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François de Pâris

François de Pâris (French pronunciation: [fʁɑ̃swa d(ə) pɑʁi]; 3 June 1690 – 1 May 1727) was a French Catholic deacon and theologian, a supporter of Jansenism. He became deacon of the Oratory of St. Magloire and was noted for his critique of the papal bull Unigenitus, which condemned Pasquier Quesnel's annotated translation of the Bible. He gave his earnings to the poor, and in his retirement he lived in a state of extreme poverty. After his death, his place of burial gained a reputation for supernatural events and the basis of the Convulsionnaires of Saint-Médard where he is buried. In 1731 there was a movement by the Jansenists to canonize François de Pâris as a saint in acknowledgement of the miracles said to have been performed there and Cardinal Archbishop Louis Antoine de Noailles, who had investigated several of the reports in 1728, had begun the beatification process.

François de Pâris

Life edit

He was born in Paris into a wealthy family,[1] the son of Nicolas de Pâris, Lord of Branscourt, Machault and Pasquy (1658–1714), and a member of the Parlement of Paris.[2] His mother, Charlotte Rolland, was the daughter of the mayor of Reims.[3] According to biographies published after his death, he was tutored as a young boy by Augustinians at Nanterre. Originally destined for a career in law, he went against his father's wishes and chose a career in the Church instead. In 1712 a bout of smallpox left his face horribly scarred, "an affliction for which he thanked God".[4] In 1713, at the age of 23, three months after the death of his mother in April,[5] he entered the seminary of the Oratory of St. Magloire, where he studied the scriptures.[4] In December 1713, his father Nicolas de Pâris made a will deposited with a notary before he died in March 1714.[5] François opposed the bull Unigenitus, which condemned Pasquier Quesnel's annotated translation of the Bible. He then gave further support to the Jansenists.[6] After three years at the Oratory, Pâris was ordained a deacon.[4] During his time there he gave to the poor his annual family pension, and there is evidence to suggest that he turned down a position as canon of Reims Cathedral in 1718 or 1719 because of his humble stance. During his later career he was associated with the College of Bayeux [fr] in Paris, a haven for Jansenist priests and follows, disturbed by the Church hierarchy or the authorities.[5]

 
François de Pâris, Diacre Paris

François de Pâris retired to a modest house Faubourg Saint-Marceau [fr], Paris, where he led a very austere life. Indeed, his living condition was so lowly that he "lodged in a hutch of planks set up in a courtyard, wore a hair shirt, and ate one meal a day, all while knitting stockings for the poor and giving advice to those who asked for it.[4] He modeled himself after St. Francis and was apparently considered a local saint by many.[7] His life has been described as one of "heroic humility".[1]

During the final years of his life, Pâris became increasingly reclusive, and his ascetic lifestyle became increasingly severe, and he practised self-flagellation:

His bare feet became cut and bruised from walking on the paving stones ... He slept on an old armoire, covered himself with a sheet bristling with iron wires that tore his flesh ... He wore a hair shirt, a spiked metal belt, and a chain around his right arm. He beat himself with an iron-tipped lash until the blood ran down his back. He lit no fire for warmth even during the coldest winter days.[8]

Death and aftermath edit

 
House of François de Pâris, by Adrien Dauzats (1867)

Only 36 years old, Pâris died on 1 May 1727. Large numbers of people from across the social spectrum, including the Cardinal Archbishop Noailles, came to attend his funeral in the small chapel at Saint-Médard. During the funeral and after, people began to collect snippets of hair and fingernails, splinters of wood from his casket or furniture, soil from his gravesite, and other souvenirs which might serve as holy relics. He was buried at the graveyard there on the Rue Mouffetard in the 12th arrondissement of Paris, not far from the Jardin des Plantes. Shortly after the funeral, his tomb became the site of religious pilgrimages and purported wonder-working.[9] Miracles were said to be performed before his tomb which left people in a state of ecstasy. The Jansenists came to pray at the cemetery. His admirers composed hymns and self-styled hagiographies praising the late deacon as a saint. In June 1728, Cardinal Noailles started an official enquiry to investigate five of the reported miracles and in the end his findings led to him posthumously bestowing upon François the title of "bienheureux".[4] Many of the city's prominent Jansenists wanted Pâris to be made into a saint, and Cardinal Noailles even began the process of beatification.[10]

