Diocese of Jaca

 Henry Moore Jackson

 Jacob

 Jacob of Jüterbogk

 Jacobus de Teramo

 Bl. Jacopo de Voragine

 Jacopone da Todi

 Joseph Jacotot

 Jacques de Vitry

 François Jacquier

 Diocese of Jaén

 Jaenbert

 Jaffa

 Diocese of Jaffna

 Jainism

 Jamaica

 Denis Jamay

 Epistle of St. James

 James of Brescia

 James of Edessa

 James of Sarugh

 St. James of the Marches

 James Primadicci

 St. James the Greater

 St. James the Less

 Bl. James Thompson

 Leopold Janauschek

 Alexandre Vincent Jandel

 St. Jane Frances de Chantal

 Ferdinand Janner

 Matthew of Janow

 Cornelius Jansen, the Elder

 Johann Janssen

 Jansenius and Jansenism

 Abraham Janssens

 Johann Hermann Janssens

 St. Januarius

 Japan

 Karl Ernst Jarcke

 Pauline-Marie Jaricot

 St. Jarlath

 Diocese of Jaro

 Pierre du Jarric

 Jacques Jasmin

 Jason

 Jassus

 Diocese of Jassy

 Juan de Jáuregui

 Ven. Anne-Marie Javouhey

 Jealousy

 Bl. Jean-Baptiste-Marie Vianney

 Bl. Jean-Gabriel Perboyre

 St. Jeanne de Valois

 Edmond Jeaurat

 Jedburgh

 Jehovah

 Jehu

 Jemez Pueblo

 Ven. Philipp Jeningen

 Silvester Jenks

 Sir Patrick Alfred Jennings

 Jephte

 Jeremias

 Jeremias (the Prophet)

 Jericho

 Jeroboam

 St. Jerome

 St. Jerome Emiliani

 Jerusalem (Before A.D. 71)

 Jerusalem (A.D. 71-1099)

 Latin Kingdom of Jerusalem (1099-1291)

 Jerusalem (After 1291)

 Liturgy of Jerusalem

 Diocese of Jesi

 Jesuit's Bark

 Daughters of Jesus

 Sisters of the Holy Childhood of Jesus and Mary

 Religious of Jesus Mary

 Jezabel

 Jíbaro Indians

 Joab

 St. Joachim

 Joachim of Flora

 Popess Joan

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 Joannes de Sacrobosco

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 Jan Joest

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 John XXIII

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 Sts. John and Paul

 St. John Baptist de la Salle

 St. John Baptist de Rossi

 St. John Berchmans

 Ven. John Buckley

 St. John Cantius

 St. John Capistran

 St. John Chrysostom

 St. John Climacus

 Bl. John Colombini

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 St. John Damascene

 Bl. John de Britto

 Bl. John Felton

 Bl. John Fisher

 Bl. John Forest

 St. John Francis Regis

 Bl. John Houghton

 St. John Joseph of the Cross

 Bl. John Larke

 John Malalas

 Bl. John Nelson

 St. John Nepomucene

 John of Antioch

 Bl. John of Avila

 St. John of Beverley

 John of Biclaro

 John of Cornwall

 John of Ephesus

 John of Falkenberg

 John of Fécamp

 Bl. John of Fermo

 John of Genoa

 St. John of God

 John of Hauteville

 John of Janduno

 John of Montecorvino

 John of Montesono

 John of Nikiû

 John of Paris

 Bl. John of Parma

 John of Ragusa

 John of Roquetaillade (de Rupescissa)

