Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Paul Moreau de Tours (5 July 1844 – 29 December 1908, in Ivry-sur-Seine) was a French psychiatrist, best remembered for his books On the Contagion of Suicide: About the Current Epidemic (1875) and Jealous madness (1877), among others. He served as director of the Ivry-sur-Seine Nursing Home. He was a brother of the painter Georges Moreau de ...
The cause for Moreau's beatification was formally opened on 20 June 1950, and he was given the title of Servant of God in 1957. [9] On April 12, 2003, Pope John Paul II proclaimed him Venerable. [10] Moreau was beatified in Le Mans by Pope Benedict XVI on September 15, 2007, the feast day of Our Lady of Sorrows. Blessed Basil Moreau is ...
Basile Antoine-Marie Moreau was born at Laigné-en-Belin, near Le Mans, France, on February 11, 1799, in the final months of the French Revolution.When Moreau decided to enter the priesthood, he was forced to undergo his seminary training in secret for fear that the French government would arrest him.
As the congregation grew throughout the 1840s and early 1850s in the United States and Canada, Fr. Moreau sent groups of priests, brothers and sisters to work together and support each other's mission within the Family of Holy Cross. The sisters initially supported the priests and brothers by providing domestic services.
The 1838 sale required permission from Rome, said the Rev. Timothy Kesicki, the former president of the Jesuit Conference of Canada and the U.S. who now chairs the Descendants Truth and ...
This disagreement was partially diffused by Father Juliane Delaune, who was able to solicit funds and donations amounting to 15,000 francs, which he divided between Sorin and the bishop. A second and deeper misunderstanding arose when Sorin made his intentions to start a collège (a college-high school on the French model).
A renowned Detroit priest who hosts a popular exorcism podcast was busted on battery charges for allegedly snatching a teenage girl's hair and pretending to floss with it inside an Illinois church.
Court rules Metropolitan AME Church owns Proud Boys' trademark after the group fails to pay $2.8 million judgment.