Manoel de Sa

 Angel de Saavedra Remírez de Baquedano

 Saba and Sabeans

 Sabaoth

 St. Sabbas

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 St. Sabina

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 Pope Sabinianus

 Louis de Sabran

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 Raineiro Sacchoni (Reiner)

 Sacra Jam Splendent

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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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 Sadducees

 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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 Ancient Diocese of Saint Asaph

 Abbey of Saint Augustine

 Saint Bartholomew's Day

 Medal of Saint Benedict

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 Diocese of Saint-Brieuc

 Diocese of Saint-Claude

 Diocese of Saint Cloud

 Jean-François Buisson de Saint-Cosme

 Abbey of Saint-Denis

 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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 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

 Saint Petersburg

 Prefecture Apostolic of Saint-Pierre and Miquelon

 Louis de Rouvroy, Duc de Saint-Simon

 Saint-Simon and Saint-Simonism

 Society of Saint-Sulpice

 Abbey of Saints Vincent and Anastasius

 Order of Saint Sylvester

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 Diocese of Saint Thomas of Guiana

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 Jean-Baptiste de Saint-Vallier

 Abbey of Saint-Victor

 Achard de Saint-Victor

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 George Augustus Henry Sala

 Diocese of Salamanca

 Salamis

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 Louis-Siffren-Joseph Salamon

 Domingo de Salazar

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 Salem

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 Salesian Society

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 Salimbene degli Adami

 Ancient Diocese of Salisbury

 Saliva Indians

 Salmanticenses and Complutenses

 Salmas

 Alphonsus Salmeron

 Salome

 Salt

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 Diocese of Saltillo

 Diocese of Salt Lake

 Diocese of Salto

 Coluccio di Pierio di Salutati

 Diocese of Saluzzo

 Juan Maria Salvatierra

 Salvation

 Salve Mundi Salutare

 Salve Regina

 Salvete Christi Vulnera

 Salvianus

 Archdiocese of Salzburg

 Joseph Salzmann

 Sámar and Leyte

 Samaria

 Samaritan Language and Literature

 Joseph Anton Sambuga

 Samoa

 Diocese of Samogitia

 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

 Sanctity (Mark of the Church)

 Sanctorum Meritis

 Sanctuary (1)

 Sanctuary (2)

