Manoel de Sa

 Angel de Saavedra Remírez de Baquedano

 Saba and Sabeans

 Sabaoth

 St. Sabbas

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 Louis de Sabran

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 Raineiro Sacchoni (Reiner)

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 Congregation of the Sacred Hearts of Jesus and Mary and of the Perpetual Adoration of the Blessed Sacrament of the Altar

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 Thomas Vincent Faustus Sadler

 Mary Anne Madden Sadlier

 Jacopo Sadoleto

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 Johann Michael Sailer

 Claude de Sainctes

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 Archdiocese of Saint Andrews and Edinburgh

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 Abbey of Saint Augustine

 Saint Bartholomew's Day

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 Diocese of Saint-Brieuc

 Diocese of Saint-Claude

 Diocese of Saint Cloud

 Jean-François Buisson de Saint-Cosme

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 Diocese of Saint-Denis

 Diocese of Saint-Dié

 Charles Sainte-Claire Deville

 Henri-Etienne Sainte-Claire Deville

 Abbey of Sainte-Geneviève

 Diocese of Saint-Flour

 Saint Francis Mission

 Diocese of Saint Gall

 Orders of St. George

 Diocese of Saint George's

 Diocese of Saint Hyacinthe

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 Diocese of Saint-Jean-de-Maurienne

 Ambrose Saint-John

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 Archdiocese of Saint John's

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 St. Louis (Missouri)

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 University of Saint Mark

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 Abbey of Saint-Ouen

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 St. Paul-without-the-Walls

 Basilica of St. Peter

 Tomb of St. Peter

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 Louis de Rouvroy, Duc de Saint-Simon

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 George Augustus Henry Sala

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 Salimbene degli Adami

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 Saliva Indians

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 Salmas

 Alphonsus Salmeron

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 Diocese of Saluzzo

 Juan Maria Salvatierra

 Salvation

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 Salve Regina

 Salvete Christi Vulnera

 Salvianus

 Archdiocese of Salzburg

 Joseph Salzmann

 Sámar and Leyte

 Samaria

 Samaritan Language and Literature

 Joseph Anton Sambuga

 Samoa

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 Samos

 Samosata

 Richard Sampson

 St. Samson

 Samson (1)

 Samson (2)

 Samuco Indians

 Diocese of San Antonio

 Diocese of San Carlos de Ancud

 Alonzo Sánchez

 Alonzo Coello Sánchez

 José Bernardo Sánchez

 Thomas Sanchez

 Sanction

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 Sanctus

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 Felino Maria Sandeo

 Anton Sander

 Nicholas Sander

 Diocese of Sandhurst

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 Ven. John Sandys

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 Archdiocese of San Francisco

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 Jacopo Sannazaro

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 Andrea Contucci del Sansovino

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 Prelature Nullius of Santa Lucia del Mela

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 Diocese of Sant' Angelo in Vado and Urbania

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 Giovanni Sante Gaspero Santini

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 Mathias Casimir Sarbiewski

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 Januarius Maria Sarnelli

 Paolo Sarpi

 Patrick Sarsfield

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 Giovanni Battista Salvi da Sassoferrato

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 Francesco Satolli

 St. Saturninus

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 Diocese of Savannah

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 Girolamo Savonarola

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 Jean de Saxe

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 Albert of Saxony

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 Julius Caesar Scaliger

 Scalimoli

 Ellakim Parker Scammon

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 Filippo Scannabecchi

 Scapular

 Giovanni Battista Scaramelli

 Pierfrancesco Scarampi

 Alessandro Scarlatti

 Paul Scarron

 Scepticism

 Friedrich Wilhelm Schadow

 Herman Schaepman

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 Johann Adam Schall von Bell

 Johann Friedrich Schannat

 Hans Leonhard Schäufelin

 Schaumburg-Lippe

 Constantine, Baron von Schäzler

 Hartmann Schedel

 Matthias Joseph Scheeben

 John James Scheffmacher

 Christopher Scheiner

 Johann Nepomuk Schelble

 Emmanuel Schelstrate

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 Georg Scherer

 Theodore, Count von Scherer-Boccard

 Matthæus Schinner

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 Friedrich von Schlegel

 Schleswig

 Aloysius Schlör

 John Frederick Henry Schlosser

 Francis Xavier Schmalzgrueber

 Christoph von Schmid

 Friedrich von Schmidt

 Gerard Schneemann

 Matthias von Schoenberg

 Peter Schöffer

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 Herman Scholliner

 Charles Mathieu Schols

 John Martin Augustine Scholz

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 Martin Schongauer

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 Johann Schraudolph

 Franz Schubert

 Joseph Schwane

 Theodor Schwann

 Ludwig von Schwanthaler

 Berthold Schwarz

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 Friedrich, Prince of Schwarzenberg

 Schwenckfeldians

 Moritz von Schwind

 Science and the Church

 Scillium

 Martyrs of Scillium

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 Ven. William Maurus Scot

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 Ven. Montford Scott

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 Scythopolis

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 Armenian Catholic Diocese of Sebastia

 St. Sebastian

 Bl. Sebastian Newdigate

 Sebastopolis

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 Sechelt Indians

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 Diocese of Seckau

 Secret (Secernere)