 
Engraving of François de Pâris's death

In 1731, a phenomenal series of events began being reported at the graveyard which reportedly brought about extraordinary cures, apparently after people visiting experienced "violent convulsive movements which overtook the patients soon after their bodies touched the marble of the tomb, sometimes even without approaching it, by swallowing, in wine or water, a small portion of the earth gathered from around it."[11] These people became known as the "Convulsionnaires of Saint-Médard". At least 800 were reportedly cured by the convulsions of 1731, amongst them were several prominent people such as Louis Basile Carré de Montgeron [fr], a well-respected magistrate and Counsellor of the Parliament of Paris who converted to Jansenism on the 7 September 1731 after experiencing a miracle at the tomb of François de Pâris.[11] He began compiling a 3 volume book of some 1800 pages afterwards in a work which is described as "one of the most extraordinary works that ever issued from the press."[11] Lives was also published in 1731, by Pierre Boyer,[12] Jean-Louis Barbeau de La Bruyère [fr],[13] and Barthélémy Doyen.[14]

However, several writers believed that the extraordinary events at the graveyard were grossly exaggerated. Dom La Taste, Bishop of Bethlehem, authored Lettres Theologiques and Memoire Theologique, both critiques of the Convulsionists and Abbe d’Asfeld [fr] published Vains Efforts des Discernans, a similar work denouncing the extravagance of the people who claimed to have experienced the supernatural there.[11] Due to the rising hysteria which amounted in 1731, with increasingly bizarre and extraordinary events frequently reported which ultimately led to conversions to Jansenism in the thousands, Louis XV was forced to close the churchyard on 27 January 1732.[11] However, the earth which had been taken from the grave was valued by Jansenists and they continued their practices.[9] Demoiselle Fourcroy, for instance, alleged she had been cured of her medically diagnosed condition of anchylosis on 14 April 1732 and said of it, "They caused me to take wine in which was some earth from the tomb of M. de Paris, and I immediately engaged in prayer, as the commencement of a neuvaine (nine-days of devotion). Almost at the same moment I was seized with a great shuddering, and soon after with a violent agitation of the members, which caused my whole body to jerk into the air, and gave me a force I had never before possessed, so that the united strength of several persons present could scarcely restrain me. After a time, in the course of these violent convulsive movements, I lost all consciousness. As soon as they passed off, I recovered my senses, and felt a sensation of tranquillity and internal peace, such as I had never experienced before."[11]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b Cavendish, Richard; Innes, Brian (1997). Man, Myth & Magic: the Illustrated Encyclopedia of Mythology, Religion and the Unknown. Marshall Cavendish. p. 454. ISBN 978-1-85435-731-1. Retrieved 15 March 2012.
  2. ^ Frémont, Léon (1900). Revue de Champagne et de Brie: Histoire – Biographie – Archéologie – Documents Inédits – Bibliographie – Beaux-arts. H. Menu. p. 701. Retrieved 15 March 2012.
  3. ^ Doyen, Barthélemy (1743). Vie du Bienheureux François de Pâris: Diacre. p. 189. Retrieved 15 March 2012.
  4. ^ a b c d e McManners, John (23 September 1999). Church and Society in Eighteenth-Century France: The Religion of the People and the Politics of Religion. Oxford University Press. p. 436. ISBN 978-0-19-827004-1. Retrieved 15 March 2012.
  5. ^ a b c Gouzi, Christine (2005). "L'image du diacre Pâris: portraits gravés et hagiographie". Chrétiens et sociétés. pp. 29–58. Retrieved 15 March 2012.
  6. ^ Chisholm 1911, pp. 803–804.
  7. ^ Strayer (2008), 237–38; Garrioch (2002), 142.
  8. ^ Strayer (2008), 238.
  9. ^ a b Chisholm 1911, p. 804.
  10. ^ Strayer (2008), 238–239; Garrioch (2002), 142–5.
  11. ^ a b c d e f Owen, Robert Dale (February–March 1864). "The Convulsionists of Saint-Medard". The Atlantic Monthly, featured at Romancatholicism.org. Retrieved 15 March 2012.
  12. ^ Pierre Boyer (1731). La vie de monsieur de Paris, diacre. Retrieved 15 March 2012.
  13. ^ Jean-Louis Barbeau de La Bruyère (1731). La vie de M. François de Paris, diacre. Retrieved 15 March 2012.
  14. ^ Barthélémy Doyen (1731). Vie de Monsieur de Paris, Diacre du diocèse de Paris. Retrieved 15 March 2012.

Attribution:

Bibliography edit

  • Garrioch, David. 2002. The Making of Revolutionary Paris. Berkeley: University of California Press.
  • Strayer, Brian E. 2008. Suffering Saints: Jansenists and Convulsionnaires in France, 1640–1799. Brighton, UK: Sussex Academic Press.

Further reading edit

  • P. F. Matthieu, Histoire des miracles et des convulsionnaires de St Medard;
  • M. Tollemache, French Jansenists (London, 1893).

