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Topic: Felix Antoine Philibert Dupanloup


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In the News (Mon 28 Dec 09)

  
  wikien.info: Main_Page   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
Felix Aguilar Observatory or Observatorio Félix Aguilar is an astronomical observatory in Argentina.
Felix Pappalardi was born in the Bronx on December 20, 1939.
Felix von Hartmann (December 15, 1851 - November 11 1919) was Archbishop of Cologne from 1912 to 1919.
snetinformation.info /browse.php?title=F/FE/FEL   (9239 words)

  
 Society Religion and Spirituality Christianity Denominations Catholicism Reference Catholic Encyclopedia D   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
De L'Orme, Philibert - Celebrated architect of the French Renaissance, born at Lyons, c.
Dupanloup, Félix-Antoine-Philibert - Bishop of Orléans, France, b.
Duprat, Antoine and Guillaume - Antoine, chancellor of France and Cardinal, b.
www.iper1.com /iper1-odp/scat/id/Society/Religion_and_Spirituality/Christianity/Denominations/Catholicism/Reference/Catholic_Encyclopedia/D   (8000 words)

  
 CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: Dupanloup
Dupanloup's courtesy and undeniable competence won over to the Catholic view such men as Thiers and Cousin, thus insuring the enactment of 1850.
Dupanloup's main efforts, however, were directed towards the defence of the Holy See, menaced in its independence by the ambition of the House of Savoy and the ill-disguised connivance of Napoleon III.
Among these are his conception of education as a process of developing mental activity instead of injecting knowledge into the mind, and his; insistence on the duty of the teacher to respect the freedom of the pupils and to cultivate; in them a spirit of honour.
www.newadvent.org /cathen/05202a.htm   (1728 words)

  
 Van Gogh and Gauguin
This pattern encompassed, for example, a definition of material reality as inevitably corrupted, even perfidious; a language of sacrifice and the martyrology of the modern artist; and a linking of the infernal to the internal, where creativity was grounded in an expanded subjectivity and the necessary cultivation of the "hell fires of the mind."
Dupanloup is well known to French historians as an architect of the Falloux Law, which assured the future security of French Catholicism, shaken by the Revolution of 1848, by revitalizing parochial education and legalizing state funding for it, an arrangement still in place to this day.
During Gauguin's time, Bishop Dupanloup developed a new, more dynamic catechism that encouraged students to move beyond dry recitation to sacred silence, to engage in active interior interrogations of supernatural beings, such as angels, and to elicit a state of visionary release from a treacherous earthly world and the debasements of carnality.
www.artbabyart.com /VanGogh_Gauguin2.htm   (1480 words)

  
 Dupanloup, Felix-Antoine-Philibert (1802-1878)   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
On April 16, 1849, he was named bishop of Orleans and soon became one of the best known and influential of French bishops for the next thirty years, ultimately being elected to the senate of the Third Republic.
With the establishment of the Second Republic, Dupanloup was appointed to the commission that prepared the Falloux law of March 1850.
Dupanloup alone among the bishops present in Paris, opposed Louis Napoleon's coup of December 2, 1851.
www.ohiou.edu /~Chastain/dh/dupanlou.htm   (448 words)

  
 Felix-Antoine-Philibert Dupanloup --  Encyclopædia Britannica
U.S. artist and printmaker Felix Darley was one of the most prolific and well-known illustrators of his day.
The composer, pianist, and conductor Felix Mendelssohn was a pivotal figure of 19th-century romanticism.
Felix was the first major comic character to become a film star.
www.britannica.com /eb/article-9031515   (609 words)

  
 [No title]
Felix Antoine Philibert Dupanloup was born on January 3, 1802, at the village of Saint F~lix, between Annecy and Chain- b6ry, and the former of these two places was the scene of his childhood.
Dupanloups life which are inseparable from the gen- eral history of France, and which must be left by the critic for the more deliberate treatment and estimate of the historian.* We would only try to follow the narrow ~ For a very interesting account of the struggles in regard to education with which Mgr.
Dupanloup was concerned, and of the way in which the best and most brilliant efforts of those with whi ns he stood were mis- represented and spoilt and baffled by the blindness of the Ultramontane press, cf.
lcweb2.loc.gov /ndlpcoop/nicmoas/livn-2/livn0175.sgm   (18934 words)

