Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
After the death of the duchess (who had no children) in 1938, Inisfada was willed to the New York Province of the Catholic Society of Jesus (Jesuit) order for their use; they ran a retreat house (known as the St. Ignatius Retreat House) there starting in 1963. [5] [6] [2] Prior to 1963, the Jesuits used the property as a seminary. [7]
Angono, Rizal: RIC - Children Center Central The first Daycare Center in Angono. Rizal: Angono, Rizal: Bahay Pamahalaan Present Seat of the Government of Angono. Built in 1957. Rizal: Angono, Rizal: Vincentian Hills Seminary Built in 1963. Rizal: Angono, Rizal: Loyola Retreat House Built in 1964. Rizal: Angono, Rizal: Rural Bank of Angono, Inc.
Fourth Jesuit house in Palermo (1633–1767), now buildings of University of Palermo (mostly rebuilt following World War II destructions) and Church of Saint Francis Xavier Jesuit college in Alcamo (1652–1773), now Museum of Contemporary Art , Church of the Holy Family and Church of the Gesù
Milltown Institute of Theology and Philosophy formed out of the Jesuit Theology Faculty. St Patrick's, Esker, Athenry, County Galway. Established on 18 August 1901 was the Redemptorist Irish Province major seminary until 1836. From 1948 until 1969 it was the novitiate. In 1971, it became a retreat house.
The original Jesuit college in Quebec (which the Jesuit Chapel was originally part of) was seized by British forces in 1776. In 1891, a Jesuit priest, Fr. Edward Désy bought Teviot House on Chemin Sainte-Foy and turned it into Villa Manresa. [3] It was to provide local individual and group retreats in Ignatian spirituality. [4]
Also called the "19th annotation exercises" based on a remark of St. Ignatius in the 19th "introductory observation" in his book, the retreat in daily life does not require an extended stay in a retreat house and the learned methods of discernment can be tried out on day-to-day experiences over time. [2]: 19
It was named the Manresa Retreat House Centre, after Manresa in Spain, where the founder of the Jesuits, Ignatius of Loyola stayed in solitude for a year. It opened in November 1946 and had accommodation for eighteen retreatants. [3] As soon as it opened, demand for retreats was more numerous that the centre could accommodate.
Paul Grendler has authored a history of Jesuit schools and universities from 1548 to 1773. In it, he notes that the Jesuits had established over 700 colleges and universities across Europe by 1749, with another hundred in the rest of the world, but in the aftermath of the Jesuit suppressions of the 18th and 19th centuries, all these schools ...