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Catholic Indian Missions of the United States

The spiritual welfare of the native tribes of America was a subject of deep concern to the Governments of Catholic Spain and France from the very discovery of the Western Continent. To this fact all the early patents bear witness. That granted to Ayllón in 1532 for exploration and settlement along the Florida coast, as quoted by Shea, is typical: "Whereas our principal intent in the discovery of new lands is that the inhabitants and natives thereof, who are without the light or knowledge of faith, may be brought to understand the truth of our holy Catholic Faith, that they may come to a knowledge thereof, and become Christians and be saved, and this is the chief motive that you are to bear and hold in this affair, and to this end it is proper that religious persons should accompany you, by these presents I empower you to carry to the said land the religious whom you may judge necessary, and the vestments and other things needful for the observance of Divine worship; and I command that whatever you shall thus expend in transporting the said religious, as well as in maintaining them and giving them what is needful, and in their support, and for the vestments and other articles required for the Divine worship, shall be paid entirely from the rents and profits which in any manner shall belong to us in the said land." With few exceptions secular priests and missionaries accompanied every Spanish expedition of discovery. The first Mass celebrated within the present limits of the United States was probably that offered up by the priests of Ponce de León's expedition at the south-western point of Florida in 1521. The next was celebrated by the noted Dominican Antonio de Montesinos, the earliest opponent of Indian slavery, at Ayllón's temporary colony of San Miguel de Guandape in Virginia in 1526, eighty years before the founding of Jamestown.

I. SOUTH-EASTERN STATES (VIRGINIA TO ALABAMA, INCLUSIVE)

The whole south-eastern portion of the United States, extending westwards to or beyond the Mississippi, was known in the early Spanish period under the general name of Florida. Although at least fifteen priests had lost their lives in this region with the expeditions of Narváez and De Soto in 1527-28 and 1539-42, an attempt to evangelise the native tribes was made in 1549 by the Dominican Luis Cancer , the apostle of Guatemala, under a royal commission granted at his own request for the conversion of Florida. Forced by the obstinacy of the ship-captain to land at Tampa Bay among the fierce Calusa, instead of being given an opportunity to search out a friendly tribe Father Cancer and his two companions had hardly touched the shore when they were killed by the assembled savages in sight of the ship, being thus the first missionary martyrs of the eastern United States. St. Augustine, Florida, the first permanent settlement in the eastern United States , was founded by Menéndez in 1565. In the next year, at the request of the King of Spain, three Jesuits were sent out, one of whom, Father Pedro Martínez, having landed with a small party on Cumberland Island on the Georgia coast, was attacked and murdered by the savages. The other two Jesuits, Father Juan Rogel and Brother Francisco de Villareal, after spending a winter studying the language, proceeded to work among the Calusa tribe in southern Florida. Reinforced by ten more Jesuits in 1568, they went over to Havana to establish there a school for Indian boys from Florida. Father Juan Bautista Segura, as Jesuit vice-provincial, then took charge of the Florida mission, establishing stations among the Calusa, Tegesta, and Tocobaga tribes of the south and west coasts, while Father Antonio Sedeño and Brother Domingo Báez began the first Georgia mission on Guale (St. Simon’s?) Island among the Yamasee, in whose language Brother Báez prepared a grammar and a catechism. In 1569 Father Rogel with several other Jesuits began work in South Carolina among the Orista (Edisto) and others in the neighbourhood of the Spanish post of Santa Elena. After about a year, the results proving unsatisfactory, both the Orista and the Guale missions were abandoned, the missionaries returning to Havana with a number of boys for the Indian school.

In 1570 Father Segura, accompanied by Father Luis de Quiros and seven (?) novices and lay brothers, all Jesuits, together with four instructed Indian youths, undertook a mission among the Powhatan Indians in what is now Virginia. The guide and interpreter on whom they depended to bring them into touch with the natives was a young Indian of the region, who was the brother of a local chief and had been brought off by a Spanish expedition nine years before, educated under the Dominicans in Mexico and Spain, and baptized under the name and title of Don Luis de Velasco. Their destination was Axacan (Oshacon) – supposed by Shea to have been on the Rappahannock – but more probably situated farther south. They met with friendly reception, and a log chapel was erected (September, 1570), but, before the winter was over, Don Luis proved treacherous, and under his leadership the Indians attacked the mission (February, 1571) and massacred the entire party with the exception of one Indian boy, who was spared, and finally escaped to tell the tale. The massacre was avenged on the principals by Menéndez a year later. In consequence of the small result in Florida the Jesuits were shortly afterwards transferred to the more promising field of Mexico. Years afterwards, on the establishment of the Catholic colony of Maryland, some attention was given to the neighbouring Indians of Virginia (see below). In 1577 several Franciscans under charge of Father Alonso de Reynoso arrived at St. Augustine and began work among the Timucua Indians near the city, of whom a number were soon regular attendants at the parish church. Fifteen years later four Franciscan priests and two lay brothers were at work in the towns of the Timucua and Yamasee from St. Augustine northwards into Georgia. In 1593 twelve more were sent out in charge of Father Juan de Silva, including the noted Father Francisco Pareja, to whom we are indebted for our most complete account of the Timucua people and language and for several devotional works, the first books printed in any Indian language of the United States.

In 1597 a chief of the Yamasee organised a conspiracy which seems to have included also a part of the Timucua tribe about St. Augustine. Five missions, stretching from St. Augustine to Ossabaw island in Georgia, were attacked and five of the six missionaries murdered, Father De Avila (or Dávila), although badly wounded, being rescued. The advance of the Indians was finally checked by some Spanish troops, after all the Yamasee missions had been destroyed. The missions among the more peaceful Timucua about the lower Saint John's River, Florida, continued to flourish, being in 1602 four in number, besides temporary stations, with 1200 Christian Indians. Other Franciscans arriving, the Yamasee missions were re-established in 1605, the Potano tribe on the Suwanee river almost entirely Christianized two years later, and a beginning made among the lower Creek bands. In 1633 missionaries were sent to the powerful Apalachee of western Florida in response to repeated requests from that tribe. In 1655 there were 35 Franciscan missions in Florida and Georgia with a Christian Indian population of 26,000 souls. This was the zenith of their prosperity. Two years later the Apalachee, in consequence of the unjust exactions of the governor, became involved in a war with the Spaniards, which compelled the abandonment of the eight flourishing missions in that territory. The fathers embarked for Havana, but were all drowned on the passage. In 1674, through the efforts of Bishop Calderón, the Apalachee mission was restored, and several new foundations established. In 1684 the Diocesan Synod of Havana promulgated regulations for the government and protection of the mission Indians. In the same year the Governor of Florida, alarmed at the growing strength of the English colony of Carolina, undertook to remove the Indians of the northern missions to more southern settlements with the result that the Yamasee again revolted and, being supplied with guns by the English, attacked and destroyed the mission on Saint Catherine island, Georgia, and carried off a troop of Christian Indians prisoners to sell as slaves in Carolina. In 1696 an attempt to establish missions about Cape Cañaveral resulted in the killing of a religious and six companions. A like attempt in the next year among the fierce Calusa south of Tampa Bay also proved abortive.

For years the English slave-traders of Carolina had made a business of arming certain tribes with guns and sending them out to make raids upon other tribes to procure slaves for Carolina and the Barbadoes. The Spanish Government, on the contrary, refused guns even to the Christian Indians. The War of the Spanish Succession gave an opportunity for an attack upon the Florida missions. In May, 1702, the heathen Lower Creeks, armed and instigated by Governor Moore of Carolina, attacked Santa Fé, occupied by the Timucua, and burnt the church. In October of the same year a combined English and Indian land expedition, co-operating with a naval force, attacked the mission towns north of St. Augustine, burned three of them with their churches, made prisoner the missionaries, and then, proceeding farther southward, burned the town of St. Augustine with the Franciscan church and convent and one of the finest libraries then in America. The fortress held out until relieved by a Spanish fleet. In January, 1704, Moore, at the head of about fifty Carolina men and a thousand or more well-armed Creek, Catawba, and other savages, ravaged the Apalachee country, destroyed ten of the eleven missions towns, slaughtered hundreds of the people, including a number of warriors who made a stand under the Spanish lieutenant Mexia, and carried off nearly 1400 Christian Indians to be sold as slaves in Carolina or distributed for torture or adoption among the savages. The missions, with their churches, gardens, and orange groves, were utterly demolished, the vestments and sacred vessels destroyed or carried off, and numbers of the neophytes burned at the stake. Four of the mission fathers were also killed (two being tortured and burned at the stake), and their bodies hacked to pieces by deliberate permission of Moore himself, who gave up Lieutenant Mexia and four Spanish soldiers to the same fate.

This was practically the end of the Florida missions, although for more than twenty years thereafter efforts were made, with some temporary success, to gather together again the remnants of the Apalachee, Timucua, and other Christian tribes, and in 1726 there were still counted more than 1000 Christian Indians. With the establishment of the English Georgia colony and the ensuing war of 1740 the attempt was abandoned and the mission territory reverted to its original wild condition. In 1753 only 136 Indians remained in four mission stations close to St. Augustine. In 1743 the Jesuit Fathers José María Monaco and José Xavier de Alana began a mission near Cape Florida among the utterly savage Aïs and Jobé with such success that a community of Christian Indians was built up, which continued until the Seminole War (1817-18).

II. MARYLAND

The English Catholic colony of Maryland, founded in 1634, was served in its first years by the Jesuits, who made the Indians their special care. Under the superior, Father Andrew White , and his companions, several missions were established among the Piscataway (Conoy) and Patuxent of lower Maryland, west of Chesapeake Bay, and considerable attention was also given to the Potomac tribe in Virginia. The principal mission was begun in 1639 at Kittamaquindi, or Piscataway, near the mouth of the creek of that name. Other stations were Mattapony on the Patuxent, Anacostan (Anacostia) adjoining the present Washington, and Potopaco (Port Tobacco), where nearly all the natives were baptized. In 1642, during an extended visit among the Potomac, on the Virginia side, Father White baptized the chief and principal men, with a number of others. The work was much hampered by the inroads of the hostile Susquehanna from the head of the bay, and was brought to a sudden and premature close in 1645 by the Puritans and other malcontents, who, taking advantage of the Civil War in England, repaid the generosity which had given them asylum in Maryland by seizing the Government, plundering the churches and missions and the houses of the principal Catholics, and sending Fathers White and Copley to England to be tried for their lives, while Father Martwell, the new superior, and two other missionaries escaped to Virginia. Later efforts to revive the mission had only temporary success owing to the hostility of the Protestant Government and the rapid wasting of the native tribes. Before 1700 the remnant of the Piscataway removed bodily from Maryland and sought refuge in the north with the Delawares and Iroquois, among whom they have long since become entirely extinct. To Father White's anonymous "Relatio itineris ad Marylandiam" (translation published in 1833 and again in1874) 10.0pt'>we ar e indebted for the best account of the western Maryland tribes. He also composed an Indian catechism, still extant, and a manuscript grammar of the Piscataway language, now unfortunately lost, the first attempt at an Indian grammar by an Englishman and antedating Eliot's Bible by at least a dozen years. (See PISCATAWAY INDIANS.)

NEW ENGLAND. – The earliest Christian mission on the soil of New England was that of Saint-Sauveur begun among the Abenakis in connexion with a French post on Mount Desert Island, Maine, by Father Pierre Biard and three other Jesuits in 1613. Both post and mission were destroyed a few months later by the English captain Argall, Brother Du Thet being killed in the attack and Fathers Biard and Quentin carried prisoners to Virginia. In 1619 the Recollects arrived to minister to the French fishermen scattered along the coast, and gave attention also to the Indians, chiefly in New Brunswick and Nova Scotia. In 1633 they were succeeded by the Capuchins, who made their headquarters at Port Royal (Annapolis), Nova Scotia, and had stations as far south as the Kennebec, the principal one being among the Penobscot, near the French Fort Pentagouet (Castine), at the mouth of the Penobscot. In 1655 the post was seized by the English, and the resident missionary, Father De Crespy, carried off. Although restored to France by treaty in 1667, the mission languished, and in 1693 was consigned to the Jesuits, who made the new mission of Sainte Anne (established by Father Louis Thury in 1684 higher up the river, near the present Oldtown) their chief residence among the Penobscot. The Capuchins had laboured also among the Etchemin (see MALISEET INDIANS) on the northern frontier of Maine, their chief station being at Medoctec on the Saint John, established by Father Siméon in 1688 and revived by the Jesuits in 1701. In 1646 the noted Jesuit, Gabriel Druillettes , was sent from Quebec, and established at Norridgewock (Indian Old Point) on the Kennebec the Assumption mission, which for nearly eighty years thereafter held its place as the principal of the Abenaki missions. The most noted worker at this post was Sebastian Rasle (Râle, Rasles), who laboured with the utmost zeal from 1695 until his heroic death in 1724 at the age of sixty-six.

The chronic warfare throughout all this period between the rival French and English colonies, in which the native tribes almost solidly took the side of the French, exposed the Indian missions to the constant attacks of the English and made the missionaries marked men, both as Catholic priests and as supposed agents of the French Government. In consequence many fugitives from the Abenaki bands retired to Canada, where they were joined by refugees from the Pennacook and other southern New England tribes, driven out by King Philip's War of 1675-76. In 1683 these were gathered by the Jesuit Father Jacques Bigot, into the new mission of Saint François de Sales (St. Francis) on the Chadière, near Quebec. In 1700 the mission was removed to its present location. In spite of repeated demands by the New England Government (1698, 1701, 1712), the Abenaki refused either to send their missionaries away or to accept Protestant teachers. Realising the danger, the Jesuits urged that the Abenaki Indians and missions be removed to a safer location in Canada, but the project was not favoured by the Canadian Government. In 1704-5 two New England expeditions ravaged the Abenaki, burning Norridgewock, with its church, and looting the sacred vessels . In 1713 some Indians removed to the St. Lawrence and settled at Bécancour, where their descendants still remain. Norridgewock was rebuilt, and in 1722 was again destroyed by the New England men. As part of the plunder the raiders carried off the manuscript Abenaki dictionary (preserved at Harvard and published in 1833), to which Father Rasle had devoted thirty years of labour, and which ranks as one of the greatest monuments of our Aboriginal languages. Earlier in the year the mission village and fine church on the Penobscot, placed under Father Lauverjat, had been destroyed by another party, following which event Massachusetts had summoned the Indians to deliver up every priest among them and had set a price on Rasle's head. Although repeatedly urged to seek safety in Canada, he refused to desert his flock. At last the blow fell. On 23 August 1724, the New England men with a party of Mohawk Indians surprised Norridgewock while most of the warriors were away, killed several or the defenders, and plundered and burned the church and village. The devoted missionary, now old and crippled, was shot down at the foot of the cross, scalped, his skull crushed and his body almost hacked in pieces. A monument to his memory was erected on the spot in 1833, the year in which the greater monument, his Abenaki dictionary, was published.

Mission work was continued in some measure, although under difficulties, among the Indians of the Penobscot and the St. John, but most of the Norridgewock band retired to Saint Francis, which thus became one of the most flourishing missions in Canada. In 1759 it was attacked by a strong New England force under Colonel Rogers and completely destroyed, with its church and records, two hundred Indians being killed. The mission was re-established near the present Pierreville, Quebec, and still exists, numbering about 350 mixed bloods, while Bécancour has about 50 more. The Abenaki bands which remained in Maine espoused the cause of the Americans in the Revolution, and in 1775 made application to the new Government for the return of their French priests. The Massachusetts commissioners, although willing, were unable to supply them, but a later application to Bishop Carroll resulted in the appointment of the Sulpician Father, François Ciquard, to the Penobscot at Oldtown about 1785 For nearly ten years he ministered to them and the Passamaquoddy, when he was transferred to the Maliseet on the Saint John. After various changes the Maine missions reverted again to the Jesuits in the person of Father John Bapst, who arrived at Oldtown in 1848. The most distinguished of the later missionaries is Eugene Vetromile, S.J. (d.1881), author of several works on the Abenaki tribe and language. The two tribes are entirely Catholic.

III. NEW YORK AND PENNSYLVANIA

A large part of what is now New York State was held by the five confederated tribes of the fierce and powerful Iroquois, numbering nearly two thousand fighting men. Through the unfortunate circumstances of Champlain's allying himself with a party of their enemies in 1609, they conceived a bitter hostility to the French which they gratified with deadly effect after procuring guns from the Dutch thirty years later. For this reason, and from the additional fact that their territory was within the sphere of English influence, no permanent Catholic mission was ever established within their limits, although several attempts were made, and large numbers were drawn off from the confederacy and formed into mission settlements under French control. So far as is known, the first missionary to enter this region was the Recollect father, Joseph de la Roche de Daillon, of the Huron mission in Ontario, who in 1626 made a perilous exploration of the country of the Neuter Nation, adjoining the Iroquois in western New York. In 1642 the heroic Jesuit, Isaac Jogues, was captured with two white companions and several Hurons by an Iroquois war party and taken to the Mohawk town of Caughnawaga (alias Ossernenon) near the present Auriesville, were the Hurons were burned at the stake, and the three Frenchmen cruelly tortured and mutilated, though not put to death . Father Jogues had his nails torn out, two fingers crushed by the teeth of the savages, and one thumb sawn off. One of his companions, the novice Rene Goupil , was killed shortly afterwards for making the sign of the cross over a sick child. The third Frenchman, Couture, was finally adopted. After a terrible captivity of fifteen months during which he baptized many prisoners at the stake as well as dying infants, besides acquiring a knowledge of the language, Father Jogues was rescued by the Dutch and finally found his way to France. In the meantime another Huron missionary, Father Joseph Bressani, had been captured by the same Mohawks, tortured in even more terrible fashion at the same town, and likewise ransomed through the kindness of the Dutch (1644). In the summer of 1644 Father Jogues was back again in Canada, assisting in negotiating an uncertain peace with the Mohawks. In May, 1646, he was sent with a single white companion to the Mohawk country to consummate the agreement. This done, he returned to Canada to make his report, and then, with another Frenchman and a Huron guide, set out once more for the Mohawk to establish a mission. They were intercepted on the way by a war party of the same perfidious Mohawks, and carried to Caughnawaga, where, after various cruelties, all three were put to death on 18 October, 1646, the head of Father Jogues being set upon the palisades of the town, and his body thrown into the Mohawk River. The site of the Indian town is now the property of the Society of Jesus, and a memorial chapel marks the spot of their martyrdom.

In August, 1653, Father Joseph Poncet, S.J. , was captured near Montreal by a Mohawk war party, carried to their towns, and there terribly tortured, but finally sent back with overtures of peace. Of the five confederated Iroquois tribes, the Onondaga, Oneida and Cayuga were also now for peace with the French and only the Seneca (who, however, nearly equalled all the others together) held back. Father Poncet reached Montreal late in the year, and peace was made. Father Simon Le Moyne, S.J., volunteered to go back to ratify the terms in the Iroquois towns, and arrived in the summer of 1654 at Onondaga, their capital, where he successfully effected his purpose and was invited to select a spot for a French settlement. As a result the Jesuit FathersJoseph Chaumonot and Claude Dablon established the first Iroquois mission at Onondaga in November, 1654. In all the Iroquois tribes there were numerous Christian Huron captives (see HURON INDIANS), who gave the missionaries a warm welcome. In 1656 Father Le Moyne was again with the Mohawks. In July, 1655, a party of fifty French colonists with several more Jesuits arrived at Onondaga to found a settlement there, as requested by the Iroquois, although it was strongly felt that the latter were insincere and meditated treachery. Mission stations were established in each of the tribes, but almost before a year had passed the Iroquois raids along the St. Lawrence broke out afresh, and in March, 1658, the mission at Onondaga was abandoned.

Besides the Huron and other Indian captives, Christianity still had many friends among the Iroquois themselves, foremost of all being Garaconthié, the Onondaga chief and orator. Through his influence the Onondaga and Cayuga sought for peace in 1661, and Le Moyne was recalled to Onondaga. In 1666 an expedition under De Courcelles completely humbled the Mohawks. In the same year New York and the Iroquois country passed from Dutch to English control. Following the peace six Jesuit fathers ( Jacques Fremin, Jean Pierron, Jacques Bruyas, Julien Garnier, Etienne de Carheil, and Pierre Milet ) proceeded to the Iroquois, and, before the end of 1668, regular missions were established in each the five tribes. Garaconthié publicly declared himself a Christian, and his example was followed by several other chiefs. As converts increased it was realized that the prevailing intemperance and debauchery consequent upon the presence of traders the Indian towns were a serious obstacle to Christianity, and many of the better-disposed removed to 10.0pt'>the neighbourhood of the mission settlements in Canada. In this way originated in 1668 the Iroquois mission village of La Prairie (St. François Xavier des Prés), the precursor of the modern Caughnawaga. Among the names prominently identified with the mission are those of Fathers Bruyas and Marcoux, Iroquois philologists; Father Lafitau, ethnologist and historian; and the sainted Indian girl, Catherine Tegakwitha. In the same year a Sulpician mission was established among some Christian Iroquois, chiefly Cayuga, Quinté Bay at Lake Ontario; but after a few years it was absorbed by the Iroquois mission of The Mountain, established in 1676 on the island of Montreal by the sulpicians. This mission was transferred in 1704 to the Sault au Recollet, north of Montreal, and in 1720 to its present site at Lake of Two Mountains (alias Oka, or Canasadaga), on the island of Montreal, a number of Algonquin sharing the village. Among the missionaries was Father Jean-André Cuoq , author of a number of works in the two languages, the most notable of which is a standard Iroquois dictionary.

