The 'Institut canadien de Montréal' was founded on
December 17,
1844, by a group of 200 young
liberal professionals in
Montreal,
Quebec,
Canada. The Institute was a public library and debating room for the literary and scientific society that would later come into conflict with the
Roman Catholic Church.
The Institute was the source of the ideas defended by the ''
Parti rouge''. Its motto was: ''Justice pour nous, justice pour tous; Raison et liberté pour nous, raison et liberté pour tous'' (Justice for us, justice for all; reason and liberty for us, reason and liberty for all).
The library contained literary works by French romantic authors such as
Victor Hugo and
Alphonse de Lamartine and Enlightenment authors such as
Voltaire and
Diderot whose writings were judged immoral by the Catholic Church. At the time, there were no French language university nor public library in Montreal.
In
1858, Mgr
Ignace Bourget gave the order to refuse to give sacrements to catholic members of the Institute. In
1869, Bourget refused to let typographer
Louis-Joseph Guibord be buried in the Côte-des-Neiges Catholic cemetery because he was a member of the Institute. The Institute decided to bring the case to court.
Guibord was eventually buried in Côte-des-Neiges after the
Privy Council of London ruled in favour of the Institute in the
Guibord case.
The library suffered the censorship of the Catholic clergy of Quebec in
1868. The Institute closed the doors of its debating room in
1871, and the library closed in
1880. Only the ''
Institut canadien de Québec'' survived the censorship by getting rid of certain works listed on the
Index Librorum Prohibitorum of the Catholic Church.
Members
★
Marc-Aurèle Plamondon
★
Francis Cassidy
★
Jean-Baptiste-Éric Dorion
★
François-Xavier Garneau
★
Antoine-Gérin-Lajoie
★
Joseph Doutre
★
Louis-Antoine Dessaulles
★
Arthur Buies
★
Napoléon Aubin
★
Victor Hugo (external member)
See also
★
Institut canadien de Québec
★
History of Quebec
★
Timeline of Quebec history
External link
★
Website for the Institut canadien de Québec