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Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Cambrai

The Archdiocese of Cambrai (Latin: Archdiocesis Cameracensis; French: Archidiocèse de Cambrai) is a Latin Church ecclesiastical jurisdiction or archdiocese of the Catholic Church in France, comprising the arrondissements of Avesnes-sur-Helpe, Cambrai, Douai, and Valenciennes within the département of Nord, in the region of Nord-Pas-de-Calais. The current archbishop is Vincent Dollmann, appointed in August 2018. Since 2008 the archdiocese has been a suffragan of the Archdiocese of Lille.

Archdiocese of Cambrai

Archidioecesis Cameracensis

Archidiocèse de Cambrai
Coat of arms
Location
CountryFrance
Ecclesiastical provinceLille
Statistics
Area3,420 km2 (1,320 sq mi)
Population
- Total
- Catholics
(as of 2013)
1,020,000
921,900 (90.4%)
Information
DenominationCatholic Church
Sui iuris churchLatin Church
RiteRoman Rite
Established580
CathedralCathedral of Our Lady of Graces in Cambrai
Patron saintSaint Gaugericus of Cambrai
Current leadership
PopeFrancis
ArchbishopVincent Dollmann
Metropolitan ArchbishopLaurent Ulrich
Map
Website
cathocambrai.com

History

 
The medieval diocese of Cambrai was based upon the Roman civitas of the Nervii.

Originally erected in the late 6th century as the Diocese of Cambrai, when the episcopal see after the death of the Frankish bishop Saint Vedast (Vaast) was relocated here from Arras. Though subordinate to the Archdiocese of Reims, Cambrai's jurisdiction was immense and included even Brussels and Antwerp.

In the early Middle Ages the Diocese of Cambrai was included in that part of Lotharingia which at first had been allocated to the West Frankish king Charles the Bald by the Treaty of Meerssen of 870 but, after various vicissitudes, came under the rule of the German king Henry the Fowler in 925. After the revolt by Duke Gilbert of Lorraine collapsed at the Battle of Andernach of 939, Louis IV of France renounced the Lotharingian lands, and in 941 Henry's son and successor King Otto I of Germany ratified all the privileges that had been accorded to the Bishops of Cambrai by the Frankish rulers.

In 1007, the Bishops gained an immediate secular territory when Emperor Henry II invested them with authority over the former County of Cambrésis; the Bishop of Cambrai thus became the overlord of the twelve "peers of Cambresis". The Prince-Bishopric of Cambrai became an Imperial State, located between the County of Hainaut and the border with Flanders and Vermandois in the Kingdom of France, while the citizens of Cambrai struggled to gain the autonomous status of an Imperial city. In the 14th and 15th centuries, the bishopric was temporarily a protectorate of the Burgundian dukes, which in 1482, as part of the inheritance of Mary the Rich, passed to her husband Maximilian I of Habsburg.

Cambrai from 1512 was part of the Imperial Lower Rhenish–Westphalian Circle and – like the Prince-Bishopric of Liège – was not incorporated into the Seventeen Provinces of the Burgundian Circle. Nevertheless, the creation in 1559 of the new metropolitan See of Mechelen and of eleven other dioceses in the Southern Netherlands was at the request of King Philip II of Spain, in order to facilitate the struggle against the Reformation. The change greatly restricted the limits of the Diocese of Cambrai, which, when thus dismembered, was made by way of compensation an archiepiscopal see with the dioceses of Saint Omer, Tournai and Namur as suffragans. The councils of Leptines, at which Saint Boniface played an important role, were held in what was then the part of the former Diocese of Cambrai in the Southern Netherlands.

Under King Louis XIV the Bishopric of Cambrai finally became French after the Siege of Cambrai of 1677, confirmed in the Treaties of Nijmegen of 1678 and 1679. From 1790 Cambrai was part of the new Nord department. By the Napoleonic Concordat of 1801, Cambrai was again reduced to a simple bishopric, suffragan to Paris, and included remnants of the former dioceses of Tournai, Ypres, and Saint Omer. In 1817 both the pope and the king were eager for the erection of a see at Lille, but Bishop Louis de Belmas (1757–1841), a former constitutional bishop, vigorously opposed it. Immediately upon his death, in 1841, Cambrai once more became an archbishopric, with the diocese of Arras as suffragan.

