History of the Compagnie des Filles de Notre-Dame, 1698?-1710.

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History of the Compagnie des Filles de Notre-Dame, 1698?-1710.

Spanish translation, apparently prepared by the Jesuits José Escrig and Ignacio Bruno, with the assistance of Father Francisco Garau and others, of a French history of the Daughters of the Virgin Mary, an educational order founded in Bordeaux in 1606 by Jeanne de Lestonnac, widow of the Marquis Gaston de Montferrand and niece of Montaigne. Contains biographical accounts of the founder and certain members, as well as a history of the Order and of various chapters or communities. Comṕosition of the history was initiated by Mother Clara de Madallán and continued by other Daughters.

Originals : 3 v., 389, 404, 413 p. ; 28 cm.Copies : partial microfilm reel (207 exposures) : negative (Rich. 102:20) and positive.

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SNAC Resource ID: 7167009

UC Berkeley Libraries

Related Entities

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Compagnie des Filles de Notre-Dame.

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Bancroft, Hubert Howe, 1832-1918

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Ezekial Thatcher was clerk of the Parkville School District, Shasta County, Calif. He emigrated to California from Pennsylvania in 1850 and helped establish the first school district in the Parkville area. He is descended from the Thatchers of Uffington, England, the same family as Denis Thatcher, husband of British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher. From the description of H.H. Bancroft letter : San Francisco, Calif., to E. Thatcher, Parkville, Shasta County, Calif. : ALS (photocopy)...

Lestonnac, Jeanne de, Saint, 1556-1640

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