Vincent de Paul

     Vincentian Priests and Brothers  
Australia and Fiji   
  

       
Heritage Places: St-Germain-en-Laye
     

 
     
    
This Site
 

    
Other Sites


 

 

 

VINCENT DE PAUL AND THE FRENCH COURT
   

During the latter part of his life, Vincent de Paul had an association with the French Royal Court.  The association with Louis XIII probably began in 1636 with the first known interview between Vincent and Louis at Senlis, when Vincent was asked to send missioners to the army.  According to the author Abelly, Vincent made the journey to the army's general headquarters in Senlis to offer the king his services and those of the Congregation of the Mission. Then, in 1638, on the orders of Louis,  some Priests of the Congregation of the Mission were part of a group organised by the Tuesday Conferences to give a Mission to the Court at St-Germain-en-Laye, just east of Paris. It was here that the Missioners came in contact with the Court - with Louis XIII and the Queen, Anne of Austria.  Louis himself spoke in defence of the preaching of the Missioners as they 'addressed' some of the vices of the Courtiers.  Thereafter, Vincent often spoke of St-Germain-en-Laye in regard to Missions there, and in referring to both the  Ladies of Charity and  the  Daughters of Charity.

  

   

Above: The Château at St Germain-en-Laye

Left: Interior Court of the Château

 

VINCENT, ANNE OF AUSTRIA, AND THE COUNCIL OF CONSCIENCE
  

Vincent became a personal adviser to Queen Anne of Austria, and often visited her at her pavillon at the 
Val-de-Grace  (1, Place Alphonse-Laveran, 5th Arrondissement, Paris)  - a place to which she frequently retreated to escape from the pressures of the Court.

In 1643, Vincent was asked to assist King Louis XIII on his deathbed. Louis spent his last days at St-Germain-en-Laye and died there. From his bed, Louis is reported to have looked across the countryside to the spires of Saint Denis and said he would be 'spending a long time there' - Saint Denis being where he would be buried. After Louis' death, Anne of Austria became the Queen Regent for her son Louis XIV (later known as the 'Sun King') who was only a few years old when his father died.  Anne set up a body known as the Council of Conscience to advise her on appointments of Bishops, and other Church matters - and made Vincent de Paul a member of this Council.   Through this Council, Vincent was able to have a huge influence for good on appointments to the Episcopate in France over a period of a number of years. His presence on the Council of Conscience also made him a target for the jibes of Cardinal Mazarin.
  

ROYAL CHAPLAINCIES AND CONSEQUENCES
 

After Vincent de Paul's death, the confreres of the Congregation of the Mission took on Royal Chaplaincies at Fontainbleau, Versailles, Les Invalides, Saint-Cloud, Saint Cyr, and even London, works which Vincent himself had resisted despite pressure from the Court. These foundations were accepted during the terms of Fr
René Alméras   CM and Fr Edmond Jolly CM as Superior General of the Congregation. Such works continued till the French Revolution in the time of Louis XVI, and would have contributed to the deaths of a number of confreres during the Revolution as by then the connection of the Vincentians with the French Court was still apparent.
  

AN ENGLISH CONNECTION

For those familiar with English History, James II of England (James VII of Scotland), the last of the Stuart Kings, was buried in the Parish Church at St-Germain-en-Laye.  After fleeing England, James II had been given refuge by King Louis XIV of France. The Stuarts had a strong French connection - Mary Queen of Scots, educated in France and married (her first marriage) to François II of France (brother of Marguérite de Valois), was the daughter of Mary of Guise.  The Guise Family was one of the very Catholic Families of France.  It is also interesting to note that, at the time of James II's demise, French Vincentians were chaplains to the Royal Court in London! James II had endeavoured to emulate his cousin Louis XIV, not only in regard to being an absolute ruler, but also in regard to having the Church present at Court in the form of Chaplains.

Above: Parish Church at St-Germain-en-Laye
(Opposite the Ch
âteau)

Right: Memorial Plaques to
James II (James VII)

   

The town and Chateau of St-Germain-en-Laye can be reached by train from Paris using Line A1 of the RER.

 

     

 

Go to Top of Page