List of bishops and archbishops

Notable people

The list of notable people associated with the Diocese of Cambrai is very extensive, and their biographies, although short, take up no less than four volumes of the work by Canon Destombes. Exclusive of those saints whose history would be of interest only in connection with the Belgian territory formerly belonging to the diocese, mention may be made of:

The Jesuits Cortyl and du Béron, first apostles of the Pelew Islands, were martyred in 1701, and Chomé (1696–1767), who was prominent in the Missions of Paraguay and Argentina in the province of Misiones, also the Oratorian Gratry (1805–1872), philosopher and member of the French Academy, were natives of the Diocese of Cambrai. The English college of Douai, founded by William Allen in 1568, gave in subsequent centuries a certain number of apostles and martyrs to Catholic England. Since the promulgation of the law of 1875 on higher education, Lille has been the seat of important Catholic faculties.

Notable French and Flemish composers who served as maître de chapelle at Cambrai include Guillaume Dufay, Robert de Févin, Johannes Lupus and Jean de Bonmarché.

See also Johann Esch and Heinrich Voes.

Notable chronicle

A chronicle of the bishops of Cambrai was written in the 11th century. This Gesta episcoporum Cambracensium[1] was for some time attributed to Balderic, archbishop of Noyon, but it now seems that the author was an anonymous canon of Cambrai.[2] The work is of considerable importance for the history of the north of France during the 11th century, and was first published in 1615.[3]

Places

Abbeys

Under the old regime the Archdiocese of Cambrai contained forty-one abbeys, eighteen of which belonged to the Benedictines. Chief among them were:

  • the Abbey of St. Géry, founded near Cambrai about the year 600 in honour of St. Médard by St. Géry (580–619), deacon of the church of Treves, and who built a chapel on the bank of the Senne, on the site of the future city of Brussels;
  • the Abbey of Hautmont, founded in the seventh century by St. Vincent Madelgarus, the husband of St. Wandru, who was foundress of the chapter at Mons;
  • the Abbey of Soignies, founded by the same St. Vincent, and having for abbots his son Landri and, in the eleventh century, St. Richard;
  • the Abbey of Maubeuge, founded in 661 by St. Aldegonde the sister of St. Wandru and a descendant of Clovis and the kings of Thuringia, among whose successors as abbesses were her niece, St. Aldetrude (d. 696) and another niece, St. Amalberte (d. 705), herself the mother of two saints, one of whom, St. Gudule, was a nun at Nivelles and became patroness of Brussels, and the other, St. Raynalde, a martyr;
  • the Abbey of Lobbes which, in the seventh and eighth centuries, had as abbots St. Landelin, St. Ursmar, St. Ermin, and St. Theodulph, and in the tenth century, Heriger, the ecclesiastical writer;
  • the Abbey of Crespin, founded in the seventh century by St. Landelin, who was succeeded by St. Adelin;
  • the Abbey of Maroilles (seventh century), which St. Humbert I, who died in 682, was abbot; the abbey was sacked and destroyed, 1791–1794, and used as a quarry for stones. It no longer exists.
  • the Abbey of Elno, founded in the seventh century by St. Amandus and endowed by Dagobert;
  • the Abbey of St. Ghislain, founded c. 650 by St. Ghislain, and having as abbots St. Gerard (tenth century) and St. Poppo (eleventh century);
  • the Abbey of Marchiennes, founded by St. Rictrudes (end of the seventh century);
  • the Abbey of Liessies (eighth century) which, in the sixteenth century, had for abbot Ven. Louis de Blois, author of numerous spiritual writings;
  • the Abbey of St. Sauve de Valenciennes (ninth century), founded in honour of the itinerant bishop St. Sauve (Salvius), martyred in Hainaut at the end of the eighth century;
  • the Abbey of Cysoing, founded about 854 by St. Eberhard, Count of Flanders, Duke of Frioul and son-in-law of Louis the Debonair.

