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|SaintName=Saint Emily de Vialar | |SaintName=Saint Emily de Vialar | ||
|SaintStage=Saint | |SaintStage=Saint | ||
| | |FeastDay=June 17 | ||
|SaintBirthPlace=Gaillac, Tarn, France | |SaintBirthPlace=Gaillac, Tarn, France | ||
|DeathPlace=Marseille, France | |DeathPlace=Marseille, France | ||
|SaintCauseOfDeath=Hernia complications | |SaintCauseOfDeath=Hernia complications | ||
|NotableAddress1=Gaillac, Tarn, France | |NotableAddress1=Gaillac, Tarn, France | ||
|NotableAddress2=Marseille, France | |NotableAddress2=Marseille, France | ||
|NotableAddress3=Algiers, Algeria | |NotableAddress3=Algiers, Algeria | ||
|NotableAddress4=Malta | |NotableAddress4=Malta | ||
|NotableAddress5=Beirut, Lebanon | |NotableAddress5=Beirut, Lebanon | ||
|Beatifier=Pope Pius XII | |Beatifier=Pope Pius XII | ||
|BeatificationLocation=Rome | |BeatificationLocation=Rome | ||
|Canonized=Yes | |Canonized=Yes | ||
|Canonizer=Pope Pius XII | |Canonizer=Pope Pius XII | ||
|CanonizationLocation=Rome | |CanonizationLocation=Rome | ||
| Line 29: | Line 19: | ||
|SaintMiracle2=Healing a woman’s head injury | |SaintMiracle2=Healing a woman’s head injury | ||
|SaintMiracle3=Posthumous cures | |SaintMiracle3=Posthumous cures | ||
|Profession=Nun, missionary, foundress | |Profession=Nun, missionary, foundress | ||
|ReligiousAffiliation=Roman Catholic | |ReligiousAffiliation=Roman Catholic | ||
| Line 37: | Line 26: | ||
|AdditionalVeneration=Roman Catholic Church | |AdditionalVeneration=Roman Catholic Church | ||
}} | }} | ||
'''Saint Emily de Vialar''' (September 12, AD 1797 – August 24, AD 1856), also known as Émilie de Vialar, was a [[Saints|saint]], French nun, and foundress of the Sisters of St. Joseph of the Apparition, dedicated to serving the poor, sick, and children. Born in [[Gaillac]], Tarn, France, to Baron Jacques de Vialar and Antoinette de Portal, she was secretly baptized due to post-French Revolution anti-Catholic sentiment. After her mother’s death in AD 1810, she managed her father’s household, resisting marriage to pursue religious life. In AD 1832, using an inheritance from her grandfather, she founded her congregation, named for the angel’s apparition to Saint Joseph (*Matthew 1:20*). She established missions in Algeria, Malta, Beirut, and beyond, despite financial ruin by AD 1851 due to mismanagement. Relocating to Marseille in AD 1852 with Saint Eugene de Mazenod’s support, she founded 40 houses worldwide. Beatified on June 18, AD 1939, and canonized on June 24, AD 1951, by [[Pope Pius XII]], her feast day is [[June 17]], or August 24 in the General Roman Calendar. She is patron of single laywomen, abandoned children, the sick, and her congregation.<ref name="web4">{{cite web |title=Emily de Vialar |url=https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emily_de_Vialar |website=Wikipedia |publisher=Wikimedia Foundation |access-date=2025-05-15}}</ref><ref name="web5">{{cite web |title=St. Emily de Vialar |url=https://www.newadvent.org/cathen/15436a.htm |website=Catholic Encyclopedia |publisher=New Advent |access-date=2025-05-15}}</ref> | '''Saint Emily de Vialar''' (September 12, AD 1797 – August 24, AD 1856), also known as Émilie de Vialar, was a [[Saints|saint]], French nun, and foundress of the Sisters of St. Joseph of the Apparition, dedicated to serving the poor, sick, and children. Born in [[Gaillac]], Tarn, France, to Baron Jacques de Vialar and Antoinette de Portal, she was secretly baptized due to post-French Revolution anti-Catholic sentiment. After her mother’s death in AD 1810, she managed her father’s household, resisting marriage to pursue religious life. In AD 1832, using an inheritance from her grandfather, she founded her congregation, named for the angel’s apparition to Saint Joseph (*Matthew 1:20*). She established missions in Algeria, Malta, Beirut, and beyond, despite financial ruin by AD 1851 due to mismanagement. Relocating to Marseille in AD 1852 with Saint Eugene de Mazenod’s support, she founded 40 houses worldwide. Beatified on June 18, AD 1939, and canonized on June 24, AD 1951, by [[Pope Pius XII]], her feast day is [[June 17]], or August 24 in the General Roman Calendar. She is patron of single laywomen, abandoned children, the sick, and her congregation.<ref name="web4">{{cite web |title=Emily de Vialar |url=https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emily_de_Vialar |website=Wikipedia |publisher=Wikimedia Foundation |access-date=2025-05-15}}</ref><ref name="web5">{{cite web |title=St. Emily de Vialar |url=https://www.newadvent.org/cathen/15436a.htm |website=Catholic Encyclopedia |publisher=New Advent |access-date=2025-05-15}}</ref> | ||