External links edit

  Media related to François de Pâris at Wikimedia Commons

  • (in French) Christine Gouzi, L'image du diacre Pâris: portraits gravés et hagiographie.

françois, pâris, french, pronunciation, fʁɑ, pɑʁi, june, 1690, 1727, french, catholic, deacon, theologian, supporter, jansenism, became, deacon, oratory, magloire, noted, critique, papal, bull, unigenitus, which, condemned, pasquier, quesnel, annotated, transl. Francois de Paris French pronunciation fʁɑ swa d e pɑʁi 3 June 1690 1 May 1727 was a French Catholic deacon and theologian a supporter of Jansenism He became deacon of the Oratory of St Magloire and was noted for his critique of the papal bull Unigenitus which condemned Pasquier Quesnel s annotated translation of the Bible He gave his earnings to the poor and in his retirement he lived in a state of extreme poverty After his death his place of burial gained a reputation for supernatural events and the basis of the Convulsionnaires of Saint Medard where he is buried In 1731 there was a movement by the Jansenists to canonize Francois de Paris as a saint in acknowledgement of the miracles said to have been performed there and Cardinal Archbishop Louis Antoine de Noailles who had investigated several of the reports in 1728 had begun the beatification process Francois de Paris Contents 1 Life 2 Death and aftermath 3 See also 4 References 5 Bibliography 6 Further reading 7 External linksLife editHe was born in Paris into a wealthy family 1 the son of Nicolas de Paris Lord of Branscourt Machault and Pasquy 1658 1714 and a member of the Parlement of Paris 2 His mother Charlotte Rolland was the daughter of the mayor of Reims 3 According to biographies published after his death he was tutored as a young boy by Augustinians at Nanterre Originally destined for a career in law he went against his father s wishes and chose a career in the Church instead In 1712 a bout of smallpox left his face horribly scarred an affliction for which he thanked God 4 In 1713 at the age of 23 three months after the death of his mother in April 5 he entered the seminary of the Oratory of St Magloire where he studied the scriptures 4 In December 1713 his father Nicolas de Paris made a will deposited with a notary before he died in March 1714 5 Francois opposed the bull Unigenitus which condemned Pasquier Quesnel s annotated translation of the Bible He then gave further support to the Jansenists 6 After three years at the Oratory Paris was ordained a deacon 4 During his time there he gave to the poor his annual family pension and there is evidence to suggest that he turned down a position as canon of Reims Cathedral in 1718 or 1719 because of his humble stance During his later career he was associated with the College of Bayeux fr in Paris a haven for Jansenist priests and follows disturbed by the Church hierarchy or the authorities 5 nbsp Francois de Paris Diacre Paris Francois de Paris retired to a modest house Faubourg Saint Marceau fr Paris where he led a very austere life Indeed his living condition was so lowly that he lodged in a hutch of planks set up in a courtyard wore a hair shirt and ate one meal a day all while knitting stockings for the poor and giving advice to those who asked for it 4 He modeled himself after St Francis and was apparently considered a local saint by many 7 His life has been described as one of heroic humility 1 During the final years of his life Paris became increasingly reclusive and his ascetic lifestyle became increasingly severe and he practised self flagellation His bare feet became cut and bruised from walking on the paving stones He slept on an old armoire covered himself with a sheet bristling with iron wires that tore his flesh He wore a hair shirt a spiked metal belt and a chain around his right arm He beat himself with an iron tipped lash until the blood ran down his back He lit no fire for warmth even during the coldest winter days 8 Death and aftermath editMain article Convulsionnaires of Saint Medard nbsp House of Francois de Paris by Adrien Dauzats 1867 Only 36 years old Paris died on 1 May 1727 Large numbers of people from across the social spectrum including the Cardinal Archbishop Noailles came to attend his funeral in the small chapel at Saint Medard During the funeral and after people began to collect snippets of hair and fingernails splinters of wood from his casket or furniture soil from his gravesite and other souvenirs which might serve as holy relics He was buried at the graveyard there on the Rue Mouffetard in the 12th arrondissement of Paris not far from the Jardin des Plantes Shortly after the funeral his tomb became the site of religious pilgrimages and purported wonder working 9 Miracles were said to be performed before his tomb which left people in a state of ecstasy The Jansenists came to pray at the cemetery His admirers composed hymns and self styled hagiographies praising the late deacon as a saint In June 1728 Cardinal Noailles started an official enquiry to investigate five of the reported miracles and in the end his findings led to him posthumously bestowing upon Francois the title of bienheureux 4 Many of the city s prominent Jansenists wanted Paris to be made into a saint and