 John of Rupella

 St. John of Sahagun

 John of Salisbury

 John of Segovia

 John of St. Thomas

 St. John of the Cross

 John of Victring

 John of Winterthur

 John Parvus

 Bl. John Payne

 Bl. John Rochester

 Bl. John Sarkander

 John Scholasticus

 Richard Malcolm Johnston

 Jesus Christ

 Origin of the Name of Jesus Christ

 Holy Name of Jesus

 Bl. John Stone

 Early Historical Documents on Jesus Christ

 Chronology of the Life of Jesus Christ

 Genealogy of Christ

 The Character of Jesus Christ

 Knowledge of Jesus Christ

 Resurrection of Jesus Christ

 Devotion to the Sacred Heart of Jesus

 Bl. John Story

 John Talaia

 St. John the Almsgiver

 St. John the Baptist

 John the Deacon

 St. John the Evangelist

 John the Faster

 St. John the Silent

 Jean, Sire de Joinville

 Louis Joliet

 Diocese of Joliette

 Philipp Johann Gustav von Jolly

 Jonas

 Jonas of Bobbio

 Jonas of Orléans

 Jonathan

 Ven. Edward Jones

 Inigo Jones

 The Jordan

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 Jordanus of Giano

 Joseph Edmund Jörg

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 St. Josaphat Kuncevyc

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 Joseph

 Joseph II

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 St. Joseph Calasanctius

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 Flavius Josephus

 Josias

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 Joseph Joubert

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 Louis Jouin

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 Jean Jouvenet

 Gaspar Melchor de Jovellanos

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 Henri, Duc de Joyeuse

 Juan Bautista de Toledo

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 St. Juliana

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 Bernard Jungmann

 Josef Jungmann

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 De Jussieu

 Jus Spolii

 Juste

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 Justinian I

 Benedetto Justiniani

 Justinianopolis

 St. Justin Martyr

 St. Justus

 C. Vettius Aquilinus Juvencus

 Juvenile Courts

Jacques de Vitry


Historian of the crusades, cardinal Bishop of Acre, later of Tusculum, b. at Vitry-sur-Seine, near Paris, probably about 1160; d. at Rome, 1240. After attending the University of Paris, then in its infancy, he visited Marie d'Oignies, a mystic of the Diocese of Liège, attracted by her reputation for holiness. On her advice he became a canon regular, returned to Paris for ordination to the priesthood, and thereafter devoted himself to preaching; from 1210 to 1213 he was one of the most noted preachers of the crusade against the Albigenses. In fact so great was his renown throughout Christendom that the Latin clergy of St. John of Acre chose him as their bishop. He accepted the episcopal dignity with the approbation of Honorius III. From Palestine he went to Egypt and was present at the capture of Damietta (1218-20), an account of which he wrote to the pope. The leaders of the crusade complained of his imperious temper and attributed their reverses to his stubbornness. In 1227 he returned to Rome but soon resumed the offensive against the heretics of the Diocese of Liège. In 1229 Gregory IX allowed him to resign the See of Acre, created him a cardinal and Bishop of Tusculum and later legate in France and in Germany. He did not long survive his refusal of the Patriarchate of Jerusalem; at his request his body was conveyed to Oignies.

Among his works are letters to Pope Honorius, which form an important source of the history of the Egyptian crusade (ed. Roehrich, "Zeitschrift fuer Kirchengesch.," XIV-XVI), a collection of sermon-models for the use of preachers; a "Liber de mulieribus Leodiensibus," the most celebrated of these being Marie d'Oignies, whose wonderful visions the author relates (ed. Acta SS., June, IV, 636, 666), finally the "Historia Orientalis seu Hierosolymitana," his principal work, an account, at first hand, of the conditions in the Holy Land in the thirteenth century. He was of an inquiring and observant mind and conceived the plan - a remarkable one for the age in which he lived - of writing a geographical description of Palestine.

The first book is wholly devoted to that land and gives its history from the time of Mohammed; describing the expansion of Islam, he gives many picturesque details concerning Oriental idolaters, the Turcomans, the Bedouins, and especially the Assassins, subjects of the Old Man of the Mountain. His recount of the crusades is followed by praise for the fertility of Palestine under Christian domination, and for the efforts of the Italians, French, Germans, Bretons, and English to colonize it. He likewise dwells upon the characteristics of the various indigenous nations and of the "Pullani," half-breeds, to whose vices he attributes the reverses of the Christians. The writer then undertakes a regular description of the physical geography of the country, and gives a great many particulars, half real and half fabulous, regarding its climate, flora, fauna, minerals, its barbarous and extraordinary nations, the Amazons, etc. The honey gathered from the reeds (ex calamellis) was, of course, only cane sugar. A still more curious account is that which he gives of the magnetic compass: "Acus ferrea postquam adamantem contigerit, ad stellam septentrionalem, quae velut axis firmamenti aliis vergentibus non movetur, semper convertitur. Unde valde necessaria est navigantibus in mari." (Bongars, "Gesta Dei," I, 1106.) The remainder of the book is a history of the Kingdom of Jerusalem. Book II, a dismally painted picture of the Christians of the East, closes with an account of the monastic orders and the hierarchy of Palestine. A third book, the story of the Egyptian crusade, is not from Jacques de Vitry, but from the pen of Oliver the Scholastic, Bishop of Paderborn.

Historia orientalis, ed. BONGARS, Gesta Dei per Francos, I, 1047-1145; French tr. in GUIZOT'S Collection des memoires, XXII: DAUNOU, Jacques de Vitry (Histoire litteraire de la France), XVIII (1835); BARROUX, Jacques de Vitry (Paris, 1885).

LOUIS BREHIER