Edward J. Gray
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The Marillac family as charitable benefactors
Family strategy and the rhetoric of poor relief in sixteenth- and seventeenth-century France
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Sainte Louise de Marillac’s charitable work and her foundation of the Filles de la Charité with Saint Vincent de Paul cannot be understood absent the influence of family strategy. While she is more well-known for her Vincentian family, it was her blood family, the powerful Marillac clan, which played a determinative role in her life. From their royal offices, the Marillac sought to advance a political strategy focused upon the reconstruction and restitution of the French monarchy, informed by their religious devotion. In the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, the Marillac expressed a consistent and committed vision to provide relief for the miseries of the French people. However, until Louise, the Marillac’s strategy was very much poor relief without the poor, for they were a noble family that was more concerned with advancing their interests. The rhetorical invocation of poor relief, however sincerely felt, was part of a broader political programme seeking to reform the monarchy and advance Catholicism in a kingdom riven by religious tension. Only after the disgrace of her uncles Michel and Louis de Marillac in 1630, when the corridors of power were cut off, did Louise personally and actively take on poor relief through the foundation of the Filles de la Charité, thus participating in the ongoing transition of women’s religious devotion from penitence to charity. Nevertheless, this dichotomy stresses the influence of family strategy on the translation of ideas into praxis and the personal and political circumstances which dictate the implementation of poor relief.

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Do good unto all

Charity and poor relief across Christian Europe, 1400–1800

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