Feuillant


 
 

Feuillant, a French word derived from the Latin for leaf, has been used as a tag by two different groups.

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The first Feuillants were monks of the Cistercian order who established an abbey in the Diocese of Rieux in 1145. The abbey was named Notre-Dame des Feuillans and the name came to be applied to the monks too. Pope Gregory XIII established the Feuillants as a separate congregation in 1589 under their reformist abbot Jean de la Barri?re. They were given two monastaries in Rome and in 1630 the order was divided into two branches, the French as the Feuillants and the Italians as the Reformed Bernardines. The Feuillants were suppressed in 1791 and the Bernardines later merged with the Order of Citeaux.

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The second Feuillants were a political grouping that emerged during the French Revolution. It came into existence from a split within the Jacobins from those opposing the overthrow of the king and proposing a constitutional monarchy. The deputies publicly split with the Jacobins when they published a pamphlet on July 16, 1791. Initially the group had 264 ex-Jacobin deputies as members.

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The group held meetings in a former monastery of the Feuillants on the Rue Saint-Honor? and came to be popularly called the Club des Feuillants. They called theselves the Amis de la Constitution. The group was led by Antoine Barnave. In March 1792 in retaliation for their opposition to war with Austria the Feuillant ministers were forced out by the Girondins. Labelled by their opponents as royalists they were targeted after the fall of the monarchy. In August 1792 a list of 841 members was published and they were arrested and tried for treason. Barnave was guillotined on November 29, 1793.

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The name survived for a few months as an insulting label for moderates, royalists and aristocrats.

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Cistercian order: REDIRECT Cistercians...

Abbey: :This article is about an abbey as a Christian monastic community. For other uses, see Abbey (disambiguation)....

Diocese: In some Christian churches, the diocese is an administrative territorial unit governed by a bishop, sometimes also referred to as a bishopric or episcopal see, though more often the term episcopal see means the office held by the bishop. In the Roman Catholic Church, an important diocese, governed ...

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~ Related Subjects ~

Monastic community (1) - Abbey (disambiguation) (1) - Girondin (1) - 1791 (1) - Antoine Barnave (1) - Archbishop (1) - As of 2003 (1) - Roman Catholic Church (1) - Bishop (1) - Episcopal see (1) - July 16 (1) - Rieux (1) - 1145 (1) - Diocese (1) - Cistercian order (1) -
 

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