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Le Puy (Marist History)
It was in the cathedral of Le Puy that the idea of a Society of Mary came to Jean-Claude Courveille.
Jean-Claude Courveille was born on 15 March 1787 at Usson, in the diocese of Le Puy a fairly important township, dependent partly on Forez and partly on Auvergne . He was the seventh of thirteen children born to Claude and Margaret Courveille. His parents sold lace. Close to the town of Usson , in the ancient sanctuary of Notre Dame de Chambriac, there was a local congregation of religious women dedicated to the Blessed Virgin. One of Jean-Claude’s aunts was a member. During the Revolution his parents hid in their home with the miraculous statue of Our Lady of Chambriac and Jean-Claude prayed before it. At the age of ten he caught smallpox, which produced lesions of the cornea and prevented him from studying like others. On 26 April 1805 , when Jean-Claude was 18, his father died.
In 1809 on a pilgrimage to the miraculous statue of Our Lady in Le Puy, the young man of 22, who was afflicted by almost total blindness, bathed his eyes in the oil of the votive lamps which surrounded the altar. He was suddenly cured.
Each year afterwards he returned in thanksgiving to the same statue in Le Puy, and so it was three years later, on 15th August 1812, that he heard “not with the ears of the body, but with those of the heart”, the call of Mary: “Here is what I want...” She asked for the foundation of a religious society which would bear her name and whose members would be called Marists.
When Courveille went to the major seminary of Lyons , he began to spread the idea, and gathered round him a small group of aspirants.
Despite the confusion surrounding the origins of the Society, Le Puy was always looked on by ‘the early Marists as a place of real significance. In 1822 when Lyons and Belley both seemed to be adamant in their opposition to the Marist project, the Colin brothers sent Jeanne-Marie Chavoin to Le Puy to make inquiries about the possibility of laying the foundations of the Society in this place where the first inspiration had come.
We thus look to Le Puy as the symbolic point of origin for the whole Marist Family.
The statue before which Courveille knelt has disappeared, but has been replaced by what is said to be a very exact copy. This statue is positioned above the main altar. It is a “black Madonna”, the type of which is found in several other churches. The “black Madonna” was a symbol of wisdom.
Before we leave Le Puy we should recall the last years of Jean-Claude Courveille. He entered the Benedictine monastery of Solesmes in 1838 and stayed there till his death in 1866. Within the Society of Mary, Fr Colin did not mention his name, and his former companions believed that he had died or disappeared. But in 1846 an apostolic missionary, probably Fr Touche, informed Fr Mayet that Fr Courveille was still alive, and told him where he was. In July 1851 and in February and May of 1852, Fr Mayet obtained from Fr Courveille much valuable information concerning the origins of the Society of Mary, including his “first hand’.’ account (the only surviving one) of the “revelation” of Le Puy.
The comment of the authors of Origines Maristes is significant:
“In a sense, the whole of Origines Maristes may be considered as a collection of sources for a study of Courveille and of his role at the origins.”
( OM 4, p.253)
Le Puy Revelation
Here is what I want...
I have always imitated my divine Son in everything.
I followed Him to Calvary itself, standing at the foot of the cross
when He gave His life for man’s salvation.
Now in heaven, sharing His glory, I follow His path still, in the work He does for His Church on earth. Of this I am the Protectress. I am like a powerful army, defending and saving souls.
When a fearful heresy threatened to convulse the whole of Europe, my Son raised up His servant, Ignatius,
to form a Society under His name, calling itself the Society of Jesus, with members called Jesuits, to fight against the hell unleashed against His Church.
In the same way in this last age of impiety and unbelief, it is my wish and the wish of my Son that there be another Society, one consecrated to me, one which will bear my name, which will call itself the Society of Mary and whose members will call themselves Marists.
General History of Le Puy
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St Michel d'Aguilhe |
St. Michel d'Aguilhe |
Statue of Our |
Statue of Our Lady |
Le Puy is 140km south-west of Lyons. Built in a volcanic crater, it is dominated by two strange stalagmite-shaped rock formations. On one, 630 meters high, a chapel in honour of St. Michael has been erected. On the other, a huge state of Our Lady, 16 metres high. The statue is made of cast iron from a cannon captured in the Crimean War.
Christianity came to this area at the beginning of the fourth century. Marian devotion, healings and pilgrimages date from as early as the fifth century, and the church of St Michel d’Aguilhe dates from 962 A.D.
The site of the present cathedral church goes back to the sixth century, and has welcomed many famous people, including Charlemagne, six Popes, and sixteen European Emperors and Kings. The present church was built in the twelfth century, restored in the eighteenth century, and again in the nineteenth century. It is a striking church, built in Romanesque style, but showing unique and impressive signs of oriental and Arabic influence, following the crusades. The church itself was an extremely significant place as a marian shrine and as an assembly point for people making their way to Compostella in Spain.
The first crusade was said to have been preached first at Le Puy, and Bishop Adhemer, having composed the Salve Regina for the crusades, himself died during the crusade. Marcellin Champagnat’s aunt was a member of the Congregation of the Sisters of St Joseph, founded in 1650 at Le Puy, and when the Revolution forced her to live in the Champagnat home, she became Marcellin’s first catechist.
Jean-François Regis used Le Puy as a base for his missions, and during an economic crisis encouraged the women of Le Puy to take up lace-making, for which Le Puy is still famous. Jean-Claude Courveille’s family was involved in an effort to preserve the ancient statue of Our Lady, but it was burned in 1794.

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