- Port-Royal-des-Champs
Port-Royal-des-Champs was a
Cistercian convent inMagny-les-Hameaux , in theVallée de Chevreuse southwest ofParis that launched a number of culturally important institutions.History
The Abbey was established in
1204 , but became famous when its discipline was reformed in1609 by its abbessMarie Angelique Arnauld (1591-1661). TheArnauld family became its patrons and the convent's subsequent history was directed by a number of the holders of that name. In1625 most of the nuns moved to a new Port-Royal in Paris, which subsequently became "Port-Royal de Paris " (or, more commonly, "Port-Royal") while the older one was known as "Port-Royal des Champs" ("Port-Royal of the fields").At the original site, several schools were founded, which became known as the "Little Schools of Port-Royal" ("Les Petites-Ecoles de Port-Royal"). These schools became famous for the high quality of the education they gave. Playwright
Jean Racine was a product of Port-Royal education. In1634 Jean du Vergier de Hauranne, Abbé de Saint-Cyran, became spiritual director of the convent; he was a companion ofJansenius and the implementer ofJansenism in France. From that point forward, the convents and schools of Port-Royal became intimately associated with that school of theology."La logique, ou l'art de penser", the "Logique de Port-Royal", was an important textbook on logic first published anonymously in 1662 by
Antoine Arnauld andPierre Nicole , two prominent members of the Jansenist movement;Blaise Pascal likely contributed considerable portions of the text. [Jan Miel. "Pascal, Port-Royal, and Cartesian Linguistics," "Journal of the History of Ideas", 30, (April 1969:261-271).] As it was written in the vernacular, it became quite popular and was in use, as a paradigm of traditionalterm logic , into the twentieth century, introducing the reader to logic, and exhibiting strong Cartesian elements in its metaphysics and epistemology (Arnauld having been one of the main philosophers whose objections were published, with replies, inDescartes ' "Meditations on First Philosophy ".The atmosphere of serious study and Jansenist piety attracted a number of prominent cultural figures to the movement, including theologian and mathematician
Blaise Pascal . Pascal defended the schools publicly against the Jesuits in the Jansenist controversies which agitated the FrenchRoman Catholic Church , writing hisProvincial Letters in 1657. Perhaps even more striking, several important persons of the court were close to Jansenism, such as the duke ofLuynes or the duke ofLiancourt . Members of theArnauld family have managed to have important jobs such as Simon Arnauld de Pomponne, minister of Louis XIV. The Jesuits, on the other hand, enjoyed predominance in political and theological power in France and Europe, having a personal confessor to the King, etc.As a result of the Jesuit attacks on Jansenism, the schools of Port-Royal were regarded as tainted with
heresy . Louis XIV wanting peace in the church, the elementary schools were forcibly closed by bull in 1660 following theformulary controversy . In1661 , the monastery was forbidden to accept novices, heralding its eventual dissolution. The convent itself was abolished by a bull fromPope Clement XI in1708 , the remaining nuns forcibly removed in1709 , most of the buildings themselves razed in1710 . The chapel, containing Mère Angélique's tomb, as well as some buildings, still exist in the vast grounds of what eventually became Paris' leading maternity hospital, known as Port-Royal Hospital.A celebrated history of Port-Royal and its influence was written by
Charles Augustin Sainte-Beuve in 1837-1859.Ruins
The remains of the monastery of Port-Royal-des-Champs may still be seen at
Magny-les-Hameaux , in the Chevreuse valley.Gallery
Caring for the Sick
Distributing Alms to the Poor
The Sisters of the Abbey
General View
Nuns Meeting in Solitude
View of the Refectoryee also
*
Antoine Arnauld
*Antoine Le Maistre
*Marie Angelique Arnauld
*Port-Royal Logic
*Formulary controversy Notes
External links
* [http://digitalcommons.unl.edu/modlangfrench/21/ Port-Royalists] Published in "Encyclopedia of Rhetoric and Composition" (1996)
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