King Henry VIII. 
The narrative and visuals include the Tower of London, St. John Fisher's communications with St. Thomas More, his final days and death on Tower Hill.

Saint John Fisher: Almost everyone has seen "A Man For All Seasons" which focuses upon St. Thomas More, but the only other leading figure in Catholic Tudor England who placed God before the King was St. John Fisher, the Bishop of Rochester who was made Cardinal of England in the Tower of London.  Beginning with his early life as a young boy, we follow St. John Fisher through the Tudor Courts, his assassination attempts on his life and his writings and holy family life.
 
Saint John Fisher in the Tower of London
© 2012 Mary's Dowry Productions
Screenshot from 'Saint John Fisher' DVD

In 2007 Mary’s Dowry productions created a new form of film media to present the lives of the saints. Mary’s Dowry Productions recreates stunning silent visuals, informative, devotional narration, and original contemplative music that touches your spirit to draw you into a spiritual encounter with the saint. Watch with your spiritual eye, listen with your spiritual ear. Our films seek to offer a window into the lives of our saints. Using your spiritual senses we invite you to shut out the world, sit prayerfully and peacefully and go on a journey of faith, history and prayer with Saint John Fisher.
Length and Format:
The film runs for one hour and is available on Region Free DVD worldwide

Available on DVD
www.marysdorwyproductions.org
We ship worldwide and in all region formats.   

Saint Margaret Ward DVD, the story of an Elizabethan English Martyr and a prison break, Film, English Martyrs

Saint Margaret Ward - English Saint.

Saint Margaret Ward:
Saint Margaret Ward was so moved by the plight of Catholic priests in England that she brought comfort and encouragement to a Fr. Watson in an Elizabethan London prison at the risk of her own life.  In a setting of beauty and reflection despite a climate of hostility and troubles, St. Margaret's story unfolds amidst prayer, history and faith.

Saint Margaret Ward visits Fr. Watson in Bridewell prison
© 2010 Mary's Dowry Productions
Screenshot from 'Saint Margaret Ward' DVD

In 2007 Mary’s Dowry productions created a new form of film media to present the lives of the saints. Mary’s Dowry Productions recreates stunning silent visuals, informative, devotional narration, and original contemplative music that touches your spirit to draw you into a spiritual encounter with the saint. Watch with your spiritual eye, listen with your spiritual ear. Our films seek to offer a window into the lives of our saints. Using your spiritual senses we invite you to shut out the world, sit prayerfully and peacefully and go on a journey of faith, history and prayer with Saint Margaret Ward. Closing the distance of time between Elizabethan England and the present day, encounter this inspiring saint and recognise how she had the same faith and desires during a troubled society. You will see and feel the beauty of the saint as Saint Margaret Ward tells her own story.
 
Length and Format:
The Film runs for 30 minutes and is available on Region Free DVD worldwide.
 
Available on DVD through Mary's Dowry Productions:
www.marysdowryproductions.org
We ship worldwide, region free