He was elected to the Académie française on 26 June 1975, replacing Jean Cardinal Daniélou, a post he held until his death on 15 January 2004 at Ancourt, in France.
•
He preached the Lenten sermons many times at Notre Dame de Paris, and in 1964, Paul VI called him to present spiritual exercises at the Vatican.
•
Born in Fleury-les-Aubrais in Loiret, France, Carré studied at l’école Saint-Joseph and the collège Sainte-Croix de Neuilly before entering the Dominican order in 1926 and being ordained a priest in 1933.
Marie Antoinette | Marie Curie | John le Carré | Marie Osmond | Sault Ste. Marie | Buffy Sainte-Marie | Marie Claire | Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario | Marie Louise, Duchess of Parma | Marie Lloyd | Adrien-Marie Legendre | Marie | Sault Ste. Marie, Michigan | Marie de' Medici | Jean Victor Marie Moreau | Jean-Marie Le Pen | Charles-Marie Widor | Anne-Marie Albiach | Marie of Brabant, Queen of France | Ambroise Paré | Teena Marie | Rose Marie | Eva Marie Saint | Sault Ste. Marie (disambiguation) | Marie-Pierre Castel | Marie Laforêt | Marie Knutsen | Marie Dressler | Marie Bashir | Jean-Marie Riachi |
Ambroise Ouédraogo (born 15 December 1948) has been the Roman Catholic bishop of the Diocese of Maradi since 2001.
Ambroise Paré (c. 1510 – 20 December 1590) was a French barber surgeon who served in that role for kings Henry II, Francis II, Charles IX and Henry III.
Ambroise, The History of the Holy War, translated by Marianne Ailes.
•
Ambroise, who wrote a poetic account of the crusade, called Balian "more false than a goblin" and said he "should be hunted with dogs".
Bertrand Vac was the nom de plume of Quebec novelist and surgeon Aimé Pelletier (b. Aug. 20, 1914, Saint-Ambroise-de-Kildare, Quebec; d. July 23, 2010, Montreal).
Charles Ambroise de Caffarelli du Falga (1758–1826), baron Caffarelli, was canon of Toul before the French Revolution and one of the Caffarelli brothers.
Charles subsequently became reconciled to Ambroise-Louis-Marie d'Hozier, his nephew, to whom he left all the papers he had accumulated from the date of the quarrel until his death, which occurred in Paris.
The second part, in particular, is closely related to an Anglo-Norman poem on the same subject, Ambroise's L'Estoire de la Guerre Sainte.
Born in Milot, Ambroise paints landscapes and scenes of daily Haitian life.
He also directly observed the work of Hippolyte Bernheim (1840–1919) in Nancy, Jean-Martin Charcot (1825–1893) at the Salpêtrière in Paris, Frederik Willem van Eeden (1860-1932) and Albert Willem van Renterghem (1846-1939) in Amsterdam, Ambroise-Auguste Liébeault (1923-1904) in Nancy and Otto Georg Wetterstrand (1845–1907) in Stockholm, at their respective clinics.
The memoir claimed that he was an undercover agent of the Soviet Union ordered to infiltrate the Catholic Church by becoming a priest and to put forth modernist ideas through a teaching position that would undermine the main teachings of the Church during the Second Vatican Council in subtle ways, by turn of phrase methods.
•
This purports to be a memoir by the 1025th Red to penetrate Catholic seminaries, but it is manifestly a feeble example of radical traditionalist propaganda that even fails to factor in the Russian purges.
The museum's main collection is located in a Parisian suburb at 112, rue Ambroise Croizat, Saint-Denis, France, and is open daily.
Philippe Ambroise Eugène Ghislain d'Olmen de Poederlé (7 December 1773, Brussels - 2 October 1815, Brussels) was a soldier and politician of the Austrian Netherlands.
On May 14, 2010 he was appointed coadjutor Archbishop to the Archdiocese of Montpellier by Pope Benedict XVI.
•
On 8 Oct 2000, he was ordained Archbishop of the Archdiocese of Albi by Pope John Paul II.
In 1956, the parish municipality lost a part of its territory when the Municipality of Sainte-Marcelline-de-Kildare was formed.
•
In 1803, the geographic township of Kildare was proclaimed, named after the town in Ireland.