With the withdrawal of the greater part of the Christian element to Canada and the renewal of war in 1687 all missionary effort in the Iroquois territory was finally abandoned, although Father Milet continued with the Oneida until 1694. In the war of 1687-99 Catholic Iroquois from the Canada missions fought beside the French against their heathen kindred of the confederacy.

At the request of the Iroquois a mission was re-established at Onondaga and another among the Senecas in 1702 by the Jesuit fathers, Jacques de Lamberville, Julien Garnier, and Vaillant du Gueslis, and had the effect of holding the Iroquois neutral in the next war between France and England, until broken up by the New York Government in 1709. In 1748 the Sulpician father, François Picquet, established the Presentation mission on the St. Lawrence near the French post of Oswegatchie, now Ogdensburg, New York, with the design of drawing off the last remaining Catholic Indians from among the Iroquois. Although raided by the Mohawks in the next year, it was at once rebuilt and grew rapidly until the opening of the war of 1754-63, which brought it to the verge of ruin, most of those who remained joining with others from the Caughnawaga mission (Canada) in 1756 to establish a new settlement under Jesuit auspices at Aquasasne, alias St. François Régis, which still exists under the name of St. Regis, on both sides of the New York-Canada boundary where it strikes the St. Lawrence. The Oswegatchie settlement was finally abandoned in 1807. The Catholic Iroquois now number about 4025 out of a total 18,725, Caughnawaga itself with 2175 souls being the largest Indian settlement north of Mexico.

About 1755 the first mission in western Pennsylvania was started among the Delawares at Sawcunk, on Beaver River, where also were some Shawnee and Mingo (detached Iroquois ), by the Jesuit Claude François Virot, but was soon discontinued.

IV. OHIO RIVER AND LAKE REGION

Under this head we include the states carved out in whole or part from the old "Northwestern Territory", viz., Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Michigan, Wisconsin, and Minnesota. As the mission history of this section is treated in detail under the principal tribal titles, we may confine ourselves here to a brief summary. Excepting southern Illinois and Indiana, all of this vast territory was originally included within the French jurisdiction of Canada, and up to the close of the French period in 1763 was confided generally to the spiritual charge of the Jesuits, who continued in the work into the American period. The first mission west of the Huron country was established in 1660, on Keweenaw Bay, a few miles north of the present L’Anse, Upper Michigan, by the veteran Huron missionary, Father René Menard, in response to urgent requests from the Chippewas and Ottawas. The next year a call came from some fugitive Hurons, who had fled to Green Bay in Wisconsin, to escape the Iroquois. To the remonstrance of those who knew the dangers of the way he replied " God calls me. I must go, if it cost me my life." In making a dangerous portage he became separated from his guides and was never seen again, but as the searchers came upon a hostile trail, and his Breviary and cassock were afterwards found with the Sioux, it is believed that he was killed by a lurking enemy. His place was filled by Father Claude Allouez, who, as vicar-general in the West, established the second Chippewa mission in 1665, under the name of Saint Esprit at La Pointe Chegoinegon, now Bayfield, Wisconsin, on the south shore of Lake Superior. Other missions soon followed at Sault Sainte Marie (Sainte Marie) and Mackinaw (St. Ignace) in Upper Michigan ; Green Bay (St. François Xavier), St. Marc, and St Jacques in Wisconsin, among Chippewas, Ottawas, Hurons, Mascoutens, Kickapoos, Foxes, and Miami. Among the noted Jesuit workers were Fathers Claude Dablon, Gabriel Druillettes, and the explorer Jacques Marquette. In 1688 the mission of St. Joseph was founded by Allouez among the Potawatomi in northern Indiana. The mission at Lapointe was abandoned in 1671 on account of the hostile Sioux, but most of the others continued, with interruption; down to the expulsion of the Jesuits in 1764. In 1727 the Jesuit father, Louis Guignas, founded the mission of St Michael among the Sioux, on Lake Pepin in Minnesota, which continued until some time after 1736, being abandoned probably on account of the war with the Foxes.

The first mission among the Illinois was that of the Immaculate Conception, founded by Marquette in 1674 near the present Rockford, Illinois, and known later as the Kaskaskia mission. Others were established later at Peoria Lake and at Cahokia, opposite St. Louis, until by 1725 the entire Illinois nation was enrolled as Christian. Among the Jesuit names prominently connected with the Illinois missions are those of Marquette, Rasle, and Jacques Gravier, author of the great manuscript Illinois dictionary.

Missions were also established later among the various branches of the Miami in Indiana as well as among the Potawatomi, which continued to flourish until the decree of expulsion, when the mission property was confiscated, although the Jesuits generally remained as secular priests until their death. Their successors continued to minister to Indians and whites alike till the removal of the tribes, 1820-40.

The majority of the Indians of Michigan and Wisconsin remained in their own homes, with missions maintained either as regular establishments or as visiting stations served by secular priests. Of the later missionaries one of the distinguished names is that of the author and philologist Bishop Frederick Baraga (d. 1865), best known for his grammar and dictionary of the Chippewa language. (See for more recent work, CHIPPEWA INDIANS ; HURON INDIANS; ILLINOIS INDIANS; KICKAPOO INDIANS; MASCOUTENS INDIANA; MENOMINEE INDIANS; MIAMI INDIANS; OTTAWA INDIANS; POTAWATOMI INDIANS ; SIOUX INDIANS ; WINNEBAGO INDIANS; BARAGA; GRAVIER; MARQUETTE, DIOCESE OF; MARQUETTE, JACQUES.)

V. LOWER MISSISSIPPI REGION: THE LOUISIANA MISSION

The "Louisiana Mission" of the French colonial period included the present States of Missouri, Arkansas, Louisiana, Mississippi, and Alabama, with the Tamarois foundation near Cahokia in Illinois, but excluding the Caddo establishments on the disputed Spanish frontier of Texas. For several reasons, rivalries and changes among the religious orders, intrigues of English traders, and general neglect or open hostility of the Louisiana colonial administration, these southern missions never attained any large measure of prosperity or permanent success. In 1673 the Jesuit Marquette had descended the Mississippi as far as 10.0pt'>th e villages of the Arkansas, later known as Quapaw, at the mouth of the river of the same name, making the earliest map of the region and indicating the position of the various tribes, but without undertaking a foundation.

In 1682 the Recollect Franciscan Father Zenobius Membré, with the party of the commander La Salle, descended the Mississippi to its mouth and returned, planting a cross among the Arkansas, and preaching to them and to the Taensa, Natches, end others farther down. In 1683 a French fort was built at the Arkansas, and the commander Tonty set apart a mission site and made formal request for a Jesuit missionary, but apparently without result. In 1698, under authority of the Bishop of Quebec, the priests of the seminary of Quebec, an offshoot of the Paris Congregation of Foreign Missions, undertook the lower Mississippi field despite the protests of the Jesuits, who considered it partly at least within their own sphere. Early in 1699, three seminary priests having arrived, as many missions were established, viz., among the Tamaroa (Tamarois), a tribe of the Illinois confederacy, at Cahokia, Illinois, by Father Jean-François de St-Cosme; among the Taensa, above the present Natchez, Mississippi, by François-J. de Montigny; and among the Tonica, at the present Fort Adams, Mississippi, by Father Antoine Davion. Father de Montigny shortly afterwards transferred his mission to the kindred and more important Natchez tribe, about the present city of that name, ministering thus to both tribes. Father Davion laboured also with the Yazoo and minor tribes on that river. Other priests of the same society arrived later. In the meantime Iberville, the father of the Louisiana colony, had brought out from France (1700) the Jesuit father, Paul du Ru, who, first at Biloxi, Mississippi, and later at Mobile, Alabama, ministered to the small tribes gathered about the French post, including a band of fugitive Apalachee from the revived Florida mission. In the same year another Jesuit, Father Joseph de Limoges, from Canada, planted a mission among the Huma and Bayagula, Choctaw bands about the mouth of the Red River, Louisiana.

In 1702 Father Nicholas Foucault, of the Seminarists, who had established a mission among the Arkansas two years before, was murdered, with three companions, by the savage Koroa of Upper Mississippi while on his way to Mobile. Their remains were found and interred by Father Davion. In 1706 Father St-Cosme, then stationed at the Natchez mission, was murdered by the Shetimasha, near the mouth of the Mississippi, while asleep in a night camp.

The Tonica station was abandoned in 1708, being threatened by the Chickasaw in the English interest. The whole southern work languished, the Indians themselves being either indifferent or openly hostile to Christianity, and when Father Charlevoix made his western tour in 1721 he found but one priest on the lower Mississippi, Father Juif, among the Yazoo. Partly in consequence of Father Charlevoix's report, the Louisiana Company, which had taken over control of the colony, gave permission to the Jesuits to under take the Indian work, while the French posts and settlements were assigned to other priests. In 1726, therefore, Father Paul du Poisson restored the Arkansas mission, which had been vacant since 1702; Father Alexis de Guyenne undertook the Alibamon, a tribe of the Creek nation, above Mobile, and Father Mathurin le Petit began work among the Choctaw in southern Mississippi. The Ursuline convent foundation at New Orleans in 1727 is due to Jesuit effort. In the a next year the Jesuit father, Michel Baudouin, undertook a mission among the warlike Chickasaw.

In 1729 the southern missions were almost ruined by the outbreak of war with the Natchez, provoked by the arbitrary exactions of the French commandant in their country. The war began on 28 November with a massacre of the French garrison, the first victim being Father du Poisson, who was struck down, and his head hacked off, while on his way to attend a dying man. Father Souel was killed on 11 December by the Yazoo, who then turned upon the French garrison in their country. On New Year’s Day, 1730, the Jesuit Father Doutreleau, on his way down the river with some boatmen, was fired upon at close range by some of the same tribe while saying Mass on shore, but escaped although badly wounded. The war involved the whole lower Mississippi, and ended in the extinction of the Natchez as a people. A part of the refugees having fled to the Chickasaw, a war ensued with that tribe in 1736, during which a French expedition was cut to pieces, and the Jesuit chaplain, Father Antoninus Senat, was burnt at the stake.

In 1730 Father Gaston, a newly-arrived Seminarist, had been killed at the Tamarois (Cahokia) mission. In 1754 the last Seminarist was sent out as a parish priest. The Arkansas mission had been killed by official neglect. The missionary among the Alibamon Greeks was driven out by the French commander at Fort Toulouse (Montgomery, Alabama ) for his opposition to the liquor traffic. Father Baudouin continued with good effect among the Choctaw for eighteen years until appointed vicar-general in 1757, when his place was filled by Father Nicholas le Febvre until 1764 (?). The Alibamon mission was restored and continued under Father Jean Le Prédour from 1754 until the expulsion of the Jesuits in 1764, which brought the "Louisiana Mission" to a close. The Natchez and Yazoo are long since extinct, but a considerable portion of the Choctaw, Quapaw, and mixed-blood Huma still keep the Faith. (See also CADDO INDIANS; CHOCTAW INDIANS; NATCHEZ, DIOCESE OF; QUAPAW INDIANS; TONICA INDIANS; YAZOO INDIANS.)

VI. NORTHERN AND CENTRAL PLAINS

The earliest labourer here was the Franciscan Father Juan de Padilla, who with four others of his order accompanied the famous expedition of Coronado in 1540-42, and on the return volunteered to remain behind with the Wichita in the "Province of Quivira", probably in southern Kansas. He was killed soon afterwards, apparently by Indians hostile to the Wichita. The latter, reduced to about 300 souls, are represented at the Catholic mission school at Anadarko, Oklahoma (see WICHITA).

The powerful Sioux, or Dakota whose territory stretched from the Wisconsin border almost to the foot of the Rocky Mountains, were visited by the Jesuit Alouez as early as 1666, but tribal jealousies interrupted friendly communication and prevented any mission establishment. In 1680 the Recollect Franciscan, Father Louis Hennepin, spent some months with them as a captive on the upper Mississippi. In 1690 (?) the Jesuit Father Joseph Marest, and in 1728 the Jesuit Father Ignatius Guignas, made unsuccessful mission attempts in the tribe, and in 1736 the Jesuit Father Jean-Pierre Aulneau (or Amand) was one of a party of twenty-one Frenchmen massacred by them on the Lake of the Woods, just beyond the northern Minnesota boundary. In 1837 a regular mission was established among the eastern Sioux in Minnesota by Father Augustin Ravoux, and in 1848 the noted Jesuit missionary Father de Smet first preached to those west of the Missouri. Nearly one-fourth of the tribe is now Catholic ( see SIOUX INDIANS ).

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Cámara y Castro, Tomás

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The Benedictus, given in Luke 1:68-79, is one of the three great canticles in the opening ...

Cantius, Saint John

Born at Kenty, near Oswiecim, Diocese of Krakow, Poland, 1412 (or 1403); died at Krakow, 1473, ...

Cantor

The chief singer (and sometimes instructor) of the ecclesiastical choir, called also precentor. ...

Canute

(Or CNUT: THE GREAT, THE MIGHTY) King of the English, Danes, and Norwegians, b. about 994; d. ...

Canute IV, Saint

Also spelled C NUT . Martyr and King of Denmark, date of birth uncertain; d. 10 July 1086, ...

Cap Haïtien

(CAPITIS HAITIANI) Erected by Pius IX, 3 October, 1861, in the ecclesiastical Province of ...

Capaccio and Vallo

(CAPUTAQUENSIS ET VALLENSIS) Suffragan diocese of Salerno. Capaccio is a city in the ...

Capecelatro, Alfonso

Cardinal, Archbishop of Capua, and ecclesiastical writer; b. at Marseilles, 5 Feb., 1824; d. ...

Capefigue, Baptiste-Honoré-Raymond

Historian, b. at Marseilles, 1802; d. at Paris, 22 December, 1872. In 1821 he was a law student ...

Caperolo, Pietro

Friar Minor,date of birth unknown; d. at Velletri in 1480; he was a man of much energy and great ...

Capgrave, John

Augustinian friar, historian, and theologian, b. at Lynn in Norfolk, 21 April, 1393; d. there, ...

Capharnaum

A titular see of Palestine. Its name (also KAPERNAUM) means village of Nahum or consolation. ...

Capital Punishment

The infliction by due legal process of the penalty of death as a punishment for crime. The ...

Capitolias

A titular see of Palestine, suffragan to Scythopolis in Palestina Secunda. According to the ...

Capitulations, Episcopal and Pontifical

Capitulations were agreements, by which those taking part in the election of a bishop or pope ...

Capocci, Gaetano

Musical composer and maestro , b. in Rome, 16 Oct., 1811; d. there, 11 Jan., 1898. As a boy he ...

Capponi, Gino, Count

Historian and litterateur; born at Florence, Italy, 13 September, 1792; died 3 February, 1876. ...

Capranica, Domenico

Cardinal, theologian, canonist, and statesman, b. at Capranica near Palestrina, Italy, in 1400; ...

Caprara, Giovanni Battista

Statesman and cardinal, born at Bologna, 29 May, 1733; died at Paris, 27 July, 1810. His ...

Capreolus, John

A theologian, born towards the end of the fourteenth century, (about 1380), in the diocese of ...

Capsa

A titular see of North Africa. The city, said to have been founded by the Libyan Hercules, ...

Captain (in the Bible)

In the Douay version captain represents several different Hebrew and Latin words, and designates ...

Captivities of the Israelites

I. THE ASSYRIAN CAPTIVITY (1) The End of the Northern Kingdom The Kingdom of Israel, formed by ...

Capua

(C APUANA ). The city of Capua is situated in the province of Caserta, Southern Italy. Of ...

Capuchin Friars Minor

An autonomous branch of the first Franciscan Order, the other branches being the Friars Minor ...

Capuchinesses

A branch of the Poor Clares of the Primitive Observance, instituted at Naples, in 1538, by the ...

Capuciati

(From caputium , hood — So named from the headgear which was one of their distinctive ...

Caquetá

Apostolic prefecture situated in South America on the southern border of the Republic of ...

Carabantes, José de

( Also Caravantes). Friar Minor Capuchin and theologian, born in Aragon, in 1628; died in ...

Caracalla

(M ARCUS A URELIUS S EVERUS A NTONINUS, nicknamed C ARACALLA ) Roman Emperor, son of ...

Caracas

(Santiago de Venezuela) ARCHDIOCESE OF CARACAS (SANCTI JACOBI DE BENEZUELA) Located in the ...

Caraffa, Vincent

Seventh General of the Society of Jesus , born at Naples, 5 May, 1585; died at Rome, 6 June, ...

Caraites

A Jewish sect professing to follow the text of the Bible ( Miqra ) to the exclusion of ...

Caramuel y Lobkowitz, Juan

Spanish ecclesiastic and writer; b. at Madrid, 23 May, 1606; d. at Vigevano, 8 September, 1682. ...

Caravaggio (Michaelangelo Morigi)

A Milanese painter, b. at Caravaggio in 1569, d. at Porto d' Ercole in 1609. His family name was ...

Carayon, Auguste

French author and bibliographer, born in Saumur, France, 31 March, 1813; died at Poitiers, 15 ...

Carbery, James Joseph

Third Bishop of Hamilton, Ontario, born in the County Westmeath, Ireland, 1 May, 1823; died at ...

Carbonari

(CHARCOAL-BURNERS) The name of a secret political society, which played an important part, ...

Carbonnelle, Ignatius

Professor of mathematics and science, writer on mathematical and scientific subjects, and ...

Carcassonne

Diocese comprising the entire department of Aude, and suffragan to Toulouse. On the occasion of ...

Cardan, Girolamo

(CARDANO, CARDANUS) Italian physician and mathematician, b. at Pavia, 24 September, 1501; d. ...

Cardenas, Juan

Moral theologian and author; b. at Seville, 1613; d. 6 June, 1684. He entered the Society of ...

Cardica

A titular see of Thessaly. Cardica is a Latinized medieval form for Gardicium, the true Greek ...

Cardinal

A dignitary of the Roman Church and counsellor of the pope. By the term cardinal ...

Cardinal Protector

Since the thirteenth century it has been customary at Rome to confide to some particular ...

Cardinal Vicar

The vicar-general of the pope, as Bishop of Rome, for the spiritual administration of the ...

Cardinal Virtues

The four principal virtues upon which the rest of the moral virtues turn or are hinged. Those ...

Cardinals (1913 List)

Members of the College of Cardinals , 1913: Agliardi, Antonio, Bishop of Albano ; ...

Cards, Altar

To assist the memory of the celebrant at Mass in those prayers which he should know by heart, ...

Carducci, Bartolommeo and Vincenzo

Both known in Spain as Carducho Florentine painters, brothers, usually grouped under the ...

Carem

( Septuagint, karem ; Hebrew, KRM , vine or vineyard) Name of a town in the Tribe of ...

Carey, Mathew

Author and publisher, b. in Dublin, Ireland, 28 January, 1760; d. in Philadelphia, U.S.A. 15 ...

Carheil, Etienne de

French missionary among the Indians of Canada, born at Carentoir, France, November 1633; died ...

Cariati

DIOCESE OF CARIATI (CARIATENSIS) Suffragan of Santa Severina. Cariati is a city of Calabria ...

Caribs

Next to the Arawaks, probably the most numerous Indian stock, of more or less nomadic habits, in ...

Carissimi, Giacomo

The most influential and prolific Italian composer of his time, b. in 1604 at Marino in the Papal ...

Carli, Dionigi da Piacenza

One of a band of Franciscan friars of the Capuchin Reform, sent out to the Congo in 1666. One ...

Carlisle

(CARLEOL, KARLIOLUM) — ANCIENT DIOCESE OF CARLISLE (CARLEOLENSIS, KARLIOLENSIS). The ...

Carlovingian Schools

Under the Merovingian Kings there was established at the court a school -- scola palatina , ...

Carmel

( Hebrew Karmel , "garden" or "garden-land"). Carmel designates in the Old Testament a ...

Carmel, Feast of Our Lady of Mount

This feast was instituted by the Carmelites between 1376 and 1386 under the title ...

Carmel, Mount

A well-known mountain ridge in Palestine, usually called in the Hebrew Bible Hakkarmel (with the ...

Carmelite Order, The

One of the mendicant orders. Origin The date of the foundation of the Order of Our Lady of ...

Carneiro, Melchior

(Carnero). Missionary bishop ; b. of a noble family at Coimbra, in Portugal ; d. at ...

Carnoy, Jean-Baptiste

Belgian biologist, b. at Rumilies, province of Hainaut, near Tournai, 11 Jan., 1836; d. at ...

