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Jesuits and Lombard
Though the pawnshops were no longer manned by Jews and / or Jesuits, they were more and more often called Lombard houses, and most major port cities still have a ' Lombard Street ' or ' Lombard Ally ' today.

Jesuits and few
The mass at 6 PM on the feast day is celebrated by the Jesuits over the last few years.
Christians were allowed to openly celebrate Christmas, Easter and other such festivals, and the Jesuits were even given an allowance and gifts to carry on with their work, with a few Indians converting to Christianity.
Within a few decades of the expulsion, most of what the Jesuits had accomplished was lost.
In 1940, Foucault's mother took him from his previous school and enrolled him in the Collège Saint-Stanislas, a strict Roman Catholic institution run by the Jesuits ; here, he remained lonely, with few friends.
He invited the Jesuits to Salzburg and asked for help from the emperor, and finally ordered the Protestants to recant or emigrate-about 30, 000 people left and settled in Württemberg, Hanover and East Prussia, and a few settled in Ebenezer, Georgia in what would become the United States of America.
When the Portuguese Prime-Minister Marquis of Pombal expelled the Jesuits from Brazil in 1759, the language started to wane fast, as few Brazilians were literate in it.
He said that many Jesuits were theologians, but few were astronomers.
A few years after the People's Liberation Army entered Shanghai, most foreign Jesuits had abandoned Xujiahui and relocated to nearby posts like Macau or Manila.
It is said that this old church was communicated to the Santiago Apostol Cathedral a few miles from there in old Surco by a sort of underground passages built by the Jesuits to be used in case of war or danger.
A few years before his death, De la Costa attended the General Congregation of Jesuits from all over the world in Rome.
The departure of German Jesuits led to a dislocation in the administration of the college, but was prevented by a few Swiss, Luxemburger and English Jesuits.
A few year later these same Jesuits would take over Saint Louis College, the successor of Saint Louis Academy which later evolved into the current Saint Louis University.
Russian Catholics have no hierarchy ; their few parishes are served by priests ordained in other Byzantine Catholic Churches, former Orthodox priests, and Catholic priests with biritual faculties, many of them Jesuits.
Making allusion to the Congregatio de Auxiliis, the debate concerned the respective role of grace and free will, Molinists ( i. e. Jesuits ) claiming that an " efficacious grace " was not necessary to save man, but only a " sufficient grace " bestowed by God to all men, while Thomists claimed that the " sufficient grace ," given to all men, had to be assisted by an " efficacious grace ," bestowed only to the select few ( in accordance also with Augustinism ).
This attitude cost them ( the Jesuits ) a few casualties on account of extreme zeal.
In 1874 he became professor of chemistry and geology in the college of the Belgian Jesuits at Leuven, a few years later he was appointed one of the curators of the Royal Natural History Museum at Brussels, and in 1882 he relinquished his post at Louvain.
The spiritually inclined Superior General sent circular letters to the Jesuits on Fervent perseverance in Prayer ( 1763 ), On greater fervour in prayer in 1769, and just a few months before the suppression of the Society another one on a New incentive to Prayer ( February 1773 ).

Jesuits and at
He was a student of Ignatius of Loyola and one of the first seven Jesuits, dedicated at Montmartre in 1534.
Francis Xavier reached Japan on 27 July 1549, with Anjiro and three other Jesuits, but he was not permitted to enter any port his ship arrived at until 15 August, when he went ashore at Kagoshima, the principal port of the province of Satsuma on the island of Kyūshū.
On 20 January the local Justice and his retainers arrived at Thomas Habington's home, Hindlip Hall, to arrest the Jesuits.
Garnet's meeting with Catesby, at which the former was said to have absolved the latter of any blame in the plot, was proof enough that the Jesuits were central to the conspiracy ; according to Coke the Gunpowder Plot would always be known as the Jesuit Treason.
Clement VIII presided at the conferences to determine the questions of grace and free will, controverted between the Jesuits and Dominicans, were commenced under him, but he abstained from pronouncing a decision.
He received his education from the Jesuits at Rimini and the Piarists of Urbino, and in 1724, at the age of nineteen, entered the Order of Friars Minor Conventual with the name of Lorenzo Francesco.
Pope Clement XIII ( 1758 – 69 ) appointed him Cardinal-Priest of San Lorenzo in Panisperna in 1759, at the insistence of Lorenzo Ricci, the General of the Jesuits.
Educated at the Roman College run by the Jesuits in Rome, he went to the University of Bologna to get degrees in canon and Roman law, June 1575.
Pope Gregory XIII also founded numerous seminaries for training priests, beginning with the German College at Rome, and put them in the charge of the Jesuits.
In 1626 his father died, and Benedetto began schooling in human sciences taught by the Jesuits at his local college, before transferring to Genoa.
* In Maryland, the Jesuits Andrew White, John Altham Gravenor, and Thomas Gervase arrived with Lord Leonard Calvert on March 25, 1634, and in that year established an institution of higher learning at St. Mary's which later became known as Georgetown University, North America's oldest university.
Paisiello was born at Taranto and educated by the Jesuits there.
The last four professors at the Carolinum resigned and all of the Carolinum and nine colleges went to the Jesuits.
* The first printing press in India is introduced by Jesuits at Saint Paul's College, Goa.
Harvey returned to Italy in 1636, dining at the English College, Rome, as a guest of the Jesuits there, in October 1636.
The Jesuits encouraged Catholics, including those struggling with sin, to receive Holy Communion frequently, arguing that Christ instituted it as a means to holiness for sinners, and stating that the only requirement for receiving Communion ( apart from baptism ) was that the communicant be free of mortal sin at the time of reception.
The Jesuits learned that the islanders were said to have been good at reindeer husbandry.
The boy was sent to school at the Collège des Godrans, a classical school run by the Jesuits of Dijon.
Indeed, in 1815 at the age of sixty-four Charles Emmanuel took simple vows in the Society of Jesus ( the Jesuits ).
It resumed its functions after Louis XIII had reestablished the royal power at Montpellier in 1622 ; but the rivalries of Dominicans and Jesuits interfered seriously with the prosperity of the faculty, which disappeared at the Revolution.

