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Marie of the Incarnation, OSU (28 October 1599 – 30 April 1672) was a French Ursuline nun. As part of a group of nuns sent to New France to establish the Ursuline Order, Marie was crucial in the spread of Catholicism in New France. She was a religious author and has been credited with founding the first girls' school in the New World.
" La bell'Acarie" ("the beautiful Acarie"), as she was known in Paris, [2] was born Barbara Avrillot in Paris.Her family belonged to the higher bourgeois society; her father, Nicholas Avrillot, was accountant general in the Chamber of Paris, and chancellor of Marguerite of Navarre, the first wife of Henry IV of France; while her mother, Marie Lhuillier, was a descendant of Etienne Marcel, the ...
Get shortened URL; Download QR code ... Print/export Download as PDF; Printable version; In other projects ... Marie of the Incarnation may refer to: Marie of the ...
Marie-Marguerite d'Youville (1701–1771), founder of the Grey Nuns. Mother Marie of the Incarnation, the foundress, practiced devotion to the Sacred Heart of Jesus, and had established it in the cloister years before the revelation to St. Margaret Mary Alacoque (1647–1690). The first celebration of the feast in the New World took place in ...
In 1639, Mother Marie of the Incarnation, two other Ursuline nuns, three Augustinian sisters and a Jesuit priest left France for a mission in New France in what is now the Province of Quebec, Canada. When they arrived in the summer of 1639, they studied the languages of the native peoples and then began to educate the native children. [6]
Marie-Catherine Boullé (rel. name: Marie Claire of Saint Magdalen) (1739–1794), Professed Religious of the Carmelite Nuns of the Ancient Observance; Martyr in odium fidei (France) Thoma Malpan Palackal (c. 1780–1841), Priest and Cofounder of the Carmelites of Mary Immaculate (India)
Mother Marie of the Incarnation, the first French woman in the Order, warned by Teresa and assisted by Francis de Sales, the Abbé de Brétigny and Cardinal de Bérulle, brought a few nuns, mostly trained by Teresa herself, with Ana de Jesús at their head, from Avila to Paris, where they established the Monastery of the Incarnation, 16 October ...
Marie of the Incarnation [6] 3. François de Laval [7] 4. Pope John XXIII [8] 27 April 2014 Saint Peter's Square, Vatican City: 5. Pope John Paul II [8] 6. Kuriakose Elias Chavara [9] 23 November 2014 7. Nicola Saggio [9] 8. Euphrasia Eluvathingal [9] 9. Giovanni Antonio Farina [9] 10. Ludovico of Casoria [9] 11. Amato Ronconi [9]