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The League for Catholic Counter-Reformation (French: Ligue de la contre-réforme catholique, CRC) is a nationalist and ultramontane organization founded in 1967 by Georges de Nantes, [1] a former abbot who was suspended a divinis (from administering the sacraments) on 25 August 1966. [2]
The Counter-Reformation (Latin: Contrareformatio), also sometimes called the Catholic Revival, [1] was the period of Catholic resurgence that was initiated in response to, and as an alternative to, the Protestant Reformations at the time.
Catholic League (French) Cenodoxus; The Cheese and the Worms; Colloquium Marianum; Cologne War; Sisters of the Company of Mary, Our Lady; Conservator (religion) Corpus Catholicorum; Council of Trent; Counter-Reformation in Poland; Melchiorre Crivelli; Crypto-Protestantism
Looting of a church during the Revolution, by Swebach-Desfontaines (c. 1793). The aim of a number of separate policies conducted by various governments of France during the French Revolution ranged from the appropriation by the government of the great landed estates and the large amounts of money held by the Catholic Church to the termination of Christian religious practice and of the religion ...
During the Reformation, Roman Catholic Counter-Reformers such as Johann Eck accused the magisterial Reformers of Donatism (although the latter had partially distanced themselves from Wycliffe's theology to avoid such a charge). [32]
Georges de Nantes (3 April 1924 – 15 February 2010), [1] better known as "Abbé de Nantes" was a theologian and traditionalist Catholic priest. He was the founder of the League for Catholic Counter-Reformation (in French Ligue de la Contre-Réforme catholique) considered a cult by the French non-profit UNADFI.
To effect a reformation in discipline or administration. This object had been one of the causes calling forth the reformatory councils and had been lightly touched upon by the Fifth Council of the Lateran under Pope Julius II. The obvious corruption in the administration of the Church was one of the numerous causes of the Reformation.