Cardinal Noailles even began the process of beatification 10 nbsp Engraving of Francois de Paris s death In 1731 a phenomenal series of events began being reported at the graveyard which reportedly brought about extraordinary cures apparently after people visiting experienced violent convulsive movements which overtook the patients soon after their bodies touched the marble of the tomb sometimes even without approaching it by swallowing in wine or water a small portion of the earth gathered from around it 11 These people became known as the Convulsionnaires of Saint Medard At least 800 were reportedly cured by the convulsions of 1731 amongst them were several prominent people such as Louis Basile Carre de Montgeron fr a well respected magistrate and Counsellor of the Parliament of Paris who converted to Jansenism on the 7 September 1731 after experiencing a miracle at the tomb of Francois de Paris 11 He began compiling a 3 volume book of some 1800 pages afterwards in a work which is described as one of the most extraordinary works that ever issued from the press 11 Lives was also published in 1731 by Pierre Boyer 12 Jean Louis Barbeau de La Bruyere fr 13 and Barthelemy Doyen 14 However several writers believed that the extraordinary events at the graveyard were grossly exaggerated Dom La Taste Bishop of Bethlehem authored Lettres Theologiques and Memoire Theologique both critiques of the Convulsionists and Abbe d Asfeld fr published Vains Efforts des Discernans a similar work denouncing the extravagance of the people who claimed to have experienced the supernatural there 11 Due to the rising hysteria which amounted in 1731 with increasingly bizarre and extraordinary events frequently reported which ultimately led to conversions to Jansenism in the thousands Louis XV was forced to close the churchyard on 27 January 1732 11 However the earth which had been taken from the grave was valued by Jansenists and they continued their practices 9 Demoiselle Fourcroy for instance alleged she had been cured of her medically diagnosed condition of anchylosis on 14 April 1732 and said of it They caused me to take wine in which was some earth from the tomb of M de Paris and I immediately engaged in prayer as the commencement of a neuvaine nine days of devotion Almost at the same moment I was seized with a great shuddering and soon after with a violent agitation of the members which caused my whole body to jerk into the air and gave me a force I had never before possessed so that the united strength of several persons present could scarcely restrain me After a time in the course of these violent convulsive movements I lost all consciousness As soon as they passed off I recovered my senses and felt a sensation of tranquillity and internal peace such as I had never experienced before 11 See also editConvulsionnaires of Saint Medard Francois de ParisReferences edit a b Cavendish Richard Innes Brian 1997 Man Myth amp Magic the Illustrated Encyclopedia of Mythology Religion and the Unknown Marshall Cavendish p 454 ISBN 978 1 85435 731 1 Retrieved 15 March 2012 Fremont Leon 1900 Revue de Champagne et de Brie Histoire Biographie Archeologie Documents Inedits Bibliographie Beaux arts H Menu p 701 Retrieved 15 March 2012 Doyen Barthelemy 1743 Vie du Bienheureux Francois de Paris Diacre p 189 Retrieved 15 March 2012 a b c d e McManners John 23 September 1999 Church and Society in Eighteenth Century France The Religion of the People and the Politics of Religion Oxford University Press p 436 ISBN 978 0 19 827004 1 Retrieved 15 March 2012 a b c Gouzi Christine 2005 L image du diacre Paris portraits graves et hagiographie Chretiens et societes pp 29 58 Retrieved 15 March 2012 Chisholm 1911 pp 803 804 Strayer 2008 237 38 Garrioch 2002 142 Strayer 2008 238 a b Chisholm 1911 p 804 Strayer 2008 238 239 Garrioch 2002 142 5 a b c d e f Owen Robert Dale February March 1864 The Convulsionists of Saint Medard The Atlantic Monthly featured at Romancatholicism org Retrieved 15 March 2012 Pierre Boyer 1731 La vie de monsieur de Paris diacre Retrieved 15 March 2012 Jean Louis Barbeau de La Bruyere 1731 La vie de M Francois de Paris diacre Retrieved 15 March 2012 Barthelemy Doyen 1731 Vie de Monsieur de Paris Diacre du diocese de Paris Retrieved 15 March 2012 Attribution nbsp This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Paris Francois de Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 20 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 803 804 Bibliography editGarrioch David 2002 The Making of Revolutionary Paris Berkeley University of California Press Strayer Brian E 2008 Suffering Saints Jansenists and Convulsionnaires in France 1640 1799 Brighton UK Sussex Academic Press Further reading editP F Matthieu Histoire des miracles et des convulsionnaires de St Medard M Tollemache French Jansenists London 1893 External links edit nbsp Media related to Francois de Paris at Wikimedia Commons in French Christine Gouzi L image du diacre Paris portraits graves et hagiographie Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Francois de Paris amp oldid 1194267390, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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