Carochi, Horacio

Born in Florence, c. 1586; died in Mexico in 1666. he entered the Society of Jesus and before ...

Caroline Books

A work in four books (120 or 121 chapters), purporting to be the composition of Charlemagne, and ...

Caroline Islands

A group of about 500 small coral islands, east of the Philippines, in the Pacific Ocean. The ...

Carolingian Schools

Under the Merovingian Kings there was established at the court a school -- scola palatina , ...

Caron, Raymond

(Or REDMOND) Franciscan friar and author, b. at Athlone, Ireland, in 1605; d. at Dublin, ...

Caron, Reneé-Edouard

A French Canadian statesman and magistrate, b. at Sainte Anne de Beaupré , Canada, 13 ...

Carpaccio, Vittore

A Venetian painter whose real name was Scarpazza, b. at Venice about 1455; d. in the same ...

Carpasia

A titular see of Cyprus. Carpasia, Karpasia, also Karpasion (sometimes mistaken for Karpathos) ...

Carpets, Altar

The sanctuary and altar-steps of the high altar are ordinarily to be covered with carpets. If ...

Carpi

DIOCESE OF CARPI (CARPENSIS). The city of Carpi is situated in the province of Modena, Central ...

Carracci

Agostino Carracci An Italian painter, engraver, and etcher, b. at Bologna, 16 August, 1557; d. ...

Carranza, Bartolomé

(Also called DE M IRANDA, from his native town). Archbishop of Toledo; b. at Miranda de ...

Carranza, Diego

Born at Mexico, 1559; died at Tehuantepec. He entered the Dominican Order 12 May, 1577, and was ...

Carreno de Miranda, Juan

Spanish painter, b. at Avilés in Asturia, 1614; d. at Madrid, 1685. He was a pupil of ...

Carrera, Rafael

Born at Guatemala, Central America, 24 October, 1814; died there 14 April, 1865, one of the most ...

Carrhae

A titular see of Mesopotamia. Carrhae is the Haran of the Bible . It is frequently mentioned ...

Carrière, Joseph

Moral theologian, thirteenth superior of the seminary and Society of Saint-Sulpice, b. 19 ...

Carrières, Louis de

Born in the chateau de la Plesse in Avrille, Angers, France, 1 September, 1662; d. at Paris, 11 ...

Carroll, Charles, of Carrollton

American statesman, b. at Annapolis, Maryland, 19 September 1737, d. at Doughoregan manor near ...

Carroll, Daniel

Brother of Archbishop Carroll , b. at upper Marlboro, Maryland, U. S. A., 1733; d. at ...

Carroll, John

First bishop of the hierarchy of the United States of America, first Bishop and Archbishop ...

Cartagena

(CARTHAGENA IN INDIIS) The city of the same name, residence of the archbishop, is situated on ...

Cartagena

DIOCESE OF CARTAGENA (CARTHAGINIENSIS) Suffragan of Granada in Spain since the concordat ...

Carter, Venerable William

English martyr, born in London, 1548; suffered for treason at Tyburn, 11 January, 1584. Son of ...

Carthage

A RCHDIOCESE OF CARTHAGE (C ARTHAGINIENSIS ) The city of Carthage, founded by Phoenician ...

Carthage, Saint

St. Carthage, whose name is also given as Mochuda, was born of a good family, in what is now ...

Carthusian Order, The

The name is derived from the French chartreuse through the Latin cartusia , of which the ...

Cartier, Georges-Etienne

A French Canadian statesman, son of Jacques Cartier and Marguerite Paradis, b. at St. ...

Cartier, Jacques

The discoverer of Canada, b. at Saint-Malo, Brittany, in 1491; d. 1 September, 1557. Little is ...

Carvajal, Bernardino Lopez de

Cardinal, b. 1455, at Plasencia in Estremadura, Spain ; d. at Rome 16 Dec., 1523. He was a ...

Carvajal, Gaspar de

Dominican missionary, b. in Estremadura, Spain, c. 1500; d. at Lima, Peru, 1584. Having entered ...

Carvajal, Juan

Cardinal ; b. about 1400 at Truxillo in Estremadura, Spain ; d. at Rome, 6 December, 1469. ...

Carvajal, Luis de

Friar Minor andTridentine theologian, b. about 1500; thetime of his death is uncertain. Of the ...

Carvajal, Luisa de

Born 2 Jan., 1568, at Jaraizejo, Spain ; died 2 Jan., 1614, at London, a lady of high birth, who ...

Carve, Thomas

Historian, b. in Co. Tipperary, Ireland, 1590; d. probably in 1672. His correct name was Carew, ...

Caryll, John

Poet, dramatist, and diplomatist, b. at West Harting, England, 1625; d. 1711; not to be ...

Carystus

A titular see of Greece. According to legend it was named after Carystus, a son of Chiron. The ...

Casale Monferatto

DIOCESE OF CASALE MONFERATTO (CASALENSIS). A suffragan of Vercelli. Casale Monferrato, the ...

Casali, Giovanni Battista

Musician, b. at Rome in 1715; d. there 1792. From 1759 until his death he held the position of ...

Casanare

Vicariate Apostolic in the Republic of Colombia, South America, administered by the Augustinians, ...

Casanata, Girolamo

(Or Casanatta) Cardinal, b. at Naples, 13 July, 1620; d. at Rome, 3 March, 1700. His father, ...

Casas, Bartolomé de las

(Originally C ASAUS ) Born at Seville, probably in 1474; d. at Madrid, 1566. His family ...

Caserta

DIOCESE OF CASERTA (CASERTANA). Caserta is the capital of the province of that name in Southern ...

Casey, John

Mathematician, b. at Kilkenny, Ireland, 12 May, 1820; d. at Dublin, 3 Jan, 1891. He received his ...

Casgrain, Henri Raymond

Author of some of the best works in French Canadian literature, b. at Rivière Ouelle, 16 ...

Cashel

A town in the County Tipperary, Ireland, which is also a Catholic archbishopric and the see of ...

Casimir, Saint

Prince of Poland, born in the royal palace at Cracow, 3 October, 1458; died at the court of ...

Casium

A titular see of Lower Egypt (Ptolemy, IV, v, 12), not far from Pelusium, and near the ...

Casot, Jean-Jacques

The last surviving Jesuit of the old Canada mission, born in Liège, Belgium, 4 ...

Cassander, George

Flemish Humanist and theologian, b. 15 August, 1513 at Pitthem in West Flanders; d. 3 February, ...

Cassani, Joseph

(Also Casani). Born at Madrid, 26 Nov., 1673, entered the Society of Jesus, 16 Nov., 1686, ...

Cassano all' Ionio

DIOCESE OF CASSANO ALL' IONIO (CASSANENSIS). Suffragan of Reggio. Cassano all' Ionio is a city ...

Casserly, Patrick S.

Patrick Educator, b. in Ireland ; d. in New York, where for many years he conducted a classical ...

Cassian, John

A monk and ascetic writer of Southern Gaul, and the first to introduce the rules of Eastern ...

Cassidy, William

Journalist, essayist, critic, b. at Albany, New York, U.S.A. 12 Aug., 1815; d. there 23 Jan., ...

Cassini, Giovanni Domenico

Astronomer, b. at Perinaldo (Nice, Italy ), 8 June, 1625; d. at Paris, 14 September, 1712. After ...

Cassiodorus

Roman writer, statesman, and monk, b. about 490; d. about 583. His full name was Flavius Magnus ...

Casson, François Dollier de

Fourth superior of Saint-Sulpice, Montreal, Canada, b. near Nantes, France, 1636; d. in 1701. ...

Cassovia

(Hungarian Kassa ; German Kaschau ; Slavic Kosice ) DIOCESE OF CASSOVIA (CASSOVIENSIS) ...

Castabala

A titular see of Asia Minor, Latin title suppressed, 1894. This city was situated somewhere on ...

Castagno, Andrea

(Or ANDREINO DEL CASTAGNO) Florentine painter, b. near Florence, 1390; d. at Florence, 9 ...

Castellammare di Stabia

(CASTRI MARIS, STABLE; DIOCESE OF CASTELLAMMARE: STABIENSIS). The seat of the diocese is an ...

Castellaneta (Castania)

DIOCESE OF CASTELLANETA (CASTELLANETENSIS). Suffragan of Taranto. Castellaneta is a city of ...

Castellanos, Juan de

Born in Spain in the first half of the sixteenth century; date of death unknown. He came to ...

Castelli, Benedetto

Mathematician and physicist ; b. at Perugia, Italy, 1577; d. at Rome, 1644. He was destined ...

Castelli, Pietro

Italian physician and botanist, b. at Rome in 1574; d. at Messina in 1662. He was graduated ...

Castello, Giovanni Battista

Italian painter, sculptor, and architect; b. at Gandino, in the Valle Seriana, in the territory ...

Castiglione, Baldassare

An Italian prose-writer, b. at Casatico, near Mantua, 6 December, 1478; died at Toledo, ...

Castiglione, Carlo Ottavio

Philologist and numismatist, b. of an ancient family at Milan, Italy, 1784; d. at Genoa, 10 ...

Castiglione, Giovanni Benedetto

Painter and etcher, b. at Genoa, Italy, 1616; d. at Mantua, 1670. In Italy he was known as ...

Castile and Aragon

The united kingdom which came into existence by the marriage (1469) of Isabella, heiress of ...

Castillejo, Cristóbal de

Spanish poet, b. in Ciudad Rodrigo (Salamanca), 1491; d. in Vienna, 12 June, 1556. From the age ...

Castner, Caspar

(Or Kastner). A missionary, b. at Munich, Bavaria, 7 October, 1655; d. at Peking, China, 9 ...

Castoria

A titular see of Macedonia. Livy (XXXI, XL) mentions a town near a lake in Orestis, called ...

Castracane degli Antelminelli, Francesco

Naturalist, b. at Fano, Italy, 19 July, 1817; d. at Rome 27 March, 1899. He was educated at ...

Castro Palao, Fernando

Spanish theologian, b. at Leon in 1581; d. at Medina, 1 Dec., 1633. From his earliest youth he ...

Castro y Bellvis, Guillen de

Spanish dramatic poet, b. of a noble family at Valencia in 1569; d. at Madrid in 1631. He ...

Castro, Alphonsus de

Friar Minor andtheologian, b. in 1495 at Zamora, Leon, Spain ; d. 11 February 1558, at Brussels. ...

Castro, Guigo de

(Guigo de Castro). Fifth prior of the Grande Chartreuse, legislator of the Carthusian Order ...

Casuistry

The application of general principles of morality to definite and concrete cases of human ...

Caswall, Edward

Oratorian and poet, b. 15 July 1814, at Yately, Hampshire, of which place his father, the Rev. R. ...

Catacombs, Roman

This subject will be treated under seven heads: I. Position; II. History; III. Inscriptions; IV. ...

Catafalque

Catafalque, derived from the Italian word catafalco , literally means a scaffold or elevation, ...

Catalani, Giuseppe

(CATALANO, CATALANUS). A Roman liturgist of the eighteenth century, member of the Oratory of ...

Catalonia

A principality within the Spanish Monarchy, occupying an area of 12,414 square miles in the ...

Catania

Catania, a seaport and capital of the province of the same name in Sicily, is situated on the ...

Catanzaro

DIOCESE OF CATANZARO (CATACIUM) Suffragan of Reggio. Catanzaro is the capital of the province of ...

Catechesis

Taken in the sense of "the act of teaching" and "the knowledge imparted by teaching", this term ...

Catechism, Roman

This catechism differs from other summaries of Christian doctrine for the instruction of the ...

Catechumen

"Catechumen," in the early Church, was the name applied to one who had not yet been initiated ...

Categorical Imperative

A term which originated in Immanuel Kant'sethics. It expresses the moral law as ultimately ...

Category

(Greek kategoría, accusation, attribution). The term was transferred by Aristotle ...

Catenæ

( Latin catena, a chain) Collections of excerpts from the writings of Biblical commentators, ...

Cathari

(From the Greek katharos , pure), literally "puritans", a name specifically applied to, or used ...

Cathedra

(1) The chair or throne ( thronos ) of a bishop in his cathedral church, on which he presides ...

Cathedral

The chief church of a diocese, in which the bishop has his throne ( cathedra ) and close to ...

Cathedraticum

( Latin cathedra, episcopal seat or throne). A certain sum of money to be contributed ...

Catherick, Venerable Edmund

Priest and martyr, born probably in Lancashire about 1605; executed at York, 13 April, 1642. ...

Catherine de' Medici

Born 13 April, 1519; died 5 January, 1589. She was the daughter of Lorenzo de' Medici (II), Duke ...

Catherine de' Ricci, Saint

(In baptism, Alessandra Lucrezia Romola), a Dominican nun, of the Third Order, though enclosed, ...

Catherine of Alexandria, Saint

A virgin and martyr whose feast is celebrated in the Latin Church and in the various ...

Catherine of Bologna, Saint

Poor Clare and mystical writer, born at Bologna, 8 September, 1413; died there, 9 March, 1463. ...

Catherine of Genoa, Saint

(CATERINA FIESCHI ADORNO.) Born at Genoa in 1447, died at the same place 15 September, 1510. ...

Catherine of Siena, Saint

Dominican Tertiary, born at Siena, 25 March, 1347; died at Rome, 29 April, 1380. She was the ...

Catherine of Sweden, Saint

The fourth child of St. Bridget and her husband, Ulf Gudmarsson, born 1331 or 1332; died 24 ...

Catherine, Monastery of Saint

Situated on Mount Sinai, at an altitude of 4854 feet, in a picturesque gorge below the ...

Catholic

The word Catholic ( katholikos from katholou -- throughout the whole, i.e., universal) ...

Catholic Benevolent Legion

A fraternal assessment life-insurance society organized in Brooklyn, New York, U.S.A. 5 ...

Catholic Club of New York

A social organization described by its constitution as a club which "shall consist of Catholic ...

Catholic Epistle

The name given to the Epistle of St. James , to that of St. Jude, to two Epistles of St. Peter ...

Catholic Knights of America

A fraternal life-insurance company chartered under the laws of the State of Kentucky, U.S.A. It ...

Catholic Missionary Union

The corporate name of a society whose directors are chosen from among the bishops of the ...

Catholic University of America

A pontifical institution located in Washington, D.C. It comprises the Schools of the Sacred ...

Catholic University of Ireland

The project of a Catholic University for Ireland was launched at the Synod of Thurles in 1850. ...

Catholicos

(Greek Katholikos , universal). The ecclesiastical title of the Nestorian and Armenian ...

Catrou, François

French historian, b. at Paris, 28 December, 1659; d. there 12 October, 1737. He was the son of ...

Cattaro

DIOCESE OF CATTARO (CATARENSIS). Suffragan of Zara. Cattaro, the principal town in one of the ...

Cauchy, Augustin-Louis

French mathematician, b. at Paris, 21 August, 1789; d. at Sceaux, 23 May, 1857. He owed his early ...

Caughnawaga

Or SAULT ST. LOUIS. An Iroquois reservation, situated on the south bank of the St. Lawrence, ...

Caulet, François-Etienne

(Also called M. DE FOIX from an abbey of which he was commendatory abbot ). A French bishop ...

Caunus

(K AUNOS ). A titular see of Asia Minor. Kaunos was said to have been founded by Kaunos, ...

Cause

CAUSE IN GREEK PHILOSOPHY The Pre-Socratics, Plato, Aristotle scholastic ">THE SCHOLASTIC ...

Caussin, Nicolas

A famous Jesuit preacher and moralist; b. at Troyes in France, in 1583; d. at Paris, 2 July, ...

Cavagnis, Felice

Canonist, b. in Bordogna, Diocese of Bergamo , Italy, 13 January, 1841; d. at Rome, 29 ...

Cavalieri, Bonaventura

Italian mathematician, b. at Milan in 1598; d. at Bologna, 3 December, 1647. At the age of ...

Cavanagh, James

Soldier, b. in County Tipperary, Ireland, 1831; d. in New York, 7 January, 1901. He emigrated ...

Cavazzi, Giovanni Antonio

Giovanni Antonio Cavazzi of Montecucolo; a Capuchin friar of the province of Bologna, date of ...

Cavedoni, Celestino

An Italian ecclesiastic, archeologist, and numismatist ; b. 18 May, 1795, at ...

Cavity, Altar

This is a small square or oblong chamber in the body of the altar, in which are placed, according ...

Cavo, Andres

A writer frequently quoted on Spanish-Mexican history; b. at Guadalajara in Mexico, 21 January, ...

Caxton, William

Born in the Weald of Kent, c. 1422; died at Westminster, 1491; the first English printer and the ...

Cayes

(CAJESENSIS) Diocese in the republic of Haiti, suffragan to Port-au-Prince. The actual ...

Cayetano, Saint

(GAETANO.) Founder of the Theatines, born October, 1480 at Vicenza in Venetian territory; ...

Caylus, Comte de

ANNE-CLAUDE-PHILIPPE DE TUBIÈRES-GRIMOARD DE PESTELS DE LÉVIS, COMTE DE CAYLUS ...

Cazeau, Charles-Félix

A French-Canadian priest, born at Quebec, 24 December, 1807, of Jean-Baptiste Cazeau and ...

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Ce 61

Ceadda, Saint

(Commonly known as ST. CHAD.) Abbot of Lastingham, Bishop successively of York and ...

Cebú

DIOCESE OF CEBÚ (CEBUANENSIS); DIOECESIS NOMINIS JESU Located in the Philippine Islands ...

Cecilia, Saint

Virgin and martyr, patroness of church music, died at Rome. This saint, so often glorified ...

Cedar

[ éréz, kedros, cedrus ]. A coniferous tree frequently mentioned in the ...

Cedar

[Hebrew Qedar ; Greek Kedar ]. The name of the second son of Ismael ( Genesis 25:13 ; ...

Cedd, Saint

(Or Cedda). Bishop of the East Saxons, the brother of St. Ceadda ; died 26 Oct. 664. There ...

Cedes

(Or C ADES ; Hebrew, Qédésh , sanctuary; Greek, Kades or Kedes ), two cities ...

Cedron, Brook of

[ Hebrew Náhál Qidhrôn , "Wâdi Qidron"; only once "fields of Qidron"; ...

Cefalù

DIOCESE OF CEFALÙ (CEPHALUDENSIS); CEPHALOEDIUM. The city of the same name in the ...

Ceillier, Rémi

Patrologist, b. at Bar-le-Duc, 14 May, 1688; d. at Flavigny, 26 May, 1763. He received his early ...

Celebret

A letter which a bishop gives to a priest, that he may obtain permission in another diocese ...

Celenderis

A titular see of Asia Minor. Celenderis was a port and fortress in Isauria, founded by the ...

Celestine I, Pope Saint

Nothing is known of his early history except that he was a Roman and that his father's name was ...

Celestine II, Pope

(GUIDO DEL CASTELLO, DE CASTELLIS) A native of Roman Tuscany, date of birth unknown; d. 8 ...

Celestine III, Pope

(GIACINTO BOBONE) The first of the Roman Orsini to ascend the Chair of Peter, b. about 1106; ...

Celestine IV, Pope

(GOFREDO CASTIGLIONI.) A native of Milan, nephew of Urban III, and probably a Cistercian ; ...

Celestine Order

(Also called the HERMITS OF ST. DAMIAN or HERMITS OF MURRONE). This Benedictine congregation ...

Celestine V, Pope Saint

(PIETRO DI MURRONE.) Born 1215, in the Neapolitan province of Moline; elected at Perugia 5 ...

Celestines

The name given to certain extreme "Spiritual" Franciscans of the Marches, because they were ...

Celibacy of the Clergy

Celibacy is the renunciation of marriage implicitly or explicitly made, for the more perfect ...

Cella

One of the names by which the small memorial chapels sometimes erected in the Christian ...

Cellier, Elizabeth

A noted London midwife, who came into prominence through the pretended "Meal-Tub Plot" of 1680. ...

Cellites

Or CELLITES. A religious institute or congregation, which had its origin at Mechlin, in ...

Celsus and Nazarius, Saints

In the Roman Martyrology and that of Bede for 12 June mention is made of four Roman martyrs, ...

Celsus the Platonist

An eclectic Platonist and polemical writer against Christianity, who flourished towards the end ...

Celtes, Conrad

(Properly C ONRAD P ICKEL, or M EISEL ; called also in Latin P ROTUSIUS ). A German ...

Celtic Rite, The

This subject will be treated under the following seven heads: I. History and Origin; II. ...

Cemeteries

Name The word coemeterium or cimiterium (in Gr. koimeterion ) may be said in early ...

Cemeteries in Law

Cemeteries in Civil Law It would be impossible here to deal in detail with the various ...

Cemeteries, Early Roman Christian

This article treats briefly of the individual catacomb cemeteries in the vicinity of Rome. For ...

Cenacle, Religious of the

The Society of Our Lady of the Cenacle was founded in 1826, at La Louvesc in France, near the ...

