Moral Aspects of Labour Unions
Jean-Baptiste-Henri Dominique Lacordaire
Lucius Caecilius Firmianus Lactantius
René-Théophile-Hyacinthe Laennec
Marie Madeleine Pioche de la Vergne, Comtesse de La Fayette
Louis-François Richer Laflèche
Jean de La Haye (Jesuit Biblical scholar)
Jean-Baptiste-Pierre-Antoine de Monet, Chevalier de Lamarck
Lamb in Early Christian Symbolism
Jacques and Jean de Lamberville
Jean-Marie-Robert de Lamennais
Louis-Christophe-Leon Juchault de la Moricière
Archdiocese of Lanciano and Ortona
Land-Tenure in the Christian Era
The Duke of La Rochefoucauld-Liancourt
Henri-Auguste-Georges du Vergier, Comte de la Rochejacquelein
René-Robert-Cavelier, Sieur de La Salle
Baron Joseph Maria Christoph von Lassberg
Classical Latin Literature in the Church
Diocese of Lausanne and Geneva
Pierre Gaultier de Varennes, Sieur de Lavérendrye
Charles-Martial-Allemand Lavigerie
Influence of the Church on Civil Law
Order of St. Lazarus of Jerusalem
Emile-Paul-Constant-Ange Le Camus
Ven. Louise de Marillac Le Gras
Diocese and Civil Province of Leon
Liber Diurnus Romanorum Pontificum
Ven. Francis Mary Paul Libermann
Bruno Franz Leopold Liebermann
Justin Timotheus Balthasar, Freiherr von Linde
Ancient Diocese and Monastery of Lindisfarne
Etienne-Charles de Loménie de Brienne
Francisco Antonio de Lorenzana
Pietro and Ambrogio Lorenzetti
Sisters of Loretto at the Foot of the Cross
St. Louis-Marie Grignion de Montfort
Brothers of Our Lady of Lourdes
Diocese of Luni-Sarzana-Brugnato
Jean-Baptiste-Alphonse Lusignan
Diocese of Lutzk, Zhitomir, and Kamenetz
Jesuit educationist and social work, b. at Paris, 21 November, 1835; d. there, 30 August, 1909. His father, Louis Paul Albert du Lac de Fugères, was descended from a noble family, noted in history as early as 1206, and his mother was Camille de Rouvroy de Lamairie. Entering into the novitiate of the Society of Jesus at Issenheim, in Alsace, October 28, 1853, he studied theology at Laval till 1869, when he was ordained priest by Mgr. Wicart, 19 September. The following summer (1870) he was made rector of the new College of Sainte-Croix, at Mans, where, during the Franco-Prussian war, he organized an efficient hospital service. During the ten months of his rectorship at Mans, twenty-two thousand soldiers sojourned successively in his college. In October, 1871, he succeeded the martyred Father Léon Ducoudray as Rector of the Ecole Sainte-Geneviève, generally called "La Rue des Postes", an institution which prepared candidates for the great military and scientific schools of France. During his rectorship, from1872 to 1881, 213 of his pupils were admitted to the Ecole Centrale, 328to the Ecole Polytechnique, and 830 to Saint-Cyr. With a rare combination of firmness and gentleness he trained his students to be such fearless Catholics that they gradually infused a Catholic spirit into the military school of Saint-Cyr. This, together with their unparalleled success at the entrance examinations, was the real cause of the closing of the Jesuit colleges in 1880 and of the subsequent persecution of the Church in France. In 1880 he founded a new French college, St. Mary's, at Canterbury, England, where he remained as rector nine years, venerated and loved by all who met him, Protestants as well as Catholics. The last twenty years ofhis life were spent in Paris and Versailles, as preacher, director of souls, and founder of the "Syndicat de l'Aiguille", a collection of loan and benefit societies for needlewomen, dressmakers, seemstresses, especially those young sewing girls who are called midinettes. As early as 1901 this syndicate, which has spread all over France, counted more than two thousand members and two hundred lady patronesses in Paris alone, where its two restaurants, reserved exclusively for members, had served more than a million meals, and where its preventive zeal had saved and consoled thousands of young women. Father du Lac had been for many years, in the eyes of the ignorant anti-Catholic multitude, the personification of the scheming Jesuit, while the Catholics who knew him best thought him only too frank, too apt to waste his kindness on men whose hatred of the Church was implacable. He wrote two books: "France" (Paris, 1888), which vividly portrays the affectionate relations between the Rector of St. Mary's, Canterbury, and his French boys; and "Jésuites" (Paris, 1901), a defence of the Society of Jesus, containing many autobiographical reminiscences. In the last long months of illness God took him away from the strife of tongues into the solitude of a religious house which was not his own, a hospital where he died in poverty and perfect trust.
LEWIS DRUMMOND