 Secret

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 Thomas Sedgwick

 Sedia Gestatoria

 Sedilia

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 Sedulius

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 Seekers

 Francis X. Seelos

 Seerth

 Diocese of Séez

 Charles John Seghers

 Paolo Segneri, the Elder

 Segni

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 Diocese of Segovia

 Louis Gaston de Ségur

 Sophie Rostopchine, Comtesse de Ségur

 Diocese of Sehna

 Johann Gabriel Seidl

 Alexander Maximilian Seitz

 Diocese of Sejny

 Sekanais

 Seleucians

 Seleucia Pieria

 Seleucia Trachæa

 Seleucids

 Self-Defence

 José Selgas y Carrasco

 Selge

 Selinus

 Giulio Lorenzo Selvaggio

 Selymbria

 Sem

 Semiarians and Semiarianism

 Ecclesiastical Seminary

 Semipelagianism

 Semites

 Semitic Epigraphy

 Ignaz Philipp Semmelweis

 Raphael Semmes

 Balthasar Seña

 St. Senan

 José Francisco de Paula Señan

 Sénanque

 Seneca Indians

 Aloys Senefelder

 Vicariate Apostolic of Senegambia

 Archdiocese of Sens

 Councils of Sens

 Sentence

 Notre-Dame de Saint-Lieu Sept-Fons

 Septimius Severus

 Septuagesima

 Septuagint Version

 Archdiocese of Serajevo

 Seraphim

 St. Seraphin of Montegranaro

 Bl. Seraphina Sforza

 St. Serapion

 Serapion

 Diocese of La Serena

 John Sergeant

 Ven. Richard Sergeant

 Sergiopolis

 Sergius and Bacchus

 Pope St. Sergius I

 Pope Sergius II

 Pope Sergius III

 Pope Sergius IV

 Girolamo Seripando

 Jean-Baptiste-Louis-George Seroux d'Agincourt

 Alessandro Serpieri

 Junípero Serra

 Serrae

 Congregation of the Servants of the Most Blessed Sacrament

 Servia

 Order of Servites

 Servus servorum Dei

 Diocese of Sessa-Aurunca

 Benedict Sestini

 Setebo Indians

 Elizabeth Ann Seton

 William Seton

 Desiderio da Settignano

 Seven-Branch Candlestick

 Seven Deacons

 Seven Robbers

 Severian

 Pope Severinus

 Alexander Severus

 Severus Sanctus Endelechus

 Marie de Rabutin-Chantal, Madame de Sévigné

 Archdiocese of Seville

 University of Seville

 Sexagesima

 St. Sexburga

 Sext

 Sexton

 Celestino Sfondrati

 The Religion of Shakespeare

 Shamanism

 Shammai

 Vicariate Apostolic of Northern Shan-si

 Vicariate Apostolic of Southern Shan-si

 Vicariate Apostolic of Eastern Shan-tung

 Vicariate Apostolic of Northern Shan-tung

 Vicariate Apostolic of Southern Shan-tung

 James Sharpe

 John Dawson Gilmary Shea

 Sir Ambrose Shea

 Richard Lalor Sheil

 Edward Sheldon

 Richard Shelley

 Vicariate Apostolic of Northern Shen-si

 Vicariate Apostolic of Southern Shen-si

 John Shepherd

 Sherborne Abbey

 Diocese of Sherbrooke

 Philip Henry Sheridan

 Martin Sherson

 William Sherwood

 James Shields

 Shi-koku

 Vicariate Apostolic of Shire

 William Shirwood

 Diocese of Shrewsbury

 Shrines of Our Lady and the Saints in Great Britain and Ireland

 The Holy Shroud (of Turin)

 Shrovetide

 Shuswap Indians

 Vicariate Apostolic of Siam

 Joseph Sibbel

 Siberia

 Marie-Dominique-Auguste Sibour

 Sibylline Oracles

 Sicard

 Sicca Veneria

 Sichem

 Sicily

 Sidon (1)

 Sidon (2)

 Sidonius Apollinaris

 Sidyma

 Archdiocese of Siena

 University of Siena

 Cyril Sieni

 Vicariate Apostolic of Sierra Leone (Sierræ Leonis, Sierra-Leonensis)

 St. Sigebert

 Sigebert of Gembloux

 Siger of Brabant

 Sigismund

 Sign of the Cross

 Luca Signorelli

 Diocese of Sigüenza

 Sikhism

 Silandus

 Silence

 Silesia

 Siletz Indians

 Siloe

 Ven. Gonçalo Da Silveira

 Pope St. Silverius

 Francis Silvester

 St. Silvia

 Simeon

 Holy Simeon

 Simeon of Durham

 St. Simeon Stylites the Elder

 St. Simeon Stylites the Younger

 Archdiocese of Simla

 St. Simon the Apostle

 Simone da Orsenigo

 Simonians

 Simon Magus

 Bl. Simon of Cascia

 Simon of Cramaud

 Simon of Cremona

 Simon of Sudbury

 Simon of Tournai

 St. Simon Stock

 Volume 15

 Simony

 Pope St. Simplicius

 Simplicius, Faustinus, and Beatrice

 Richard Simpson

 Sin

 Sinai

 Diocese of Sinaloa

 Diocese of Sinigaglia

 Sinis

 Sinope

 Diocese of Sion

 Sion

 Diocese of Sioux City

 Diocese of Sioux Falls

 Sioux Indians

 Sipibo Indians

 Pope St. Siricius

 Guglielmo Sirleto

 Diocese of Sirmium

 Jacques Sirmond

 Pope Sisinnius

 Sisters of Charity of Cincinnati, Ohio

 Sisters of the Little Company of Mary

 Sistine Choir

 Sitifis

 Buenaventura Sitjar

 Siunia

 Pope St. Sixtus I

 Pope St. Sixtus II

 Pope St. Sixtus III

 Pope Sixtus IV

 Pope Sixtus V

 Peter Skarga

 Josef Skoda (Schkoda)

 Slander

 Slavery

 Ethical Aspect of Slavery

 Slaves

 Slavonic Language and Liturgy

 The Slavs

 The Slavs in America

 Anton Martin Slomšek

 John Slotanus

 Sloth

 Thomas Slythurst

 Smalkaldic League

 Ardo Smaragdus

 James Smith

 Richard Smith (1)

 Richard Smith (2)

