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Topic: Georges Darboy


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In the News (Sun 3 Jun 12)

  
  Georges Darboy
The Gallicanism of Darboy made him unduly subservient to imperial wishes and caused him to assume against the exemptions of the religious an attitude which Rome (1869) compelled him to abandon.
Darboy was one of those who suggested diplomatic intervention as a means of ending difficulties.
During the siege of Paris Darboy showed himself a true pastor and won the admiration of all.
www.catholicity.com /encyclopedia/d/darboy,georges.html   (508 words)

  
 Georges Darboy - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Darboy was born in Fayl-Billot, Haute-Marne in north-east France.
Darboy was a strenuous upholder of episcopal independence in the Gallican sense, and involved himself in a controversy with Rome by his endeavours to suppress the jurisdiction of the Jesuits and other religious orders within his diocese.
Darboy was the third archbishop of Paris to die violently between 1848 and 1871.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Georges_Darboy   (536 words)

  
 Georges Darboy - LoveToKnow 1911
GEORGES DARBOY (1813-1871), archbishop of Paris, was born at Fayl-Billot in Haut Marne on the 16th of January 1813.
Darboy was the author of a number of works, of which the most important are a Vie de St Thomas Becket (1859), a translation of the works of St Denis the Areopagite, and a translation of the Imitation of Christ.
Darboy (Paris, 1888), biographies written from the clerical standpoint, which have called forth a number of pamphlets in reply.
www.1911encyclopedia.org /Georges_Darboy   (491 words)

  
 Georges Darboy   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-03)
'''Georges Darboy''' (January 16, 1813 - May 27, 1871), archbishop of Paris, was born at Fayl-Billot in Haute-Marne.
His body was recovered with difficulty, and, having been embalmed, was buried with imposing ceremony at the public expense on June 7.
It is a noteworthy fact that Darboy was the third archbishop of Paris who perished by violence in the period between 1848 and 1871.
georges-darboy.setcom.sk   (484 words)

  
 Partner with us to reach Darboy...
Darboy is a small community outside Appleton which is located on the north shore of Lake Winnebago.
Darboy, for many years was a small farming community but is fast becoming a vital part of what is known as the Fox Valley.
Darboy is home of one of the states largest and oldest Catholic churches.
www.reachingwisconsin.com /text.htm   (744 words)

  
 Darboy Georges: Free Encyclopedia Articles at Questia.com Online Library
...German, or Hungarian except the Archbishop of Paris Georges Darboy and Archbishop Purcell of Cincinnati.
Georges Darboy, the Archbishop of Paris, was executed by a Commune firing-squad on 24 May 1871.
DARBOY, GEORGES zhorzh darbwa, 1813 71, French churchman, bishop of Nancy (1859 63) and archbishop of Paris (1863 71).
www.questia.com /library/encyclopedia/darboy-georges.jsp?l=D&p=1   (399 words)

  
 AllRefer.com - Georges Darboy (Roman Catholic And Orthodox Churches: General Biography) - Encyclopedia
Georges Darboy, Roman Catholic And Orthodox Churches: General Biographies
Georges Darboy[zhOrzh dArbwA´] Pronunciation Key, 1813–71, French churchman, bishop of Nancy (1859–63) and archbishop of Paris (1863–71).
In the Franco-Prussian War he behaved heroically, notably in the siege of Paris when he remained in the city to aid the wounded.
reference.allrefer.com /encyclopedia/D/Darboy-G.html   (195 words)

  
 Darboy, Georges - HighBeam Encyclopedia   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-03)
DARBOY, GEORGES [Darboy, Georges], 1813-71, French churchman, bishop of Nancy (1859-63) and archbishop of Paris (1863-71).
When the Commune of Paris was set up, he was imprisoned as a hostage and subsequently shot.
Find newspaper and magazine articles plus images and maps related to "Darboy, Georges" at HighBeam.
www.encyclopedia.com /doc/1E1-darboy-g.html   (205 words)

