Resultado de búsqueda
Louis Antoine de Noailles, Cardinal de Noailles (27 May 1651 – 4 May 1729), second son of Anne de Noailles, 1st Duke of Noailles, was a French bishop and cardinal. His signing of the Unigenitus bull in 1728 would end the formal Jansenist controversy.
23 de may. de 2024 · Louis-Antoine de Noailles (born May 27, 1651, Château de Tessières, near Aurillac, France—died May 4, 1729, Paris) was a cardinal and archbishop of Paris who, with his brother, the second duc de Noailles, made the name Noailles one of the most honoured in France.
- The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
Louis-Antoine de Noailles est un prélat français, né le 27 mai 1651 au château de Peynières à Cros-de-Montvert et mort le 4 mai 1729 à Paris. Évêque de Cahors puis de Châlons, il est ensuite archevêque de Paris de 1695 à 1729, créé cardinal en 1700.
Louis de Noailles studied theology at Paris in the Collège du Plessis, where Fénelon was his fellow-student and friend, and obtained his doctorate at the Sorbonne, 14 March, 1676.
Louis-Antoine Cardinal de Noailles (born 27 May 1651, died 4 May 1729) Archbishop of Paris Consistory - 1700 : Created Cardinal Conclave - 1700 : Participated
- May 27, 1651
- May 4, 1729
Religion. Encyclopedias almanacs transcripts and maps. Noailles, Louis Antoine de. views 2,126,691 updated. NOAILLES, LOUIS ANTOINE DE. Cardinal archbishop of Paris; b. ch â teau of Tessi è res, near Aurillac, May 27, 1651; d. Paris, May 4, 1729.
Quick Reference. (1651–1729), Abp. of Paris from 1695, created a cardinal in 1700. He was a devoted pastor and an ardent reformer of clerical discipline. His repeated commendations in 1695 and 1699 of P. Quesnel's Réflexions morales caused him to be suspected of Jansenism.