'Étienne Le Camus' (
1632,
Paris –
Grenoble,
1707) was a French
cardinal.
Through the influence of his father,
Nicolas le Camus, a state councillor, he was when still very young attached to the court as
almoner of the king, and enjoyed the friendship of
Bossuet. The
Sorbonne made him
doctor of theology at the age of eighteen.
The fact of his consorting with such men as
Benserade,
Vivonne, and
Bussy drew upon him the severity of
Mazarin, and he was for a while exiled to
Meaux. Recalled through the influence of
Colbert, he retired in 1665 to
La Trappe with
de Rancé, and passed from his former levity to an
asceticism that led him to
Port-Royal.
The publication of his letters by
Ingold shows that
Jansenism was with Le Camus more a matter of personal sympathy and spiritual discipline than of doctrinal tenets. Made against his will
Bishop of Grenoble in 1671, he proved himself zealous almost to excess in reforming abuses in his diocese. In the affair of the ''
régale'' he acted as intermediary between Rome and Versailles, and showed creditable courage before the omnipotent
Louis XIV.
Pope Innocent XI, having made him cardinal instead of
Harlay, presented by the king, he was not allowed till 1689 to go to Rome to receive the insignia of his dignity. Le Camus founded in the Diocese of Grenoble two seminaries and several charitable institutions.
Besides a "Recueil d'ordonnances synodales" we have from him the "Défense de la Virginité perpétuelle de la Mère de Dieu" (Paris, 1680), and numerous letters published by Ingold.
References
★ BELLET, Histoire du Cardinal Le Camus (Paris 1886)
★ SAINTE-BEUVE, Port-Royal, IV (Paris, 1901), 528
★ ST-SIMON, Mémoires (ed. HACHETTE), IV 59 to be corrected by LALOUETTE, Abrégé de la vie de M. le Cardinal Le Camus (Paris, 1720)
★ INGOLD, Lettres du Card. Le Camus in Bulletin de l'Académie Delphinoise, 2nd series, I.
External link
★