Abbey of Saint Vaast

 Vacancy

 Abbey of Vadstena

 Vaga

 François Vaillant de Gueslis

 Alfonso de Valdés

 Diocese of Valence

 Archdiocese of Valencia

 University of Valencia

 Flavius Valens

 St. Valentine

 Pope Valentine

 Valentinian

 Valentinus and Valentinians

 Valerian

 Validation of Marriage

 Lorenzo Valla

 Archdiocese of Valladolid

 Dominic Vallarsi

 Pietro della Valle

 Charles-Louis-Joseph-Xavier de la Vallée-Poussin

 Diocese of Valleyfield

 Thomas de Vallgornera

 Valliscaulian Order

 Vallumbrosan Order

 Henri Valois

 Valona

 Hyacinthe de Valroger

 Dioceses of Valva and Sulmona

 Vincent de Valverde

 Ludwig Van Beethoven

 Pierre-Joseph Van Beneden

 William Home Van Buren

 Archdiocese of Vancouver

 Albert Vandal

 Vandals

 Theodore J. Van den Broek

 Maximilian Van der Sandt

 Rogier Van der Weyden

 Peter Van de Velde

 Augustine Van De Vyver

 Thomas Vane

 Diocese of Vannes

 Andrea Vanni

 Francesco Vanni

 Luis de Vargas

 Francisco de Vargas y Mexia

 Giorgio Vasari

 Gabriel Vasquez

 François Vatable

 Vatican

 Vatican Council

 Vatican Observatory

 Philippe de Rigaud, Marquis de Vaudreuil

 Herbert Vaughan

 Roger William Vaughan

 Louis-Nicolas Vauquelin

 Laurence Vaux

 Vaux-de-Cernay

 Thomas Vavasour

 François Vavasseur

 Joseph Vaz

 Lorenzo di Pietro Vecchietta

 Vedas

 Andreas de Vega

 Johannes Veghe

 Maffeo Vegio

 Diocese of Veglia

 Michael Vehe

 Religious Veil

 Philipp Veit

 Johann Emanuel Veith

 Diego Rodriguez de Silva y Velazquez

 Venezuela

 Venice

 Veni Creator Spiritus

 Veni Sancte Spiritus Et Emitte Coelitus

 Veni Sancte Spiritus Reple

 Diocese of Venosa

 Diocese of Ventimiglia

 Gioacchino Ventura di Raulica

 Venturino of Bergamo

 Raffaele Venusti

 Diocese of Vera Cruz

 Archdiocese of Verapoly

 Ferdinand Verbiest

 Verbum Supernum Prodiens

 Archdiocese of Vercelli

 Carlo Vercellone

 Jacinto Verdaguer

 Giuseppe Verdi

 Diocese of Verdun

 Verecundus

 Paolo Vergani

 Pier Paolo Vergerio, the Elder

 Polydore Vergil

 St. Vergilius of Salzburg

 Friedrich Heinrich Vering

 Vermont

 La Verna

 Tommasina Vernazza

 Jules Verne

 Pierre Vernier

 Diocese of Veroli

 François Véron

 Diocese of Verona

 St. Veronica

 St. Veronica Giuliani

 Augustin Verot

 Giovanni da Verrazano

 Hospice-Anthelme Verreau

 Count Pietro Verri

 Andrea del Verrocchio

 Diocese of Versailles

 Versions of the Bible

 Richard Verstegan

 John Vertin

 Réné-Aubert Vertot

 Veruela

 Andreas Vesalius

 Vespasian

 Vespasiano da Bisticci

 Vespers

 Music of Vespers

 Sicilian Vespers

 Amerigo Vespucci

 Vestibule

 Vestments

 Diocese of Veszprém

 Royal Veto

 Conrad Vetter

 Louis Veuillot

 Vexilla Regis Prodeunt

 Antonio Francesco Vezzosi

 José Viader

 Viaticum

 Clerics of Saint Viator

 Vicar

 Vicar Apostolic

 Vicar Capitular

 Vicar-General

 Hermann von Vicari

 Vicar of Christ

 Vice

 St. Vicelinus

 Gil Vicente

 Diocese of Vicenza

 Diocese of Vich

 Francescoe de Vico

 Victimae Paschali Laudes Immolent Christiani

 Pope St. Victor I

 Pope Victor II

 Pope Bl. Victor III

 Victor IV

 Victor

 Diocese of Victoria

 Vicariate Apostolic of Northern Victoria Nyanza