Pilgrimages

The principal places of pilgrimage are:

  • Notre-Dame de la Treille at Lille, a church dedicated in 1066 by Baldwin V, Count of Flanders, visited by St. Thomas of Canterbury, St. Bernard, and Pope Innocent III, and where, on 14 June 1254, fifty-three cripples were suddenly cured;
  • Notre-Dame de Grâce at Cambrai, containing a picture ascribed to St. Luke;
  • Notre-Dame des Dunes at Dunkerque, where the special object of interest is a statue which, in the beginning of the fifteenth century, was discovered near the castle of Dunkerque;
  • the feast associated with this, 8 September 1793, coincided with the raising of the siege of this city by the Duke of York;
  • Notre-Dame des Miracles at Bourbourg, made famous by a miracle wrought in 1383, an account of which was given by the chronicler Froissart, who was an eyewitness. A Benedictine abbey formerly extant here was converted by Marie Antoinette into a house of noble canonesses. Until a comparatively recent date, the great religious solemnities in the diocese often gave rise to ducasses, sumptuous processions in which giants, huge fishes, devils, and representations of heaven and hell figured prominently. Before the law of 1901 was enforced there were in the diocese Augustinians, English Benedictines, Jesuits, Marists, Dominicans, Franciscans, Lazarists, Redemptorists, Camillians, Brothers of St. Vincent de Paul, and Trappists; the last-named still remain. Numerous local congregations of women are engaged in the schools and among the sick, as, for instance: the Augustinian Nuns (founded in the sixth century, mother-house at Cambrai);
  • the Bernardines of Our Lady of Flines (founded in the thirteenth century);
  • the Daughters of the Infant Jesus (founded in 1824, mother-house at Lille);
  • the Bernardines of Esquernes (founded in 1827);
  • the Sisters of Providence, or of St. Therese (mother-house at Avesnes);
  • the Sisters of Our Lady of Treille (mother-house at Lille), and the Religious of the Holy Union of the Sacred Hearts (mother-house at Douai).

See also

References

  1. ^ Monumenta Germaniae historica inde ab anno Christi quingentesimo usque ad annum millesimum et quingentesimum... (in German and Latin). Vol. Scriptores: VII. Hannover: Impensis Bibliopolii Aulici Hahniani. 1846. pp. 393–525.
  2. ^ Robert M. Stein (2006). "Sacred Authority and Secular Power: The Historical Argument of the Gesta Episcoporum Cameracensis [sic]," in: Lawrence Besserman, ed. (2006). Sacred and Secular in Medieval and Early Modern Cultures: New Essays. New York: Palgrave Macmillan. pp. 149–166. ISBN 978-1-4039-7727-4., and especially p. 217 n. 12.
  3. ^ Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Balderic" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 3 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.

Bibliography

Reference works

  • Gams, Pius Bonifatius (1873). Series episcoporum Ecclesiae catholicae: quotquot innotuerunt a beato Petro apostolo. Ratisbon: Typis et Sumptibus Georgii Josephi Manz. p. 526–528. (Use with caution; obsolete)
  • Eubel, Conradus, ed. (1913). Hierarchia catholica, Tomus 1 (second ed.). Münster: Libreria Regensbergiana. p. 160. (in Latin)
  • Eubel, Conradus, ed. (1914). Hierarchia catholica, Tomus 2 (second ed.). Münster: Libreria Regensbergiana. pp. 115–116.
  • Eubel, Conradus (ed.); Gulik, Guilelmus (1923). Hierarchia catholica, Tomus 3 (second ed.). Münster: Libreria Regensbergiana. {{cite book}}: |first1= has generic name (help) p. 100.
  • Gauchat, Patritius (Patrice) (1935). Hierarchia catholica IV (1592–1667). Münster: Libraria Regensbergiana. Retrieved 6 July 2016. pp. 145.
  • Ritzler, Remigius; Sefrin, Pirminus (1952). Hierarchia catholica medii et recentis aevi V (1667–1730). Patavii: Messagero di S. Antonio. Retrieved 6 July 2016. p. 139.
  • Ritzler, Remigius; Sefrin, Pirminus (1958). Hierarchia catholica medii et recentis aevi VI (1730–1799). Patavii: Messagero di S. Antonio. Retrieved 6 July 2016. p. 143.