Cenalis, Robert

(Sometimes written CÉNEAU and COENALIS, whence the nickname, le Soupier ) Bishop, ...

Ceneda

DIOCESE OF CENEDA (CENETENSIS). The city of Ceneda is situated in the province of Treviso, in ...

Censer

A vessel suspended by chains, and used for burning incense at solemn Mass, Vespers, ...

Censorship of Books

( Censura Librorum .) DEFINITION AND DIVISION In general, censorship of books is a supervision ...

Censures, Ecclesiastical

Medicinal and spiritual punishments imposed by the Church on a baptized, delinquent, and ...

Censures, Theological

Doctrinal judgments by which the Church stigmatizes certain teachings detrimental to faith ...

Census

A canonical term variously defined by different writers. Zitelli (Appar. Jur. Eccl.) calls it a ...

Central Verein of North America, German Roman Catholic

(Deutscher römisch-katholischer Centralverein von Nordamerika) The origin of the Central ...

Centre (Party), The

(THE CENTRE PARTY). This name is given to a political party in the German Reichstag and to a ...

Centuriators of Magdeburg

In 1559 there appeared at Basle the first three folio volumes of a work entitled "Ecclesiastica ...

Centurion

(Latin Centurio , Greek kentyrion, ekatontarkos, ekatontarkys ). A Roman officer ...

Ceolfrid, Saint

Benedictine monk, Abbot of Wearmouth and Jarrow, b. 642, place of birth not known; d. 29 ...

Ceolwulf

(CEOLWULPH or CEOLULPH) King of Northumbria and monk of Lindisfarne, date and place of ...

Cepeda, Francisco

(Also called ZEPEDA and ZEPEDAS) Born in the province of La Mancha, 1532; died at Guatemala, ...

Ceramus

A titular see of Asia Minor. Ceramus (or Keramos) was a city of Caria, subject at first to ...

Cerasus

A titular see of Pontus Polemoniacus in Asia Minor. Cerasus is remembered for the sojourn of ...

Ceremonial

The book which contains in detail the order of religious ceremony and solemn worship prescribed ...

Ceremony

(Sanskrit, karman , action, work; from kar or ker , to make or create; Latin ...

Cerinthus

(Greek Kerinthos ). A Gnostic-Ebionite heretic, contemporary with St. John ; against whose ...

Certitude

The word certitude indicates both a state of mind and a quality of a proposition, according ...

Cervantes Saavedra, Miguel de

A Spanish author, born at Alcála de Henares, Spain, in 1547; died at Madrid, 23 April, ...

Cervantes, Salazar Francisco

Born at Toledo, Spain, probably in 1513 or 1514; went to Mexico in 1550; died there in 1575. He ...

Cervia

DIOCESE OF CERVIA (CERVIENSIS) Suffragan of Ravenna. Cervia is a city in the province of ...

Cesalpino, Andrea

(Caesalpinus). A physician, philosopher, and naturalist, distinguished above all as a ...

Cesarini, Giuliano

(Also known as CARDINAL JULIAN) Born at Rome, 1398; died at Varna, in Bulgaria 10 November, ...

Cesena

DIOCESE OF CESENA (CAESENATENSIS). The ancient Cæsena is a city of Emilia, in the ...

Ceslaus, Saint

Born at Kamien in Silesia, Poland (now Prussia ), about 1184; died at Breslau about 1242. He ...

Cestra

A titular see of Asia Minor, Hierocles (709), Georgius Cyprius (ed. Gelzer, p. 836), and ...

Ceva, Thomas

Mathematician, born at Milan, 21 December, 1648; died there, 23 February, 1737. In 1663 he ...

Ceylon

An island (266 1/2 miles long and 140 1/2 miles broad), to the south-east of India and separated ...

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Ch 189

Châlons-sur-Marne

DIOCESE OF CHÂLONS-SUR-MARNE (CATALAUNENSIS) The Diocese comprises the department of ...

Chézy, Antoine-Léonard

A French Orientalist, born at Neuilly, 15 January, 1773; died at Paris, 31 August, 1832. His ...

Chabanel, Noel

A Jesuit missionary among the Huron Indians, born in Southern France, 2 February, 1613; slain by ...

Chachapoyas

Diocese of Peru created by Pius VII in 1803, under the name of Chachapoyas and Maynas; made a ...

Chad, Saint

(Commonly known as ST. CHAD.) Abbot of Lastingham, Bishop successively of York and ...

Chadwick, James

Second Bishop of Hexham and Newcastle, born at Drogheda, Ireland, 24 April, 1813; died at ...

Chaignon, Pierre

Born at Saint-Pierre-la-Cour, Mayenne, France, 8 October, 1791, entered the Society of Jesus 14 ...

Chair of Peter

Under this head will be treated: I. The annual Feast of the Chair of Peter ( Cathedra Petri ) at ...

Chalcedon

A titular see of Asia Minor. The city was founded 676 B. C. by the Megarians on the ...

Chalcedon, Council of

The Fourth Ecumenical Council, held in 451, from 8 October until 1 November inclusive, at ...

Chaldean Christians

The name of former Nestorians now reunited with the Roman Church. Ethnologically they are ...

Chalice

HISTORY The chalice occupies the first place among sacred vessels, and by a figure of speech ...

Challoner, Richard

Bishop of Debra, Vicar Apostolic of the London District, author of spiritual and controversial ...

Cham, Chamites

I. CHAM ( A.V. Ham). Son of Noah and progenitor of one of the three great races of men whose ...

Chambéry

ARCHDIOCESE OF CHAMBÉRY (CAMBERIENSIS). The Archdiocese of Chambéry comprises the ...

Chamberlain

(Latin camerarius ). The title of certain papal officials. The Low Latin word camera ...

Champlain, Samuel de

Founder of Quebec and Father of New France , born at Brouage, a village in the province of ...

Champney, Anthony

A controversialist, born in England c. 1569; died there c. 1643. He studied at Reims (1590) ...

Champollion, Jean-François

(Called THE YOUNGER to distinguish him from his elder brother, Champollion-Figeac). A French ...

Champs, Etienne Agard de

A distinguished theologian and author, born at Bourges, 2 September, 1613; died at Paris ...

Chanaan, Chanaanites

(Canaan, Canaanites). The Hebrew Kenaan , denoting a person, occurs: in the Old ...

Chanca, Diego Alvarez

A physician-in-ordinary to Ferdinand and Isabella of Castile and Aragon ; dates of birth and ...

Chancel

The chancel is part of the choir near the altar of a church, where the deacons or sub-deacons ...

Chancery, Diocesan

That branch of administration which handles all written documents used in the official government ...

Chanel, Peter-Louis-Marie, Saint

The print version of the C ATHOLIC E NCYCLOPEDIA contains two articles on this saint. We ...

Changanacherry

VICARIATE APOSTOLIC OF CHANGANACHERRY (CHANGANACHERENSIS) Located in Travancore, British India ...

Chant, Gregorian

The name is often taken as synonymous with plain chant, comprising not only the Church music of ...

Chant, Plain

By plain chant we understand the church music of the early Middle Ages, before the advent of ...

Chantal, Saint Jane Frances de

Born at Dijon, France, 28 January, 1572; died at the Visitation Convent Moulins, 13 December, ...

Chantelou, Claude

Patristic scholar, born in 1617, at Vion, in the present Diocese of Le Mans, France ; died 28 ...

Chantry

(Middle English chaunterie ; Old French chanterie , French chanter , to sing; Middle Latin ...

Chapeauville, Jean

A Belgian theologian and historian, b. at Liège, 5 January, 1551; d. there 11 May 1617. ...

Chapel

( Latin capella; French chapelle ). When St. Martin divided his military cloak ( cappa ) ...

Chapelle, Placide-Louis

Archbishop of New Orleans, U.S.A. b. at Runes Lozère, France, 28 August, 1842; d. at ...

Chaplain

(Latin capellanus , from capella , chapel ). The origin of capella has been a ...

Chaplets (Prayer Beads)

Beads variously strung together, according to the kind, order, and number of prayers in certain ...

Chaptal, Jean-Antoine

Comte de Chanteloup, technical chemist and statesman; b. Nogaret, Lozère, France, 4 June, ...

Chapter

The name Chapter ( Latin capitulum ), designating certain corporate ecclesiastical bodies, ...

Chapter and Conventual Mass

As a general rule, churches in which the Divine office is to be said publicly every day must also ...

Chapter House

A building attached to a monastery or cathedral in which the meetings of the chapter are held. ...

Character

Quite distinct from the technical meaning which the term character possesses in theological ...

Character, Sacramental

Character indicates a special effect produced by three of the sacraments, viz. Baptism, ...

Charadrus

A titular see of Asia Minor. According to Strabo (XIV, 669) and Skylax, 102, it was a harbour ...

Chardon, Jean-Baptiste

Indian missionary in Canada, and in the Louisian territory, born at Bordeaux, France, 27 April, ...

Chardon, Mathias

(His name in religion was Charles.) A learned French Benedictine of the Congregation of the ...

Charette de la Contrie, Baron Athanase-Charles-Marie

Born at Nantes, 3 Sept., 1832; died at Basse-Motte (Ille-et-Vilaine), 9 Oct., 1911. His father ...

Chariopolis

A titular see of Thrace. Nothing is known about this city during antiquity. In 1087 it was ...

Charismata

The Greek term charisma denotes any good gift that flows from God's benevolent love ( ...

Charitable Bequests, Civil Law Concerning

The word charity , as employed by the courts and used as descriptive of uses and trusts which ...

Charity and Charities

In its widest and highest sense, charity includes love of God as well as love of man. The ...

Charity, Congregation of the Brothers of

Founded in Belgium early in the present century: the rule and constitutions were approved and ...

Charity, Sisters of, (St. John, New Brunswick)

Founded in 1854 by Bishop, subsequently Archbishop, Connolly. Two years before this the bishop ...

Charity, Sisters of, of Jesus and Mary

A congregation founded in 1803 by Canon Triest, who was known as "the St. Vincent de Paul of ...

Charity, Sisters of, of Our Lady Mother of Mercy

A congregation founded in Holland in 1832 by the Rev. John Zwijsen, pastor of Tilburg, aided by ...

Charity, Sisters of, of Providence

The community of Sisters of xxyyyk.htm">Providence, or, more accurately, Daughters of Charity, ...

Charity, Sisters of, of St. Elizabeth

(Mother-house at Convent Station, near Morristown, New Jersey). A community founded at Newark, ...

Charity, Sisters of, of St. Louis

This congregation was founded at Vannes in Brittany, in 1803, by Madame Molé, ...

Charity, Sisters of, of St. Paul

These sisters who now add " OF C HARTRES " to their title to distinguish them from another ...

Charity, Sisters of, of St. Vincent de Paul

A congregation of women with simple vows, founded in 1633 and devoted to corporal and ...

Charity, Sisters of, of St. Vincent de Paul (New York)

(Motherhouse at Mt. St. Vincent-on Hudson, New York; not to be confused with the Sisters of ...

Charity, Sisters of, of the Blessed Virgin Mary

A congregation begun by five young women in Dublin, Ireland, 8 December, 1831, with the purpose ...

Charity, Theological Virtue of

The third and greatest of the Divine virtues enumerated by St. Paul ( 1 Corinthians 13:13 ), ...

Charity, Theological Virtue of

The third and greatest of the Divine virtues enumerated by St. Paul ( 1 Corinthians 13:13 ), ...

Charlemagne

(French for Carolus Magnus , or Carlus Magnus ("Charles the Great"); German Karl der Grosse ...

Charlemagne and Church Music

Charlemagne's interest in church music and solicitude for its propagation and adequate ...

Charles Borromeo, Saint

St. Charles Borromeo -- Archbishop of Milan, Cardinal-Priest of the Title of St. Prassede, ...

Charles Martel

Born about 688; died at Quierzy on the Oise, 21 October, 741. He was the natural son of Pepin of ...

Charles V, Emperor

(CHARLES I, KING OF SPAIN). Born at Ghent, 1500; died at Yuste, in Spain, 1558; was a ...

Charleston

The Diocese of Charleston (Carolopolitana) now comprises the entire State of South Carolina, ...

Charlevoix, François-Xavier

Historian, b. at St-Quentin, France, 24 October, 1682, d. at La Flèche, 1 February, 1761. ...

Charlottetown

DIOCESE OF CHARLOTTETOWN (CAROLINAPOLITANA) Includes all Prince Edward Island (formerly called ...

Charpentier, François-Philippe

French engraver, inventor, and mechanician, b. at Blois, 1734; d. there 22 July, 1817. His ...

Charron, Pierre

Moralist, b. in Paris, 1541; d. there 6 Nov., 1603. He studied law at Bourges, but after ...

Charterhouse

From the fact that St. Bruno founded the first house of his austere order at Chartreux, near ...

Chartier, Alain

A French poet, born about 1390, at Bayeux, died between 1430 and 1440. It is believed he studied ...

Chartres

Comprises the department of Eure-et-Loir. Dismembered by the formation of the new Diocese of ...

Chartreuse, La Grande

The mother-house of the Carthusian Order lies in a high valley of the Alps of Dauphine, at an ...

Chartulary

( Cartularium , Chartularium , also called Pancarta and Codex Diplomaticus ), a medieval ...

Chastel, Guigues du

(Guigo de Castro). Fifth prior of the Grande Chartreuse, legislator of the Carthusian Order ...

Chastellain, Georges

(Or Chastelain), a Burgundian chronicler, born in the County of Alost, Flanders, in 1403; died ...

Chastellain, Pierre

Missionary among the Huron Indians, born at Senlis, France, in 1606; died at Quebec, 14 August, ...

Chastity

In this article chastity is considered as a virtue ; its consideration as an evangelical counsel ...

Chasuble

Called in Latin casula planeta or pænula , and in early Gallic sources amphibalus , ...

Chateaubriand, François-René

French writer, b. at Saint-Malo, Brittany, 4 September, 1768; d. at Paris, 4 July, 1848. He ...

Chatham

DIOCESE OF CHATHAM (CHATHAMENSIS) The Diocese of Chatham comprises the northern half of the ...

Chaucer, Geoffrey

English poet, born in London between 1340 and 1345; died there, 25 October, 1400. John ...

Chaumonot, Pierre-Joseph

Jesuit missionary in New York and Canada, Born near Châtillon-sur-Seine in France, 1611; ...

Chauncy, Maurice

Prior of the English Carthusians at Bruges, date of birth unknown; died at Bruges, 2 July, ...

Chauveau, Pierre-Joseph-Octave

Canadian statesman, born at Quebec, 30 May, 1820; died at Montreal, 4 April, 1890. After a ...

Chelm and Belz

(CHELMENSIS ET BELTHIENSIS RUTENORUM). A diocese of the Greek-Ruthenian Rite in Russian ...

Cheminais de Montaigu, Timoléon

A pulpit orator, born at Paris, 3 January, 1652; entered the Society of Jesus at fifteen, died ...

Cherokee Indians

The largest and most important tribe of Iroquoian stock of the southern section of the United ...

Chersonesus

(1) A titular see of Crete. The city stood on a little peninsula of the north-east coast, ...

Cherubim

Angelic beings or symbolic representations thereof, mentioned frequently in the Old Testament ...

Cherubini, Maria Luigi Carlo Zenobio Salvatore

Composer, born in Florence, 14 September, 1760; died at Paris, 15 March, 1842. His instruction ...

Chester

ANCIENT DIOCESE OF CHESTER (CESRENSIS). Located in England. Though the See of Chester, ...

Cheverus, Jean-Louis Lefebvre de

First Bishop of Boston, U.S.A., Bishop of Montauban ; Archbishop of Bordeaux, France, and ...

Chevreul, Michel-Eugène

Chemist, physicist, and philosopher, b. at Angers, France, 31 August, 1786; d. at Paris, 9 ...

Cheyenne

DIOCESE OF CHEYENNE (CHEYENNENSIS) The Diocese of Cheyenne, established 9 August, 1887, is ...

Chi-Rho (Labarum)

Labarum is the name by which the military standard adopted by Constantine the Great after his ...

Chiabrera, Gabriello

A poet, born at Savona, Italy, 8 June, 1552, died there 1638. When nine years of age he went to ...

Chiapas

The Diocese of Chiapas comprises almost the entire state of that name in the Republic of Mexico. ...

Chiavari

(CLAVARIUM); DIOCESE OF CHIAVARI (CLAVARENSIS) Suffragan of Genoa. Chiavari is a city of the ...

Chibchas

(Or MUYSCAS). Next to the Quichuas of Peru and the Aymaras in Bolivia, the Chibchas of ...

Chicago, Archdiocese of

(Chicagiensis). Diocese created 28 November, 1842; raised to the rank of an archdiocese, 10 ...

Chichele, Henry

(Or Chicheley) Archbishop of Canterbury, b. at Higham Ferrers, Northamptonshire, England, ...

Chichester

Ancient Catholic Diocese of Chichester (Cicestrensis), in England. This see took its rise in ...

Chicoutimi

Diocese created, 28 May, 1878, a part of the civil and ecclesiastical Province of Quebec, which ...

Chieregati, Francesco

(C HIEREGATO ) Papal nuncio, b. at Vicenza, 1479; d. at Bologna, 6 December, 1539. Little ...

Chieti

ARCHDIOCESE OF CHIETI (THEATENSIS) Archdiocese with the perpetual administration of Vasto. ...

Chihuahua

The Diocese of Chihuahua, in the north of Mexico, comprises the State of Chihuahua, with a ...

Chilapa

Diocese in Mexico, suffragan of the Archdiocese of Mexico, comprises the State of Guerrero, in ...

Children of Mary

The Sodality of Children of Mary Immaculate owes its origin to the manifestation of the Virgin ...

Children of Mary of the Sacred Heart, The

A Sodality of the Blessed Virgin, founded by the Venerable Mother Barat of the Society of the ...

Chile

(Also written C HILI ). A comparatively narrow strip of coast-land in South America between ...

Chimalpain, Domingo (San Anton y Muñon)

A Mexican Indian of the second half of the sixteenth and the first half of the seventeenth ...

China

The Chinese Empire, the largest political division of Eastern Asia, extends from 18°10' to ...

China, History of

The question of the origin of the Chinese has been discussed by several foreign savants: J. Edkins ...

China, Martyrs in

The first Christian martyrs in China appear to have been the missionaries of Ili Bâliq ...

China, The Church in

Ancient Christians The introduction of Christianity into China has been ascribed not only to ...

Chinooks

An aboriginal tribe of the extreme northwest of the United States, which might be adduced as an ...

Chioggia (Chiozza)

DIOCESE OF CHIOGGIA (CLODIENSIS). Chioggia is a sea-coast city in the province of Venice. It ...

Chios

(Greek Chios , Italian Scio , Turkish, Sakiz Adassi ). One of the Sporades in the ...

Chippewa Indians

The largest and most important tribe north of Mexico, numbering some 30,000 souls, about equally ...

Chiusi-Pienza

DIOCESE OF CHIUSI-PIENZA (CLUSINENSIS ET PIENTINENSIS) Suffragan of Siena. Chiusi is an ...

Chivalry

Chivalry (derived through the French cheval from the Latin caballus ) as an institution is ...

Choctaw Indians

An important tribe or confederacy of Muskogean stock formerly holding most of Southern Alabama ...

Choir

There is much ambiguity about the terms choir and presbytery. Strictly speaking, the choir is ...

Choir

A body of singers entrusted with the musical parts of the Church service, and organized and ...

Choiseul du Plessis-Praslin, Gilbert

French bishop, b. 1613; d. at Paris, 31 December, 1689. He was a descendant of the noble family ...

Choiseul, Etienne-François, Duc de

French statesman, b. 28 June, 1719; d. in Paris 8 May, 1785. Until his thirty-seventh year he ...

Cholonec, Pierre

A biographer and French missionary among the Canadian Indians, born in the Diocese of ...

Chorepiscopi

(Greek Chorepiskopoi = rural bishops.) A name originally given in the Eastern Church to ...

Choron, Alexandre-Etienne

A French musician and teacher of music, b. at Caen, 21 October, 1772; d. 29 June, 1834. Being ...

Chrism

A mixture of oil of olives and balsam, blessed by a bishop in a special manner and used in the ...

Chrismal, Chrismatory

Formerly used to designate the sheath, or cloth-covering ( theca ) in which relics were ...

Chrismarium

(1) A place in a church set apart for the administration of confirmation. (2) An ampulla or jar, ...

Christ, Agony of

(From agonia , a struggle; particularly, in profane literature, the physical struggle of ...

Christ, Character of

The surpassing eminence of the character of Jesus has been acknowledged by men of the most ...

Christ, Chronology of the Life of

In the following paragraphs we shall endeavour to establish the absolute and relative chronology ...

Christ, Early Historical Documents on

The historical documents referring to Christ's life and work may be divided into three classes: ...

Christ, Genealogy of

It is granted on all sides that the Biblical genealogy of Christ implies a number of exegetical ...

Christ, Holy Name of

In this article, we shall consider the two words which compose the Sacred Name. JESUS The word ...