 Thomas Kilby Smith

 Latin Archdiocese of Smyrna

 Snorri Sturluson

 Ven. Peter Snow

 Sobaipura Indians

 John Sobieski

 Socialism

 Socialistic Communities

 Catholic Societies

 American Federation of Catholic Societies

 Secret Societies

 Society

 Catholic Church Extension Society

 Society of Foreign Missions of Paris

 Society of Jesus

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 Socinianism

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 Diocese of Socorro

 Socrates (1)

 Socrates (2)

 Sodality

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 Ancient Diocese of Sodor and Man

 Diocese of Soissons

 Solari

 Solemnity

 Abbey of St. Solesmes

 Soli

 Solicitation

 Prefecture Apostolic of Solimôes Superiore

 Solomon

 Psalms of Solomon

 Prefecture Apostolic of Northern Solomon Islands

 Prefecture Apostolic of Southern Solomon Islands

 Diocese of Solsona

 Somaliland

 Somaschi

 Thomas Somerset

 Religious Song

 Songish Indians

 Franciscus Sonnius

 Son of God

 Son of Man

 Diocese of Sonora

 Sophene

 Sophists

 Sophonias

 St. Sophronius

 Sophronius

 Sora

 Paul de Sorbait

 Sorbonne

 Edward Sorin

 Archdiocese of Sorrento

 Feasts of the Seven Sorrows of the Blessed Virgin Mary

 Dominic Soto

 Soul

 South Carolina

 South Dakota

 Ven. William Southerne

 Diocese of Southwark

 Ven. Robert Southwell

 Ven. John Southworth

 Diocese of Sovana and Pitigliano

 Salaminius Hermias Sozomen

 Sozopolis

 Sozusa

 Space

 Andrea Spagni

 Spain

 Spanish Language and Literature

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 Diocese of Spalato-Macarsca (Salona)

 Martin John Spalding

 Lazzaro Spallanzani

 Sparta

 Species

 Josef Speckbacher

 Speculation

 Nicola Spedalieri

 Friedrich von Spee

 Bl. John Speed

 Hon. George Spencer

 John Spenser

 Ven. William Spenser

 Diocese of Speyer

 Johann and Wendelin von Speyer

 Joseph Spillmann

 Alphonso de Spina

 Bartolommeo Spina

 Christopher Royas de Spinola

 Benedict Spinoza

 Spire

 Spirit

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 Diocese of Spirito Santo

 Spiritual Exercises of Saint Ignatius

 Spiritualism

 Spirituals

 Spokan Indians

 Archdiocese of Spoleto

 Henri Spondanus

 Gasparo Luigi Pacifico Spontini

 Patritius Sporer

 Ven. Cæsar Sportelli

 Diocese of Springfield

 Ven. Thomas Sprott

 Squamish Indians

 Herbert Goldsmith Squiers

 Diocese of Squillace

 Stabat Mater

 John Evangelist Stadler

 Stained Glass

 Stalls

 Stanbrook Abbey

 William Clarkson Stanfield

 St. Stanislas Kostka

 St. Stanislaus of Cracow

 Diocese of Stanislawow

 Vicariate Apostolic of Stanley Falls

 Valentin Stansel

 Richard Stanyhurst

 Stanza

 Joseph Ambrose Stapf

 Friedrich Staphylus

 Theobald Stapleton

 Thomas Stapleton

 Simon Starowolski

 Eliza Allen Starr

 State and Church

 State or Way

 States of the Church

 Station Days

 Ecclesiastical Statistics

 Statistics of Religions

 Benedict Stattler

 Franz Anton Staudenmaier

 Johann von Staupitz

 Stauropolis

 Stedingers

 Giacomo Gaetani Stefaneschi

 Agostino Steffani

 Diocese of Steinamanger

 Eduard von Steinle

 Ferdinand Steinmeyer

 Nicolaus Steno

 St. Stephen (1)

 St. Stephen (2)

 Pope St. Stephen I

 Pope Stephen II

 Pope Stephen (II) III

 Pope Stephen (III) IV

 Pope Stephen (IV) V

 Pope Stephen (V) VI

 Pope Stephen (VI) VII

 Pope Stephen (VII) VIII

 Pope Stephen (VIII) IX

 Pope Stephen (IX) X

 St. Stephen Harding

 Stephen of Autun

 Stephen of Bourbon

 St. Stephen of Muret

 Stephen of Tournai

 Henry Robert Stephens

 Thomas Stephens

 Agostino Steuco

 Joseph Stevenson

 Simon Stevin

 Adalbert Stifter

 Mystical Stigmata

 Stipend

 Stockholm

 Albert Stöckl

 Charles Warren Stoddard

 Stoics and Stoic Philosophy

 Stolberg

 Stole

 Alban Isidor Stolz

 Corner Stone

 Mary Jean Stone

 Marmaduke Stone

 Precious Stones in the Bible

 Stoning in Scripture

 James Stonnes

 Stonyhurst College

 Veit Stoss

 Antonio Stradivari

 Abbey of Strahov

 John Strain

 Ven. Edward Stransham

 Diocese of Strasburg

 Stratonicea

 Franz Ignaz von Streber

 Franz Seraph Streber

 Hermann Streber

 Joseph Georg Strossmayer

 Henry Benedict Maria Clement Stuart

 Studion

 Diocese of Stuhlweissenburg (Székes-Fehérvàr)

 Stylites (Pillar Saints)