Studies

  • Aubry, Martine, ed. (1996). Fénelon, évêque et pasteur en son temps, 1695–1715. Actes du colloque, Cambrai, 15–16 septembre 1995 (in French). Villeneuve d'Ascq: Centre d'histoire de la région du Nord et de l'Europe du Nord-Ouest, Université Charles de Gaulle-Lille 3. ISBN 978-2-905637-29-1.
  • Destombes, Cyrille Jean (1890). Histoire de l'église de Cambrai (in French). Vol. Tome I (to 1093). Lille: Desclée.
  • Destombes, Cyrille Jean (1890). Histoire de l'église de Cambrai (in French). Vol. Tome II (1093–1561). Lille: Desclée.
  • Destombes, Cyrille Jean (1891). Histoire de l'église de Cambrai (in French) (Tome III (1562–1802) ed.). Lille: Desclée.
  • Fisquet, Honore (1864). La France pontificale (Gallia Christiana): Cambrai (in French). Paris: Etienne Repos.
  • Glay, André-Joseph-Ghislain (1849). Cameracum christianum, ou histoire ecclésiastique du Diocèse de Cambrai (in French). Lille: Lefort.
  • Maillard-Luypaert, Monique (2001). Papauté, clercs et laïcs: le diocèse de Cambrai à l'épreuve du grand schisme d'occident (1378–1417) (in French). Bruxelles: Publications Fac. St Louis. ISBN 978-2-8028-0142-9.
  • Pierrard, Pierre (1978). Les Diocèses de Cambrai et de Lille (in French). Paris: Beauchesne. ISBN 9782701001760.
  • Roger, Paul (2003). Histoire des cathédrales, abbayes, châteaux-forts et villes de la Picardie et de l'Artois (in French). Bouhet: Découvrance. ISBN 978-2-84265-206-7.
  • Rouche, Michel (1982). Cambrai (in French). Lille: Presses universitaires de Lille. ISBN 9782859392017.
  • Sainte-Marthe (OSB), Denis de (1725). Gallia Christiana, In Provincias Ecclesiasticas Distributa; (in Latin). Vol. Tomus tertius. Paris: Ex Typographia Regia.
  • Société bibliographique (France) (1907). L'épiscopat français depuis le Concordat jusqu'à la Séparation (1802–1905). Paris: Librairie des Saints-Pères.

Acknowledgment

  •   This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainHerbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). "Archdiocese of Cambrai". Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company.

External links

  • (in French) Centre national des Archives de l'Église de France, L'Épiscopat francais depuis 1919 10 May 2017 at the Wayback Machine, retrieved: 2016-12-24.

