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      • Born to a wealthy family in Ireland in 1718, Nano Nagle’s parents sent her to France to be educated since strict penal laws barred Catholic children from attending school in Ireland. She returned to Ireland after her father’s death in 1746; her mother died soon after. Prayer and reflection led Nano back to France to become a sister.
      www.presentationsisters.org/who-we-are/nano-nagle/
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  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Nano_NagleNano Nagle - Wikipedia

    Nano Nagle is believed to have attended a local hedge school, like her cousin Edmund Burke, before she travelled to France to complete her education. [6] The Education Act 1695 banned Catholic schoolteachers in Ireland, while also prohibiting overseas travel for Catholic education.

  3. nanonagleplace.ie › the-story-of-nano-nagleThe Story of Nano Nagle

    In the 1760s Nano began to plan for the future of her educational mission. In 1771 she used money inherited from her wealthy uncle to build a convent for the Ursuline sisters, a teaching order, whom she invited from France. This convent survives as the oldest building at Nano Nagle Place today.

    • Why did Nano Nagle go to France?1
    • Why did Nano Nagle go to France?2
    • Why did Nano Nagle go to France?3
    • Why did Nano Nagle go to France?4
    • Why did Nano Nagle go to France?5
  4. Nano decided to open a convent where women could share the mission of Jesus through prayer, teaching and care for the sick and needy. Nano and three companions opened the first Presentation Convent in Cork, Ireland, on Christmas Day in 1775. In 1784, at age 65, Nano died.

  5. So Nano grew up knowing that many of her closest relatives were adherents of the established Protestant faith. Others had been forced to emigrate. Two uncles on her father’s side lived in Bath, England. Many of her cousins had made their homes in France and elsewhere on the European mainland.

  6. Born to a wealthy family in Ireland in 1718, Nano Nagle’s parents sent her to France to be educated since strict Penal laws barred Catholic children from attending school in Ireland. She returned to Ireland after her father’s death in 1746; her mother died soon after.

  7. While it is not known where she originally studied, from sources it is known that she was surrounded by family and friends from Ireland. In her later teens and early twenties, Nano did go to Paris for further education and to learn the behaviors required of upper-class women.

  8. Oct 1, 2019 · Nano turned away from her comfortable life and returned to France to enter a religious order. In the French convent, Nano was haunted by her memories of the plight of the poor people in Ireland, and on the advice of her spiritual director she returned to Ireland to assist where she could.

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