Christ, Jesus

Origin of the Name of Jesus In this article, we shall consider the two words -- "Jesus" and ...

Christ, Knowledge of

" Knowledge of Jesus Christ," as used in this article, does not mean a summary of what we know ...

Christ, Order of the Knights of

A military order which sprang out of the famous Order of the Temple (see Knights Templars ). ...

Christ, Temptation of

In the Catholic translation of the Bible , the word "temptation" is used in various senses, ...

Christ, Virgin Birth of

The dogma which teaches that the Blessed Mother of Jesus Christ was a virgin before, during, ...

Christchurch

DIOCESE OF CHRISTCHURCH (CHRISTOPOLITANA) (Its centre being Christchurch, the Capital of ...

Christendom

In its wider sense this term is used to describe the part of the world which is inhabited by ...

Christendom, Union of

The Catholic Church is by far the largest, the most widespread, and the most ancient of ...

Christian

First Bishop of Prussia, d. 1245. Before becoming a missionary he was a Cistercian monk at ...

Christian Archæology

Christian archaeology is that branch of the science of archaeology the object of which is the ...

Christian Art

" Christian art" is a term which, while it always applies to the fine arts and their creations ...

Christian Brothers

NATURE AND OBJECT The Institute of the Brothers of the Christian Schools is a society of male ...

Christian Brothers of Ireland

An institute founded at Waterford, Ireland, in 1802, by Edmund Ignatius Rice, a merchant of that ...

Christian Charity, Sisters of

Also called DAUGHTERS OF THE IMMACULATE CONCEPTION, an institute for teaching poor schools and ...

Christian Doctrine, Confraternity of

An association established at Rome in 1562 for the purpose of giving religions instruction. Till ...

Christian Instruction, Brothers of

A congregation founded in 1817 at Saint-Brieuc, Côtes-du-Nord, France, by Jean-Marie-Robert ...

Christian Knowledge, Society for Promoting

The greatest and most important society within the Church of England. It was founded 8 March, ...

Christian Retreat, Congregation of

There are two branches of this congregation, the Fathers of Christian Retreat and the Sisters. ...

Christianity

In the following article an account is given of Christianity as a religion, describing its origin, ...

Christina Alexandra

Queen of Sweden, child of Gustavus Adolphhus II of Sweden, born at Stockholm, 8 December, 1626; ...

Christine de Pisan

A French poetess and historiographer, born at Venice, 1363; died in France, 1430. Although an ...

Christine of Stommeln, Blessed

Born at Stommeln near Cologne, in 1242; died 6 November, 1312. Stommeln, called in the ...

Christmas

ORIGIN OF THE WORD The word for Christmas in late Old English is Cristes Maesse , the Mass of ...

Christology

Christology is that part of theology which deals with Our Lord Jesus Christ. In its full extent ...

Christopher Numar of Forli

Minister general of the Friars Minor and cardinal, date of birth uncertain; d. at Ancona, 23 ...

Christopher, Pope

(Reigned 903-904). Some hold that Christopher, once Cardinal-Priest of the Title of St. Damasus, ...

Christopher, Saint

(Greek christos , Christ, pherein , to bear. Latin Christophorus , i.e. Christbearer). ...

Chrodegang, Saint

(Called also CHRODEGAND, GODEGRAND, GUNDIGRAN, RATGANG, RODIGANG and SIRIGANG). Bishop of ...

Chromatius, Saint

Bishop of Aquileia, died about 406-407. He was probably born at Aquileia, and in any case grew ...

Chronicle of Eusebius

Consists of two parts: the first was probably called by Eusebius the "Chronograph" or ...

Chronicles (Paralipomenon), Books of

( Paraleipomenon ; Libri Paralipomenon ). Two books of the Bible containing a summary of ...

Chronicon Paschale

(P ASCHAL C HRONICLE ). The name ordinarily given to a valuable Byzantine chronicle of the ...

Chronology, Biblical

Biblical chronology deals with the dates of the various events recorded in the Bible . It ...

Chronology, General

CHRISTIAN ERA PRE-CHRISTIAN CHRONOLOGY REGNAL YEARS INDICTIONS BEGINNING OF THE YEAR THE ...

Chrysanthus and Daria, Saints

Roman martyrs, buried on the Via Salaria Nova, and whose tombs, according to the testimony of ...

Chrysogonus, Saint

Martyr, suffered at Aquileia, probably during the persecution of Diocletian, was buried ...

Chrysopolis

A titular see of Roman Arabia, not to be confounded with Chrysopolis (today Scutari), opposite ...

Chrysostom, Saint John

( Chrysostomos , "golden-mouthed" so called on account of his eloquence). Doctor of the ...

Chur

(Anciently C URIA R HÆTORUM, in Italian C OIRA, French C OÏRE, in the local ...

Church and State

The Church and the State are both perfect societies, that is to say, each essentially aiming ...

Church Maintenance

The proper support of church edifices and church institutions, as well as of the clergy who ...

Church, The

The term church (Anglo-Saxon, cirice, circe ; Modern German, Kirche; Sw., Kyrka ) is ...

Churching of Women

A blessing given by the Church to mothers after recovery from childbirth. Only a Catholic ...

Chusai

The Arachite, i.e. the native of Archi, a place south of the portion of Ephraim, near Bethel ( ...

Chysoloras, Manuel

First teacher of Greek in Italy, born at Constantinople about the middle of the fourteenth ...

Chytri

A titular see of Cyprus. The Greek see of similar title was suppressed in 1222 by Cardinal ...

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Ci 39

Ciampini, Giovanni Giustino

An ecclesiastical archaeologist, born at Rome, 1633; died there 1698. He graduated from the ...

Ciasca, Agostino

(In the world, PASQUALE). An Italian Augustinian and cardinal, born at Polignano a Mare, in ...

Ciborium

A chalice-like vessel used to contain the Blessed Sacrament. The word is of rather doubtful ...

Cibot, Pierre-Martial

Missionary, born at Limoges, France, 14 August, 1727; died at Peking, China, 8 August, 1780. He ...

Ciboule, Robert

Theologian and moralist, born in the Department of Eure, France, at the close of the fourteenth ...

Cibyra

A titular see of Caria, in Asia Minor. Kibyra, later Kibyrrha, had been founded by the Lycian ...

Ciccione, Andrea

An Italian sculptor and architect, born in Naples in the first part of the fifteenth century. ...

Cicognara, Leopoldo, Count

Politician, writer on art, and collector of Italian antiquities, born at Ferara 26 November, 1767; ...

Cid, El

(Rodrigo, or Ruy, Diaz, Count of Bivar). The great popular hero of the chivalrous age of ...

Cidyessus

A titular see of Asia Minor. It was a city of some importance, west of Ammonia in West-Central ...

Cienfuegos

The Diocese of Cienfuegos (Centumfocensis), which includes all the Province of Santa Clara in the ...

Cignani Family

(1)CARLO, born 1628, the most distinguished of three Bolognese painters of the same name, was a ...

Cima da Conegliano, Giovanni Battista

A Venetian painter, born at Conegliano in the province of Treviso in 1459 or 1460; died in ...

Cimabue, Cenni di Pepo

Florentine painter, born 1240; died after 1301; the legendary founder of Italian painting and ...

Cimbebasia

PREFECTURE APOSTOLIC OF UPPER CIMBEBASIA Cimbebasia was the name given for a long time to the ...

Cincinnati

The Archdiocese of Cincinnati (Cincinnatiensis) comprises that part of the State of Ohio lying ...

Cincture

( Latin Cingulum .) The cincture (or, as it is more commonly called in England, the ...

Cinites

(A.V. Kenites). A tribe or family often mentioned in the Old Testament, personified as ...

Cinna

A titular see of Asia Minor. According to the order of the "Synecdemus" of Hirerocles (p. 696) ...

Circesium

(KERKESION, KERKISION, KIRKISIA, CERCUSIUM, CIRCESSUS). A titular see of Osrhoene. Founded ...

Circumcision

The Hebrew, like the Greek ( peritome ), and the Latin ( circumcisio ), signifies a cutting ...

Circumcision, Feast of the

As Christ wished to fulfil the law and to show His descent according to the flesh from Abraham. ...

Cisalpine Club

An association of Catholic laymen formed in England to perpetuate the movement which had found ...

Cisamus

Cisamus, a titular see of Crete. Kisamos, or Kissamos, was a harbour on the north-west coast of ...

Cistercian Sisters

The first Cistercian monastery for women was established at Tart in the Diocese of Langres ...

Cistercians

( See also CISTERCIAN SISTERS ; CISTERCIANS IN THE BRITISH ISLES .) Religious of the Order ...

Cistercians in the British Isles

St. Stephen Harding, third Abbot of Cîteaux (1109-33), was an Englishman and his ...

Citation

( Latin citare ). A legal act through which a person, by mandate of the judge, is called ...

Citharizum

A titular see of Armenia. The city was situated in Asthianene or Balabitene, a region between ...

Città della Pieve, Diocese of

(CIVITATIS PLEBIS) A city of obscure origin in the province of Perugia in Umbria, Central ...

Città di Castello, Diocese of

Città di Castello, DIOCESE OF (CIVITATIS CASTELLI), is a town in the province of Perugia, ...

Ciudad Real

(ECCLESIA CLUNIENSIS Bishopric-Priorate of the Military Orders of Spain, directly subject ...

Ciudad Rodrigo

Diocese of Ciudad Rodrigo (Civitatensis) Suffragan of the Diocese of Santiago; comprises the ...

Cius

(Kios.) A titular see of Asia Minor. Kios was a Milesian colony on the Bithynian coast in ...

Civil Allegiance

By civil allegiance is meant the duty of loyalty and obedience which a person owes to the State ...

Civil Authority

Civil Authority is the moral power of command, supported (when need be) by physical coercion, ...

Civil Marriage

"Marriage", says Bishop, "as distinguished from the agreement to marry and from the act of ...

Cività Castellana, Orte, and Gallese

Cività Castellana, DIOCESE OF (CIVITATIS CASTELLANÆ, HORTANENSIS ET GALLESINENSIS) is ...

Civitavecchia and Corneto, Diocese of

Civitavecchia and Corneto, DIOCESE OF (CENTUMCELLARUM ET CORNETANA) is an important and fortified ...

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Cl 83

Clémanges, Mathieu-Nicolas Poillevillain de

(Or CLAMANGES) A French Humanist and theologian, b. in Champagne about 1360; d. at Paris ...

Clémencet, Charles

Benedictine historian, b. at Painblanc, in the department of Côte-d'Or, France, 1703; d. ...

Clément, François

A member of the Benedictine Congregation of Saint-Maur and historian; born at Bèze in the ...

Clairvaux, Abbey of

The third daughter of Cîteaux and mother in the fourth line of numerous and celebrated ...

Clandestinity (in Canon Law)

Strictly speaking, clandestinity signifies a matrimonial impediment introduced by the Council of ...

Clare of Assisi, Saint

Cofoundress of the Order of Poor Ladies , or Clares, and first Abbess of San Damiano; born at ...

Clare of Montefalco, Saint

Born at Montefalco about 1268; died there, 18 August, 1308. Much dispute has existed as to whether ...

Clare of Rimini, Blessed

(Chiara Agolanti), of the order of Poor Clares, born at Rimini in 1282; died there 10 February, ...

Claret y Clará, Saint Antonio María

Spanish prelate and missionary, born at Sallent, near Barcelona, 23 Dec., 1807; d. at ...

Clark, William

English priest, date of birth unknown, executed at Winchester, 29 Nov., 1603. He was educated ...

Classical Latin Literature in the Church

I. Early Period This article deals only with the relations of the classical literature, chiefly ...

Claude de la Colombière, Saint

Missionary and ascetical writer, born of noble parentage at Saint-Symphorien-d'Ozon, between ...

Claudia

( Klaudia ), a Christian woman of Rome, whose greeting to Timothy St. Paul conveys with ...

Claudianus Mamertus

(The name Ecdicius is unauthorized). A Gallo-Roman theologian and the brother of St. ...

Claudiopolis

A titular see of Asia Minor. It was a city in Cilicia Tracheia or Byzantine Isauria. The old ...

Claudiopolis

A titular see of Bithynia, in Asia Minor. Strabo (XII, 4, 7) mentions a town, Bithynium ...

Claver, Saint Peter

The son of a Catalonian farmer, was born at Verdu, in 1581; he died 8 September, 1654. He ...

Clavigero, Francisco Saverio

Born at Vera Cruz, Mexico, 9 September, 1731; d. at Bologna, Italy, 2 April, 1787. At the age of ...

Clavius, Christopher

Christoph Clau, mathematician and astronomer, whose most important achievement related to the ...

Clavius, Claudius

(Or NICHOLAS NIGER.) The latinized form of the name of the old Danish cartographer Claudius ...

Clayton, James

Priest, confessor of the faith, b. at Sheffield, England, date of birth not know ; d. a ...

Clazomenae

A titular see of Asia Minor. The city had been first founded on the southern shore of the ...

Clean and Unclean

The distinction between legal and ceremonial, as opposed to moral, cleanness and uncleanness ...

Cleef, Jan van

A Flemish painter, b. in Guelderland in 1646, d. at Ghent, 18 December, 1716. He was a pupil of ...

Cleef, Joost van

(JOSSE VAN CLEVE). The "Madman", a Flemish painter born in Antwerp c. 1520, died c. 1556. ...

Cleef, Martin van

A Flemish painter, born at Antwerp in 1520; died in 1570; was the son of the painter William ...

Clemens non Papa

(Jacques Clement). Representative of the Flemish or Netherland School of music of the ...

Clemens, Franz Jacob

A German Catholic philosopher, b. 4 October, 1815, at Coblenz; d. 24 February, 1862, at Rome. ...

Clement I, Pope Saint

Pope Clement I (called CLEMENS ROMANUS to distinguish him from the Alexandrian ), is the first ...

Clement II, Pope

(S UIDGER .) Date of birth unknown; enthroned 25 December, 1046; d. 9 October, 1047. In the ...

Clement III, Pope

(Paolo Scolari). Date of birth unknown; elected 19 December, 1187; d. 27 March, 1191. During ...

Clement IV, Pope

(G UIDO L E G ROS ). Born at Saint-Gilles on the Rhone, 23 November, year unknown; ...

Clement IX, Pope

(GIULIO ROSPIGLIOSI) Born 28 January, 1600, at Pistoja, of an ancient family originally from ...

Clement Mary Hofbauer, Blessed

(JOHN DVORÁK) The second founder of the Redemptorist Congregation, called "the Apostle ...

Clement of Alexandria

(Properly TITUS FLAVIUS CLEMENS, but known in church history by the former designation to ...

Clement of Ireland, Saint

Also known as CLEMENS SCOTUS (not to be confounded with Claudius Clemens). Born in Ireland, ...

Clement V, Pope

(B ERTRAND DE G OT .) Born at Villandraut in Gascony, France, 1264; died at Roquemaure, 20 ...

Clement VI, Pope

(P IERRE R OGER ) Born 1291 in the castle of Maumont, departmentof Corrèze, France, ...

Clement VII, Pope

(G IULIO DE’ M EDICI ). Born 1478; died 25 September, 1534. Giulio de' Medici was ...

Clement VIII, Pope

(IPPOLITO ALDOBRANDINI). Born at Fano, March, 1536, of a distinguished Florentine family ; ...

Clement X, Pope

(EMILIO ALTIERI). Born at Rome, 13 July, 1590; elected 29 April, 1670, and died at Rome, 22 ...

Clement XI, Pope

(GIOVANNI FRANCESCO ALBANI). Born at Urbino, 23 July, 1649; elected 23 November, 1700; died ...

Clement XII, Pope

(LORENZO CORSINI). Born at Florence, 7 April, 1652; elected 12 July, 1730; died at Rome 6 ...

Clement XIII, Pope

(C ARLO DELLA T ORRE R EZZONICO ). Born at Venice, 7 March, 1693; died at Rome, 2 ...

Clement XIV, Pope

(L ORENZO –or G IOVANNI V INCENZO A NTONIO –G ANGANELLI ). Born at ...

Clement, Cæsar

Date of birth uncertain; died at Brussels 28 Aug., 1626, great-nephew of Sir Thomas More's ...

Clement, John

President of the College of Physicians and tutor to St. Thomas More's children, born in ...

Clementines

(K LEMENTIA ; C LEMENTINE P SEUDO -W RITINGS ) Clementines is the name given to the ...

Clenock, Maurice

(Or Clynog.) Date of birth unknown; died about 1580. He was b. in Wales and educated at ...

Cleophas

According to the Catholic English versions the name of two persons mentioned in the New ...

Clerestory

A term formerly applied to any window or traceried opening in a church, e.g. in an aisle, ...

Cleric

A person who has been legitimately received into the ranks of the clergy. By clergy in the ...

Clericato, Giovanni

Canonist, born 1633, at Padua ; died 1717. He was of English descent, and the name is variously ...

Clericis Laicos

The initial words of a Bull issued 25 Feb., 1296, by Boniface VIII in response to an earnest ...

Clerk, John

Bishop of Bath and Wells ; date of birth unknown; died 3 January, 1541. He was educated at ...

Clerke, Agnes Mary

See also ELLEN MARY CLERKE . Astronomer, born at Skibbereen, County Cork, Ireland, 10 ...

Clerke, Ellen Mary

Sister of Agnes Mary Clerke, journalist and novelist, b. at Skibbereen, County Cork, Ireland, ...

Clerks Regular

Canonical Status By clerks regular are meant those bodies of men in the Church who by the very ...

Clerks Regular of Our Saviour

A religious congregation instituted in its present form in 1851, at Benoite-Vaux in the Diocese ...

Clerks Regular of the Mother of God of Lucca

Clerks Regular of the Mother of God of Lucca, a congregation founded by the Blessed Giovanni ...

Clermont

(CLERMONT-FERRAND; CLAROMONTENSIS) Comprises the entire department of Puy-de-Dôme and is ...

Cletus, Pope Saint

The second successor of St. Peter . Whether he was the same as Cletus, who is also called ...

Cletus, Pope Saint

This name is only another form for Anacletus, the second successor of St. Peter. It is true ...

Cleveland

The Diocese of Cleveland (Clevelandensis), established 23 April, 1847, comprises all that part of ...

Clichtove, Josse

(Jodocus Clichtovaeus). A theologian, b. 1472 at Nieuport (Flanders); d. 1543 at Chartres ( ...

Clifford, William

( Alias Mansell), divine, d. 30 April, 1670; he was the son of Henry Clifford, by his wife ...

Clifton

(Cliftoniensis). Diocese of England, consisting of Gloucestershire, Somersetshire, and ...

Climent, José

Spanish bishop, b. at Castellon de la Plana (Valencia), 1706; d. there 25 Nov., 1781. ...

Clitherow, Saint Margaret

Martyr, called the "Pearl of York", born about 1556; died 25 March 1586. She was a daughter of ...

Clogher

DIOCESE OF CLOGHER (CLOGHERENSIS) A suffragan of Armagh, Ireland, which comprises the County ...

Cloister

The English equivalent of the Latin word clausura (from claudere , "to shut up"). This word ...

Clonard, School of

Clonard (Irish, Cluain Eraird , or Cluain Iraird , Erard's Meadow) was situated on the ...

Clonfert

(Clonfertensis, in Irish Cluain-fearta Brenainn ). The Diocese of Clonfert, a suffragan see ...

Clonmacnoise, Abbey and School of

Situated on the Shannon, about half way between Athlone and Banagher, King's County, Ireland, ...

Cloths, Altar

The use of altar-cloths goes back to the early centuries of the Church. St. Optatus of Mileve ...

Clotilda, Saint

( French CLOTILDE; German CHLOTHILDE). Queen of the Franks, born probably at Lyons, c. ...

Clouet

The family name of several generations of painters. Jean (Jean the Younger) Born at Tours, ...

Clovesho, Councils of

Clovesho, or Clofeshoch, is notable as the place at which were held several councils of the ...

Clovio, Giorgio

(Also known as Giulio Clovio ) A famous Italian miniaturist, called by Vasari "the unique" ...

Clovis

(CHLODWIG, or CHLODOWECH) Son of Childeric, King of the Salic Franks ; born in the year 466; ...

Cloyne, Diocese of

(Gaelic Cluain-uania , Cave-meadow. Latin Clonensis or Cloynensis .) Comprises the ...

Cluny, Congregation of

(CLUNI, CLUGNI, or CLUGNY) The earliest reform, which became practically a distinct order, ...

Clynn, John

(Or CLYN). Irish Franciscan and annalist, b. about 1300; d., probably, in 1349. His place of ...

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Co 387

Co-Consecrators

Co-consecrators are the bishops who assist the presiding bishop in the act of consecrating a ...

Co-education

The term is now generally reserved to the practice of educating the sexes together; but even in ...

Cobo, Bernabé

Born at Lopera in Spain, 1582; died at Lima, Peru, 9 October, 1657. He went to America in ...

Coccaleo, Viatora

A Capuchin friar, so called from his birthplace, Coccaglio in Lombardy, date of birth unknown; ...