 Sanctus

 Episcopal Sandals

 Sandemanians

 Felino Maria Sandeo

 Anton Sander

 Nicholas Sander

 Diocese of Sandhurst

 Diocese of Sandomir

 Sands

 Vicariate Apostolic of the Sandwich Islands

 Ven. John Sandys

 Sanetch Indians

 Archdiocese of San Francisco

 San Gallo

 Sanhedrin

 Diocese of San José de Costa Rica

 Diocese of San Juan

 Diocese of Sankt Pölten

 Prefecture Apostolic of San León del Amazonas

 Diocese of San Luis Potosí

 Diocese of San Marco and Bisignano

 San Marino

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 San Miniato

 Jacopo Sannazaro

 Diocese of San Salvador

 San Salvador

 Piero da San Sepolcro

 Diocese of San Severino

 Gaetano Sanseverino

 Diocese of San Severo

 Andrea Contucci del Sansovino

 Diocese of Santa Agata dei Goti

 Santa Casa di Loreto

 Diocese of Santa Catharina

 Diocese of Santa Cruz de la Sierra

 Archdiocese of Santa Fe

 Diocese of Santa Fe

 Prelature Nullius of Santa Lucia del Mela

 Diocese of Santa Maria

 Abbey Nullius of Santa Maria de Monserrato

 Diocese of Santa Marta

 Diocese of Santander

 Diocese of Sant' Angelo de' Lombardi

 Diocese of Sant' Angelo in Vado and Urbania

 Prelature nullius of Santarem

 Diocese of Santa Severina

 University of Santiago

 Archdiocese of Santiago de Chile

 Diocese of Santiago del Estero

 Giovanni Sante Gaspero Santini

 Archdiocese of Santo Domingo

 Joao dos Santos

 Mission of San Xavier del Bac

 Diocese of São Carlos do Pinhal

 Diocese of São Luiz de Cáceres

 Diocese of São Luiz de Maranhão

 Archdiocese of São Paulo

 Archiocese of São Salvador de Bahia de Todos os Santos

 Archdiocese of São Sebastião do Rio de Janeiro

 Diocese of São Thiago de Cabo Verde

 Diocese of Sappa

 Sara

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 Sarayacú Mission

 Mathias Casimir Sarbiewski

 Sardes

 Sardica

 Council of Sardica

 Sardinia

 Sarepta

 Januarius Maria Sarnelli

 Paolo Sarpi

 Patrick Sarsfield

 Diocese of Sarsina

 Andrea del Sarto

 Sarum Rite

 Sasima

 Saskatchewan and Alberta

 Archdiocese of Sassari

 Giovanni Battista Salvi da Sassoferrato

 Satala

 Francesco Satolli

 St. Saturninus

 Sauatra

 Saul

 Diocese of Sault Sainte Marie

 Diocese of Savannah

 Savaric

 Savary

 Abbey of Savigny

 Diocese of Savona and Noli

 Girolamo Savonarola

 Savoy

 Jean de Saxe

 Saxe-Altenburg

 Saxe-Coburg and Gotha

 Saxe-Meiningen

 Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach

 Saxo Grammaticus

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 Albert of Saxony

 Scala Sancta (Holy Stairs)

 Julius Caesar Scaliger

 Scalimoli

 Ellakim Parker Scammon

 Scandal

 Filippo Scannabecchi

 Scapular

 Giovanni Battista Scaramelli

 Pierfrancesco Scarampi

 Alessandro Scarlatti

 Paul Scarron

 Scepticism

 Friedrich Wilhelm Schadow

 Herman Schaepman

 Schäftlarn

 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

 Maurus von Schenkl

 Schenute

 Georg Scherer

 Theodore, Count von Scherer-Boccard

 Matthæus Schinner

 Schism

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 Western Schism

 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

 Schola Cantorum

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 Herman Scholliner

 Charles Mathieu Schols

 John Martin Augustine Scholz

 Schönborn

 Martin Schongauer

 Schöningh

 Schools

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 Burghard Freiherr von Schorlemer-Alst

 Gaspar Schott

 Schottenklöster

 Clement Schrader

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 Franz Paula von Schrank

 Johann Schraudolph

 Franz Schubert

 Joseph Schwane

 Theodor Schwann

 Ludwig von Schwanthaler

 Berthold Schwarz

 Schwarzburg

 Friedrich, Prince of Schwarzenberg

 Schwenckfeldians

 Moritz von Schwind

 Science and the Church

 Scillium

 Martyrs of Scillium

 Archdiocese of Scopia

 Ven. William Maurus Scot

 Scotism and Scotists

 Scotland

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 Scoto-Hibernian Monasteries

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 Ven. Montford Scott

 Diocese of Scranton

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 Scruple

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 Archdiocese of Scutari

 Scythopolis

 Seal

 Law of the Seal of Confession

 Diocese of Seattle

 Sebaste

 Armenian Catholic Diocese of Sebastia

 St. Sebastian

 Bl. Sebastian Newdigate

 Sebastopolis

 Diocese of Sebenico

 Angelo Secchi

 Sechelt Indians

 St. Sechnall

 Diocese of Seckau

 Secret (Secernere)

 Secret

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 Secularism

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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

 Diocese of Segorbe

 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)

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 Sodality

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 Ancient Diocese of Sodor and Man

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 Solari

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 Abbey of St. Solesmes

 Soli

 Solicitation

 Prefecture Apostolic of Solimôes Superiore

 Solomon

 Psalms of Solomon

 Prefecture Apostolic of Northern Solomon Islands

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 Diocese of Solsona

 Somaliland

 Somaschi

 Thomas Somerset

 Religious Song

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 Franciscus Sonnius

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 Paul de Sorbait

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 Edward Sorin

 Archdiocese of Sorrento

 Feasts of the Seven Sorrows of the Blessed Virgin Mary

 Dominic Soto

 Soul

 South Carolina

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 Ven. William Southerne

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 Ven. Robert Southwell

 Ven. John Southworth

 Diocese of Sovana and Pitigliano

 Salaminius Hermias Sozomen

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 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

