
Félix Dupanloup
'Félix Antoine Philibert Dupanloup' (
January 3,
1802 –
October 11,
1878) was a
French ecclesiastic.
He was born at
Saint-Félix, in
Haute-Savoie. In his earliest years he was confided to the care of his brother, a priest in the
diocese of Chambéry. In
1810 he was sent to a ''pensionnat ecclésiastique'' at
Paris. Thence he went to the seminary of St Nicolas de Chardonnel in
1813, and was transferred to the seminary of
St Sulpice at
Paris in
1820. In
1825 he was
ordained priest, and was appointed vicar of the Madeleine at Paris. For a time he was tutor to the
Orléans princes. He became the founder of the celebrated academy at St Hyacinthe, and received a letter from
Gregory XVI eulogizing his work there, and calling him ''Apostolus juventutis''.
He was elected to the
French Academy in
1854, occupying the thirty-eighth chair, becoming leader of the Academy’s "religious party", in which capacity he opposed the election of
agnostic intellectuals. Dupanloup resigned in
1871 when
Émile Littré, an agnostic, was elected to the Academy.
His imposing height, his noble features, his brilliant eloquence, as well as his renown for zeal and charity, made him a prominent feature in French life for many years. Crowds of persons attended his addresses, on whom his energy, command of language, powerful voice and impassioned gestures made a profound impression. When made
bishop of Orléans in 1849, he pronounced a fervid panegyric on
Joan of Arc, which attracted attention in
England as well as France. Joan of Arc would later be canonized, due partly to Dupanloup's efforts. Before this, he had been sent by Archbishop Aifre to
Rome, and had been appointed Roman prelate and protonotary apostolic.
For thirty years he remained a notable figure in France, doing his utmost to arouse his countrymen from religious indifference. In ecclesiastical policy his views were moderate; thus he opposed the
definition of the dogma of papal infallibility both before and during the
Vatican Council, but was among the first to accept the
dogma when decreed. He was a distinguished educationist who fought for the retention of the Latin classics in the schools and instituted the celebrated catechetical method of St Sulpice. Among his publications are ''De l'éducation'' (1850), ''De la haute éducation intellectuelle'' (3 vols., 1866), ''Œuvres choisies'' (1861, 4 vols.); ''Histoire de Jésus'' (1872), a counterblast to
Renan's ''Vie de Jésus''. He died on
October 11,
1878, at the château of La Combe-de-Lancey.
Memory
In the work known as ''
Illustrissimi'', a collection of letters written by
Pope John Paul I when he was Patriarch of
Venice, Dupanloup is one of the "recipients" of the letters. There are 40 letters in all, mainly to people in Italian history and fiction, but also to internationally well known fictional and historical characters such as
Pinocchio,
Charles Dickens,
Hippocrates, and
Jesus. Each of the letters tend to be droll and witty, but cleverly turned into a short sermon in order to make a point, whether it is on fashion, pornography, capitalism, or the communications industry.
References
★
★ ''This article incorporates text from the 1913 ''
Catholic Encyclopedia'' article "
Felix-Antoine-Philibert Dupanloup" by J.F. Sollier, a publication now in the
public domain.''
★ ''Life'' by F. Lagrange (Eng. tr. by Lady Herbert, London, 1885).