See also:DIDON, See also:HENRI (1840-1900) , See also:French Dominican, was See also:born at Trouvet, See also:Isere, on the 17th of See also:March 184o. He joined the See also:Dominicans, under the See also:influence of See also:Lacordaire, in 1858, and completed his theological studies at the See also:Minerva See also:convent at See also:Rome. The influence of Lacordaire was shown in the zeal displayed by Didon in favour of a reconciliation between See also:philosophy and See also:science. In 1871 his fame had so much grown that he was chosen to deliver the funeral oration over the murdered See also:arch-See also:bishop of See also:Paris, Monseigneur G. See also:Darboy. He also delivered some
discourses at the See also:- CHURCH
- CHURCH (according to most authorities derived from the Gr. Kvpcaxov [&wµa], " the Lord's [house]," and common to many Teutonic, Slavonic and other languages under various forms—Scottish kirk, Ger. Kirche, Swed. kirka, Dan. kirke, Russ. tserkov, Buig. cerk
- CHURCH, FREDERICK EDWIN (1826-1900)
- CHURCH, GEORGE EARL (1835–1910)
- CHURCH, RICHARD WILLIAM (1815–189o)
- CHURCH, SIR RICHARD (1784–1873)
church of St See also:Jean de See also:Beauvais in Paris on the relations between science and See also:religion; but his utterances, especially on the question of See also:divorce, were deemed suspicious by his superiors, and his intimacy with See also:Claude See also:Bernard the physiologist was disapproved. He was interdicted from See also:preaching and sent into retirement at the convent of Corbara in See also:Corsica. After eighteen months he emerged, and travelled in See also:Germany, See also:publishing an interesting See also:work upon that See also:country, entitled See also:Les Allemands (See also:English See also:translation by R. Ledos de See also:Beaufort, See also:London, 1884). On his return to See also:France in 1890 he produced his best known work, Jesus-See also:Christ (2 vols., Paris), for which he had qualified himself by travel in the See also:Holy See also:Land. In the same See also:year he became director of the See also:College See also:Albert-le-See also:Grand at See also:Arcueil, and founded three See also:auxiliary institutions, Ecole Lacordaire, Ecole See also:Laplace and Ecole St Dominique. He wrote, in addition, several See also:works on educational questions, and augmented his fame as an eloquent preacher by discourses preached during See also:- LENT (0. Eng. lenclen, " spring," M. Eng. lenten, lente, lent; cf. Dut. lente, Ger. Lenz, " spring," 0. H. Ger. lenzin, lengizin, lenzo, probably from the same root as " long " and referring to " the lengthening days ")
Lent and See also:Advent. He died at See also:Toulouse on the 13th of March 1900.
See the See also:biographies by J. de Romano (1891), and A. de Coulanges (Paris, 1900) ; and especially the work of Stanislas Reynaud, entitled Le Pere Didon, sa See also:vie et son teuvre (Paris, 1904).
End of Article: DIDON, HENRI (1840-1900)
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