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  1. In response to this crisis, De La Salle purchased property outside of Paris, at a place called Vaugirard, and brought all the Brothers there for an extended retreat wherein he rekindled their fervor.

    • Cities

      This PDF booklet provides a guide for individuals and groups...

    • Meet-Nyel

      Ten years later, in 1688, Louis de La Salle, De La Salle’s...

    • Map

      Basilica of St. Remi; College des Bons Enfants; Cradle of...

    • About

      The purpose of the site is to build interest in St. John...

    • Timeline

      Rue Princesse: Brothers Move to Paris. Age: 36. February 24,...

    • Rouen

      De La Salle and the Brothers endured many hardships in order...

    • Church of Saint Andre

      M. De La Salle sometimes said mass in their collegiate...

    • St. Sulpice

      De La Salle spent only 18 months in the seminary here, but...

  2. De La Salle began his time in Paris schooling at St. Sulpice and the Sorbonne. The death of both parents brought him back to Reims to care for his young brother and sisters. In 1688, February 24, he arrived in Paris with two Brothers from Reims.

  3. Apr 10, 2018 · Rue Princesse: Brothers Move to Paris. Age: 36. February 24, 1688. De La Salle and two Brothers arrive in Paris, at the invitation of the pastor of the parish of Saint Sulpice to begin work at the parish school on Rue Princesse three days later.

  4. The De La Salle Brothers, officially named the Institute of the Brothers of the Christian Schools (Latin: Fratres Scholarum Christianarum; French: Frères des Écoles Chrétiennes; Italian: Fratelli delle Scuole Cristiane) abbreviated FSC, is a Catholic lay religious congregation of pontifical right for men founded in France by Jean-Baptiste de ...

  5. a Catholic teacher than those in which, at the beginning, De La Salle extols the teacher's vocation as that of a veritable coadjutor with Christ in the forming of human persons.

  6. It is only on November 11, 1691, at a time of crisis when the newly founded community seemed on the verge of disappearing, that De La Salle bound himself definitively by vow with two companions, Nicolas Vuyart and Gabriel Drolin, to establish the Society of the Christian Schools.

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  8. St. Jean-Baptiste de La Salle was a French educator and the founder of the Institute of the Brothers of the Christian Schools (sometimes called the de La Salle Brothers or the Christian Brothers), the first Roman Catholic congregation of male nonclerics devoted solely to schools, learning, and teaching.

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