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** Marie-Marguerite d ' Youville
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** This German publication is both one of the most comprehensive general introductions to the life and works of the philosopher and physician Avicenna ( Ibn Sīnā, d. 1037 ) and an extensive and careful survey of his contribution to the history of science.
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D ' Youville College was founded by the Grey Nuns of the Sacred Heart ( GNSH ), and named for their patron Saint Marie-Marguerite d ' Youville.
d and Youville
The seigneurie was bought by Marguerite d ' Youville, a founder of the Quebec religious society the Grey Nuns in 1765 and 10 years later construction began on the Church of Saint-Joachim.
* Marguerite d ' Youville ( Born Varennes, France October 15, 1701 Died December 28, 1771 ) and some friends in Montreal, begin taking in the poor and educating abandoned children.
* Marguerite d ' Youville ( Born Varennes, France October 1701 Died December 28, 1771 ) founds the Sisters of Charity or the Grey Nuns of Montreal.
D ’ Youville College honors its Catholic heritage and spirit of St. Marguerite d ' Youville by providing academic, social, spiritual, and professional development in programs that emphasize leadership and service.
Saint Marguerite d ' Youville, foundress of the Sisters of Charity of Montreal, in the former habit of the institute.
Painting by Sr. Flore Barrette ( 1954 ). The Sisters of Charity of Montreal, formerly called The Sisters of Charity of the Hôpital Général of Montreal and more commonly known as the Grey Nuns of Montreal, is a Canadian religious institute of Roman Catholic religious sisters, founded in 1738 by Saint Marguerite d ' Youville, a young widow.
The congregation was founded when Marguerite d ' Youville and three of her friends formed a religious association to care for the poor.
The city residents mocked the nuns by calling them " les grises " – a phrase meaning both " the grey women " and " the drunken women ", in reference to the color of their attire and d ' Youville's late husband, François-Magdeleine You d ’ Youville ( 1700 – 1730 ), a notorious bootlegger.
Marguerite d ' Youville and her colleagues adopted the particular black and brown dress of their religious institute in 1755: despite a lack of grey colour, they kept the nickname once used to spite them.
The rule given to Marguerite d ' Youville and her companions by the Sulpician priest, Father Louis Normant de Faradon, P. S. S, in 1745 received episcopal sanction in 1754, when Monseigneur de Pontbriant formed the society into an official religious community.
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