  
 Felix Acosta-Nunez - Encyclopedia Glossary Meaning Explanation Felix Acosta-Nunez   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
Felix Acosta-Nunez - Encyclopedia Glossary Meaning Explanation Felix Acosta-Nunez.
Felix Acosta-Nunez was a journalist, the sport editor of one of the major newpapers in the Dominican Republic, Listin Diario.
After he retired, he was honored by the Listin Diario as one of its greatest contributors and a portion of the stadium were he used to work as a sports commentator was named after him.
www.encyclopedia-glossary.com /en/Felix-Acosta-Nunez.html   (188 words)

  
 history_of_paris.html
Antoine Le Clerc de Juigné (died 1811), who succeeded Beaumont in 1781, was president of the clergy at the States General of 1789.
His friendly relations with Louis XVIII and Charles X drew upon him in 1830 the hostility of the populace; his palace was twice sacked, and the Monarchy of July regarded him with suspicion, but the devotion he showed during a terrible cholera epidemic won many hearts to him.
Assisted by Dupanloup he converted the famous Talleyrand, nephew of his predecessor, on his death-bed in 1838.
www.promotours.com /history_of_paris.html   (9020 words)

  
 New Catholic Dictionary: Felix Antoine Philibert Dupanloup   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
Bishop of Orleans, born Saint Felix, Savoie, France, 1802; died Lacombe, Isére, 1878.
He was an illegitimate child whose mother sought to lessen his disgrace by providing him with an excellent education.
He was the author of a number of important works on catechetical and historical subjects.
www.catholic-forum.com /saints/ncd02889.htm   (160 words)

  
 Pius IX
Though Dupanloup tried to explain away the Syllabus by insisting upon its context and by stressing its purely negative aspect, the Syllabus nevertheless dealt a mortal blow at liberal Catholicism, which ceased after 1864 to be the main issue taxing Catholic controversialists.
When, however, at a gathering of bishops and other dignitaries of the church in Rome in 1862 and again at another in 1867 it had been suggested that the doctrine of infallibility should be authoritatively defined, Dupanloup had led a successful opposition to the project.
The criticism that must attach to Pius IX is that he allowed the council to put aside discussion on the wider issue, which was its original program, in favor of the narrower definition.
www.safran-arts.com /42day/more/more4feb/0207pio9.html   (2659 words)

  
 WNYC - Reading Room: Paul Gauguin
André's brother, Antoine, and Antoine's son Charles Camille Chazal both had modestly successful careers as painters, forming a minor artistic dynasty that lasted in Paris until 1875.
Even after the marriage between André Chazal and Flora Tristan ended, Tristan's interest in art continued, and in addition to publishing some articles on art topics, she was active in a Parisian art circle that included avant-garde painters like Eugène Delacroix.
For the three years that Pard Gauguin was in residence, it was at the height of its fame and drew students from all over France.
www.wnyc.org /books/3016   (3940 words)

  
 Van Gogh and Gauguin
Because van Gogh, a pastor's son, sought to enter the School of Theology in Amsterdam and was employed as an evangelical minister, Silverman's discussion of the influence of Reformed Dutch Protestantism is both plausible and interesting.
The section on Bishop Felix-Antoine-Philibert Dupanloup, director of the seminary Gauguin attended for roughly four years, is less persuasive.
His exploitation of religious and supernatural themes betrayed a comparatist, syncretist approach common to many in the late nineteenth century, including those who never benefited from contact with Dupanloup.
digilander.libero.it /contemporarea/10_02/Silverman   (1491 words)

  
 PHILIBERT   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
Search the PHILIBERT Family Message Boards at Ancestry.com (if available).
Search the PHILIBERT Family Resource Center at RootsWeb.com (if available).
Find graves of people named PHILIBERT at Find-a-Grave.com (or add one that you know).
www.worldhistory.com /surname/US/P/PHILIBERT.htm   (73 words)