 Vicariate Apostolic of Southern Victoria Nyanza

 St. Victorinus

 Caius Marius Victorinus

 Victor of Capua

 Victor Vitensis

 Feast of Our Lady of Victory

 Marco Girolamo Vida

 Antonio Vieira

 Nicolas Viel

 Vienna

 University of Vienna

 Council of Vienne (1311-12)

 Franz Michael Vierthaler

 François Vieta

 Denis-Benjamin Viger

 Jacques Viger

 Diocese of Vigevano

 St. Vigilius

 Vigilius, Bishop of Tapsus

 Pope Vigilius

 Giacomo Barozzi da Vignola

 Simon Vigor

 Juan Bautista Villalpandus

 Giovanni Villani

 Arnaldus Villanovanus

 Jacques-Melchior Villefranche

 Geoffroi de Villehardouin

 Jean-Paul-Alban Villeneuve-Barcement

 Louis-René Villermé

 Abbey of Villers

 Diocese of Vilna

 St. Vincent (Maldegarius)

 St. Vincent

 St. Vincent de Paul

 St. Vincent Ferrer

 Bl. Vincent Kadlubek

 Vincent of Beauvais

 St. Vincent of Lérins

 Leonardo di Ser Piero da Vinci

 St. Vindicianus

 Vineam Domini

 Violence

 Eugène-Emmanuel Viollet-Le-Duc

 Giovanni Battista Viotti

 St. Virgilius

 Virgin Birth of Christ

 Virginia

 Virginity

 Devotion to the Blessed Virgin Mary

 Bl. Virgin Mary

 Virtue

 Peter Vischer

 Claude de Visdelou

 Visigoths

 Visions

 Visit ad Limina

 Canonical Visitation

 Visitation of the Blessed Virgin Mary

 Visitation Order

 Visitors Apostolic

 Visits to the Blessed Sacrament

 Visitation Convent, Georgetown

 Vincenzo de Vit

 Pope St. Vitalian

 Bonifazio Vitalini

 St. Vitalis

 Sts. Vitalis and Agricola

 St. Vitalis of Savigny

 Muzio Vitelleschi

 Lucius Vitellius

 Diocese of Viterbo and Toscanella

 Diocese of Vitoria

 Vittorino da Feltre

 Sts. Vitus, Modestus, and Crescentia

 Domenico Viva

 Vivarini

 Juan Luis Vives

 Diocese of Viviers

 Moral Aspect of Vivisection

 Diocese of Vizagapatam

 Diocese of Vizeu

 St. Vladimir the Great

 Ecclesiastical and Religious Vocation

 George Joseph Vogler

 Eugène-Melchior, Vicomte de Vogüé

 Wilhelm Volk

 Volksverein for Catholic Germany

 Alessandro Volta

 Daniele da Volterra

 Diocese of Volterra

 Voluntarism

 Voluntary

 Völuspá

 Joost van Den Vondel

 Freiherr Max Von Gagern

 Votive Mass

 Votive Offerings

 Votive Offices

 Vows

 Philibert Vrau

 Theodoric Vrie

 Revision of Vulgate

Visitation Order


The nuns of the Visitation of Mary, called also Filles de Sainte-Marie, Visitandines, and Salesian Sisters, were founded in 1610 at Annecy in the Duchy of Savoy by St. Francis de Sales, Bishop of Geneva, and by St. Jane de Chantal. Their aim was to secure the benefit of the religious life for persons who had neither the physical strength nor the attraction for the corporal austerities at that time general in religious orders. St. Francis wished especially to apply in souls of good will and in a permanent institution the spiritual method dear to him: to reach God chiefly through interior mortification and to endeavour to do in every action only the Divine Will with the greatest possible love. The Visitation is therefore the principal work of St. Francis de Sales, the perpetuation of his doctrine and spirit, the living commentary on the "Introduction à la vie dévote" and the "Traité de l'amour de Dieu".