  
 ✓ Georges_Darboy - Versorgungszentrum-Chemnitz.de - Versorgungszentrumchemnitz
Georges Darboy besuchte das Seminar in Langres, wurde 1836 zum Priester geweiht und zum Pfarrgehilfen von Saint-Dizier.
Darboy war von gemäßigter Haltung und ein Feind der jesuitischen Richtung, weswegen sich Papst Pius IX.
Juni wurde unter Teilnahme von Deputationen der großen Staatskörper das feierliche Leichenbegängnis Darboys abgehalten.
versorgungszentrum-chemnitz.de /index.php/Georges_Darboy   (2579 words)

  
 Paris
The Church of St-Eustache, built between 1532 and 1637, was the scene of the First Communion of Louis XIV (1649), the funeral oration of Turenne preached by Fléchier (1676), and Massillon's sermon on the small number of the elect (1704).
Massillon preached the Lenten sermons in the church of St-Leu (fourteenth century), and the conspirator Georges Cadoudal hid in its crypt from the police of Bonaparte.
In the Church of St-Gervais (early sixteenth-century), where the League was established, Bossuet preached the funeral sermon of Chancellor Michel Le Tellier.
www.catholicity.com /encyclopedia/p/paris.html   (13582 words)

  
 Danton, Georges Jacques (Nuttall Encyclopædia)
/ · 1907 Nuttall Encyclopædia of General Knowledge · D · Danton, Georges Jacques
Danton, Georges Jacques, “The Titan of the Forlorn Hope” of the French Revolution, born at Arcis-sur-Aube, “of good farmer people...
Belloc, “the most French, the most national, the nearest to the mother of all the Revolutionary group.
www.fromoldbooks.org /Wood-NuttallEncyclopaedia/d/dantongeorgesjacques.html   (95 words)

  
 CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: Martyrs of the Paris Commune
(1) At the head of the first group of martyrs is the Archbishop of Paris, Monseigneur Georges Darboy, to whom the discomforts of his prison life were peculiarly trying on account of his feeble health.
This revolutionary party still held possession of the east of Paris, but the regular army, whose headquarters were at Versailles, was fast approaching, and the leaders of the Commune, made desperate by failure, wished to inflict what evil they could on an enemy they no longer hoped to conquer.
The priests had, one and all, endured their captivity with patience and dignity the Jesuits, their letters prove it, had no illusions as to their probable fate, Archbishop Darboy and the Abbé Deguerry were more sanguine.
www.newadvent.org /cathen/04168a.htm   (975 words)

  
 Darboy, Wisconsin WI, profile (Calumet County) - hotels, festivals, genealogy, newspapers - ePodunk
Wisconsin > All counties > Calumet County > Darboy
Darboy is in Calumet County, in the Appleton metro area.
Calumet County supported George W. Bush in the 2004 presidential election.
www.epodunk.com /cgi-bin/genInfo.php?locIndex=23917   (380 words)

  
 The Spectator.co.uk
For me the two religions are one.’ He was, naturally, immediately contradicted by the Chief Rabbi, but you cannot say that the cardinal was not trying.
Who knows what Monsignor Georges Darboy, one of his predecessors in the archiepiscopal chair would have thought?
It is little more than a century since his martyrdom in the Paris commune.
ontology.buffalo.edu /smith/courses01/rrtw/Grant.htm   (1206 words)

  
 28 May History: This Date
Born on 23 June 1894, the eldest child of George, duke of York (later King George V) [03 Jun 1865 – 20 Jan 1936], and Princess Mary of Teck (later Queen Mary), he became heir to the throne on the accession of his father (06 May 1910).
The French and Indian War was the last and most important of a series of colonial conflicts between the British and the American colonists on one side, and the French and their broad network of Native-American allies on the other.
In November 1752, at the age of 20, George Washington was appointed adjutant in the Virginia colonial militia, which involved the inspection, mustering, and regulation of various militia companies.
www.safran-arts.com /42day/history/h4may/h4may28.html   (13055 words)

  
 Roman Miscellany: May 2006
The second nineteenth century Archbishop of Paris to be a victim of revolution was Georges Darboy (1813-71).
Darboy was taken hostage by the communards and imprisoned first at Mazas and then La Roquette.
It is fitting that, in 1859, Darboy had written a life of another famous episcopal martyr - St Thomas of Canterbury.
romanmiscellany.blogspot.com /2006_05_01_romanmiscellany_archive.html   (11078 words)