 Styria

 Francisco Suárez

 Subdeacon

 Subiaco

 Subreption

 Episcopal Subsidies

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 Suburbicarian Dioceses

 Vicariate Apostolic of Sudan

 Sufetula

 Ven. John Sugar

 Suger

 Suicide

 Suidas

 St. Suitbert

 Alexander Martin Sullivan

 Peter John Sullivan

 Maurice de Sully

 Sulpicians in the United States

 Sulpicius Severus

 Sulpitius

 Prefecture Apostolic of Sumatra

 Summæ

 Catholic Summer Schools

 Sunday

 Diocese of Superior

 Supernatural Order

 Superstition

 The Last Supper

 Supremi disciplinæ

 Sura

 Jean-Joseph Surin

 Laurentius Surius

 Surplice

 Diocese of Susa

 Susa

 Suspension

 Ven. Robert Sutton

 Sir Richard Sutton

 Order of the Swan

 Sweden

 Swedenborgians

 Sophie-Jeanne Soymonof Swetchine

 Konrad Sweynheim

 Swinomish Indians

 St. Swithin

 Switzerland

 Archdiocese of Sydney

 Syene

 Edmund Sykes

 Syllabus

 Pope St. Sylvester I

 Pope Sylvester II

 Bernard Sylvester

 St. Sylvester Gozzolini

 Sylvestrines

 Francis Sylvius

 Symbolism

 Pope St. Symmachus

 Symmachus the Ebionite

 St. Symphorosa

 Synagogue

 Synaus

 Synaxarion

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 Synesius of Cyrene

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 Diocese of Syra

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 Diocese of Syracuse

 Syria

 Syriac Hymnody

 Syriac Language and Literature

 East Syrian Rite

 West Syrian Rite

 Stephan Szántó (Arator)

 Diocese of Szatmár

 Vicariate Apostolic of Eastern Sze-Ch'wan

 Vicariate Apostolic of North-western Sze-ch'wan

 Vicariate Apostolic of Southern Sze-ch'wan

 Martin Szentiványi

 Joseph Szujski

 Simon Szymonowicz

Archdiocese of Sens


(S ENONIS)

Archdiocese comprising the Department of the Yonne. It was suppressed by the Concordat of 1802 which annexed to the Diocese of Troyes the Dioceses of Sens and Auxerre and by a somewhat complex combination gave the title of Bishop of Auxerre to the bishops of Troyes, and the purely honorary title of Archbishop of Sens to the Archbishop of Paris, otherwise deprived of all real jurisdiction over Sens. The Concordat of 1817 reestablished the Archdiocese of Sens and the Diocese of Auxerre, but this arrangement did not last. The law of July, 1821, the pontifical Brief of 4 Sept., 1821, the royal ordinance of 19 October, 1821, suppressed the Diocese of Auxerre and gave to the Archdiocese of Sens as territory all the Department of the Yonne, and as suffragan the Dioceses of Troyes, Nevers, and Moulins. A papal Brief of 3 June, 1823, gave to the Archbishop of Sens the title of Bishop of Auxerre.


DIOCESE OF SENS

The history of the religious beginnings of the Church of Sens dates from Sts. Savinian and Potentian, and through some connecting legends also has to do with the Dioceses of Chartres, Troyes, and Orléans. Gregory of Tours is silent with regard to Sts. Savinian and Potentian, the founders of the See of Sens; the Hieronymian Martyrology which was revised somewhat before 600 at Auxerre or Autun, ignores them. The cities of Chartres and Troyes have nothing relative to these saints in their local liturgy prior to the twelfth century, and that of Orléans nothing prior to the fifteenth, which recalls the preaching of Altinus, Eodaldus, and Serotinus, the companions of Sts. Savinian and Potentian. Previous to the ninth century there was in the cemetery near the monastery of Pierre le Vif at Sens a group of tombs among which have been recognized those of the first bishops of Sens. In 847 the solemn transfer of their bodies to the church of St-Pierre le Vif originated great popular devotion towards Sts. Savinian and Potentian. In 848 Wandelbert of Prüm named them the first patrons of the church of Sens. Ado, in his martyrology published shortly afterwards, speaks of them as envoys of the Apostles and as martyrs. The martyrology of Usuardus, about 875, indicates them as envoys of the "Roman pontiff" and as martyrs. In the middle of the tenth century the relics of these two saints were hidden in a subterranean vault of the Abbey of St-Pierre le Vif to escape the pillage of the Hungarians, but in 1031 they were placed in a beautiful reliquary executed by the monk Odoranne. This monk, in a chronicle published about 1045, speaks of Altinus, Eodaldus, and Serotinus as the apostolic companions of Savinian and Potentian, but does not regard them as having been sent by St. Peter.

In a document which, according to the Abbé Bouvier, dates from the end of the sixth century or the beginning of the seventh, but which, according to Mgr Duchesne was written in 1046 and 1079 under the inspiration of Gerbert, Abbot of St-Pierre le Vif, is developed for the first time a vast legend which traces to Sts. Savinian and Potentian and their companions the evangelization of the churches of Orléans, Chartres, and Troyes; this document Mgr Duchesne calls the Gerbertine legend. After some uncertainties and hesitations this legend became definitely fixed in the chronicle of Clarius, compiled about 1120. It impossible that the Christian Faith was preached at Sens in the second century, but we know from Sidonius Apollinaris that in 475 the Church of Sens had its thirteenth bishop, and the list of bishops does not permit the supposition that the episcopal see existed prior to the second half of the third century or the beginning of the fourth. Among the bishops of Sens in the fourth century may be mentioned: St. Severinus, present at the Council of Sardica in 344; St. Ursicinus (356-87), exiled to Phrygia under Constantius through the influence of the Arians, visited by St. Hilary on his return to Sens after three years of exile, and who about 386 founded at Sens the monastery of Sts. Gervasius and Protasius. In the fifth century: St. Ambrose (d. about 460); St. Agroecius (Agrice), bishop about 475; St. Heraclius (487-515), founder of the monastery of St. John the Evangelist at Sens. In the sixth century: St. Paul (515-25); St. Leo (530-41), who sent St. Aspais to evangelize Melun; St. Arthemius, present at the councils of 581 and 585, who admitted to public penance the Spaniard, St. Bond, and of, a criminal made a holy hermit.