  
 FELIX ANTOINE PHILIBERT DUPANLOUP - LoveToKnow Article on FELIX ANTOINE PHILIBERT DUPANLOUP   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
FELIX ANTOINE PHILIBERT DUPANLOUP - LoveToKnow Article on FELIX ANTOINE PHILIBERT DUPANLOUP
To properly cite this FELIX ANTOINE PHILIBERT DUPANLOUP article in your work, copy the complete reference below:
"FELIX ANTOINE PHILIBERT DUPANLOUP." LoveToKnow 1911 Online Encyclopedia.
www.1911encyclopedia.org /D/DU/DUPANLOUP_FELIX_ANTOINE_PHILIBERT.htm   (378 words)

  
 The White Priest:   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
Fleeing France, he eventually made his way to the United States in 1851.
Dismissed from the dioceses of Detroit and Chicago following allegations of sexual improprieties, doctrinal laxity, and financial chicanery, the maverick priest convinced Archbishop Antoine Blanc, who needed clergy, to allow him to work in the archdiocese of New Orleans.
Adept in financial matters (while in Chicago he had loaned out over $4000 at interest), Maistre proved himself an energetic pastor, acquiring land and building a church for his French-speaking, racially mixed congregation.
www.gprep.org /fac/sjochs/priest.htm   (2178 words)

  
 University of Notre Dame Archives: Calendar (1862)
Yesterday Father Dutil, assistant at St. Paul, came to tell Madame Lesne of the death of her brother-in-law, Father (James) Lesne, at New Orleans.
This news had been communicated to him by Father (Philibert) Gutton, his successor.
They are blind men who wish to speak of colors, even Bishop (Felix Antoine Philibert) Dupanloup.
archives.nd.edu /calendar/cal1862h.htm   (4075 words)

  
 [No title]
Félix Antoine Philibert Dupanloup (1802-78), bishop of Orleans, was a major figure in French Catholicism as it prepared for Vatican I. In his 1868 Letter on the Future Ecumenical Council, he referred to the planned Council as "this great effort [tentative] to work toward the illumination and the peace of the world."
The phrase "peace of the world" does not however signify any allusion to questioning the legitimacy of modern war, or to the concern to regulate it.
Although personally very friendly to Urquhart, council fathers Antonelli, Dupanloup, and Strossmayer considered the project correct in principle but inopportune.
www.nd.edu /~theo/research/jhy_2/writings/justwar/urquhart.htm   (12129 words)

  
 Philibert Berthelier --  Encyclopædia Britannica
Though no more than a minor public official, Berthelier took an active part in Geneva's political controversies.
"Berthelier, Philibert." Encyclopædia Britannica from Encyclopædia Britannica Premium Service.
More results on "Philibert Berthelier" when you join.
www.britannica.com /eb/article-9078890?tocId=9078890   (286 words)

  
 [No title]   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
Louis AGNEW, Sir Andrew AGO, Felix "AGRESTIS" AGUILAR, Grace AHN, F. AHRENS, Dr. H.
BODEN, A. BODEN, August BODEN, Felix BODENSTEDT, F. BODENSTEDT, Friedrich BODENSTEDT, G. BODICHON, Docteur BOECKH, Augustus BOGAERT, Felix BOGGIE, John BOGUE, Adam BOHMER, Eduard BOHN, H. BOHN, Henry G. BOHN, Mr.
LE BRETON, Philip Hemery LE COIN, Col. Robert L. Leouzon LE DUC, Philibert LE FANU, G. Sheridan LE FANU, J. Sheridan LE FANU, Joseph Sheridan LE FANU, Sheridan LE FONTAINE, Augustus LE GENDRE, l'Abbe LE GEYT, A. LE GRAY, Gustave LE M. Emm.
oldspice.soi.city.ac.uk /project/athenaeum/reviews/authors/namelist   (13129 words)

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