Coordinates: 50°10′24″N 3°13′59″E / 50.1732°N 3.23305°E / 50.1732; 3.23305

roman, catholic, archdiocese, cambrai, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scho. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Cambrai news newspapers books scholar JSTOR September 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Archdiocese of Cambrai Latin Archdiocesis Cameracensis French Archidiocese de Cambrai is a Latin Church ecclesiastical jurisdiction or archdiocese of the Catholic Church in France comprising the arrondissements of Avesnes sur Helpe Cambrai Douai and Valenciennes within the departement of Nord in the region of Nord Pas de Calais The current archbishop is Vincent Dollmann appointed in August 2018 Since 2008 the archdiocese has been a suffragan of the Archdiocese of Lille Archdiocese of CambraiArchidioecesis CameracensisArchidiocese de CambraiCambrai CathedralCoat of armsLocationCountryFranceEcclesiastical provinceLilleStatisticsArea3 420 km2 1 320 sq mi Population Total Catholics as of 2013 1 020 000921 900 90 4 InformationDenominationCatholic ChurchSui iuris churchLatin ChurchRiteRoman RiteEstablished580CathedralCathedral of Our Lady of Graces in CambraiPatron saintSaint Gaugericus of CambraiCurrent leadershipPopeFrancisArchbishopVincent DollmannMetropolitan ArchbishopLaurent UlrichMapWebsitecathocambrai com Contents 1 History 2 List of bishops and archbishops 3 Notable people 4 Notable chronicle 5 Places 5 1 Abbeys 5 2 Pilgrimages 6 See also 7 References 8 Bibliography 8 1 Reference works 8 2 Studies 8 3 Acknowledgment 9 External linksHistory Edit The medieval diocese of Cambrai was based upon the Roman civitas of the Nervii Originally erected in the late 6th century as the Diocese of Cambrai when the episcopal see after the death of the Frankish bishop Saint Vedast Vaast was relocated here from Arras Though subordinate to the Archdiocese of Reims Cambrai s jurisdiction was immense and included even Brussels and Antwerp In the early Middle Ages the Diocese of Cambrai was included in that part of Lotharingia which at first had been allocated to the West Frankish king Charles the Bald by the Treaty of Meerssen of 870 but after various vicissitudes came under the rule of the German king Henry the Fowler in 925 After the revolt by Duke Gilbert of Lorraine collapsed at the Battle of Andernach of 939 Louis IV of France renounced the Lotharingian lands and in 941 Henry s son and successor King Otto I of Germany ratified all the privileges that had been accorded to the Bishops of Cambrai by the Frankish rulers In 1007 the Bishops gained an immediate secular territory when Emperor Henry II invested them with authority over the former County of Cambresis the Bishop of Cambrai thus became the overlord of the twelve peers of Cambresis The Prince Bishopric of Cambrai became an Imperial State located between the County of Hainaut and the border with Flanders and Vermandois in the Kingdom of France while the citizens of Cambrai struggled to gain the autonomous status of an Imperial city In the 14th and 15th centuries the bishopric was temporarily a protectorate of the Burgundian dukes which in 1482 as part of the inheritance of Mary the Rich passed to her husband Maximilian I of Habsburg Cambrai from 1512 was part of the Imperial Lower Rhenish Westphalian Circle and like the Prince Bishopric of Liege was not incorporated into the Seventeen Provinces of the Burgundian Circle Nevertheless the creation in 1559 of the new metropolitan See of Mechelen and of eleven other dioceses in the Southern Netherlands was at the request of King Philip II of Spain in order to facilitate the struggle against the Reformation The change greatly restricted the limits of the Diocese of Cambrai which when thus dismembered was made by way of compensation an archiepiscopal see with the dioceses of Saint Omer Tournai and Namur as suffragans The councils of Leptines at which Saint Boniface played an important role were held in what was then the part of the former Diocese of Cambrai in the Southern Netherlands Under King Louis XIV the Bishopric of Cambrai finally became French after the Siege of Cambrai of 1677 confirmed in the Treaties of Nijmegen of 1678 and 1679 From 1790 Cambrai was part of the new Nord department By the Napoleonic Concordat of 1801 Cambrai was again reduced to a simple bishopric suffragan to Paris and included remnants of the former dioceses of Tournai Ypres and Saint Omer In 1817 both the pope and the king were eager for the erection of a see at Lille but Bishop Louis de Belmas 1757 1841 a former constitutional bishop vigorously opposed it Immediately upon his death in 1841 Cambrai once more became an archbishopric with the diocese of Arras as suffragan List of bishops and archbishops EditMain article List of bishops and archbishops of CambraiNotable people EditThe list of notable people associated with the Diocese of Cambrai is very extensive and their biographies although short take up no less than four volumes of the work by Canon Destombes Exclusive of those saints whose