In the seventh century: St. Lupus (Lou, or Leu), b. about 573, bishop approximately between 609 and 623, son of Blessed Betto, of the royal house of Burgundy, and of Ste-Austregilde, founder of the monastery of Ste-Colombe and perhaps also of the monastery of Ferrières in the Gatinais, which some historians, trusting to an apocryphal charter, believed to have been founded under Clovis; he secured from the king authorization to coin money in his diocese; St. Annobertus (about 639); St. Gondelbertus (about 642-3), whose episcopate is only proved by the traditions of the Vosgian monastery of Senones, which traditions date from the eleventh century; St. Arnoul (654-7); St. Emmon (658-75), who about the end of 668 received the monk Hadrian, sent to England with Archbishop Theodore: perhaps St. Amé (about 676), exiled to Péronne by Ebroin, and whose name is suppressed by Mgr Duchesne as having been interpolated in the episcopal lists in the tenth century; St. Vulfran (692-5), a monk of Fontenelle, who soon left the See of Sens to evangelize Frisia and died at Fontenelle before 704; St. Gerie, bishop about 696. In the eighth century: St. Ebbo, at first Abbot of St-Pierre le Vif, bishop before 711, and who in 731 placed himself at the head of his people to compel the Saracens to raise the siege of Sens; and his successor St. Merulf.

In the ninth century great bishops occupied the See of Sens: Magnus, former chaplain of Charlemagne, bishop before 802, author of a sort of hand book of legislation of which he made use when he journeyed as missus dominicus, or royal agent for Charlemagne, died after 817; Jeremias, ambassador at Rome of Louis the Pious in the affair of the Iconoclasts, died in 828; St. Alderic (829-36), former Abbot of Ferrières, and consecrated Abbot of St. Maur des Fosses at Paris in 832; Vénilon (837-65) anointed Charles the Bald, 6 June, 843, in the cathedral of Orléans, to the detriment of the privileges of the See of Reims; his chorepiscopus, or auxiliary bishop, was Andrade, author of numerous theological writings, among others of the poem "De Fonte Vitae" dedicated to Hinemar, and of the "Book of Revelations", by which he sought to put an end to the divisions between the sons of Louis the Pious. In 859 Charles the Bald accused Vénilon before the Council of Savonnières of having betrayed him; the matter righted itself, but opinion continued to hold Vénilon guilty and the name of the traitor Ganelon, which occurs in the "Chanson de Roland" is but a popular corruption of the name Vénilon. Ansegisus (871-83), at the death of Louis II, Emperor of Italy, negotiated at Rome for Charles the Bald and brought thence the letter of John VIII inviting Charles to come and receive the imperial crown. He himself was named by John VIII primate of the Gauls and Germania and vicar of the Holy See for France and Germany, and at the Council of Ponthion was solemnly installed above the other metropolitans despite the opposition of Hincmar; in 880 he anointed Louis III and Carloman in the abbey of Ferrières. It was doubtless in the time of Ansegisus, while the See of Sens exercised a real primacy, that a cleric of his church compiled the historical work known as the "Ecclesiastical Annals of Sens" or "Gestes des Archevêques de Sens", an attempt to write the history of the first two French dynasties.

Vaulter (887-923) anointed King Eudes in 888, King Robert in July, 922, and King Raoul, 13 July, 923, in the Church of St-Médard at Soissons; he doubtless inherited from his uncle Vaultier, Bishop of Orléans, a superb Sacramentary composed between 855 and 873 for the Abbey of St-Amand at Puelle. This Sacramentary, which he gave to the church of Sens, forms one of the most curious monuments of Carlovingian art and is now in the library of Stockholm. Among the bishops of Sens may also be mentioned: St. Anastasius (967-76 Sevinus (976-99), who presided at the Council of St-Basle and brought upon himself the disfavour of Hugh Capet by his opposition to the deposition of Arnoul; Gelduinus (1032-49), deposed for simony by Leo IX at the of the Council of Reims. The second half of the eleventh century was fatal to the Diocese of Sens. Under the episcopate of Richerius (1062-96), Urban II withdrew primatial authority from the See of Sens to confer it on that of Lyons, and Richerius died without having accepted this decision; his successor Daimbert (1098-1122) was consecrated at Rome in March, 1098, only after having given assurance that he recognized the primacy of Lyons. Bishop Henri Sanglier (1122-42), caused the condemnation by a council in 1140 of certain propositions of Abelard. The see regained great prestige under Hugues de Toucy (1142-68), who at Orléans in 1152 crowned Constance, wife of King Louis VII, despite the protests of the Archbishop of Reims, and under whose episcopate Alexander III, driven from Rome, installed the pontifical Court at Sens for eighteen months after having taken the advice of the bishops.

Among later bishops of Sens were: Guillaume aux Blanches Mains (1168-76), son of Thibaud IV, Count of Champagne, uncle of Philip Augustus, and first cousin of Henry II, who in 1172 in the name of Alexander III placed the Kingdom of England under an interdict and in 1176 became Archbishop of Reims; Michael of Corbeil (1194-9), who combated the Manichaean sect of "Publicans"; Peter of Corbeil (1200-22), who had been professor of theology of Innocent III; Pierre Roger (1329-30), later Clement VI; Guillaume de Brosse (1330-8), who erected at one of the doorways of the cathedral of Sens an equestrian statue of Philip VI of Valois to perpetuate the remembrance of the victory won by the clergy over the pretentions of the legist Pierre de Cugnières; Guillaume de Melun (1344-75), who together with King John II was taken prisoner by the English at the battle of Poitiers in 1356; Guy de Roye (1385-90); Henri de Savoisy (1418-22), who at Troyes in 1420 blessed the marriage of Henry VI of England with Catherine of France; Etienne Tristan de Salazar (1475-1519), who concluded the first treaty of alliance between France and the Swiss; Antoine Duprat (q.v.) 1525-35, made cardinal in 1527; Louis de Bourbon Vende (1535-57), cardinal, from 1517; Jean Bertrandi (1557-60), cardinal in 1559; Louis de Lorraine (1560-2), Cardinal de Guise from 1553; Nicolas de Pellevé (1562-92), cardinal from 1570; Cardinal du Perron (1606-18); Languet de Gergy (730-53), first biographer of Marie Alacoque and member of the French Academy; Paul d'Albert (1753-88), Cardinal de Luynes after 1756 and member of the French Academy; Loménie de Brienne (1788-93), minister of Louis XVI, cardinal in 1788, and who during the Revolution swore to the civil constitution of the clergy but refused to consecrate the first constitutional bishops, returned to the pope his cardinal's hat, refused to become constitutional Bishop of Toulouse, was twice imprisoned by the Jacobins of Sens and died in prison of apoplexy; Anne, Cardinal de la Fare (1821-9), Victor Felix Bernadou (1867-91), cardinal in 1886.