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 Spokan Indians

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 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

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 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

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 Station Days

 Ecclesiastical Statistics

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 Benedict Stattler

 Franz Anton Staudenmaier

 Johann von Staupitz

 Stauropolis

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 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

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 Suburbicarian Dioceses

 Vicariate Apostolic of Sudan

 Sufetula

 Ven. John Sugar

 Suger

 Suicide

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 Alexander Martin Sullivan

 Peter John Sullivan

 Maurice de Sully

 Sulpicians in the United States

 Sulpicius Severus

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 Prefecture Apostolic of Sumatra

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 The Last Supper

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 Jean-Joseph Surin

 Laurentius Surius

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 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

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 Diocese of Syra

 Archdiocese of Syracuse

 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

Diocese of Soissons



Diocese of Soissons (Suessionensis)

Includes, with the exception of two hamlets, the entire Department of Aisne. It was re-established by the concordant of 1802 as suffragan of Paris, but in 1821 it became suffragan of Reims. It consists of (1) all the ancient Diocese of Soissons, except the civil district of Compiègne, which went to the Diocese of Beauvais; (2) all of the Diocese of Laon, except two parishes, which went to Reims; (3) that portion of Vermandois which formerly belonged to the Diocese of Noyon (see BEAUVAIS); (4) a few parishes which formerly belonged to Cambrai, Meaux, Troyes, Reims. After a vain attempt made by the unexecuted concordant of 1817 to re-establish the See of Laon, the bishops of Soissons were authorized by Leo XII (13 June, 1828) to join the title of Laon to that of their own see; by Leo XIII (11 June, 1901) they were further authorized to use the title of St-Quentin, which was formerly the residence of the bishops of Noyon. The territory of Soissons and Laon played an important political part under the Merovingians. After the death of Clovis (511), Soissons was the capital of one of the four kingdoms into which his states were divided. The kingdom of Soissons, which ceased to exist in 558, when Clotaire I reunited all the Frankish states, came into being again in 561 when the death of Clotaire led to a redivision of the territory. It finally disappeared in 613 when the Frankish lands were once more reunited under Clotaire II.


I. THE SEE OF SOISSONS

Concerning the traditions that make St. Sixtus and St. Sinicius the earliest apostles of Soissons as envoys of St. Peter, see REIMS. Sts. Crepinus and Crepinianus martyrs (c. 288) are patrons of the diocese. According to Mgr. Duchesne, the establishment of a see at Soissons dates from about 300. Among its bishops are: St. Divitianus (c. 310-20); St. Onesimus (c. 350-361); St. Edibius (c. 431-62); St. Principius (462-505), brother of St. Remy of Reims; St. Lupus (505-35); St. Baldarinus (Baudry) (535-545), whom Clotaire I exiled for seven years to England, where he served as gardener in a monastery; St. Ansericus or Anscher (623-52); St. Drausinus (657-76), founder of the monastery of Notre Dame de Soissons and of the Abbey of Rethondes; St. Adolbertus (677-85); St. Gaudinus (685-707), assassinated by usurers; Rothadius (832-869), famous for his quarrel with Hinemar (q. v.); Riculfus (884-902), whose pastoral issued in 889 is one of the great extant treasures of the ecclesiastical literature of that period; St. Arnuel de Paméle (1081-1082), elected through the efforts of Hugues e Die legate from Gregory VII, and who was disturbed in the possession of his see by two bishops nominated successively by Philip I; Jocelyn de Vierzy (1126-52). who aided in the victory of Innocent II over the antipope Anticletus, and wrote an explanation of the Apostle's Creed and the Lord's Prayer; Hugues de Champfleury (1159-75), chancellor of Louis VII; Gui de Château Porcein (1245-50), who accompanied St. Louis on the Crusade and was killed in Palestine; Languet de Gergy (1715-30) who wrote the life of Mary Alacoque. In 1685 Louis XIV nominated the famous littérateur Huet Bishop of Soissons, but the strained relations existing then between France and Rome prevented him from receiving his Briefs, and he exchanged that see for Avranches in 1689.


