Francis Taylor (Irish: Proinnsias Táiliúr; Beannaithe, Swords, c. 1550 – Dublin, 29 January 1621) was a Mayor of Dublin, Ireland, who was incarcerated because of his Catholicism.
He has been declared a martyr for his faith and beatified by the Catholic Church.
He was imprisoned for his Catholic faith around 1614, and died in Dublin Castle on 29 January 1621,[1] after seven years of refusing to accept his freedom by giving up his religion.
Pope John Paul II beatified Taylor on 27 September 1992, as part of a group of 17 Irish Catholic Martyrs who were victims of religious persecution due to their Catholic faith during that era.
[2] A statue of Taylor and of his wife's grandmother, the Blessed Margaret Ball, who had died in that same prison for her faith in 1584, stands outside the main entrance of St. Mary's Pro-Cathedral in Dublin.