Gabriel Thubières de Levy de Queylus

Gabriel Thubières de Levy de Queylus, S.S. (1612 20 May 1677), was a Sulpician priest from France, who was a significant leader in the development of New France. He was the founder and first superior of the Seminary of Saint-Sulpice in Montreal.[1]

Life

Early life

De Queylus, as he was known during his life, was born in 1612 in Privezac, in the ancient Province of Rouergue in the Kingdom of France, a son of a wealthy nobleman. Destined for service in the Church, at the age of 11 he was made the commendatory abbot of the Abbey of Loc-Dieu, giving him the lifelong title of abbé. Choosing late in his life to pursue the priesthood, he studied at a seminary in the village of Vaugirard, now the Quartier Saint-Lambert in the 15th arrondissement of Paris. He was ordained a priest on 15 April 1645. In July of that year, he joined the Society of Saint-Sulpice, dedicated to the sound training of a clergy for France and her territories. That same year, independently, he joined the Société Notre-Dame de Montréal, an organization dedicated to the conversion of the people of the First Nations in the recently conquered territory of New France.

Almost immediately after his admission to the Society, Queylus gained the trust of its founder, Jean-Jacques Olier, whom he might have known from their mutual alma mater. Olier soon entrusted him with the task of establishing new seminaries in the format which he had instituted in 1641 in founding the Seminary of Saint-Sulpice, Paris. Within a few year, De Queylus has established seminaries in his native region of Rodez (1647), as well as in Nantes (1649) and Viviers (1650). In 1648, moreover, he was briefly made superior of the motherhouse of Saint-Sulpice in Paris. Two years later, Queylus settled in the Vivarais, as the pastor of Privas, site of the final rebellion of the Huguenots in France. He worked to convert the remaining Huguenot population to the Catholic faith. He also established a Sulpician seminary at Clermont in 1656. Shortly after that, he was suddenly recalled to Paris.

New France

First mission

In 1656, the Societé de Montréal had determined to establish a seminary in the colony of Ville-Marie, now Montreal, for the training of missionaries to the indigenous people of America. Olier, himself a member of the society, nominated de Queylus, his trusted assistant who had already successfully founded four such schools. Given de Queylus' large fortune and his characteristic generosity, it seemed even more of a natural choice for an enterprise which would require all the resources that could be found. Some members of the society further proposed that the candidate should be a bishop. Queylus gave his consent to both proposals. His nomination was declared at the General Assembly of the French clergy held on 10 January 1657.

The Jesuits, who at that point had complete control of the colony, objected and put forth an alternate candidate, François de Laval, who enjoyed the favor of the royal court. This turn of events was to rankle Queylus for much of his time in New France, but he accepted the decision of the society and prepared for his departure for the New World. For the mission, Olier also appointed two other priests, Dominique Galinier and Gabriel Souart, and a deacon, Antoine d’Allet. All four set sail on 17 May 1657 from Saint-Nazaire in Brittany, after receiving ecclesiastical authority, conveyed by letters dated 22 April, from the Archbishop of Rouen, François de Harlay de Champvallon, who claimed authority over the operations of the Catholic Church in the colony. The archbishop had also given letters patent to de Queylus, naming him as his Vicar General for the whole of New France. What de Queylus did not know was that the previous archbishop had given that same authority to the Superior of the Jesuit missions in Canada in 1649. The new appointment made no mention of the prior one.

Queylus and his colleagues arrived at Île d’Orléans in late July of that year, where they were hosted in Rivière-des-Roches (now the Les Rivières Quarter of Quebec) at the house of René Maheut. As soon as he heard of the clerics' arrival, Jean de Quen, the Superior of the Jesuits, hastened to the Île d’Orléans, where he welcomed the Sulpicians, and brought them to Quebec. Their first meeting was polite and cordial. A few days later, de Queylus showed de Quen his letters of appointment. They agreed that the Jesuit would take no action in his capacity of Vicar General, inasmuch as the Archbishop of Rouen had left his status unclear. After confirming the Jesuit pastor of Quebec, Joseph-Antoine Poncet, the Sulpicians sailed for Montreal.

One innocent act on the part of de Queylus, however, was shortly to ignite longstanding tensions between the two leaders. The Sulpicians had given Poncet a papal bull of Indulgence granted by Pope Alexander VII on the occasion of his election to the papacy, with instructions to proclaim it from the pulpit. Without notifying his superior, Poncet read the papal document to the congregation. Quen was offended by what he took to be a show of independence, and – as he was entitled to do by reason of his formal agreement with de Queylus – relieved Poncet of his office and replaced him with Father Claude Pijart. Poncet, on his way to the Iroquois country, stopped at Ville-Marie at the beginning of September, and informed de Queylus of this incident, who, taking offense in his turn, ordered the Jesuit to accompany him to Quebec. When they arrived there on 12 September, de Queylus immediately took the control of the parish away from Pijart and declared himself as the pastor of the town. A battle of names ensued between de Queylus and de Quen.

This situation was exacerbated when Queylus took the Jesuits to court in an effort to claim their residence as parish property. When it was proven that the Jesuits had, in fact, paid for the property, their victory did not help the situation. The situation did ease, however, so that by the summer of 1658, a visitor was to report that the religious leaders of the colony were in harmony. The test of this quickly came, when documents came that July from the Archbishop of Rouen, confirming both as his Vicars General for the colony, the Sulpician in Montreal, and the Jesuit for the rest of the colony. While de Queylus initially balked, he soon relented and moved to Montreal.