Cochabamba

(COCABAMBENSIS). The city from which this diocese takes its name is the capital of the ...

Cochem, Martin of

A celebrated German theologian, preacher and ascetic writer, born at Cochem, a small town on ...

Cochin, Diocese of

(COCHINENSIS) on the Malabar coast, India. The diocese was erected and constituted a ...

Cochin, Jacques-Denis

A preacher and philanthropist, born in Paris, 1 January, 1726; died there 3 June, 1783. His ...

Cochin, Pierre-Suzanne-Augustin

Born in Paris, 12 Dec., 1823; died at Versailles, 13 March, 1872. He took an early interest in ...

Cochlæus, Johann

(Properly Dobeneck), surnamed Cochlæus (from cochlea , a snail shell) after his birthplace ...

Cocussus

(Cocusus, Cocussus, Cocusus). A titular see of Armenia. It was a Roman station on the road ...

Codex

The name given to a manuscript in leaf form, distinguishing it from a roll. The codex seems to ...

Codex Alexandrinus

A most valuable Greek manuscript of the Old and New Testaments, so named because it was ...

Codex Amiatinus

The most celebrated manuscript of the Latin Vulgate Bible, remarkable as the best witness to ...

Codex Bezae

(CODEX CANTABRIGIENSIS), one of the five most important Greek New Testament manuscripts, and the ...

Codex Ephraemi Rescriptus

(Symbol C). The last in the group of the four great uncial manuscripts of the Greek Bible, ...

Codex Sinaiticus

(The symbol is the Hebrew character Aleph , though Swete and a few other scholars use the ...

Codex Vaticanus

(CODEX B), a Greek manuscript, the most important of all the manuscripts of Holy Scripture . ...

Codrington, Thomas

(Died 1691?), Catholic divine, chiefly known for his attempt to introduce into England the ...

Coeffeteau, Nicolas

Preacher and controversialist, born 1574, at Château-du-Loir, province of Maine, France ; ...

Coelchu

Also COLGA, COLCU (Latin Colcus ) A distinguished Abbot of the School of Clonmacnoise in ...

Coelde, Theodore

(THEODORE OF MÜNSTER; THEODORE OF OSNABRÜCK; DERICK, DEDERICK, or DIETERICH, CÖLDE) ...

Coemgen, Saint

Abbot of Glendalough, Ireland, b. about 498, the date being very obscure; d. 3 June, 618; son ...

Coenred

( Or CENRED, also COENRÆD, COINRED, KENRED, and CHRENRED) King of Mercia (reigned ...

Coeur d'Alêne Indians

A small tribe of Salishan stock formerly ranging along the lake and river of the same name in ...

Coffin, Edward

( Alias HATTON.) An English Jesuit and missionary, born at Exeter, 1570; died 17 April, ...

Coffin, Robert Aston

An ecclesiastical writer and bishop, b. at Brighton, England, 19 July, 1819; d. at Teignmouth, ...

Cogitosus

An Irishman, an author, and a monk of Kildare ; the date and place of his birth and of his ...

Cogolludo, Diego López de

One of the chief historians of Yucatán. His work, the "Historia de Yucatán", which ...

Cohen, Hermann

A Discalced Carmelite (Augustin-Marie of the Blessed Sacrament, generally known as Father ...

Coimbatore, Diocese of

(KOIMBATUR; COIMBATURENSIS). The City of Coimbatore is the capital of the district of ...

Coimbra, Diocese of

(Conimbricensis). In Portugal, suffragan of Braga, in the province of Beira. The cathedral ...

Coimbra, University of

The earliest certain information concerning a university in Portugal dates from 1288, when the ...

Colbert, Jean-Baptiste

I. JEAN-BAPTISTE COLBERT (1619-1683) Marquis de Seignelay, statesman, b. at Rheims, France, 1619; ...

Cole, Henry

A confessor of the Faith, b. at Godshill, Isle of Wight, about 1500; d. in the Fleet Prison, ...

Coleman, Edward

A controversialist, politician, and secretary of the Duchess of York, date of birth unknown; ...

Coleridge, Henry James

A writer and preacher, b. 20 September 1822, in Devonshire, England ; d. at Roehampton, 13 April ...

Colet, John

Dean of St. Paul's Cathedral and founder of St. Paul's School, London ; b. in London, 1467; d. ...

Coleti, Nicola

(COLETTI) Priest and historian, b. at Venice, 1680; d. in the same city, 1765. He studied at ...

Colette, Saint

(Diminutive of NICOLETTA, COLETTA). Founder of Colettine Poor Clares (Clarisses), born 13 ...

Colgan, John

Hagiographer and historian, b. in County Donegal, Ireland, about the beginning of the seventeenth ...

Colima

(COLIMENSIS). The city of Colima, the capital of the State of the same name in Mexico, is ...

Colin, Frédéric-Louis

Superior of the Sulpicians in Canada, b. at Bourges, France, in 1835; d. at Montreal, 27 ...

Colin, Jean-Claude-Marie

A French priest, founder of the Marists, b. at Saint-Bonnet-le-Troncy, now in the Diocese of ...

Coliseum, The

The Coliseum, known as the Flavian Amphitheatre, commenced A.D. 72 by Vespasian, the first of the ...

Collège de France, The

The Collège de France was founded in the interest of higher education by Francis I. He ...

Collado, Diego

A missionary, born in the latter part of the sixteenth century at Miajadas, in the province of ...

Colle de Val d'Elsa

(Collis Hetruscus) Diocese (Collensis), suffragan to Florence. Colle is situated in the ...

Collect

The name now used only for short prayers before the Epistle in the Mass, which occur again at ...

Collectarium

(Sometimes COLLECTARIUS, COLLECTANEUM, ORATIONALE, CAPITULARE), the book which contains the ...

Collections

The offerings of the faithful in their special relation to the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass will ...

Collectivism

The term Collectivism is sometimes employed as a substitute for socialism . It is of later ...

College

( French collège , Italian collegio , Spanish colegio ) The word college , ...

College (in Canon Law)

A collection ( Latin collegium ) of persons united together for a common object so as to ...

College, Apostolic

This term designates The Twelve Apostles as the body of men commissioned by Christ to spread the ...

Colleges, Roman

This article treats of the various colleges in Rome which have been founded under ...

Collegiate

( Latin collegiatus , from collegium ) An adjective applied to those churches and ...

Colman Mac Lenine, Saint

Saint Colman Mac Lenine, founder and patron of the See of Cloyne, born in Munster, c. 510; died ...

Colman, Saint

Saint Colman, one of the patrons of Austria, was also an Irish saint, who, journeying to ...

Colman, Saint Elo

Famed in Irish hagiology. He was founder and first Abbot of Muckamore, and from the fact of ...

Colman, Saint MacCathbad

Famed in Irish hagiology. He was distinguished as MacCathbad, whence Kilmackevat, County Antrim, ...

Colman, Saint, of Dalaradia

Born in Dalaradia, c. 450; date of death uncertain. His feast is celebrated 7 June. He founded ...

Colman, Saint, of Kilmacduagh

Bishop and patron of Kilmacduagh, born at Kiltartan c. 560; died 29 October, 632. He lived for ...

Colman, Saint, of Mayo

Founder of the Abbey and Diocese of Mayo, born in Connacht, c. 605; died 8 August, 676. He ...

Colman, Saint, of Templeshambo

Saint Colman of Templeshambo was a Connacht saint, and has been confounded with the patron of ...

Colman, Walter

Friar Minor andEnglish martyr : date of birth uncertain; died in London, 1645. He came of noble ...

Colmar, Joseph Ludwig

Bishop of Mainz ; born at Strasburg, 22 June, 1760; died at Mainz, 15 Dec., 1818. After his ...

Cologne

(German KÖLN or CÖLN), German city and archbishopric. THE CITY Cologne, in size the ...

Cologne, University of

Though famous all through the Middle Ages for its cathedral and cloister schools and for ...

Colomba of Rieti, Blessed

Born at Rieti in Umbria, Italy, 1467; died at Perugia, 1501. Blessed Colomba of Rieti is always ...

Colombière, Saint Claude de la

Missionary and ascetical writer, born of noble parentage at Saint-Symphorien-d'Ozon, between ...

Colombia

( Republic of Colombia ; formerly United States of Colombia ) Colombia forms the ...

Colombo

The Archdiocese of Colombo, situated on the western seaboard of the Island of Ceylon, includes ...

Colombo, Mateo Realdo

Italian anatomist and discoverer of the pulmonary circulation, b. at Cremona in 1516; d. at ...

Colona, Blessed Margaret

Poor Clare, born in Rome, date uncertain; died there, 20 September, 1284. Her parents died in ...

Colonia

A titular see of Armenia. Procopius (De Ædif., III, iv) informs us that Justinian ...

Colonia

A titular see in Armenia Prima. Colonia should be identified with Kara Hissar, chief town of a ...

Colonna

A celebrated family which played an important rôle in Italy during medieval and ...

Colonna, Egidio

(Ægidius a Colonna) A Scholastic philosopher and theologian, b. about the middle of the ...

Colonna, Giovanni Paolo

Born at Bologna, 1637; died in the same city, 28 November, 1695. After studying under Agostino ...

Colonna, Vittoria

Italian poet, born at Marino, 1490; died at Rome, February 25, 1547. She was the daughter of ...

Colonnade

A number of columns symmetrically arranged in one or more rows. It is termed monostyle when of one ...

Colophon

A titular see of Asia Minor. It was one of the twelve Ionian cities, between Lebedos (ruins ...

Colorado

The thirty-fifth, in point of admission, of the United States of America. It lies between the ...

Colossæ

A titular see of Phrygia in Asia Minor, suppressed in 1894. Little is known about its history. ...

Colossians, Epistle to the

One of the four Captivity Epistles written by St. Paul during his first imprisonment in Rome ...

Colours, Liturgical

By a law of her liturgy the Church directs that the vestments worn by her sacred ministers, ...

Columba of Sens, Saint

Suffered towards the end of the third century, probably under the Emperor Aurelian. She is said ...

Columba of Terryglass, Saint

A son of Crinthainn and a disciple of St. Finnian of Clonard. When the latter was in extremis , ...

Columba, Saint

Abbot of Iona, b. at Garten, County Donegal, Ireland, 7 December, 521; d. 9 June, 597. He ...

Columba, Saint

A Spanish nun, of whom it is related that she was beheaded by the Moors at the monastery of ...

Columbanus, Saint

Abbot of Luxeuil and Bobbio, born in West Leinster, Ireland, in 543; died at Bobbio, Italy, ...

Columbia University (Oregon)

Portland, Oregon Columbia University, formerly known as Portland University, is located on the ...

Columbus, Christopher

(Italian C RISTOFORO C OLOMBO ; Spanish C RISTOVAL C OLON .) Born at Genoa, or on ...

Columbus, Diocese of

The Diocese of Columbus comprises that part of the State of Ohio, south of 40§41', lying ...

Columbus, Knights of

A fraternal and beneficent society of Catholic men, founded in New Haven, Connecticut, 2 ...

Column

In architecture a round pillar, a cylindrical solid body, or a many-sided prism, the body of which ...

Comacchio

(COMACLENSIS) Diocese ; suffragan of Ravenna. Comacchio is a town in the province of Ferrara ...

Comana

A titular see of Asia Minor. According to ancient geographers, Comana was situated in ...

Comayagua

The Diocese of Comayagua, suffragan to Guatemala, includes the entire Republic of Honduras in ...

Combefis, François

Patrologist, b. November, 1605, at Marmande in Guyenne; d. at Paris, 23 March, 1679. He made his ...

Comboni, Daniel

Missionary, b. 15 March, 1831 in Limone San Giovanni near Brescia, Italy ; d. 10 Oct., 1881, at ...

Comellas y Cluet, Antonio

A philosopher, born at Berga, in the Province of Barcelona, 16 Jan., 1832; died there, 3 June, ...

Comgall, Saint

Founder and abbot of the great Irish monastery at Bangor, flourished in the sixth century. The ...

Commandments of God (The Ten Commandments)

Called also simply THE COMMANDMENTS, COMMANDMENTS OF GOD, or THE DECALOGUE (Gr. deka , ten, ...

Commandments of the Church

We shall consider: I. The nature of the Commandments of the Church in general; II. The history of ...

Commemoration (in Liturgy)

The recital of a part of the Office or Mass assigned to a certain feast or day when the whole ...

Commendatory Abbot

An ecclesiastic, or sometimes a layman, who holds an abbey in commendam, that is, who draws its ...

Commendone, Giovanni Francesco

Cardinal and Papal Nuncio, born at Venice, 17 March, 1523; died at Padua, 26 Dec., 1584 After ...

Commentaries on the Bible

"To write a full history of exegesis ", says Farrar, "would require the space of many volumes." ...

Commines, Philippe de

(Also C OMINES or C OMYNES ). French historian and statesman, b. in Flanders probably ...

Commissariat of the Holy Land

In the Order of Friars Minor the territory or district assigned to a commissary, whose duty it ...

Commissary Apostolic

( Latin Commissarius Apostolicus ) A commissary is one who has received power from a ...

Commissions, Ecclesiastical

Ecclesiastical Commissions are bodies of ecclesiastics juridically established and to whom are ...

Commodianus

A Christian poet, the date of whose birth is uncertain, but generally placed at about the ...

Commodus

(M ARCUS A URELIUS C OMMODUS A NTONINUS ). Roman Emperor, born 161; died at Rome, 31 ...

Common Life, Brethren of the

A community founded by Geert De Groote , of rich burgher stock, born at Deventer in Gelderland ...

Common Prayer, Book of

I. HISTORY On 21 January, 1549, the first Act of Uniformity was passed imposing upon the whole ...

Common Sense, Philosophy of

The term common sense designates (1) a special faculty, the sensus communis of the ...

Commune, Martyrs of the Paris

The secular priests and the religious who were murdered in Paris, in May 1871, on account of ...

Communicatio Idiomatum

("Communication of Idioms"). A technical expression in the theology of the Incarnation. It ...

Communion Antiphon

The term Communion ( Communio ) is used, not only for the reception of the Holy Eucharist, but ...

Communion Bench

An adaptation of the sanctuary guard or altar-rail. Standing in front of this barrier, in a ...

Communion of Children

In order to get some insight into the historical aspect of this subject it will be useful to dwell ...

Communion of Saints

( communo sanctorum , a fellowship of, or with, the saints). The doctrine expressed in the ...

Communion of the Sick

This differs from ordinary Communion as to the class of persons to whom it is administered, as to ...

Communion Rail

The railing which guards the sanctuary and separates the latter from the body of the church. It ...

Communion under Both Kinds

Communion under one kind is the reception of the Sacrament of the Eucharist under the species ...

Communion, Frequent

Without specifying how often the faithful should communicate, Christ simply bids us eat His Flesh ...

Communion, Holy

By Communion is meant the actual reception of the Sacrament of the Eucharist. Ascetic writers ...

Communism

( Latin communis .) In its more general signification communism refers to any social system ...

Comnena, Anna

Byzantine historian, eldest daughter of Alexius Comnenus, Emperor of Constantinople (1081-1118). ...

Como

DIOCESE OF COMO (COMENSIS). Como is an important town in the province of Lombardy (Northern ...

Compagnie du Saint-Sacrement

A Catholic secret society which included among its members many Catholic celebrities of the ...

Compensation

Compensation, as considered in the present article denotes the price paid for human exertion or ...

Compensation, Occult

An extra-legal manner of recovering from loss or damage; the taking, by stealth and on one's ...

Competency, Privilege of

( Latin Privilegium Competentiœ ) (1) The competency of a cleric means his right ...

Compiégne, Teresian Martyrs of

Guillotined at the Place du Trône Renversé (now called Place de la Nation), Paris, 17 ...

Compline

The term Complin (Compline) is derived from the Latin completorium , complement, and has been ...

Compostela

A famous city of Spain, situated on an eminence between the Sar (the Sars of Pomponius Mela) ...

Compromise (in Canon Law)

Compromise, in a general sense, is a mutual promise or contract of two parties in controversy to ...

Conal, Saint

(Or Conall). An Irish bishop who flourished in the second half of the fifth century and ...

Conan, Saint

Bishop of the Isle of Man, died January, 684; an Irish missionary, also known as Mochonna. He ...

Concelebration

Concelebration is the rite by which several priests say Mass together, all consecrating the ...

Concepción

(SANCTISSIMÆ CONCEPTIONIS DE CHILE) Located in the Republic of Chile, suffragan to ...

Conceptionists

A branch of the Order of Saint Clare, founded by Beatriz de Silva. Isabel, the daughter of Edward, ...

Conceptualism, Nominalism, Realism

These terms are used to designate the theories that have been proposed as solutions of one of the ...

Conciliation, Industrial

Industrial Conciliation is the discussion and adjustment of mutual differences by employers and ...

Concina, Daniello

Dominican preacher, controversialist and theologian, b. at Clauzetto or San Daniele, small ...

Conclave

[ NOTE: For current procedures regarding the conclave, see Pope John Paul II's 1996 Apostolic ...

Concordances of the Bible

Concordances of the Bible are verbal indexes to the Bible , or lists of Biblical words arranged ...

Concordat

Definition Canonists and publicists do not agree about the nature of a concordat and, ...

Concordat of 1801, The French

This name is given to the convention of the 26th Messidor, year IX (July 16, 1802), whereby Pope ...

Concordia, Diocese of

(CONCORDIA VENETA, or JULIA; CONCORDIENSIS). Suffragan of Venice. Concordia is an ancient ...

Concordia, Diocese of

(CONCORDIENSIS IN AMERICA.) The Diocese of Concordia was erected 2 August, 1887, and is ...

Concubinage

At the present day, the state -- more or less permanent -- of a man and woman living together in ...

Concupiscence

In its widest acceptation, concupiscence is any yearning of the soul for good; in its strict ...

Concursus

Concursus is a special competitive examination prescribed in canon law for all aspirants to ...

Condamine, Charles-Marie de la

Explorer and physicist, b. at Paris, 28 January, 1701; d. there 4 February, 1774. After a brief ...

Condillac, Ettiene Bonnot de

A French philosopher, born at Grenoble, 30 September, 1715; died near Beaugency (Loiret), 3 ...

Condition

( Latin conditio , from condo , to bring, or put, together; sometimes, on account of a ...

Conecte, Thomas

Carmelite reformer, b. at Rennes towards the end of the fourteenth century; d. at Rome, 1433. ...

Conferences, Ecclesiastical

Ecclesiastical Conferences are meetings of clerics for the purpose of discussing, in general, ...

Confession

( Latin confessio ). Originally used to designate the burial-place of a confessor or martyr ...

Confession, Lay

This article does not deal with confession by laymen but with that made to laymen, for the ...

Confession, Sacrament of

Penance is a sacrament of the New Law instituted by Christ in which forgiveness of sins ...

Confession, Seal of

In the "Decretum" of the Gratian who compiled the edicts of previous councils and the principles ...

Confessor

(1) Etymology and primitive meaning The word confessor is derived from the Latin confiteri , ...

Confirmation

A sacrament in which the Holy Ghost is given to those already baptized in order to make them ...

Confiteor

The Confiteor.(so called from the first word, confiteor , I confess) is a general confession of ...

Confraternity (Sodality)

( Latin confraternitas , confratria ) A confraternity or sodality is a voluntary ...

Confraternity of Christian Doctrine

An association established at Rome in 1562 for the purpose of giving religions instruction. Till ...

Confucianism

By Confucianism is meant the complex system of moral, social, political, and religious teaching ...

Congo

(CONGO INDEPENDENT STATE AND CONGO MISSIONS) [EDITOR'S NOTE: The following account of the Congo ...

Congregatio de Auxiliis

A commission established by Pope Clement VIII to settle the theological controversy regarding ...

Congregational Singing

In his Instruction on sacred music , commonly referred to as the Motu Proprio (22 Nov., 1903), ...

Congregationalism

The retention by the Anglican State Church of the prelatical form of government and of many ...

Congregations, Roman

Certain departments have been organized by the Holy See at various times to assist it in the ...

Congresses, Catholic

One of the remarkable and important manifestations of the social and religious life of the ...

Congrua

Congrua (i.e. CONGRUA PORTIO), a canonical term to designate the lowest sum proper for the yearly ...

Congruism

( congrua , suitable, adapted) Congruism is the term by which theologians denote a theory ...

Conimbricenses

(Or Collegium Conimbricenses). The name by which Jesuits of the University of Coimbra in ...

Coninck, Giles de

(Also called Regius). Jesuit theologian, b. 20 Dec., 1571, at Bailleul in French Flanders ; ...

Connecticut

This State, comprising an area of substantially 5000 square miles, was one of the thirteen ...

Connolly, John

Second Bishop of New York, U.S.A. b. at Slane, Co. Meath, Ireland, 1750; d. New York, 6 ...

Conon, Pope

Date of birth unknown; d., after a long illness, 21 September, 687. The son, seemingly, of an ...

Conrad of Ascoli, Blessed

Friar Minor and missionary, b. at Ascoli in the family of Milliano and from his earliest years ...