history would be of interest only in connection with the Belgian territory formerly belonging to the diocese mention may be made of Blessed Evermod disciple of Saint Norbert and first Bishop of Ratzeburg in Germany twelfth century Blessed Charles le Bon Count of Flanders son of King Canute IV of Denmark and assassinated at Bruges in 1127 Blessed Beatrice of Lens a recluse thirteenth century The Jesuits Cortyl and du Beron first apostles of the Pelew Islands were martyred in 1701 and Chome 1696 1767 who was prominent in the Missions of Paraguay and Argentina in the province of Misiones also the Oratorian Gratry 1805 1872 philosopher and member of the French Academy were natives of the Diocese of Cambrai The English college of Douai founded by William Allen in 1568 gave in subsequent centuries a certain number of apostles and martyrs to Catholic England Since the promulgation of the law of 1875 on higher education Lille has been the seat of important Catholic faculties Notable French and Flemish composers who served as maitre de chapelle at Cambrai include Guillaume Dufay Robert de Fevin Johannes Lupus and Jean de Bonmarche See also Johann Esch and Heinrich Voes Notable chronicle EditA chronicle of the bishops of Cambrai was written in the 11th century This Gesta episcoporum Cambracensium 1 was for some time attributed to Balderic archbishop of Noyon but it now seems that the author was an anonymous canon of Cambrai 2 The work is of considerable importance for the history of the north of France during the 11th century and was first published in 1615 3 Places EditAbbeys Edit Under the old regime the Archdiocese of Cambrai contained forty one abbeys eighteen of which belonged to the Benedictines Chief among them were the Abbey of St Gery founded near Cambrai about the year 600 in honour of St Medard by St Gery 580 619 deacon of the church of Treves and who built a chapel on the bank of the Senne on the site of the future city of Brussels the Abbey of Hautmont founded in the seventh century by St Vincent Madelgarus the husband of St Wandru who was foundress of the chapter at Mons the Abbey of Soignies founded by the same St Vincent and having for abbots his son Landri and in the eleventh century St Richard the Abbey of Maubeuge founded in 661 by St Aldegonde the sister of St Wandru and a descendant of Clovis and the kings of Thuringia among whose successors as abbesses were her niece St Aldetrude d 696 and another niece St Amalberte d 705 herself the mother of two saints one of whom St Gudule was a nun at Nivelles and became patroness of Brussels and the other St Raynalde a martyr the Abbey of Lobbes which in the seventh and eighth centuries had as abbots St Landelin St Ursmar St Ermin and St Theodulph and in the tenth century Heriger the ecclesiastical writer the Abbey of Crespin founded in the seventh century by St Landelin who was succeeded by St Adelin the Abbey of Maroilles seventh century which St Humbert I who died in 682 was abbot the abbey was sacked and destroyed 1791 1794 and used as a quarry for stones It no longer exists the Abbey of Elno founded in the seventh century by St Amandus and endowed by Dagobert the Abbey of St Ghislain founded c 650 by St Ghislain and having as abbots St Gerard tenth century and St Poppo eleventh century the Abbey of Marchiennes founded by St Rictrudes end of the seventh century the Abbey of Liessies eighth century which in the sixteenth century had for abbot Ven Louis de Blois author of numerous spiritual writings the Abbey of St Sauve de Valenciennes ninth century founded in honour of the itinerant bishop St Sauve Salvius martyred in Hainaut at the end of the eighth century the Abbey of Cysoing founded about 854 by St Eberhard Count of Flanders Duke of Frioul and son in law of Louis the Debonair Pilgrimages Edit This article contains embedded lists that may be poorly defined unverified or indiscriminate Please help to clean it up to meet Wikipedia s quality standards Where appropriate incorporate items into the main body of the article September 2016 The principal places of pilgrimage are Notre Dame de la Treille at Lille a church dedicated in 1066 by Baldwin V Count of Flanders visited by St Thomas of Canterbury St Bernard and Pope Innocent III and where on 14 June 1254 fifty three cripples were suddenly cured Notre Dame de Grace at Cambrai containing a picture ascribed to St Luke Notre Dame des Dunes at Dunkerque where the special object of interest is a statue which in the beginning of the fifteenth century was discovered near the castle of Dunkerque the feast associated with this 8 September 1793 coincided with the raising of the siege of this city by the Duke of York Notre Dame des Miracles at Bourbourg made famous by a miracle wrought in 1383 an account of which was given by the chronicler Froissart who was an eyewitness A Benedictine abbey formerly extant here was converted by Marie Antoinette into a house of noble canonesses Until a comparatively recent date the great religious solemnities in the diocese often gave rise to ducasses sumptuous