361:, Russia, Greece, and Yugoslavia). In 1865 he founded a congregation of religious women, the Oblates of the Assumption, to assist the Assumptionists in the foreign missions, especially in Eastern Europe. At the same time he continued his efforts in France to promote freedom of exercise for private Catholic schools and dreamed of building a Catholic university. He opened a series of minor seminaries for students of limited financial means called alumnates.
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In 1843 one of his most cherished dreams became a reality: he acquired a secondary school, Collège de l'Assomption, in Nìmes, where he hoped to form upper-class students to enter society as
Catholic agents of change in a traditionalist mode. With this purchase began one of the greatest struggles of
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In 1828 d'Alzon enrolled in law school in Paris but never finished because of the political upheavals which struck France in 1830. During these years in the French capital he had come to know a host of distinguished young men, some of whom remained friends throughout his life,
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d'Alzon's life, a fight to obtain free and full exercise of private education in the face of state monopoly. It was at this institution that in 1845, spurred along by his lifelong friend and collaborator, Mother
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and soon thereafter decided to invest much of his time, energy, and resources in addressing the needs of the Church in
Eastern Europe. As with his concerns to convert Protestants, d'Alzon wished to win back
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to Rome, so profound was his desire for the unity of Church, as he saw it. Within a few years he had sent some of his first religious to
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In 1832 d'Alzon, against the wishes of his parents since he was an only son of a noble family, decided to enter the diocesan
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In 1816 the family moved to the family château of
Lavagnac (HĂ©rault) where d'Alzon received his early education at home from
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of the diocese, a position he held until 1878, two years before his death. All of his endeavors carried the stamp of his
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in souls", especially through "education, publication of books, works of charity, retreats, and the foreign missions" (
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and
Lamennais that made the later d'Alzon a determined opponent of the Gallican party at the First Vatican Council."
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in 1862 that would have a profound effect on him and his young congregation. Encouraged by the pope, he visited
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Catholicism
Contending with Modernity: Roman Catholic Modernism and Anti-Modernism in Historical Context
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large scale pilgrimages within France (e.g. Lourdes) and outside France (Rome and the Holy Land) and
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In 1870 d'Alzon returned to Rome, where he fought for the declaration of the doctrine of
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the Bonne Presse (now known as Bayard Presse), an influential publication house.
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Emmanuel Joseph Marie
Maurice d’Alzon was born the oldest of four children, in
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He understood these latter endeavors to be "education in its various forms".
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478:"Emmanuel d'Alzon Library", Assumption University, Worcester, Massachusetts
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Tavard, George H., "Blondel's 'Action' and the problem of the university",
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Christ Is My Life: The
Spiritual Legacy of Emmanuel d'Alzon
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D'Alzon died in Nìmes. Pope John Paul II declared him "
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A frequent visitor to Rome, d'Alzon had a meeting with
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397:, Massachusetts is named for Emmanuel d'Alzon.
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109:Learn how and when to remove this message
578:Venerated Catholics by Pope John Paul II
509:The Assumptionists: From Past to Present
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198:École spéciale militaire de Saint-Cyr
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535:Tavard, George; "Emmanuel d'Alzon,"
47:adding citations to reliable sources
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573:Collège Stanislas de Paris alumni
434:"Our Founder", Assumptionists, UK
395:Assumption University (Worcester)
144:and was a leading figure of the
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492:Bernoville, Gaétan;
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521:Sève, André ;
370:Notre Dame de Salut
366:papal infallibility
343:Orthodox Christians
317:First Constitutions
218:La Revue catholique
125:P. Emmanuel d'Alzon
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273:Carmelite
269:Theatines
152:Biography
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