Conrad of Hochstadt

(CONRAD OF HOSTADEN) Archbishop of Cologne and Imperial Elector (1238-1261), and son of ...

Conrad of Leonberg

(Leontorius) A Cistercian monk and Humanist, b. at Leonberg in Swabia in 1460; d. at ...

Conrad of Marburg

Confessor of Saint Elizabeth of Thuringia and papal inquisitor, b. at or near Marburg, ...

Conrad of Offida, Blessed

Friar Minor, b. at Offida, a little town in the Order of Friars Minor at Ascoli, and was making ...

Conrad of Piacenza, Saint

Hermit of the Third Order of St. Francis, date of birth uncertain; died at Noto in Sicily, ...

Conrad of Saxony

(Also called CONRADUS SAXO, CONRAD OF BRUNSWICK, or CONRADUS HOLYINGER). Friar Minor and ...

Conrad of Urach

Cardinal-Bishop of Porto and Santa Rufina ; born about 1180; d. 1227. At an early age he became ...

Conrad of Utrecht

Bishop; born in Swabia at an unknown date ; killed at Utrecht, 14 April, 1099. Before becoming ...

Conradin of Bornada

(Or CONRADIN OF BRESCIA) Dominican preacher, b. in the latter part of the fourteenth century; ...

Conry, Florence

Or Florence Conroy; in Irish Flaithri O'Maolconaire (O'Mulconry). Archbishop of Tuam, ...

Consalvi, Ercole

Cardinal and statesman, b. in Rome, 8 June, 1757; d. there, 24 January, 1824. Family His ...

Consanguinity (in Canon Law)

Consanguinity is a diriment impediment of marriage as far as the fourth degree of kinship ...

Conscience

I. THE NAME In English we have done with a Latin word what neither the Latins nor the French have ...

Conscience, Examination of

By this term is understood a review of one's past thoughts, words and actions for the purpose of ...

Conscience, Hendrik

A Flemish novelist, b. at Antwerp, 3 December, 1812; d. at Brussels, 10 September, 1883. His ...

Consciousness

( Latin conscientia ; Ger. Bewusstsein ) cannot, strictly speaking, be defined. In its widest ...

Consecration

Consecration, in general, is an act by which a thing is separated from a common and profane to a ...

Consent (in Canon Law)

Consent is the deliberate agreement required of those concerned in legal transactions in order to ...

Consentius

The name of a fifth-century Gallo-Roman family, three of whose representatives are known in ...

Conservator

(From Latin conservare ) A Conservator is a judge delegated by the pope to defend certain ...

Consistory, Papal

I. DEFINITION During the Roman imperial epoch the term consistorium ( Latin con-sistere , to ...

Constable, Cuthbert

(Formerly TUNSTALL) Date of birth uncertain; d. 27 March, 1746. He was the son of Francis ...

Constable, John

( Alias Lacey). Controversialist (pen-name Clerophilus Alethes), b. in Lincolnshire, 10 ...

Constance

(Latin Constantia , German Konstanz or Constanz , Czechic name Kostnitz ). ...

Constance, Council of

A (partly) ecumenical council held at Constance, now in the Grand Duchy of Baden, from 5 ...

Constantia

A titular see of Arabia and suffragan of Bostra. It figures in Hierocles' "Synecdemus" about ...

Constantine (Cirta)

DIOCESE OF CONSTANTINE (CONSTANTINIANA). Comprises the present arrondissement of Constantine in ...

Constantine Africanus

A medieval medical writer and teacher; born c. 1015; died c. 1087. His name, Africanus, comes ...

Constantine the Great

Life His coins give his name as M., or more frequently as C., Flavius Valerius Constantinus. ...

Constantine, Donation of

( Latin, Donatio Constantini ). By this name is understood, since the end of the Middle ...

Constantine, Pope

Consecrated 25 March, 708; d. 9 April, 715; a Syrian, the son of John, and "a remarkably affable ...

Constantinople

(Greek Konstantinoupolis ; city of Constantine) Capital, formerly of the Byzantine, now of ...

Constantinople, Council of

In the summer of 382 a council of the oriental bishops, convoked by Theodosius, met in the ...

Constantinople, Council of

In 754 the Iconoclast Emperor Constantine V called in the imperial city a council of 338 ...

Constantinople, Council of, in Trullo

This particular council of Constantinople, held in 692 under Justinian II, is generally known as ...

Constantinople, Councils of

For the three Photian synods of 861 (deposition of Ignatius), 867 (attempted deposition of ...

Constantinople, Councils of

In 1639 and 1672 councils were held by the Orthodox Greeks at Constantinople condemnatory of the ...

Constantinople, First Ecumenical Council of

(SECOND GENERAL COUNCIL.) This council was called in May, 381, by Emperor Theodosius, to ...

Constantinople, Fourth Ecumenical Council of

(EIGHTH GENERAL COUNCIL.) The Eighth General Council was opened, 5 October, 869, in the ...

Constantinople, Second Ecumenical Council of

(FIFTH GENERAL COUNCIL). This council was held at Constantinople (5 May-2 June, 553), having ...

Constantinople, The Rite of

( Also BYZANTINE RITE.) The Liturgies, Divine Office, forms for the administration of ...

Constantinople, Third Ecumenical Council of

(SIXTH GENERAL COUNCIL.) The Sixth General Council was summoned in 678 by Emperor Constantine ...

Constantius, Flavius Julius

Roman emperor (337-361), born in Illyria, 7 Aug., 317; died at the Springs of Mopsus (Mopsokrene ...

Constitutions, Ecclesiastical

The term constitution denotes, in general, the make-up of a body, either physical or moral. ...

Constitutions, Papal

(Latin constituere , to establish, to decree.) Papal Constitutions are ordinations issued ...

Consubstantiation

This heretical doctrine is an attempt to hold the Real Presence of Christ in the Holy ...

Consultors, Diocesan

Diocesan consultors are a certain number of priests in each diocese of the United States who ...

Contant de la Molette, Philippe du

Theologian and Biblical scholar, born at Côte-Saint-André, in Dauphiné, ...

Contarini, Gasparo

Venetian statesman and cardinal, born 16 October, 1483, of an ancient and noble family in ...

Contarini, Giovanni

Italian painter of the Venetian School, born at Venice about 1549; died in 1605. Contarini ...

Contemplation

The idea of contemplation is so intimately connected with that of mystical theology that one ...

Contemplative Life

A life ordered in view of contemplation ; a way of living especially adapted to lead to and ...

Contenson, Vincent

Dominican theologian and preacher, born at Altivillare (Gers), Diocese of Condon, France, 1641; ...

Continence

Continence may be defined as abstinence from even the licit gratifications of marriage. It is a ...

Contingent

( Latin contingere , to happen) Aside from its secondary and more obvious meaning (as, for ...

Contract

(Latin contractus ; Old French contract ; Modern French contrat ; Italian contratto ). ...

Contract, The Social

Du Contrat Social, ou Principes du droit politique , is the title of a work written by J.J. ...

Contractus, Hermann

(Herimanus Augiensis, Hermann von Reichenau ). Chronicler, mathematician, and poet; b. 18 ...

Contrition

( Latin contritio --a breaking of something hardened). In Holy Writ nothing is more common ...

Contrition, Imperfect

Attrition or Imperfect Contrition (Latin attero , "to wear away by rubbing"; p. part. ...

Contumacy (in Canon Law)

Contumacy, or contempt of court, is an obstinate disobedience of the lawful orders of a court. ...

Contzen, Adam

Economist and exegete, b. in 1573 (according to Sommervogel in 1575), at Montjoie in the Dutchy ...

Convent

( Latin conventus ). Originally signified an assembly of Roman citizens in the provinces for ...

Convent Schools (Great Britain)

Convent education is treated here not historically but as it is at the present day, and, by the ...

Conventual and Chapter Mass

As a general rule, churches in which the Divine office is to be said publicly every day must also ...

Conventuals, Order of Friars Minor

This is one of the three separate bodies, forming with the Friars Minor and the Capuchins what ...

Conversano

DIOCESE OF CONVERSANO (CUPERSANENSIS) Suffragan to Bari. Conversano, situated in the province ...

Conversi

Lay brothers in a religious order. The term was originally applied to those who, in adult life, ...

Conversion

(From the classical Latin converto, depon. convertor , whence conversio , change, etc.). ...

Convocation of the English Clergy

The technical name given in the Church of England to what corresponds in some respects to a ...

Conwell, Henry

Second Bishop of Philadelphia, U.S.A. b. at Moneymore, County Derry, Ireland, in 1745; d. at ...

Conza

(C OMPSANA ) Archdiocese with the perpetual administration of Campagna ( Campaniensis ). ...

Cooktown

The Vicariate Apostolic of Cooktown comprises North Queensland, Australia, from 16°30' ...

Coombes, William Henry

Born 8 May, 1767; died 15 November, 1850. He passed his early years at Meadgate, Somersetshire, ...

Copacavana

(Also called COPACABANA) A village of about four hundred people, Indians chiefly, on the shore ...

Cope

(Known in Latin as pluviale or cappa ), a vestment which may most conveniently be described ...

Copenhagen, University of

It was founded by a Bull which Sixtus IV issued 19 June, 1475, at the request of King Christian ...

Copernicus, Nicolaus

Latinized form of Niclas Kopernik, the name of the founder of the heliocentric planetary theory; ...

Coppée, François Edouard Joachim

Poet, dramatist and novelist, b. at Paris, 26 January, 1842; d. 23 May, 1908. His father, a clerk ...

Coptic Literature

Since the publication of the article EGYPT, under which Coptic literature was treated, important ...

Coptic Persecutions

(ACCORDING TO GREEK AND LATIN SOURCES) During the first two centuries the Church of Alexandria ...

Coptic Versions of the Bible

DIALECTS The Coptic language is now recognized in four principal dialects, Bohairic (formerly ...

Coptos

A titular see of Upper Egypt. It was the chief town of the Nomos of Harawî (Two Hawks), ...

Coquart, Claude-Godefroi

Missionary and army chaplain, b. in Pays de Caux, France, 20 February, 1706; d. at Chicoutini, ...

Coracesium

A titular see of Asia Minor. According to Ptolemy (V, 5, 3), this town was not in Cilicia ...

Corbie, Ambrose

(Corby or Corbington). Born near Durham, 7 Dec., 1604; d. at Rome, 11 April, 1649. He was ...

Corbie, Monastery of

(Also CORBEY) A Benedictine abbey in Picardy, in the Diocese of Amiens, dedicated to Sts. ...

Corbie, Venerable Ralph

(Called at times Corrington). Brother of Ambrose Corbie ; martyr - priest, b. 25 March, ...

Corbinian

Bishop of Freising, in Bavaria, born about 680 at Chatres near Melun, France ; died 8 ...

Corcoran, James Andrew

Theologian, editor, and Orientalist, b. at Charleston, South Carolina, U.S.A. 30 March, 1820; ...

Corcoran, Michael

Soldier, b. at Carrowkeel, County Sligo, Ireland, 21 September, 1827; d. at Fairfax Court House, ...

Cord, Confraternities of the

Pious associations of the faithful, the members of which wear a cord or cincture in honour of ...

Cordara, Guilo Cesare

Historian and littérateur , b. at Alessandra in Piedmont, Italy, 14 Dec., 1704; died ...

Cordell, Charles

English missionary priest, b. 5 October, 1720; d. at Newcastle-on-Tyne, 26 January, 1791. He was ...

Cordier, Balthasar

(Corderius) Exegete and editor of patristic works, b. at Antwerp, 7 June, 1592; d. at Rome, ...

Cordova

DIOCESE OF CORDOVA (CORDUBENSIS) Diocese in Spain, formerly suffragan of Toledo, since 1851 ...

Cordova

(CORDUBENSIS IN AMERICA). Diocese in the Argentine Republic, suffragan of Buenos Aires. It was ...

Cordova, Juan de

Born 1503, at Cordova in Andalusia, Spain, of noble parents ; d. 1595 at Oaxaca, Mexico. It ...

Cordova, Pedro de

Born at Cordova, Andalusia, Spain, about 1460; died on the Island of Santo Domingo, 1525. He ...

Core, Dathan, and Abiron

Leaders of a revolt against Moses and Aaron ( Numbers 16 ). Core was the son of Isaar, of ...

Corea

Vicariate apostolic, coextensive with the Empire of Corea; it was created a distinct vicariate ...

Corfu

ARCHDIOCESE OF CORFU. Corfu is one of the Ionian Islands, at the entrance of the Adriatic, ...

Coria

(C AURIA ; C AURIENSIS ) Diocese in Spain, suffragan of Toledo; it includes nearly the ...

Corinth

(CORINTHUS) A titular archiepiscopal see of Greece. The origin of Corinth belongs to ...

Corinthians, Epistles to the

INTRODUCTORY St. Paul Founds the Church at Corinth St. Paul's first visit to Europe is ...

Coriolis, Gaspard-Gustave de

French mathematician, born at Paris, in 1792; died in the same city, 1843. He entered the Ecole ...

Cork, Diocese of

(Corcagia, Corcagiensis). In Ireland, suffragan of Cashel. St. Finbarr was the founder and ...

Cork, School of

The monastic School of Cork had a wide reputation, especially in the seventh and eighth ...

Corker, Maurus

An English Benedictine, born in 1636 in Yorkshire; died 22 December, 1715, at Paddington near ...

Cormac MacCuilenan

(836-908). An Irish bishop and King of Cashel, Cormac MacCquilenan was of the race of ...

Cornaro, Elena Lucrezia Piscopia

A learned Italian woman of noble descent, born at Venice, 5 June, 1646; died at Padua, 26 July, ...

Corneille, Jean-Baptiste

French painter, etcher, and engraver, b. at Paris between 1646 and 1649; d. there, 12 April, ...

Corneille, Michel, the Elder

French painter, etcher, and engraver, b. in Orléans about 1601; d. at Paris, 1664. He was ...

Corneille, Michel, the Younger

French painter, etcher and engraver, b. in Paris in 1642; d. at the Gobelins manufactory at ...

Corneille, Pierre

A French dramatist, b. at Rouen, 6 June, 1606; d. at Paris, 1 October, 1684. His father, Pierre ...

Cornelisz, Jacob

Also called Jacob van Amsterdam or van Oostzann, and at times confounded with a Walter van ...

Cornelius

( Kornelios ) A centurion of the Italic cohort, whose conversion at Cæsarea with his ...

Cornelius and Companions, Ven. John

John Cornelius (called also Mohun) was born of Irish parents at Bodmin, in Cornwall, on the ...

Cornelius Cornelii a Lapide

(Cornelis Cornelissen van den Steen) Flemish Jesuit and exegete, b. at Bocholt, in Flemish ...

Cornelius, Peter

Later when ennobled, VON C ORNELIUS Born at Düsseldorf, 23 September, 1783; died at ...

Cornelius, Pope

Martyr (251 to 253). We may accept the statement of the Liberian catalogue that he reigned two ...

Cornely, Karl Josef Rudolph

German biblical scholar and Jesuit, b. 19 April, 1830, at Breyell in Germany ; d. at Treves, 3 ...

Corner Stone

(Foundation Stone) A rite entitled "De benedictione et impositione Primarii Lapidis pro ...

Cornet, Nicolas

French theologian, born at Amiens, 1572; died at Paris, 1663. He studied at the Jesuit college ...

Cornice

A cornice is the uppermost division of the entablature, the representative of the roof, of an ...

Cornillon, Abbey of

Founded by Albero, Bishop of Liège, in 1124, three years after St. Norbert had formed ...

Cornoldi, Giovanni Maria

Professor, author, and preacher, born at Venice, 29 Sept., 1822; d. at Rome, 18 Jan., 1892. He ...

Coronado, Francisco Vasquez de

Explorer, b. at Salamanca, Spain, 1510; d. in Mexico, 1553. He went to Mexico before 1538, and is ...

Coronation

The subject will be treated under the following headings: (I) The Emperors at Constantinople; ...

Coronel, Gregorio Nuñez

A distinguished theologian, writer, and preacher, b. in Portugal, about 1548; d. about 1620. At ...

Coronel, Juan

Born 1569, in Spain ; died 1651, at Mérida, Mexico. He made his academic studies at the ...

Corporal

(From Latin corpus , body). A square white linen cloth, now usually somewhat smaller than ...

Corporation

( Latin corpus , a body) A corporation is an association recognized by civil law and ...

Corporation Act of 1661

The Corporation Act of 1661 belongs to the general category of test acts, designed for the ...

Corpus Christi, Feast of

(Feast of the Body of Christ) This feast is celebrated in the Latin Church on the Thursday ...

Corpus Juris Canonici

I. DEFINITION The term corpus here denotes a collection of documents; corpus juris , a ...

Correction, Fraternal

Fraternal correction is here taken to mean the admonishing of one's neighbor by a private ...

Correctories

Correctories are the text-forms of the Latin Vulgate resulting from the critical emendation as ...

Corrigan, Michael

Third Archbishop of New York, b. 13 August, 1839, at Newark, New Jersey , d. at New York, 5 ...

Corrigan, Sir Dominic

Physician, b. 1802, in Dublin, Ireland ; d. there, 1880; distinguished for his original ...

Corsica

The third island of the Mediterranean in point of size, only Sicily and Sardinia being of ...

Corsini, Saint Andrew

Of the illustrious Corsini family ; born in Florence, in 1302; died 1373. Wild and dissolute in ...

Cortés, Hernando

Conqueror of Mexico, born at Medellin in Spain c. 1485; died at Castilleja de la Cuesta near ...

Cortese, Giovanni Andrea

(His name in the Benedictine Order was Gregorio). Cardinal and monastic reformer, b. 1483 ...

Cortona

DIOCESE OF CORTONA (CORTONENSIS) Immediately subject to the Holy See . Cortona is a small ...

Corvey, Abbey of

(Also called N EW C ORBIE ) A Benedictine monastery in the Diocese of Paderborn, in ...

Corycus

A titular see of Cilicia Trachæa in Asia Minor. It was the port of Seleucia, where, in ...

Corydallus

A titular see of Asia Minor. Korydallos, later also Korydalla, was a city in Lycia. In Roman ...

Cosa, Juan de la

Navigator and cartographer, according to tradition b. in 1460 at Sta. Maria del Puerto (Santona), ...

Cosenza

(COSENTINA). An archdiocese immediately subject to the Holy See. Cosenza is a city in the ...

Cosgrove, Henry

Second Bishop of Davenport, Iowa, U.S.A. born 19 December, 1834, at Williamsport, ...

Cosin, Edmund

(The name is also written COSYN.) Vice-Chancellor of Cambridge University , England. The ...

Cosmas

(Called HAGIOPOLITES or COSMAS OF JERUSALEM). A hymn-writer of the Greek Church in the eighth ...

Cosmas and Damian, Saints

Early Christian physicians and martyrs whose feast is celebrated on 27 September. They were ...

Cosmas Indicopleustes

(COSMAS THE INDIAN VOYAGER) A Greek traveller and geographer of the first half of the sixth ...

Cosmas of Prague

Bohemian historian, b. about 1045, at Prague, Bohemia ; d. there, 21 October, 1125. He belonged ...

Cosmati Mosaic

(Greek kosmos ) A peculiar style of inlaid ornamental mosaic introduced into the ...

Cosmogony

By this term is understood an account of how the universe ( cosmos ) came into being ( gonia ...

Cosmology

ORIGIN OF COSMOLOGY METHOD DIVISION OF COSMOLOGY The first cause of the material ...

Cossa, Francesco

Known sometimes as DEL COSSA, Italian painter of the school of Ferrara, b. about 1430; d. ...

Costa Rica

A narrow isthmus between Panama in the east and the Republic of Nicaragua in the north, the ...

Costa, Lorenzo

Ferrarese painter, b. at Ferrara in 1460; d. at Mantua in 1535. He is believed to have been a ...

Costadoni, Giovanni Domenico

Frequently known as Dom Anselmo, his name in religion, an Italian Camaldolese monk, historian, and ...

Coster, Francis

Theologian, born at Mechlin, 16 June, 1532 (1531); died at Brussels, 16 December, 1619. He was ...

Costume, Clerical

To discuss the question of ecclesiastical costume in any detail would be impossible in an ...

Cosway, Maria

Miniature-painter, born in Florence, Italy, 1759; died at Lodi, 5 January, 1838. Her maiden name ...

Cotelier, Jean-Baptiste

(COTELERIUS) Patristic scholar and theologian, born December, 1629, at Nîmes ; died 19 ...

Cotenna

A titular see of Asia Minor. Strabo (XII, 570) mentions the Katenneis in Pisidia adjoining ...

Cotiæum

A titular see of Asia Minor. Kotiaion according to its coins, better Cotyaion, the city of ...

Coton, Pierre

A celebrated French Jesuit, born 7 March, 1564, at Néronde in Forez; died 19 March, 1626, ...

Cotrone

(COTRONENSIS) Cotrone is a suffragan diocese of Reggio. Cotrone is a city of the province of ...

