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Accordingly, La Croix transitioned into a daily newspaper on 16 June 1883. [citation needed] Father Emmanuel d'Alzon (1810–1880), the founder of the Assumptionists and the Oblates of the Assumption, started the paper. Also, La Croix's biggest early advocate was Father Vincent de Paul Bailly. La Bonne Presse was the first publishing house of ...
La Presse Régionale was closely aligned with the Ralliement movement and the Action Libérale Populaire (ALP). Paul Féron-Vrau and André Bernard, both prominent figures in the ALP, leveraged the press group to combat the Bloc des gauches and its anticlerical policies, including the 1905 French law on the Separation of the Churches and the State.
At the end of 1916 Guiraud accepted the position of co-editor with father Georges Bertoye of the Assumptionist journal La Croix. He succeeded Jules Bouvattier, who had held this position since 1897. [2] From 1921 he regularly wrote in the literary pages, where he criticized François Mauriac, Marcel Proust and Charles Péguy, whom he detested.
His taste for aesthetics, as well as his Catholicism, led him, at a very young age, to enter the circle of Péladan's closest collaborators, in the Ordre de la Rose-Croix Catholique et Esthetique du Temple et du Graal (Order of the Catholic and Aesthetic Rosicrucian of the Temple and the Grail) which at that time acquired considerable fame with ...
Jean Lavoué, Jean Sulivan, la voie nue de l'intériorité, Éditions Golias, Lyon, 2011. Bruno Frappat , « Jean Sulivan, contemporain » - sur Jean Sulivan Abécédaire by Charles Austin (November 2010), La Croix, 6 January 2011.
President-elect Donald Trump won a return to the White House in part by promising big changes in economic policy — more tax cuts, huge tariffs on imports, mass deportations of immigrants working ...
Le Sillon ("The Furrow" or "The Path") was a French political and religious movement founded by Marc Sangnier (1873–1950), which existed from 1894 to 1910. It aimed to bring Catholicism into a greater conformity with French Republican and socialist ideals, in order to provide an alternative to Marxism and other anticlerical labour movements.
The Midwest may be the last place many wine drinkers think of when seeking their next bottle. But consider Michigan, the Great Lakes State, as perhaps the country’s “third coast.”