The Archdiocese of Sens, which perhaps became a metropolitan see at the middle of the fifth century, until 1622 numbered seven suffragans: Chartres, Auxerre, Meaux, Paris, Orléans, Nevers, and Troyes; the Diocese of Bethléem at Clamecy (see NEVERS; was also dependent on the metropolitan See of Sens. In 1622 Paris having been raised to a metropolitan see, the Sees of Chartres, Orléans and Meaux were separated from the Archdiocese of Sens. As indemnity the abbey of Mont Saint-Martin in the Diocese of Cambrai was united to the archiepiscopal revenue.


II. DIOCESE OF AUXERRE

The "Gestes des évêques d'Auxerre", written about 875 by the canons Rainogala and Alagus, and continued later down to 1278, gives a list of bishops which, save for one detail, Mgr Duchesene regards as accurate; but the chronological data of the Gestes" seem to him to be very arbitrary for the period prior to the seventh century. No other church of France glories in a similar list of bishops honoured as saints; already in the Middle Ages this multiplicity of saints was remarkable. St. Peregrinus (Pélérin) was the founder of the see; according to the legend, he was sent by Situs II and was martyred under Diocletian in 303 or 304.

After him are mentioned without the possibility of certainly fixing their dates: St. Marcellianus, Valerianus, St. Helladius, St. Amator (d. 418), who had been ordained deacon and tonsured by St. Helladius and who thus affords the earliest example of ecclesiastical tonsure mentioned in the religious history of France; the illustrious St. Germain d'Auxerre (q. v.; 418-48); St. Elladius; St. Fratemus; St. Censurius, to whom about 475 the priest Constantius sent the Life of St. Germain; St. Ursus; St. Theodosius, who assisted in 511 at the Council of Orléans; St. Gregorius; St. Optatus; St. Droctoaldus; St. Eleutherius, who assisted at four Councils of Orléans between 533 and 549; St. Romanus; St. Actherius; St. Aunacharius (Aunaire; 573-605), uncle of St. Lupus, Archbishop of Sens; St. Desiderius (Didier); St. Palladius, who assisted at several councils in 627, 650, and 654; St. Vigilius, who was assassinated about 684, doubtless at the instigation of Gilmer, son of Waraton, mayor of the palace; St. Tetricius (692-707); Venerable Aidulf (perhaps 751-66); Venerable Maurin (perhaps 766-94); Blessed Aaron (perhaps 794-807); Blessed Angelelmus (807-28); St. Heribaldus (829-57), first chaplain of Louis the Pious, and several times given ambassadorial charges; St. Abbo (857-69); Blessed Christian (860-71); Ven. Wibaldus (879-87), Ven. Herifridus (Herfroy; 887-909); St. Géran (909-14); St. Betto (933-61); Ven. Guy (933961); Bl. John (997-998); Ven. Humbaud (1095-1114), drowned on the way to Jerusalem; St. Hugues de Montaigu (1116-1136), a friend of St. Bernard; Bl. Hugues de Mâcon (1137-51), Abbot of Pontigny, often charged by Eugene III with adjusting differences and re-establishing order in monasteries; Ven. Alanus (1152-67), author of a life of St. Bernard; Ven. Guillaume de Toucy (1167-81), the first French bishop who went to Rome to acknowledge the authority of Alexander III.

Among later bishops may be mentioned: Hugues de Noyers (1183-1206), known as the "hammer of heretics" for the vigour with which he sought out in his diocese the sects of the Albigenses and the "Caputiés"; Guillaume de Seignelay (1207-20), who took part in the war against the Albigenses and in 1230 became the Archbishop of Paris; Ven. Bernard de Sully (1234-44); Guy de Mello (1247-70), who was Apostolic delegate in the crusade of Charles of Anjou against Manfred; Pierre de Mornay (1296-1306), who negotiated between Boniface VIII and Philippe le Bel and in 1304 became chancellor of France; Pierre de Cros (1349-51), cardinal in 1350; Philippe de Lenoncourt (1560-62), cardinal in 1586; Philibert Babou de la Bourdaisière (1562-70), cardinal in 1561; the Hellenist Jacques Amyot (1571-93), translator of the works of Plutarch and Diodorus Siculus, tutor of Charles IX, grand almoner of Charles IX and Henry III; Charles de Caylus (1704-54), who made his diocese a centre of Jansenism and whose works in four volumes were condemned by Rome in 1754. The Cathedral of St-Etienne of Sens, founded in 972 and rebuilt under Louis VII and Philip Augustus, is regarded by several archaeologists as the most ancient of pointed style churches. When in 1241 the Dominicans brought to Sens the Crown of Thorns which St. Louis had obtained from Baldwin II, the king went at the head of a procession to within five leagues of Sens, took the relic, and with his brother Robert entered the city barefoot and deposited the relic in the metropolitan church until the Sainte Chapelle of Paris was built to receive it. The cathedral of Auxerre, completed in 1178, contains numerous sculptures in the Byzantine style.

