5 July 2020

Three Emigre French clergy

At the beginning of May in 1619, a Carmelite House was founded at Antwerp for exiled English recusant ladies. The community in 1794 transferred to Lanherne in Cornwall. If you discount a recent hiatus of three or four years, there are four centuries of Carmelite continuity now represented at Lanherne.

During one of my early visits there, "We'll put out the five kilo chasuble" said Reverend Mother through the grille. "It dates from when the House was opened in Antwerp in 1619. But we'll also put out a lighter chasuble in case it's too much for you."

Of course, I wore the five kilo chasuble, its embroidery a heavy riot of baroque cornucopias. How could one resist such a challenge? After Mass, as I left the Chapel, and looked at the gravestones surrounding the first millenium crucifix outside the door, this inscription caught my eye: Beneath is interred the Rev Louis Dourlen Chaplain of Lanherne formerly priest of the Diocese of St Omers and Canon of Arras Cathedral 1839. Aged 85.

It suddenly dawned upon me that M le Chanoine would very probably have worn that five kilo chasuble; the penny dropped that he must have been a gentleman clergyman who had left France during its Revolutionary troubles. I later discovered (George Oliver, Collections, page 287) that Dourlen joined, for a while, the considerable community (unmentioned by Jane Austen) of French emigres in Bath. There, "he was much respected and esteemed for his integrity and polished manners"; he was gout-ridden but never wore spectacles! I suppose he was in his thirties when Arras Cathedral was declared the Temple of Reason and, presumably, he lost the stipends of his canonry (so it is no surprise that, according to a Guide to Regency Bath, he was available to give French lessons!). The Cathedral was subsequently demolished.

I have recently written about an Abbe Chauvel, whose life was interwoven with the activities of the Catholic Trelawnys. Tentatively, I wonder if he may be the cleric listed as "A Pannece. Chauvel (Jean), ex-vicaire; y exerce. Insoumis, peu eclaire, sans moyens, tres pieux" (E Sevestre, Le clerge Breton en 1801 d'apres les enquetes prefectorales de l'an IX et l'an X conservees aux archives nationales). Peu eclaire! what an accolade! Faxit Deus ...

There were some 5,000 emigre clergy from France in this country after the Revolution, including thirty bishops. They were organised by the Bishop of Saint Pol de Leon, Jean Francois de la Marche, who had escaped to England in the spring of 1791. He played a big role in organising the emigre clergy of London; Sir Harry Trelawny could have known him in London before the bishop's death in 1806. But, although Wilson records that Trelawny spent "a considerable time" in Saint Pol de Leon, it is not easy to see how he could have done this at the same time as while de la Marche was resident in his See.

These clergy ... confessores Fidei in the old sense ... had lived through the days when the ambiguities of the Oath, the Civil Constitution of the Clergy and of the Concordat tried the consciences of the Clerus Gallicanus; the despoiling of the Church in the Hiberian and Italian peninsulars; the period in 1799 when "the last pope" died, a lonely prisoner of the triumphant and invincible French revolutionary regime ... the pope at whose death the long history of the Catholic Church came, manifestly, unmistakably, definitively, to its end: and the gates of Hell prevailed, as the Enemy had always known they certainly would.


As people say, the rumours of the Catholic Church's demise were much exaggerated. Pius VI did, after all, have a successor, and Bonaparte was, happily, ultimately vincible. There are no historical inevitables except the Church's indefectibility.

Ambiguities; ruptures; continuities. The Church Militant always has, in her institutions, even in the Papacy, a tension between continuita interiore and appearances of discontinuity.

Does her life really change much?

5 comments:

Thomas Student said...

Father, what book(s) do you most recommend for this period (French Revolution, its effects, imprisonment of Pius VI)?

william arthurs said...

How were these clergy welcomed to England?

"Church and State combined to make provision for the exiled French clergy: a clear indication not only of public dismay at the fate of religion in France, but also an application of the need to give public support to religion, even if it was Catholic and foreign."

--Edward Norman, Church & Society in England, 1770-1970: An Historical Study, p. 21

Simon Cotton said...

It has a wider timescale, but Daniel-Rops' The Church in an Age of Revolution 1789-1870 covers France 1789-1801 in its first (fifty-page) chapter. This period is not as well known outside France as it should be, with its inspiring martyrs, like the Carmelites of Compiegne, who intoned the Veni Creator as they waited at the scaffold; Blessed Noel Pinot, who went to the guillotine in alb and chasuble reciting the Introibo; not forgetting the laity like Blessed Catherine Jarrige, who ran errands for the priests in hiding, and walked to the scaffold with Fr Francois Filiol of Mauriac.

David said...

Thomas,
"Revolution and Papacy" by E.E.Y. Hales is a book I would recommend for an account of Pius VI's imprisonment and the papacy during this time period.

Pelerin said...

During the extension of the platforms at St Pancras Station prior to the arrival of the Eurostar a cemetery was excavated and the bodies moved elsewhere. It was discovered that many of those buried had been emigre clergy from France including the Bishop of Evreux who it was found wore a very superior set of false teeth. The teeth were later exhibited at the Museum of London during National Smile Week!