At first the founder had not a religious order in mind; he wished to form a congregation without external vows, where the cloister should be observed only during the year of novitiate, after which the sisters should be free to go out by turns to visit the sick poor. This was why he called his institute the Visitation. The project was quite different from the idea realized later by St. Vincent de Paul in the Sisters of Charity, for what the bishop desired above all was the contemplative life; to this he added visitation of the sick, but merely by way of devotion. The undertaking was begun on Trinity Sunday, 6 June, 1610. The Baronne de Chantal, a widow, native of Burgundy, was destined to be the first superioress. Marie-Jacqueline Favre, daughter of the Savoyard juris-consult Antoine Favre, and Mlle Charlotte de Brechard, a Burgundian, accompanied the foundress as did also a servant, Anne-Jacqueline Coste, destined to be the first outdoor sister of the Visitation. After having receive the bishop's blessing they assembled in the house of "la Galerie", still standing, in a suburb of Annecy. Trials, especially those arising from ridicule, were not wanting to the young congregation. People did not readily understand the mild and simple rule of the new institute. Superficial observers did not take into account that the bishop was in his conduct and direction really the most mortified of all the saints. Nevertheless the novices arrived, and the names of two, Peronne-Marie de Chatel and Marie-Amee de Blonay, have remained noted in the history of the Visitation.

When the establishment was an accomplished fact (1615) Archbishop de Marquemont of Lyons undertook to persuade the founder to follow the common practice and erect his congregation into a religious order under the Rule of St. Augustine, with the cloister imposed by the Council of Trent. At first the saint resisted. It cost him much to abandon the sick poor and leave to his daughters only the apostolate of prayer and sacrifice, but he eventually yielded. He then (1616) undertook the compilation of the "Constitutions pour les religieuses de la Visitation Sainte-Marie". The Church has thus characterized this work: "He had added to the rule of St. Augustine constitutions which are admirable for wisdom, discretion, and sweetness" (Brev. Rom., 29 Jan., sixth lesson). At once the founder opened the door of the monastery to all of good will. No severity, however great, could prevent the weak and infirm from coming "there to seek the perfection of Divine love". He expressly ordered the reception at the Visitation not only of virgins but also of widows, on condition that they were legitimately freed from the care of their children; the aged, provided they were of right mind; the crippled, provided they were sound in mind and heart; even the sick, except those who had contagious diseases.

Austerities of the cloister, like rising at night, sleeping on hard surfaces, were suppressed. Instead of chanting the canonical office in the middle of the night the sisters recited the Little Office of the Blessed Virgin at half-past eight in the evening. There was no perpetual abstinence nor prolonged fast. Besides the ordinary fast days of the Church, he retained only that on every Friday and certain vigils. Corporal mortifications properly so called were limited to the use of discipline every Friday. But the wise legislator was careful to give to interior mortification what he withdrew from exterior mortification. His first concern was for poverty, which is nowhere so strict as in the Visitation, where everything is absolutely in common. No sister may "have as property anything however little, or under any pretext whatever". Not only the rooms and the beds, but medals, crosses, rosary beads, even pictures, are changed every year in order that the sisters may never come to consider them as their own. Next comes obedience. Whether general or particular it extends to every moment of the day, and the superior is to be obeyed as a mother, "carefully, faithfully, promptly, simply, frankly, and cordially". The most trying mortification is perhaps that of the common life as understood by St. Francis de Sales. The day of the Visitandine is divided from 5 a. m. until 10 p. m. into a multitude of short exercises which keep her occupied every instant in duties determined by her rule. An hour of mental prayer in the morning and a half-hour in the evening, Mass, Office, spiritual readings, and examens of conscience succeed one another, and keep the religious in perpetual contemplation. Silence, recollection, modesty of demeanour prepare for and facilitate prayer. Two recreations of an hour each relax without dissipating the mind; the sisters should talk with cordiality and simplicity only of agreeable and piously cheerful topics.