During this period, de Queylus worked on building up the colony. In 1657 he reorganized the parish of Montreal and appointed his fellow Sulpician, Gabriel Souart, as its pastor. In 1658 he authorized the building of the Churches of Sainte-Anne at Beaupré and of Notre-Dame-de-la-Visitation at Château-Richer. In 1659 he supervised the development of the settlement of Ville-Marie, fixing the site of the town and making it ready for the arrival of new settlers, who were to clear the fiefs of Saint-Marie and of Saint-Gabriel.

De Queylus had envisioned the founding of a hospital at Ville-Marie for aged and sick Indians. He hoped that the natives, following their relatives who were being cared for there, would come to Montreal, settle there, and gradually acquire the French language and manners from their contacts with the settlers. Admiring the work of the Canonesses of St. Augustine of the Mercy of Jesus at Hôtel-Dieu de Québec, in 1658 he had offered them the administration of a hospital which was being operated by Jeanne Mance, a laywoman who had helped to found the colony, pending the arrival of canonesses from another religious Order in France. Queylus obtained Laval’s permission for the direction of this institution to be entrusted to the canonesses of Quebec. The administrator of the hospital, however, found another benefactor and was able to bring three Religious Hospitallers of St. Joseph from the Hôtel-Dieu of La Fleche in France.

De Queylus' position was eroded, moreover, with the hurried appointment of de Laval as Vicar Apostolic for the colony by the Holy See, which rejected the protests of the Parlements of both Rouen and Paris. Laval landed in Quebec on 16 June 1659. While initially confused as to his authority relative to that of de Queylus, the colonists soon accepted him as their spiritual leader. De Queylus himself acknowledged him as such the following August.

This changed when new letters giving de Queyluy ecclesiastical authority over the colony were received from both the Archbishop of Rouen and King Louis XIV the following month. Recanting his earlier submission, de Queylus sought to have the governor of the colony enforce his authority. Unfortunately for him, the king had quickly reversed his decision. When a letter to that effect arrived, de Queylus relented. He then sailed back to France on 22 October 1659.

Second mission

After his return, de Queylus immediately began to form plans to return to New France. Laval, suspecting him of this, had already requested that the king take steps to prevent his return. In February 1660, King Louis explicitly forbade de Queylus from leaving France without his express permission. When de Queylus was unsuccessful in getting the king to reverse his decision, he covertly left for Rome, where he tricked the Apostolic Datary into giving him a papal bull which established a parish in Ville-Marie independent of the Vicar Apostolic's authority. It further gave the right of nomination of the pastor for said parish to the Superior General of the Sulpicians, and the right of appointment to the Archbishop of Rouen. Once he had received this appointment by the archbishop he sailed to New France under an alias. Disembarking at Percé, he then took a small boat which arrived in Quebec before the ship from Europe had arrived, landing there on 3 August 1661.

Laval was completely astonished at de Queylus' arrival and claims of authority. He refused to recognize the papal bull and threatened de Queylus with suspension of his priestly faculties if he were to proceed with his plans to go to Montreal. Completely ignoring the threats of sanctions, de Queylus took a canoe and arrived in Ville-Marie on 6 August. When King Louis heard of this, he ordered Pierre Dubois, the newly appointed Governor of New France to have him sent back upon his arrival in the colony. De Queylus boarded a boat bound for France on 22 October 1661, which ended the struggle between himself and de Laval. It further led the Archbishop of Rouen to drop his claims of authority over the colony.

Third mission

De Queylus' forced return to France was a major setback for the waning Societé de Montréal. He had been a major financial supporter of their undertakings. In March 1663 they ceded ownership of Montreal Island to the Sulpicians. Though they were now the Seigneurs of the colony, without de Queylus' guidance and financial support, they questioned the viability of the project of a seminary there. During a visit to France, de Laval was asked to allow his return. This he steadfastly refused to do.

By 1668, however, de Queylus' quiet submission in the matter changed de Laval's mind and he allowed him to return to New France as the Superior of the Seminary of Ville-Marie. Laval even appointed him Vicar General for the island. Upon his return in the autumn of that year, de Queylus embarked on an ambitious program of missionary activity by the Sulpicians of the colony. He sent two priests to establish a mission among the Onondagas on Lake Ontario, aided the following year by François-Saturnin Lascaris d'Urfé. By 1670 there were three separate missions on the shores of the lake. At the same time, he sent two Sulpicians to evangelize the Odawa people in the Mississippi Valley. They traveled as far as Lake Erie, which they claimed in the name of France.

De Queylus also took up the challenge of the cultural conversion of the native children, having both boys and girls educated in French and useful trades by the Sulpicians and the early members of the Congregation of Notre Dame. These attempts proved ineffective. Additionally, he also attempted to fulfill his earlier promises to the canonesses of Quebec for funding a medical mission to the Native Americans. In 1671, in order to persuade them to assume this undertaking, he promised them a generous grant of land and a fund of 10,000 French livres. This project never reached completion. His offer of land grants to colonists who would come to serve for a time as indentured servants nearly tripled the population of Ville-Marie between 1666-71.

Final days

By 1671 de Queylus' accomplishments had won the praise of the king and others. That year, however, he had to return to France for the division of his father's estate among himself and his brothers. While there, he took seriously ill. He retired to the motherhouse in Paris, where he died on 20 May 1677.

References

  1. "A Brief History: The Society of the Priests of Saint Sulpice in Canada". Society of the Priests of Saint-Sulpice, Province of Canada.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Sunday, April 12, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.