Feuillans

Feuillans, a reformed brotherhood of Cistercian monks, founded in 1577 by Jean de la Barrière, abbot of the Cistercian monastery at Feuillans, in Languedoc. The movement thus organised was a protest against the laxity which had crept into the Church, and probably received some stimulus from the Reformation, which was then in progress. The Feuillans settled in a convent in the Rue St. Honoré, Paris, which in after years became the meeting-place of a revolutionary club, which took the name of Feuillans; founded in 1790 by Lafayette, La Rochefoucauld, &c., and which consisted of members of the respectable property classes, whose views were more moderate than those of the Jacobins. They could not hold out against the flood of revolutionary violence, and on March 28, 1791, a mob burst into their place of meeting and dispersed them.

Definition taken from The Nuttall Encyclopædia, edited by the Reverend James Wood (1907)

Feuerbach, Paul Johann Anselm von * Féuillet, Octave
[wait for the fun]
Ferrier, Susan Edmonston
Ferrol
Ferry, Jules François Camille
Fesch, Joseph
Festus
Festus, Sextus Pompeius
Fetichism
Feudalism
Feuerbach, Ludwig Andreas
Feuerbach, Paul Johann Anselm von
Feuillans
Féuillet, Octave
Fez
Fezzan
Fiars
Fichte, Johann Gottlieb
Fichtelgebirge
Ficino, Marsilio
Fick, August
Fidelio
Fi`des

Nearby

Links here from Chalmers

Cosme, John De St.
Goulu, John
Mansard, Francis