A little book based on St. Francis de Sales and which St. Jane de Chantal added from the first to the Constitutions of the order, namely, the "Directoire spirituel pour les actions journalieres", gives the practical means of fulfilling the Constitutions in the spirit of the holy founder, the method of performing each of the daily actions under the eye of God, in dependence on Him, and in union with the Divine Model, Jesus Christ. It may be said that the "Directoire" is the mould of the Visitandines. The sisters wear a black habit. The gown is made a sac, rather full, and is confined by a girdle. On the head they wear a veil of black taminy. A black bandeau encircles the brow; a guimpe or barbette of white linen covers the neck, from which is suspended a silver cross; a large chaplet hangs at the belt. There are three grades among the sisters: the choir sisters who sing the Office; the associate sisters dispensed from the Office because of their health, but in other respects the same as the first grade; and finally the lay sisters who wear a white veil and are engaged in domestic tasks; they have no voice in the chapter but they make the same vows and are as much religious as the others. The communities are cloistered. The outdoor sisters who make publicly only the vow of obedience are charged with the external service of the house. Each convent is governed by a superior whom all the sisters elect by secret ballot. She is chosen for three years at the end of which time she is eligible for election for three more years. When this time is ended she is ineligible for the subsequent term. A council of four other sisters assist her in the government of the house. An assistant replaces her when it is necessary. All the houses of the order are independent of one another. Circulars sent from time to time keep all acquainted with the events of each convent. There is no superior general, no visitor general, nor general chapter. In doubts regarding observance, recourse is had to the house of Annecy, the sainte source, which actually exercises no authority, but whose right to advise is recognized as that of an elder sister. The first superior of each convent is the bishop of the diocese and it is under his direct and immediate care. Two priests are charged by the bishop with the care of the convent, one with the title of superior, the other with that of confessor.

Such are the chief rules of the Visitation, their most striking characteristic being moderation and common sense. Made for generous souls, there is nothing about them which could weaken the body, while they overlook nothing which could mortify the spirit. For three centuries the Visitation has never stood in need of reform and each century has brought to the Church and the world its contingent of holy souls. The Order of the Visitation of Mary was canonically erected in 1618 by Paul V who granted it all the privileges enjoyed by the other orders. A Bull of Urban VIII solemnly approved it in 1626. At the first centenary of the institute in 1710 came renewed praise for its Constitutions "admirable for wisdom, discernment, and mildness, and which open up a certain easy and united path" to religious perfection. The Visitation developed rapidly. As early as the third year the house of "la Galerie" was too small; it was necessary to purchase an estate and build not far from the lake the convent which kept the name of the first convent of Annecy. The church still exists; the remainder of the building was destroyed during the French Revolution. Lyons (1615) was the first foundation with Mother Favre as superior; Moulines (1616) was the second with Mother de Brechard. Grenoble (1618), Bourges (1618), and Paris (1619) followed in close succession. When St. Francis de Sales died (1622) there were already 13 convents established. At the death of St. Jane de Chantal (1641) there were 86. The Bull of Clement XI at the first centenary of the foundation mentions 147. In the seventeenth century the order was confined to France and especially to Savoy; in the eighteenth century it extended to Italy, Germany, Spain, Switzerland, Poland, and the Low Countries. There were 167 houses in 1792 when the French Revolution dispersed and closed all the convents it reached. The foreign houses retained the traditions of the founders. The storm passed and as early as 1800 the convents of the Visitation began gradually to be restored in all parts of France. That of Annecy was not restored until 1824.