Cottam, Blessed Thomas

Martyr, born 1549, in Lancashire; executed at Tyburn, 30 May, 1582. His parents, Laurence cottam ...

Coucy, Robert De

A medieval French master-builder and son of a master-builder of the same name, born at Reims ...

Coudert, Frederick René

Born in New York, 1 March, 1832; died at Washington, D. C., 20 December, 1903. He graduated from ...

Councils, Ecumenical

This subject will be treated under the following heads: Definition Classification ...

Councils, General

This subject will be treated under the following heads: Definition Classification ...

Councils, Plenary

A canonical term applied to various kinds of ecclesiastical synods. The word itself, derived from ...

Counsels, Evangelical

( Or COUNSELS OF PERFECTION). Christ in the Gospels laid down certain rules of life and ...

Counter-Reformation, The

The subject will be considered under the following heads: I. Significance of the term II. Low ebb ...

Counterpoint

(Latin contrapunctum ; German Kontrapunkt ; French contrepoint ; Italian contrapunto ). ...

Court (in Scripture)

I. OPEN SPACE The word court , in the English Bible, corresponds to the Hebrew haçer ...

Courtenay, William

Archbishop of Canterbury, born in the parish of St. Martin's, Exeter, England, c. 1342; died ...

Courts, Ecclesiastical

I. JUDICIAL POWER IN THE CHURCH In instituting the Church as a perfect society, distinct from ...

Cousin, Germain, Saint

Born in 1579 of humble parents at Pibrac, a village about ten miles from Toulouse ; died in ...

Cousin, Jean

French painter, sculptor, etcher, engraver, and geometrician, born at Soucy, near Sens, 1500; ...

Coussemaker, Charles-Edmond-Henride

French historian of music, b. at Bailleul, department of Nord, France, 19 April, 1805; d. at ...

Coustant, Pierre

A learned Benedictine of the Congregation of Saint-Maur, b. at Compiègne, France, 30 ...

Coustou, Nicholas

French sculptor, b. at Lyons, 9 January, 1658; d. at Paris, 1 May, 1733. He was the son of a ...

Coutances

Diocese of Coutances (Constantiensis) The Diocese of Coutances comprises the entire department of ...

Couturier, Louis-Charles

Abbot of the Benedictine monastery of Saint-Pierre at Solesmes and President of the French ...

Covarruvias, Diego

(Or COVARRUBIAS Y LEYVA) Born in Toledo, Spain, 25 July, 1512; died in Madrid, 27 Sept., ...

Covenant, Ark of the

The Hebrew aron , by which the Ark of the Covenant is expressed, does not call to the mind, as ...

Covenanters

The name given to the subscribers (practically the whole Scottish nation) of the two Covenants, ...

Covetousness

Generally, an unreasonable desire for what we do not possess. In this sense, it differs from ...

Covington

(COVINGTONENSIS) Comprises that part of Kentucky, U. S. A., lying east of the Kentucky ...

Cowl

( koukoulion, cucullus, cuculla, cucullio. -- Ducange, "Gloss.", s.v.). A hood worn in ...

Coxcie, Michiel

Flemish painter, imitator of Raphael, known as the Flemish Raphael ; b. at Mechlin, 1499; d. ...

Coysevox, Charles-Antoine

A distinguished French sculptor, b. at Lyons, 29 Sept., 1640; d. at Paris, 10 Oct., 1720; he ...

Cozza, Lorenzo

Friar Minor, cardinal, and theologian, b. at San Lorenzo near Bolsena, 31 March, 1654; d. at Rome, ...

Cozza-Luzi, Giuseppe

Italian savant, Abbot of the Basilian monastery of Grottaferrata near Rome ; b. 24 Dec., ...

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Crépieul, François

Jesuit missionary in Canada and vicar Apostolic for the Montagnais Indians; b. at Arras, ...

Crétin, Joseph

First Bishop of St. Paul, Minnesota, U.S.A. b. at Montluel, department of Ain, France, 19 ...

Crétineau-Joly, Jacques

Journalist and historian; b. at Fontenay-le-Comte, Vendee, France, 23 Sept., 1803; d. at Vincennes ...

Crèvecoeur, Hector St. John de

A French agriculturist, b. at Caen, France, 1731; d. at Sarcelles, near Paris, 1813. At the age of ...

Cracow

( Polish Krakow ; Latin Cracoviensis ). The Prince-Bishopric that comprises the western ...

Cracow, The University of

The first documentary evidence regarding the scheme that King Casimir the Great conceived of ...

Craigie, Pearl Mary Teresa

Better known, under the pseudonym which first won her fame, as JOHN OLIVER HOBBES. English ...

Crashaw, Richard

Poet, Cambridge scholar and convert ; d. 1649. The date of his birth is uncertain. All that ...

Crasset, Jean

Ascetical writer, b. at Dieppe, France, 3 January, 1618; d. at Paris, 4 January, 1692. He entered ...

Craven, Augustus, Mrs.

(PAULINE-MARIE-ARMANDE-AGLAE-FERRON DE LA FERRONNAYS). Born 12 April, 1808, in London ; died ...

Crawford, Francis Marion

Novelist, b. of American parents at Bagni di Lucca, Italy, 2 Aug., 1854; died at his home near ...

Crayer, Gaspar de

Flemish painter, b. at Antwerp, 1582; d. at Ghent, 1669. He was a pupil of Raphael van Coxcie, ...

Creagh, Richard

Archbishop of Armagh, Ireland, b. at Limerick early in the sixteenth century; d. in the Tower ...

Creation

(Latin creatio .) I. DEFINITION Like other words of the same ending, the term creation ...

Creation, Six Days of

Hexaemeron signifies a term of six days, or, technically, the history of the six days' work of ...

Creationism

( Latin creatio ). (1) In the widest sense, the doctrine that the material of the universe ...

Credence

(Or Credence-Table). A small table of wood, marble, or other suitable material placed within ...

Credi, Lorenzo di

Florentine painter, b. at Florence, 1459; d. there, 1537. Vasari gives his family name as ...

Cree

(A contraction of Cristino or Kenisteno, their Ojibwa name, of uncertain meaning; they commonly ...

Creed

(Latin credo , I believe). In general, a form of belief. The work, however, as applied to ...

Creed, Apostles'

A formula containing in brief statements, or "articles," the fundamental tenets of Christian ...

Creed, Liturgical Use of

The public use of creeds began in connection with baptism, in the Traditio and Redditio ...

Creed, Nicene

As approved in amplified form at the Council of Constantinople (381), it is the profession of the ...

Creeks

An important confederacy of Indian tribes and tribal remnants, chiefly of Muskogian stock, ...

Creighton University

An institution located at Omaha, Nebraska, U.S.A. and conducted by the Jesuit Fathers. It ...

Crelier, Henri-Joseph

Swiss Catholic priest, Hebrew scholar and Biblical exegete ; b. at Bure, 16 October, 1816; d. at ...

Crema, Diocese of

(CREMENSIS.) Suffragan to Milan. Crema is a ciy of the province of Cremona, Lombardy, ...

Cremation

I. HISTORY The custom of burning the bodies of the dead dates back to very early times. The ...

Cremona

DIOCESE OF CREMONA (CREMONENSIS) Suffragan of Milan. Cremona is a city (31,661 in 1901) in ...

Crescens

Crescens, a companion of St. Paul during his second Roman captivity, appears but once in the New ...

Crescentia, Modestus, and Vitus, Saints

According to the legend, martyrs under Diocletian ; feast, 15 June. The earliest testimony for ...

Crescentius

The name of several leaders of the Roman aristocracy in the tenth century, during their ...

Crescimbeni, Giovanni Mario

Italian historian of literature, chronicler, and poet, b. in Macerata, 9 Oct., 1663; d. 8 March ...

Cresconius

(Or CRISCONIUS) A Latin canonist of uncertain date and place, flourished probably in the ...

Cressy, Hugh Paulinus Serenus

Doctor of Theology and English Benedictine monk, b. at Thorpe-Salvin, Yorkshire, about 1605; d. ...

Creswell, Joseph

( vere Arthur) Controversialist, b. 1557 of Yorkshire stock in London ; d. about 1623. His ...

Crib

(Greek phatne ; Latin praesepe, praesepium .) The crib or manger in which the Infant ...

Crime, Impediment of

An Impediment of Crime nullifies marriage according to ecclesiastical law, and arises from ...

Crisium

A Græco-Slavonic Rite diocese in Croatia. Crisium is the Latin name of a little town some ...

Crispin and Crispinian, Saints

Martyrs of the Early Church who were beheaded during the reign of Diocletian ; the date of ...

Crispin of Viterbo, Blessed

Friar Minor Capuchin ; b. at Viterbo in 1668; d. at Rome, 19 May, 1750. When he was five years ...

Crispin, Milo

Monk, and cantor of the Benedictine Abbey of Bec ; wrote the lives of five of its abbots : ...

Crispina, Saint

A martyr of Africa who suffered during the Diocletian persecution ; b. at Thagara in the ...

Criticism, Higher

Overview Biblical criticism in its fullest comprehension is the examination of the literary ...

Criticism, Historical

Historical criticism is the art of distinguishing the true from the false concerning facts of ...

Criticism, Textual

The object of textual criticism is to restore as nearly as possible the original text of a work ...

Crivelli, Carlo

Italian painter. Little is known of his life, and his b. and d. are usually reckoned by his ...

Croagh Patrick

A mountain looking out on the Atlantic ocean from the southern shore of Clew Bay, in the County ...

Croatia

With Slavonia, an autonomous state. It is bounded on the north by the Danube and the Drave; on the ...

Croce, Giovanni

Composer, b. at Chioggia near Venice in 1557; d. 15 May, 1609. Under the tutelage at Venice ...

Crockett, Venerable Ralph

English martyr, b. at Barton, near Farndon, Cheshire; executed at Chichester, 1 October, 1588. ...

Croia

A titular see of Albania. Croia (pronounced Kruya, Albanian, "Spring") stands on the site of ...

Croke, Thomas William

Archbishop of Cashel, Ireland, b. near Mallow, Co. Cork, 24 May, 1824; d. at Thurles, 22 July, ...

Crolly, William

Archbishop of Armagh, b. at Ballykilbeg, near Downpatrick, 8 June, 1780; d. 6 April, 1849. At ...

Cronan

Name of several Irish saints. St. Cronan Mochua Founder of the See of Balla, subsequently ...

Crosier

(Or PASTORAL STAFF). The crosier is an ecclesiastical ornament which is conferred on bishops ...

Crosiers, The

( Or Canons Regular of the Holy Cross). A religious order, founded by Théodore de ...

Cross and Crucifix in Archæology

I. PRIMITIVE CRUCIFORM SIGNS The sign of the cross, represented in its simplest form by a ...

Cross and Crucifix in Liturgy

(1) Material Objects in Liturgical Use ; (2) Liturgical Forms connected with Them ; (3) ...

Cross of Jesus, Brothers of the

A congregation founded in 1820 at Lyons, France, by Father C.M. Bochard, Doctor of the Sorbonne, ...

Cross, Daughters of the

A Belgian religious congregation founded in 1833 at Liège, by Jean-Guillaume Habets, ...

Cross, Daughters of the

(Also called the Sisters of St. Andrew). The aim of this congregation is to instruct poor ...

Cross, Daughters of the Holy

A French institute. The first steps towards the foundation of this society were taken in 1625 ...

Cross, Sign of the

A term applied to various manual acts, liturgical or devotional in character, which have this at ...

Cross, The True

(AND REPRESENTATIONS OF IT AS OBJECTS OF DEVOTION). (1) Growth Of the Christian Cult ; (2) ...

Cross-Bearer

The cleric or minister who carries the processional cross, that is, a crucifix provided with a ...

Crotus, Johann

(Properly Johannes Jäger, hence often called VENATOR, "hunter", but more commonly, in ...

Crown of Thorns

Although Our Saviour's Crown of Thorns is mentioned by three Evangelists and is often alluded ...

Crown of Thorns, Feast of the

The first feast in honour of the Crown of Thorns ( Festum susceptionis coronae Domini ) was ...

Crown, Franciscan

( Or Seraphic Rosary.) A Rosary consisting of seven decades in commemoration of the seven ...

Croyland, Abbey of

(Or Crowland.) A monastery of the Benedictine Order in Lincolnshire, sixteen miles from ...

Crucifix and Cross in Archæology

I. PRIMITIVE CRUCIFORM SIGNS The sign of the cross, represented in its simplest form by a ...

Crucifix and Cross in Liturgy

(1) Material Objects in Liturgical Use ; (2) Liturgical Forms connected with Them ; (3) ...

Crucifix, Altar

The crucifix is the principal ornament of the altar. It is placed on the altar to recall to the ...

Cruelty to Animals

Pagan antiquity The first ethical writers of pagan antiquity to advocate the duty of kindness ...

Cruet

A small vessel used for containing the wine and water required for the Holy Sacrifice of the ...

Crusade, Bull of the

A Bull granting indulgences to those who took part in the wars against the infidels. These ...

Crusades

The Crusades were expeditions undertaken, in fulfilment of a solemn vow, to deliver the Holy ...

Crutched Friars

(Or Crossed Friars). An order of mendicant friars who went to England in the thirteenth ...

Cruz, Ramón de la

Poet, b. at Madrid, Spain, 28 March, 1731; d. in the same city, 4 November, 1795. He was for a ...

Crypt

(Or LOWER CHURCH). The word originally meant a hidden place, natural or artificial, suitable ...

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Csanád

The Diocese of Csanád includes the counties of Temes, Torontál, ...

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Cuba

Cuba, "The Pearl of the Antilles", is the largest and westernmost island of the West Indies. Its ...

Cuenca

DIOCESE OF CUENCA (CONCA IN INDIIS). A suffragan of Quito, in the Republic of Ecuador, South ...

Cuenca

(Conca) Diocese in Spain, suffragan of Toledo. The episcopal city (10,756) is also the ...

Cuernavaca

DIOCESE OF CUERNAVACA (CUERNAVACENSIS). The Diocese of Cuernavaca, erected 23 June, 1891, ...

Cueva, Juan de la

Poet and dramatist, b. of a noble family at Seville, Spain, in 1550, d. in 1607. Little is ...

Culdees

A word so frequently met with in histories of the medieval Churches of Ireland and Scotland, ...

Cullen, Paul

Cardinal, Archbishop of Dublin, born at Prospect, Co. Kildare, Ireland, 29 April, 1803; died at ...

Culm

A bishopric in the north-eastern part of Prussia, founded in 1234, suffragan to Gnessen. The ...

Cult, Disparity of

( Disparitas Cultus ) A diriment impediment introduced by the Church to safeguard the ...

Cummings, Jeremiah Williams

Publicist, b. in Washington, U.S.A. , April, 1814; d. at New York , 4 January, 1866. His ...

Cuncolim, Martyrs of

On Monday, 25 July, 1583 (N.S.), the village of Cuncolim in the district of Salcete, territory of ...

Cunegundes, Blessed

Poor Clare and patroness of Poland and Lithuania ; born in 1224; died 24 July, 1292, at ...

Cuneo, Diocese of

(CUNEENSIS). Suffragan to Turin. Cuneo is the capital of the province of that name in ...

Cuoq, André-Jean

Philologist, b. at LePuy, France, 1821; d. at Oka near Montreal, 1898. Jean Cuoq entered the ...

Cupola

A spherical ceiling, or a bowl-shaped vault, rising like an inverted cup over a circular, square, ...

Curé d'Ars

Curé of Ars, born at Dardilly, near Lyons, France, on 8 May, 1786; died at Ars, 4 ...

Cura Animarum

( Latin cura animarum ), technically, the exercise of a clerical office involving the ...

Curaçao

Vicariate apostolic ; includes the islands of the Dutch West Indies: Curaçao, Bonaire, ...

Curate

( Latin curatus , from cura , care) Literally, one who has the cure (care) or charge of ...

Curator

( Latin curare ). A person legally appointed to administer the property of another, who ...

Cure of Souls

( Latin cura animarum ), technically, the exercise of a clerical office involving the ...

Curia, Roman

Strictly speaking, the ensemble of departments or ministries which assist the sovereign pontiff ...

Curityba do Parana

(CURYTUBENSIS DE PARANA) Diocese ; suffragan of São Sebastião (Rio de Janeiro), ...

Curium

A titular see of Cyprus, suppressed in 1222 by the papal legate, Pelagius. Koureus, son of ...

Curley, James

An astronomer, b. at Athleague, County Roscommon, Ireland, 26 October, 1796; d. at Georgetown, ...

Curr, Joseph

A priest, controversialist and martyr of charity, b. at Sheffield, England, in the last quarter ...

Curry, John

Doctor of medicine and Irish historian, b. in Dublin in the first quarter of the eighteenth ...

Cursing

In its popular acceptation cursing is often confounded, especially in the phrase "cursing and ...

Cursor Mundi

(THE RUNNER OF THE WORLD) A Cursor Mundi is a Middle-English poem of nearly 30,000 lines ...

Cursores Apostolici

Cursores Apostolici is the Latin title of the ecclesiastical heralds or pursuivants pertaining ...

Curtain, Altar

Formerly, in most basilicas, cathedrals, and large churches a large structure in the form of a ...

Curubis

A titular see of Africa Proconsularis. The town was fortified about 46 B.C. by P. Attius ...

Cusæ

A titular see of Egypt. The Coptic name of this town was Kõskõ; in Greek it ...

Cush

ep>(Son of Cham; Douay Version, Chus ) Cush, like the other names of the ethnological table ...

Cuspinian, Johannes

(Properly SPIESHAYM or SPIESHAM) Distinguished humanist and statesman, born at Schweinfurt, ...

Custom (in Canon Law)

A custom is an unwritten law introduced by the continuous acts of the faithful with the consent ...

Custos

(1) An under-sacristan. (See S ACRISTAN .) (2) A superior or an official in the Franciscan ...

Cuthbert

Abbot of Wearmouth ; a pupil of the Venerable Bede (d. 735). He was a native of Durham, but ...

Cuthbert

Date of birth not known; died 25 October, 758. He is first heard of as Abbot of Liminge, Kent. ...

Cuthbert, Saint

Bishop of Lindisfarne, patron of Durham, born about 635; died 20 March, 687. His emblem is the ...

Cuyabá

(CUYABENSIS) Diocese ; suffragan of São Sebastião (Rio de Janeiro) , Brazil. ...

Cuyo, Virgin of

(At Mendoza, Argentine Republic ). Historians tell us that the statue of the Virgin of ...

Cuzco, Diocese of

(Cuzcensis). Suffragan of Lima, Peru. The city of Cuzco, capital of the department of the same ...

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Cybistra

A titular see of Cappadocia in Asia Minor. Ptolemy (5, 7, 7) places this city in Lycaonia; ...

Cyclades

A group of islands in the Ægean Sea. The ancients called by this name only Delos and eleven ...

Cydonia

A titular see of Crete. According to old legends Cydonia (or Kydonia) was founded by King ...

Cyme

A titular see of Asia Minor. Kyme (Doric, Kyma) was a port on the Kymaios Kolpos (Tchandarli ...

Cynewulf

That certain Anglo-Saxon poems still extant were written by one Cynewulf is beyond dispute, for ...

Cynic School of Philosophy

The Cynic School, founded at Athens about 400 B.C., continued in existence until about 200 B.C. ...

Cyprian and Justina, Saints

Christians of Antioch who suffered martyrdom during the persecution of Diocletian at ...

Cyprian of Carthage, Saint

(Thaschus Cæcilius Cyprianus). Bishop and martyr. Of the date of the saint's birth ...

Cyprian of Toulon, Saint

Bishop of Toulon, born at Marseilles in 476; died 3 October, 546. He was the favourite pupil of ...

Cyprus

An island in the Eastern Mediterranean, at the entrance of the Gulf of Alexandretta. It was ...

Cyrenaic School of Philosophy

The Cyrenaic School of Philosophy, so called from the city of Cyrene, in which it was founded, ...

Cyrene

A titular see of Northern Africa. The city was founded early in the seventh century B.C. by a ...

Cyril and Methodius, Saints

(Or CONSTANTINE and METHODIUS). These brothers, the Apostles of the Slavs, were born in ...

Cyril of Alexandria, Saint

Doctor of the Church. St. Cyril has his feast in the Western Church on the 28th of January; in ...

Cyril of Constantinople, Saint

General of the Carmelites, d. about 1235. All that is known is that he was prior of Mount ...

Cyril of Jerusalem, Saint

Bishop of Jerusalem and Doctor of the Church, born about 315; died probably 18 March, 386. In ...

Cyrrhus

A titular see of Syria. The city of the same name was the capital of the extensive district of ...

Cyrus and John, Saints

Celebrated martyrs of the Coptic Church, surnamed thaumatourgoi anargyroi because they healed ...

Cyrus of Alexandria

A Melchite patriarch of that see in the seventh century, and one of the authors of Monothelism ...

Cyzicus

A titular see of Asia Minor, metropolitan of the ancient ecclesiastical province of ...

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Cz 1


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