Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Jean-Jacques Olier, S.S. (20 September 1608 – 2 April 1657) was a French Catholic priest and the founder of the Sulpicians. He also helped to establish the Société Notre-Dame de Montréal, which organized the settlement of a new town called Ville-Marie (now Montreal) in the colony of New France.

  2. Jean-Jacques Olier was the founder of the Sulpicians, a group of secular priests dedicated to training candidates for the priesthood. Ordained a priest in 1633, Olier soon came under the influence of St. Vincent de Paul, founder of a congregation of missionaries known as Lazarists.

  3. Jean-Jacques Olier de Verneuil ( 20 septembre 1608 à Paris - 2 avril 1657 à Paris), dit aussi « Monsieur Olier », était un mystique et un prêtre français . Séminaire Saint-Sulpice. Il a créé le premier séminaire français, à la suite du concile de Trente, a fondé la Compagnie des prêtres de Saint-Sulpice.

  4. Olier, JEAN-JACQUES, founder of the seminary and Society of St-Sulpice, b. at Paris, September 20, 1608; d. there, April 2, 1657. At Lyons, where his father had become administrator of justice, he made a thorough classical course under the Jesuits (1617-25); he was encouraged to become a priest by St. Francis de Sales, who predicted his ...

  5. Mar 6, 2016 · OLIER RESIGNS HIS CURE. M. Olier's failing health ; his reluctance to take repose. He visits Chatillon-sur-Seine, Clairvaux, Dijon, and Citeaux. At Beaune makes acquaintance with the Venerable Marguerite du Saint-Sacrement 5 their spiritual relations; devotion to the Sacred Infancy at St. Sulpice.

  6. OLIER, JEAN JACQUES Founder of the Seminary and the Society of Saint-Sulpice; b. Paris, Sept. 20, 1608; d. Issy, April 2, 1657. Olier was baptized in the church of St. Paul, Paris, on the day of his birth; he spent his childhood in Lyons, where his father had been assigned as administrator of justice.

  7. Sep 15, 2008 · The 400th anniversary of the birth of Jean-Jacques Olier on Sept. 20 is likely to pass unnoticed in the United States, given the relatively low visibility of his foundation, the Sul-picians.

  1. Ad

    related to: Jean-Jacques Olier