II. THE SEE OF LAON

The Diocese of Laon was evangelized at an uncertain date by St. Beatus; the see was founded in 487 by St. Remy, who cut it off from Reims and made his nephew St. Genebaldus bishop. Among the bishops of Laon are: St. Chagnoaldus (c. 620-3), brother of St. Faro, Bishop of Meaux, and of St. Fara; Hinemar (857-76); Adalbero Ascelin (977-1030) driven from his see (981) by the Carlovingian Louis V who accused him of undue intimacy with Emma, widow of Lothaire, and who was afterwards very loyal to the interests of Hugh Capet, to whom he handed over the Carlovingian Charles of Lorraine, and Arnoul, Archbishop of Reims. He was the author of a satirical poem addressed to King Robert; Gaudri (1106-12), who held out against the commune movement, and who was slain in a brawl at Laon; Barthélemy, de Vir, or de Viry (1113-51), who attracted St. Norbert to the diocese; Gautier de Mortagne (1155-74), author of six small theological treatises; Robert le Cocq (1352-8), who in October, 1356, and March, 1357, after the imprisonment of John II by the English held an important position in the States General, took the side of Stephen Marcel, conspired with him and Charles the Bad, King of Navarre, against the dauphin, the future Charles V and then fled to Aragon, where he became Bishop of Calahorra; Pierre de Montaigut (1371-86), cardinal in 1383; the historian Jean Juvenel des Ursins (1444-9), afterwards Archbishop of Reims; Louis de Bourbon Vendôme (1510-52), cardinal in 1517; César d'Estées (1653-1681), cardinal in 1672, was elected to the French Academy, and in Rome was involved in the difficulties between Louis XIV and Innocent XI, Alexander VIII and Innocent XII; Jean de Rochechouart de Foudoas (1741-77), cardinal in 1761. Louis Séguier, nominated by Henry IV, Bishop of Laon in 1598, refused the nomination to make room for his young nephew Peter de Bérulle, afterwards cardinal and founder of the Oratorians; de Bérulle refused the see.

The Bishop of Soissons as senior suffragan of Reims had the privilege during a vacancy of the metropolitan see to replace the archbishop at the ceremony of anointing a King of France. The Bishop of Laon ranked as Duke and peer from the twelfth century. As second ecclesiastical peer, he had the privilege of holding the ampulla during the anointing of the king. The chapter of Laon was one of the most illustrious of the kingdom. From the twelfth century its members numbered eighty-four; it had to engage in bitter struggles with the communal regime; three popes, Urban IV, Nicholas II, and Clement VI, sixteen cardinals, and more than fifty archbishops and bishops belonged to it. Jacques Pantaléon who became pope as Urban IV was a choir boy, then canon of the cathedral of Laon. He arranged the cartularium of the church of Laon, and was commissioned by Gregory IX to settle the dispute between the chapter and Enguerrand de Coucy. As Archdeacon of Laon he assisted in 1245, at the council of Lyons. Under the direction of St. Anselm of Laon (q. v.), appointed by Eugene III to restore theological studies in France, the school in connexion with Laon cathedral drew young men from all parts of Europe.