Jesuits and church
The church granted Jesuits extensive powers to phase out the encomienda system, angering settlers dependent on a continuing supply of Indian labor and concubines.
* The New Cathedral, or church of S. Maria Assunta in Cielo, was built by the Jesuits from 1610.
His memory is venerated in the Santa Cova, which has been converted into a church, and a magnificent college of the Jesuits built near it.
The earliest two-towered Baroque church was built by the Jesuits from 1718 to 1724 on the pattern of Košice and was later handed over to the Piarists.
On this trip he was successful in obtaining letters from Pope Urban VIII forbidding the enslavement of the missionaries under the severest church penalties, and from King Philip IV of Spain, permitting guaraníes to carry firearms for defense and to be trained in their use by veteran soldiers who had become Jesuits.
The Jesuits established a mission and church at what became St. Thomas Manor at Chapel Point.
The government takeover of church property, " Klostersturm ", resulted in the loss of valuable properties such as that of ' Stimmen der Zeit ', and limited the work of the Jesuits in Germany.
Construction of the church was begun in 1746 by the Jesuits and is a combination of Baroque and Neo Classic architectural styles.
A conspiracy of nobles aimed at murdering King Joseph and the Marquis gave Pombal the opportunity ( some say, the pretext ) to get rid of the Távora family, and to expel the Jesuits in September 1759, thus gaining control of public education and a wealth of church lands and ushering Portugal, which had been a backwater dominated by the High Aristocracy and a very conservative brand of Catholicism, into the Enlightenment age.
Also nearby is the Martyrs ' Shrine, a Catholic church dedicated to the Canadian Martyrs, Jesuits who were killed during Iroquois warfare against the Huron around Georgian Bay in the 17th century.
The Catholic Church and its orders, especially the Jesuits, were granted vast hacienda holdings, linking the interests of the church with the rest of the landholding class.
* The most important church of Gorizia is that of St. Ignatius of Loyola, built by the Jesuits in 1680 – 1725.
From 1682 on, the Jesuits built their college as well as the Jesuit church ( nowadays the " University Church " or Universitätskirche ).
Susenyos made a grant of land to Páez on the peninsula of Gorgora on the north side of Lake Tana, where he built a new center for his fellow Jesuits, starting with a stone church, which was dedicated 16 January 1621.
* Cathedral of Santarém ( Sé-Catedral ): Built in the 17th century in mannerist style as the Jesuit church of the city, it became the Seminary church after the Jesuits were expelled from Portugal in the mid-18th century. The interior decoration is very rich, with altarpieces from various periods and styles ( Mannerist and Baroque ) and a ceiling with an illusionist painting.
In 1570, the Jesuits built a college and a church in Bandra by the name St Anne's ( Santa Anna ) College and Church.
The church was built by the Jesuits in 1551 and was known as St. Peter and Our Lady of the Rosary.
In 1591, the Jesuits built a school and then the foundations of a church of Sainte-Croix.
The area was part of the Jesuitic Sesmaria, where the Jesuits built a cemetery and a church consecrated to Saint Francis Xavier.
The Capuchins founded a monastery in 1631 and started construction of the monastery church in 1636 ) and the Jesuits started missionary activity in the 17th century and established a school in 1734.
Although the Jesuits got the Marchesa's land, they did not get any money from her for completing the church.
Since the earlier church had already been built to the height of the ground floor in 1555, there was no way for the Jesuits to expand the structure to hold the increasing number of students attending the Collegio Romano.
He was one of the founding members of the St. Louis Jesuits who popularized a contemporary style of church music set to sacred texts sung in English as a result of the liturgical reforms initiated by Vatican II.

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