The convent of Georgetown was the first house of the Visitation founded in the United States (see sub-article below). The Visitation of Georgetown founded that of Mobile 1833 and in the same year that of Kaskaskia, which was transferred to St. Louis in 1844. In 1837 it founded the Visitation of Baltimore, that of Frederick in 1846, and Philadelphia in 1848. These various convents founded others, and at present there are in the United States 21 houses of the Visitation in relation with Annecy. England has two convents, Westbury, now transferred to Harrow, London, and that of Roseland, Walmer, Kent, which is the ancient convent of Vilna, Poland. The last Visitation convent founded in an English-speaking country is that of Ottawa, Canada, founded by sisters from Annecy in 1910. At the third centenary of the order, 6 June, 1910, the Visitation numbered 170 convents: 56 in France and 12 other French houses which the religious persecution compelled to go into exile; 30 in Italy; 2 in Switzerland; 7 in Austria; 1 in Russian Poland; 4 in Belgium; 1 in Holland; 2 in England; 17 in Spain; 3 in Portugal (these convents were driven into exile by the Revolution in 1910); 21 in the United States; 1 in Canada; 11 in Latin America; and 2 in Syria.

The first Visitandines, emulating their foundress, had nearly all received extraordinary gifts of prayer. The process of beatification of Mother de Brechard was even begun but was abandoned to make way for that of Mother de Chantal. It was Blessed Margaret Mary Alacoque (q. v.), a Visitandine of Paray-le- Monial in Burgundy, to whom the Sacred Heart of Jesus was manifested, in order that the devotion to the Sacred Heart might be communicated to the Church. Another Visitandine, Venerable Anne- Madeleine Remusat of the second convent of Marseilles, was the propagator of devotion to the Sacred Heart at the time of the plague of Marseilles in 1722; her cause was introduced in 1891. The cause of Venerable Marie de Sales Chappuis, superioress of the Visitation convent of Troyes (d. in 1875), was introduced in 1879 and the process of her beatification is proceeding rapidly. A religious of exalted virtue, she encouraged a number of souls both within and without the cloister in that path of confidence, generosity, obedience to the Divine Will, of fidelity to the duty of the present moment, which was inculcated by St. Francis de Sales. In the course of the process of beatification her authentic writings have been carefully examined and approved by the Sacred Congregation of Rites (Decree of 21 Sept., 1892). The Visitandines are contemplatives, and in order that they might not be turned aside from the chief aim the founder often recurs in his letters to the necessity of not imposing external duties which would divert them from their first vocation. Nevertheless, even in the time of St. Francis de Sales the Visitation several times accepted temporarily the mission of reforming foreign communities or even houses of penitent women, and God has blessed their devotion. It was likewise the need of the times which at a certain period led many convents to open within their cloisters boarding-schools for young girls. These boarding-schools which still exist in certain communities have done great good to youth. The instruction given at the Visitation is generally solid and on a par with that of the most serious schools. But what especially characterizes the schools of the Visitation and the pupils themselves is the strong education of will and character. In a constantly serene and maternal atmosphere the child leans at an early age self-denial, a sense of duty, and of responsibility to God for every action. The mistress's methods of going to God become to a certain extent those of the children.

HAMON, Hist. de St. Francois de Sales, ed. GONTHIER AND LETOURNEAUX (Paris, 1909); Bougaud, Hist. de ste Chantal (Paris, 1865); ST. FRANCIS DE SALES, Lettres, in Oeuvres, XIV (Annecy, 1908); Regles, de st Augustin et constitutions pour les soeurs de la Visitation (Annecy, 1889); Annee sainte des religieuses de la Visitation Ste Marie (Annecy, 1871); DE CHAUGY, Vie de quatre des premieres meres de l'ordre de la Visitation Ste. Marie, ed. VEUILLOT (Paris, 1852).

Raphael Pernin.