The Abbey of St-Médard at Soissons, founded in 557 by Clotaire I to receive the body of St. Médard, was looked upon as the chief Benedictine Abbey in France; it held more than two hundred and twenty fiefs. Hilduin, abbot (822-30) in 826 obtained from Eugene II relics of St. Sebastian and St. Gregory the Great; he caused the relics of St. Godard and St. Remi to be transferred to the abbey; he rebuilt the church which was consecrated 27 August, 841, in the presence of Charles the Bald and seventy-two prelates. The king bore the body of St. Médard into the new basilica. The church was pulled down but rebuilt and reconsecrated in 1131 by Innocent II, who granted those visiting the church indulgences known as "St. Médard's pardons". In this abbey Louis the Pious was imprisoned in 833, and there he underwent a public penance. Among the abbots of St. Médard's are: St. Arnoul, who in 1081 became Bishop of Soissons; St. Gerard (close of the eleventh century); Cardinal de Bernis, made commendatory abbot of St. Médard in 1756. The Benedictine Abbey of Note Dame de Soissons was founded in 660 by Ebroin and his wife Leutrude. The Cistercian abbey of Longpont, founded in 1131, counted among its monks the theologian Pierre Cantor (q. v.), who died in 1197, and Blessed John de Montmirail (1167-1217), who abandoned the court of Phillipe-Auguste in order to become a monk. The abbey of St. Vincent at Laon was founded in 580 by Queen Brunehaut. Among its earlier monks were: St. Gobain, who, through love of solitude, retired to a desert place near Oise and was slain there; St. Chagnoaldus, afterward Bishop of Laon, who wished to die in his monastery; St. Humbert, first abbot of Maroilles in Hainaut. The abbey adopted the rule of St. Benedict. It was reformed in 961 by Blessed Malcaleine, a Scotchman, abbot of St. Michael at Thierache, and in 1643 by the Benedictines of St. Maur. Among the abbots of St. Vincent were: St. Gerard (close of the eleventh century), who wrote the history of St. Adelard, abbot of Corde; Jean de Nouelles (d. 1396), who wrote a history of the world, and began the cartulary of his monastery. The Abbey of St. John at Laon was founded in 650 by St. Salaberga, who built seven churches there; she was its first abbess; St. Austruda (d. 688) succeeded her. In 1128 the abbey became a Benedictine monastery. The Abbey of Nogent sous Coucy was founded in 1076 by Albéric, Lord of Coucy. Among its abbots were St. Geoffroy (end of the eleventh century) and the historian Guibert de Nogent, who died in 1112, and whose autobiography, "De Vita Sua" is one of the most interesting documents of the century. Under the title "Gesta Die per Francos" he wrote an account of the First Crusade. The Abbey of Cuissy in the Diocese of Laon was founded in 1116 by Blessed Lucas de Roucy, dean of Laon, and followed the rule of Premonstratensians. In the Diocese of Soissons, the Premonstratensians had the abbeys: Chartreuve, Valsery, St. Yved de Braine, Villers Cotterets, Val Secret, Vauchrétien, Lieurestauré. (See PREMONTRÉ, ABBEY OF.)

The portion of the ancient Diocese of Noyon within the jurisdiction of the present Diocese of Soissons includes the town, St-Quentin (Augusta Vermanduorum) where St-Quentin was martyred under Diocletian. It was the chief town of a diocese until 532, when St. Médard, the titular, removed the see to Noyon. Abbott Fulrade built the Church of St-Quentin in the eighth century and Pope Stephan II blessed it (816). From the time of Charles Martel until 771, and again from 844 the abbots of St-Quentin were laymen and counts of Vermandois. During the Middle Ages a distinct type of religious architecture sprang up in Soissons; Eugéne Lefèvre Pontalis has recently brought out a work dealing with its artistic affiliations. After investigation Canon Bauxin concludes that the cathedral of Laon, as it exists, is not the one consecrated in 1114 and visited by Innocent II in 1132; that was the restored ancient Romanesque building; the present one was built 1150-1225. Louyis d'Outremer (936), Robert the Pious (996), Philip I (1959) were anointed in Notre Dame de Laon; in the twelfth century Hermann, Abbot of St. Martin's of Tournai, wrote a volume on the miracles of Notre Dame of Laon. The Hôtel-Dieu of Laon, once known as Hôtellerie Notre Dame, was founded in 1019 by the Laon chapter. The Hôtel-Dieu of Château Thierry was founded in 1304 by Jeanne, wife of Philip the Fair.