The Dioceses of Sens and Auxerre contained illustrious Abbeys; for that of Ferrières, located in a region which now depends on the Diocese of Orléans, see FERRIERES. The Abbey of St-Pierre le Vif dates from the sixth century, but M. Maurice Prou has proved that the diploma of Clovis and the testament of "Queen" Théodechilde, in the archives of the monastery, lack authenticity. The Théodechilde who founded the monastery was not the daughter of Clovis but his granddaughter, the daughter of Thierry first king of Austrasia. The schools instituted by Rainard, Abbot of St-Pierre le Vif, were celebrated during the Middle Ages. The Abbey of St. Columba, the great primitive saint of the City of Lyons, was founded about 590. Her "Passion" dates beyond doubt from the end of the sixth century, in the time of Bishop St. Loup, who translated the relics of St. Columba to the monastery church. It is probable that her martyrdom took place in the time of Aurelian. Her cultus was widespread, extending to Rimini, Barcelona, and Cordova. The Acts of the martyrdom of Sts. Sanctian, Augustine, and Beata, companions of St. Columba, seem to date from the end of eighth century or the beginning of the ninth century. In the Abbey of St. Columba, whose third church was consecrated 26 April, 1164, by Alexander III, were buried Raoul, King of France, and Richard, Duke of Burgundy. The Abbey of St. Germain d'Auxerre, founded in 422 by the bishop St. Germain, in honour of St. Maurice, took the name of St. Germain when it was rebuilt by Queen Clotilde about 500. In 850 Abbot Conrad, brother-in-law of Louis the Pious, had crypts built in the monastery in which were deposited many bodies of saints. Urban V was Abbot of St-Germain before becoming pope; King Charles VI of France did not disdain the honour of seeing his name inscribed among those of the monks. The crypts were ravaged by the Calvinists in 1567. The abbey followed the Benedictine rule; it was twice reformed, from 995-9 by St. Mayeul of Cluny and his disciple Heldric, and in 1029 by the Benedictines of St-Maur.

The Abbey of St-Edmond of Pontigny, the second daughter of Cîteaux, was founded in 1114 by Thibaud IV the Great, Count of Champagne. Hugh, Count of Mâcon, one of the first thirty companions of St. Bernard, was the first abbot. Louis VII, King of France, was its benefactor. St. Thomas à Becket took refuge at Pontigny before seeking shelter at St. Columba's at Sens. In the thirteenth century Stephen Langton and later St. Edmund, Archbishop of Canterbury, also found refuge at Pontigny. The Benedictine Abbey of St-Michel at Tonnerre was founded about 800 on the site of a hermitage dating from the time of Clovis I; it was restored about 980 by Milo, Count of Tonnerre. In the fifteenth century Cardinal Alanus, legate of Callistus III, numbered it among the twelve most illustrious abbeys of Gaul. The arrondissement of Avallon, now in the Diocese of Sens, and formerly dependent on the Diocese of Autun, possessed the celebrated monastery of Vézelay. It was founded about 860 under the protection of Christ and the Blessed Virgin by Gerard, Count of Roussillon and his wife, Bertha; Gerard declared the territory free and dependent only on the pope. Nicholas I in 867 and Charles the Bald in 868 confirmed the donation. Eudes, the first abbot, offered hospitality to John VIII, who in, 879 consecrated the first church of the monastery. The Norman invasions laid waste the monastery, but it was restored under Abbot Geoffrey, installed in 1037. Under this abbot the cultus of St. Magdalen appeared for the first time at Vézelay; a letter of Leo IX (1050) shows that the name of St. Magdalen was part of the official title of the abbey. Mgr Duchesne has shown that the monks of Vézelay, at this date, constructed a first account according to which the tombs of Sts. Maximinus and Magdalen, at St-Maximin in Provence, had been opened and their bodies removed to Vézelay; shortly afterwards a second account relates that there was taken away only the body of St. Magdalen. For two centuries the account of the monks of Vézelay was accepted; Bulls of Lucius III, Urban III, and Clement III confirmed the statement that they possessed the body of St. Magdalen. The tomb of the saint was visited in the twelfth century by a host of illustrious pilgrims; "All France", writes Hugh of Poitiers, seems to go to the solemnities of the Magdalen."

In 1096 Abbot Artaud, who was later assassinated, had begun the construction of the Basilica of the Madeleine, which was dedicated in 1104 by Paschal II; his successor, Renaud de Semur, later Archbishop of Lyons, completed it, raised it from its ruins after the great fire of July, 1120, and also built the abbatial chateau. Alberic, a monk of Cluny, named abbot by Innocent II, built in front of the portal the narthex, or church of the catechumens, the doorways of which have marvelously wrought archivolts and which was blessed by Innocent II in 1132 during his sojourn at Vézelay; he died a cardinal and Archbishop of Ostia. Under Abbot Pontius of Montboisier (d. 1161), a former monk of Cluny, Vézelay emancipated itself from Cluniac rule, declared its autonomy as against the claims of the bishops of Autun, and victoriously resisted the encroachments of the counts of Nevers. The second crusade was preached in 1146 by St. Bernard in the abbatial chateau amid such enthusiasm that the assistants tore their garments to make crosses and distribute them to the crowd. Guillaume IV of Nevers sought to be revenged on the monks of Vézelay, and his provost, Léthard, defying excommunication, forced the monks to take flight, but in 1166 Louis arranged a peace between the Comte de Nevers and Abbot Guillaume de Mello. On Pentecost, 1166, St. Thomas á Becket from the pulpit of Vézelay pronounced excommunication against the clerics who, to gratify King Henry II had violated the rights of the Church. Louis VII came himself to Vézelay at epiphany, 1167, to celebrate the reconciliation between the monks of Vézelay and Count Guillaume IV, and in expiation of his crimes Guillaume IV set out for the Holy Land where he died in 1168.