processions in which giants huge fishes devils and representations of heaven and hell figured prominently Before the law of 1901 was enforced there were in the diocese Augustinians English Benedictines Jesuits Marists Dominicans Franciscans Lazarists Redemptorists Camillians Brothers of St Vincent de Paul and Trappists the last named still remain Numerous local congregations of women are engaged in the schools and among the sick as for instance the Augustinian Nuns founded in the sixth century mother house at Cambrai the Bernardines of Our Lady of Flines founded in the thirteenth century the Daughters of the Infant Jesus founded in 1824 mother house at Lille the Bernardines of Esquernes founded in 1827 the Sisters of Providence or of St Therese mother house at Avesnes the Sisters of Our Lady of Treille mother house at Lille and the Religious of the Holy Union of the Sacred Hearts mother house at Douai See also EditCatholic Church in FranceReferences Edit Monumenta Germaniae historica inde ab anno Christi quingentesimo usque ad annum millesimum et quingentesimum in German and Latin Vol Scriptores VII Hannover Impensis Bibliopolii Aulici Hahniani 1846 pp 393 525 Robert M Stein 2006 Sacred Authority and Secular Power The Historical Argument of the Gesta Episcoporum Cameracensis sic in Lawrence Besserman ed 2006 Sacred and Secular in Medieval and Early Modern Cultures New Essays New York Palgrave Macmillan pp 149 166 ISBN 978 1 4039 7727 4 and especially p 217 n 12 Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Balderic Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 3 11th ed Cambridge University Press Bibliography EditReference works Edit Gams Pius Bonifatius 1873 Series episcoporum Ecclesiae catholicae quotquot innotuerunt a beato Petro apostolo Ratisbon Typis et Sumptibus Georgii Josephi Manz p 526 528 Use with caution obsolete Eubel Conradus ed 1913 Hierarchia catholica Tomus 1 second ed Munster Libreria Regensbergiana p 160 in Latin Eubel Conradus ed 1914 Hierarchia catholica Tomus 2 second ed Munster Libreria Regensbergiana pp 115 116 Eubel Conradus ed Gulik Guilelmus 1923 Hierarchia catholica Tomus 3 second ed Munster Libreria Regensbergiana a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a first1 has generic name help p 100 Gauchat Patritius Patrice 1935 Hierarchia catholica IV 1592 1667 Munster Libraria Regensbergiana Retrieved 6 July 2016 pp 145 Ritzler Remigius Sefrin Pirminus 1952 Hierarchia catholica medii et recentis aevi V 1667 1730 Patavii Messagero di S Antonio Retrieved 6 July 2016 p 139 Ritzler Remigius Sefrin Pirminus 1958 Hierarchia catholica medii et recentis aevi VI 1730 1799 Patavii Messagero di S Antonio Retrieved 6 July 2016 p 143 Studies Edit Aubry Martine ed 1996 Fenelon eveque et pasteur en son temps 1695 1715 Actes du colloque Cambrai 15 16 septembre 1995 in French Villeneuve d Ascq Centre d histoire de la region du Nord et de l Europe du Nord Ouest Universite Charles de Gaulle Lille 3 ISBN 978 2 905637 29 1 Destombes Cyrille Jean 1890 Histoire de l eglise de Cambrai in French Vol Tome I to 1093 Lille Desclee Destombes Cyrille Jean 1890 Histoire de l eglise de Cambrai in French Vol Tome II 1093 1561 Lille Desclee Destombes Cyrille Jean 1891 Histoire de l eglise de Cambrai in French Tome III 1562 1802 ed Lille Desclee Fisquet Honore 1864 La France pontificale Gallia Christiana Cambrai in French Paris Etienne Repos Glay Andre Joseph Ghislain 1849 Cameracum christianum ou histoire ecclesiastique du Diocese de Cambrai in French Lille Lefort Maillard Luypaert Monique 2001 Papaute clercs et laics le diocese de Cambrai a l epreuve du grand schisme d occident 1378 1417 in French Bruxelles Publications Fac St Louis ISBN 978 2 8028 0142 9 Pierrard Pierre 1978 Les Dioceses de Cambrai et de Lille in French Paris Beauchesne ISBN 9782701001760 Roger Paul 2003 Histoire des cathedrales abbayes chateaux forts et villes de la Picardie et de l Artois in French Bouhet Decouvrance ISBN 978 2 84265 206 7 Rouche Michel 1982 Cambrai in French Lille Presses universitaires de Lille ISBN 9782859392017 Sainte Marthe OSB Denis de 1725 Gallia Christiana In Provincias Ecclesiasticas Distributa in Latin Vol Tomus tertius Paris Ex Typographia Regia Societe bibliographique France 1907 L episcopat francais depuis le Concordat jusqu a la Separation 1802 1905 Paris Librairie des Saints Peres Acknowledgment Edit This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Herbermann Charles ed 1913 Archdiocese of Cambrai Catholic Encyclopedia New York Robert Appleton Company External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Cambrai in French Centre national des Archives de l Eglise de France L Episcopat francais depuis 1919 Archived 10 May 2017 at the Wayback Machine retrieved 2016 12 24 Coordinates 50 10 24 N 3 13 59 E 50 1732 N 3 23305 E 50 1732 3 23305 Portals Catholicism France Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Cambrai amp oldid 1148745402, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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