Besides the saints already mentioned, the following are specially honoured as connected with the religious history of the diocese: St. Montanus, hermit, who foretold the birth of St. Remi (fifth century); St. Marculfus, Abbot of Nanteuil (sixth century) in the Diocese of Coutances, whose relics, transferred to Corbeny in the Diocese of Laon, were visited by the kings of France who, after their anointing at Reims, were wont to go to the tomb of St. Marculfus to cure the king's evil (see REIMS, ARCHDIOCESE OF); St. Sigrada, mother of St. Leodagarius, exiled by Ebroïn to the monastery of Notre Dame at Soissons (seventh century); St. Hunegundis, a nun from the monastery of Homblières (d. c. 690); St. Grimonia, an Irishwoman martyred at La Chapelle (date uncertain); St. Boetianus (Bosan), husband of St. Salaberga, and St. Balduinus, martyr, his son (seventh century); St. Voël, or Vodoalus, hermit (d. c. 720). Among the natives of the diocese may be mentioned: Pierre Ramus (1515-72), Racine (1639-99), La Fontaine (1621-95), Dom Luc d'Achéry (1609-1685), Charlevoix (1683-1761), Camille Desmoulins (1760-1794). The chief pilgrimages are: Notre Dame de Liesse, a shrine founded in the thirteenth century, and replaced at the end of the fourteenth century by the present church; Notre Dame de Paix at Fieulaine, which dates back to 1660. Before the application of the Congregations Law (1901), there were in the Diocese of Soissons Jesuits, Trinitarians, and several teaching congregations of brothers. Some congregations of women had their origin in the diocese: the Nursing and Teaching Sisters of the Child Jesus, with mother-house at Soissons, founded in 1714 by the Madame Brulard de Genlis; the Sisters of Notre Dame de Bon Secours, a nursing and teaching order, founded in 1806, with mother-house at Charly; Sisters of Notre Dame, nursing and teaching order, with mother-house at Saint-Erme, founded in 1820 by the Abbé Chrétien; the Franciscan nuns of the Sacred Heart, a nursing order, founded in 1867, with mother-house at St-Quentin; the Servants of the Heart of Jesus, of whom their are two branches, the "Marys" who lead a contemplative life, and the "Marthas" who nurse the sick; they were founded at Starsburg in 1867, and brought to St-Quentin after the war of 1870-1.

At the close of the nineteenth century the religious congregations in the diocese had charge of 40 nurseries, two deaf-and-dumb schools; 1 orphanage for boys, 14 for girls, 6 work bureaus, one home for the poor, 29 hospitals, 10 district nursing homes, 1 retreat house, and 1 lunatic asylum. In 1905, when the Concordat was broken, there were in the diocese of Soissons: 535,583 inhabitants, 39 parishes, 539 auxiliary parishes, and 15 curacies recognized by the State.

Gallia Christiana, nova, IX (1751), 333-88, 506-693, 978-1036; instrum., 95-146, 187-202, 359-94; FISQUET, France Pontificale; Soissons et Laon (Paris, 1866); PÉCHEUR, Annales de diocèse de Soissons (10 vols., Soissons, 1863-1891); LEDOUBLE, Etat relig. ancien et moderne des pays qui forment aujourd'hui le diocèse de Soissons (Soissons, 1880); MARTIN AND LACROIX, Histoire de Soissons (2 vols, Soissons, 1880); MALLEVILLE, Histoire de la ville de Laon et de ses institutions (2 vols., Laon, 1846); Broche, les rapports des évéques avec la commune de Laon in Nouvelle revue historique de droit français et étranger, XXV (1901); DEMARSY, Armorial des évéques de Laon (Paris, 1865); Poquet, Notre Dame de Soissons, son hist., ses églises, ses tombeaux, ses abbesses, ses reliques (2nd ed., Paris, 1855); LEFÉVRE PONTALIS, L'architecture religieuse dans l'ancien diocèse de Soissons au XIe et au XIIe siècle (2 vols., Paris, 1894-7); BOUXIN, La Cathédrale de Laon (Laon, 1892); Lecocq, Hist. de la Ville de Saint-Quentin (St-Quentin, 1875).

GEORGES GOYAU