Under the rule of Abbot Girard d'Arcy (1171-96), Philip Augustus and Richard Coeur de Lion met at Vézelay in July, 1190, to arrange for the Third Crusade. In place of the Romanesque apse burnt in 1165, Girard had built the choir today admired as one of the most beautiful specimens of Burgundian architecture and falsely attributed to Abbot Hugh, his successor. St. Louis came to Vézelay in 1267 for a solemn feast organized by the monks for the recognition of the relics of St. Mary Magdalen and at which Simon de Brion, the future Martin IV, represented the Holy See as legate; St. Louis returned here in 1270 on his way to the crusade. This benevolence of the kings of France and the constant menace which the abbey endured from the counts of Nevers led the monks of Vézelay and the pope to accept the act whereby Philip the Bold in 1280 declared himself protector and guardian of the Abbey. Hugues de Maison-Comte, who became abbot in 1352 and was taken prisoner with John II of France at the battle of Poitiers, occupied himself after two years of captivity in England with fortifying the monastery against an English attack; he rendered it impregnable and in gratitude Charles V made him a member of the royal council. The claims put forth by the Dominicans of Provence, beginning in 1279, that they possessed the body of St. Mary Magdalen injured the prestige of Vézelay during the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries. In 1538 a Bull of secularization sought from Paul III by Francis I and the monks themselves transformed the abbey into a simple collegiate church. Odet de Chatillon, brother of Coligny and Abbot of Vézelay, subsequently became a Calvinist. The Huguenot masters of Vézelay converted the Madeleine into a storehouse and stable and burned the relics. During the Revolution the ancient monastery buildings were sold at auction. In 1876 the future Cardinal Bernadou, Archbishop of Sens, determined to restore the pilgrimage of St. Mary Magdalen at Vézelay and brought thither a relic of the saint which Martin IV had given to the Chapter of Sens in 1281.

A certain number of saints are honoured with a special cultus or are connected with the history of the diocese: St. Jovinian, martyr, lector of the church of Auxerre (third century); Sts. Sanctian, Augustine, Felix, Aubert, and Beata, Spaniards, martyred at Sens; St. Sidronius (Sidioine), possibly martyred under Aurelian, whose martyrdom is considered by the Bollandists as very doubtful; St. Justus, martyr, b. at Auxerre about the end of the third century; Sts. Magnentia and Maxima, virgins consecrated by St. Germain (fifth century); St. Mamertinus, Abbot of St-Germain (fifth century); the priest St. Marien (sixth century); St. Romain, d. at the beginning of the sixth century in the monastery, which he founded in Auxerre, and in which St. Maurus learned through a vision of the death of St. Benedict; St. Severin, d. at Château Landon, Diocese of Sens (506); St. Eligius (5659), who' administered the monastery of St. Columba before becoming Bishop of Noyon; St. Mathurin, a priest of Sens, d. 688; St. Paternus, a Benedictine, native of Coutances, monk at St. Pierre le Vif, and assassinated at Sergines (eighth century); St. Robert, Abbot of Tonnerre, founder of the Abbey, of Molesmes and of the Order of Cîteaux (1018-1110); St. Thierry, Bishop of Orléans, reared at the monastery of St-Pierre le Vif, and d. in 1027 at Tonnerre; Bl. Alpaide, of Tonnerre (end of twelfth century); St. Guillaume, Archbishop of Bourges, previously a monk at Pontigny (d. in 1209). Jean Lebeuf (1687-1760), who in 1743 wrote the "Memoires contenant l'histoire ecelésiastique et civile d' Auxerre", was a member of the Academy of Inscriptions.

The chief pilgrimages of the Diocese of Sens are: Notre Dame de Bellevue at Tronchoy; Notre Dame de Champrond at Vinneuf; the tomb of St. Columba at Sens; the altar of Sts. Savinian and Potentian at Sens, which according to legend is the stone on which St. Savinian fell. Before the application of the Associations' Law of 1901, there were in the Diocese of Sens: Augustinians of the Assumption; Lazarists; Oblates of St. Francis de Sales; Missionaries of the Sacred Heart of Jesus and of the Immaculate Heart of Mary, founded in 1843 by Fr. Muard (1809-54), with mother-house at Pontigny; and Benedictines of the Sacred Heart of Jesus and of the Immaculate Heart of Mary founded at "La Pierre qui Vire" by the same Fr. Muard. Two congregations of women originated in the diocese: the Sisters of Providence founded in 1818 with mother-house at Sens; the Sisters of the Holy Childhood founded in 1838 by Abbé Grapinet with mother-house at Ste-Colombe. At the end of the nineteenth century the religious congregations directed in the Diocese of Sens: 53 infant schools, 4 orphanages for boys, 8 orphanages for girls, 2 workrooms, 2 organizations of rescue, 5 houses of religious for the care of the sick in their homes, 16 hospitals or infirmaries. In 1905 (end of the period of the Concordat) the diocese numbered 334,656 inhabitants, 49 parishes, 440 filial churches, and 4 vicariates remunerated by the State.

Gallia Christiana (nova), XII (1770), 1-107, instr. 1-98; FISQUET, France Pontificate: Sens et Auxerre (Paris, 1866); DUCHESNE, Fastes épiscopaux, II, 389-418, 427-46; MÉMAIN, L'Apostolate de Saint Savinien, (Paris, 1888); BLONDEL, L'Apostolicité de l'eglise de Sens (Sens, 1902); BOUVIER, Histoire de I'église de I'ancien archidiocèse de Sens, I (Paris, 1906); QUESVERS AND STEIN, Inscriptions de l'ancien diocese de Sens (Paris, 1904); LONGNON, Pouillés la province de Sens (Paris, 1904); VAUDIN, La cathédrale de Sens (Paris, 1882); JULLIOT, Armorial des archevêques de Sens (Sens, 1862); ASPINALL, Les écoles épiscopales monastiques d'l'ancienne province de Sens (Paris, 1904); CHÉREST, Études historique sur Vézelay (Auxerre, 1868); GALLY, Vézelay monastique, (Tonnerre, 1888)

GEORGES GOYAU