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St. Isabel of France
Daughter of Louis VIII and of his wife, Blanche of Castille, born in March,
1225; died at Longchamp, 23 February, 1270. St. Louis IX, King of France
(1226-70), was her brother. When still a child at court, Isabel, or Elizabeth,
showed an extraordinary devotion to exercises of piety, modesty, and other
virtues. By Bull of 26 May, 1254, Innocent IV allowed her to retain some
Franciscan fathers as her special confessors. She was even more devoted to the
Franciscan Order than her royal brother. She not only broke off her engagement
with a count, but moreover refused the hand of Conrad, son of the German Emperor
Frederick II, although pressed to accept him by everyone, even by Pope Innocent
IV, who however did not hesitate subsequently (1254) to praise her fixed
determination to remain a virgin. As Isabel wished to found a convent of the
Order of St. Clare, Louis IX began in 1255 to acquire the necessary land in the
Forest of Rouvray, not far from the Seine and in the neighbourhood of Paris. On
10 June, 1256, the first stone of the convent church was laid. The building
appears to have been completed about the beginning of 1259, because Alexander IV
gave his sanction on 2 February, 1259, to the new rule which Isabel had had
compiled by the Franciscan Mansuetus on the basis of the Rule of the Order of St.
Clare. These rules were drawn up solely for this convent, which was named the
Monastery of the Humility of the Blessed Virgin (Monasterium Humilitatis B.
Mariæ Virginis). The sisters were called in the rule the Sorores Ordinis
humilium ancillarum Beatissimf Marif Virginis
. The fast was not so strict as in
the Rule of St. Clare; the community was allowed to hold property, and the
sisters were subject to the Minorites. The first sisters came from the convent
of the Poor Clares at Reims. Isabel herself never entered the cloister, but from
1260 (or 1263) she followed the rules in her own home near by. Isabel was not
altogether satisfied with the first rule drawn up, and therefore submitted
through the agency of her brother Louis IX, who had also secured the
confirmation of the first rule, a revised rule to Urban IV. Urban approved this
new constitution on 27 July, 1263.
The difference between the two rules consisted for the most part in outward
observances and minor alterations. This new rule was also adopted by other
French and Italian convents of the Order of St. Clare, but one can by no means
say that a distinct congregation was formed on the basis Isabella's rule. In the
new rule Urban IV gives the nuns of Longchamp the official title of Sorores
Minores inclusæ, which was doubtlessly intended to emphasize closer union with
the Order of Friars Minor. After a life of mortification and virtue, Isabella
died in her house at Longchamp on 23 February, 1270, and was buried in the
convent church. After nine days her body was exhumed, when it showed no signs of
decay, and many miracles were wrought at her grave. In 1521 Leo X allowed the
Abbey of Longchamp to celebrate her feast with a special Office. On 4 June,
1637, a second exhumation took place. On 25 January, 1688, the nuns obtained
permission to celebrate her feast with an octave, and in 1696 the celebration of
the feast on 31 August was permitted to the whole Franciscan Order. They now
keep it on 1 September. The history of the Abbey of Longchamp had many
vicissitudes. The Revolution closed it, and in 1794 the empty and dilapidated
building was offered for sale, but as no one wished to purchase it, it was
destroyed. In 1857 the walls were pulled down except one tower, and the grounds
were added to the Bois de Boulogne.
AGNES D'HARCOURT, third Prioress of Longchamp (1263-70), wrote the saint's life, Vie de Madame Isabelle, which may be found in the Archives Nationales L. 1021 MSS. (Paris). A Latin translation of this book is given in Acta SS., VII, Aug., 798-808; cf. ibid., 787-98. See also ROULLIARD, La sainte mère, ou vie de Madame Saincte Isabel (Paris, 1619); ANDRÉ, Histoire de Ste Isabelle (Carpentras, 1885); DANIÉLO, Vie de Madame Ste Isabelle (Paris, 1840); BERGUIN, La Bienheureuse Isabelle de France (Grenoble, 1899); DUCHESNE, Histoire de l'abbaye royale de Longchamp, 1255-1789 (2nd ed., Paris, 1904); SBARA-LEA, Bull. Franc., III (Rome, 1765), 64-9; II (1761). 477-86.
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