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  1. 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.

  2. 30 de abr. 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
  3. Louis-Antoine de Noailles est un prélat français, né le 27 mai 1651 au château de Peynières à Cros-de-Montvert ( Cantal) 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 .

  4. De ses études jusqu’en 1693, Louis-Antoine de Noailles a baigné dans un gallicanisme épiscopal et royal particulièrement affirmé qui constitue alors la norme théologique. Un châtelain accompli. ­ Dans les trois évêchés qu’il occupa, Louis-Antoine de Noailles porta une attention particulière à la tenue du château qui lui était réservé.

  5. Appointed. Cardinal-Priest of San Sisto. 4 May 1729. 77.9. Died. Archbishop of Paris, France. MicroData Summary for Louis-Antoine de Noailles. ( VIAF: 58957; WikiData: Q691381 ) Louis-Antoine Cardinal de Noailles (born 27 May 1651, died 4 May 1729 ) Archbishop of Paris.

    • May 27, 1651
    • May 4, 1729
  6. 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. Already provided with the Abbey of Aubrac ( Diocese of Rodez ), he was, in March, 1679, appointed to the Bishopric of Cahors, and in 1680 transferred to Châlons ...

  7. NOAILLES, LOUIS ANTOINE DE Cardinal archbishop of Paris; b. château of Tessières, near Aurillac, May 27, 1651; d. Paris, May 4, 1729. As the second son of Anne Jules, first duke of Noailles, he was educated in Paris and received a doctorate in theology at the Sorbonne (1676).