  
 Notre Dame Archives: Calendar
Maureau hopes Perché will appreciate the sentiments of an old friend who sends him pictures of the victims of atheism accompanied by a detailed account.
Perché has no doubt read of the letter of (Elihu Benjamin) Washburn, U.S. ambassador,taining the account of his interview with Archbishop (Georges) Darboy in Cell 37 at Mazas.
George Hecker will offer his home for Brownson's use if he desires it.
archives.nd.edu /calendar/c187108.htm   (4643 words)

  
 24 May History: This Date
Born on 25 February 1888, in Washington DC, Dulles was a grandson of John Watson Foster, secretary of state under President Benjamin Harrison, and a nephew of Robert Lansing, secretary of state under President Woodrow Wilson.
Educated at Princeton and George Washington universities and at the University of Paris, he began to practice law in New York City in 1911 and subsequently became known as an authority on international law.
After serving as an adviser at several post-World War II international conferences, Dulles was appointed to negotiate the US peace treaty with Japan in 1951.
h42day.0catch.com /history/h4may/h4may24.html   (10344 words)

  
 Papal Infallibility Becomes Dogma   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-03)
At the First Vatican Council the approval of the passing of Papal Infallibility was almost guaranteed from the beginning.
First, by the incredibly unequal representation which was highlighted during the Council by a pamphlet, whose author was believed to be Georges Darboy, Archbishop of Paris entitled, The Liberty of the Council and the Infallibility.
This pamphlet claimed that while Italy had two hundred and seventy bishops, the rest of Europe had only two hundred and sixty-five.
www.orthodoxinfo.com /inquirers/papaldogma.aspx   (2320 words)

  
 TIME.com: France -- Sep. 29, 1986 -- Page 1
During that era bombs exploded regularly in Parisian theaters, cafes, police stations and courts.
After two obscure terrorists bombed the Chamber of Deputies, the president of that body waited for the smoke to clear, then said, "Gentlemen, the meeting continues." In the 1870s the Communards executed 60 hostages, including the Archbishop of Paris, Georges Darboy, during a two-month insurrection that took at least 20,000 lives.
A century later the famed Middle East terrorist Carlos, also known as Ilyich Ramirez Sanchez, used Paris as a base and once killed two French secret-service men and a Lebanese accomplice in a shoot-out on the Left Bank.
www.time.com /time/archive/preview/0,10987,962409,00.html   (666 words)

  
 The Cardinals of the Holy Roman Church - Biographical Dictionary - Consistory of January 16, 1893
413-414; Ritzler, Hierarchia Catholica Medii et Recientoris Aevi, VIII, 192, indicates that the first consecrator was Georges Darboy, archbishop of Paris.
London : Burns & Oates 1966; O'Neil, Robert J. Cardinal Herbert Vaughan : Archbishop of Westminster, Bishop of Salford, founder of the Mill Hill Missionaries.
Tunbridge Wells, Kent : Burns & Oates, 1995; Snead-Cox, John George.
www.fiu.edu /~mirandas/bios1893.htm   (3815 words)

  
 Association for Asia Research- Epoch Times Commentaries on the Chinese Communist Party - Part 2
During the rebellion of the Paris Commune, they censored the Press.
They took as hostage and later shot the Archbishop of Paris, Georges Darboy, who gave sermons to the King.
For their personal enjoyment they cruelly killed 64 clergymen, set fire to palaces, and destroyed government offices, private residences, monuments, and inscription columns.
www.asianresearch.org /articles/2443.html   (11240 words)

  
 A History of the General Councils - AD 325 through AD 1870 - Mgr. Philip Hughes
Meanwhile, the fortnight between the close of the debate and the promulgation of the constitution Pastor Aeternus had seen, in the world outside the council, the swift emerging of a first-class international crisis.
When Dupanloup and Darboy met Melchers and Ketteler in that last conference, the evening before the final session, their two countries were already on the verge of war.
Two days later the fateful Franco-German war had begun.
www.christusrex.org /www1/CDHN/coun21.html   (10209 words)

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