Arnauld, Antoine

Arnauld, Antoine

▪ French theologian
byname  The Great Arnauld  
born Feb. 6, 1612
died Aug. 8, 1694, Brussels, Spanish Netherlands [now in Belgium]

      leading 17th-century theologian of Jansenism, a Roman Catholic movement that held heretical doctrines on the nature of free will and predestination.

      Arnauld was the youngest of the 10 surviving children of Antoine Arnauld, a Parisian lawyer, and Catherine Marion de Druy (see Arnauld Family). He studied theology at the Sorbonne and, in 1641, was ordained into the Roman Catholic priesthood. Under the influence of the abbot of Saint-Cyran—a founder of Jansenism and spiritual adviser to several members of the Arnauld family—he published his treatise De la fréquente communion (1643; “On Frequent Communion”), defending controversial Jansenist views on the Eucharist and on penance. With his Théologie morale des Jésuites (1643; “Moral Theology of the Jesuits”), Arnauld launched his long polemical campaign against the Jesuits, in which Pierre Nicole, a young theologian from Chartres, was to be his collaborator. In 1655 Arnauld wrote two pamphlets in which he affirmed the substantial orthodoxy of Cornelius Otto Jansen (the Belgian theologian who initiated the movement). These works sparked a dispute that resulted in Arnauld's expulsion from the Sorbonne in 1656. It was this controversy that provoked the French philosopher Blaise Pascal (Pascal, Blaise) to write his defense of Arnauld in the series of letters known as Les Provinciales (1656–57). During the period of the great persecution of the Jansenists (1661–69), Arnauld emerged as a leader of the resistance.

      The so-called Peace of Clement IX (1669) brought Arnauld some years of tranquillity, beginning with the gracious reception accorded to him by King Louis XIV, and he next turned to writing against the Calvinists and on subjects disputed between Protestants and Roman Catholics. He then won such fame as a theologian that Pope Innocent XI is said to have considered making him a cardinal.

      In 1679, the persecution of Jansenists was renewed and Arnauld sought refuge first in the Netherlands and then in Belgium. He settled permanently in Brussels in 1682, where he was to remain in voluntary exile until his death. Despite the precarious conditions in which he had to work, the amount of Arnauld's writing during his exile was enormous. He not only resumed his attack on the Jesuit casuists in the last six volumes of his Morale pratique des Jésuistes (1689–94; the first two had appeared in 1669 and 1682) but also intervened in the dispute over the rights of the French monarch in the Gallican church. The major written works of Arnauld's later years were generated by his disagreements with the French philosopher and theologian Nicolas Malebranche and with Pierre Nicole, his ally in the earlier anti-Jesuit polemics.

* * *


Universalium. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужна курсовая?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Arnauld, Antoine — (1612 1694) (the Grand Arnauld)    theologian    The most famous French exponent of jansenism, Arnauld was born in paris and studied theology at the sorbonne. There, he came under the influence of the leaders of the Jansenist movement. In 1641,… …   France. A reference guide from Renaissance to the Present

  • Arnauld, Antoine — (1612–1694) French theologian and philosopher, and possibly the most distinguished and rigorous 17th century thinker after Descartes . Arnauld was a Jansenist, and the turbulent controversies of the time led to his losing his doctorate and being… …   Philosophy dictionary

  • Arnauld, Antoine — (1612–94)    Theologian.    The brother of Mère Angélique, the formidable Abbess and reformer of the Convent of Port Royal, Arnauld was born in Paris. He was educated at the Sorbonne and was under the spiritual direction of the Abbé de Saint… …   Who’s Who in Christianity

  • ARNAULD, ANTOINE —    the great Arnauld, a French theologian, doctor of the Sorbonne, an inveterate enemy of the Jesuits, defended Jansenism against the Bull of the Pope, became religious director of the nuns of Port Royal des Champs, associated here with a circle… …   The Nuttall Encyclopaedia

  • Arnauld,Antoine — Ar·nauld (är nōʹ), Antoine. 1612 1694. French Jansenist theologian and Cartesian philosopher who co authored the Port Royale Logic with Pierre Nicole (1625 1695) in 1662. * * * …   Universalium

  • Arnauld, Antoine — ► (1612 94) Teólogo francés, uno de los teorizadores del jansenismo. Autor, junto con Pierre Nicole, de la Lógica de Port Royal (1662) …   Enciclopedia Universal

  • Arnauld — Arnauld, Antoine …   Philosophy dictionary

  • Antoine Arnauld — Antoine Arnauld, (February 6, 1612 August 6, 1694) mdash; le Grand as contemporaries called him, to distinguish him from his father mdash; was a French Roman Catholic theologian, philosopher, and mathematician. He was one of the leading… …   Wikipedia

  • Antoine Arnauld — (* 5. Februar 1612 in Paris; † 8. August 1694 in Brüssel) war ein französischer Philosoph, Linguist, Theologe, Logiker und Mathematiker. Er war ein Vertreter der katholischen Reformbewegung des Jansenismus. Arnauld lehrte von 1643 bis 1656 …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Antoine Arnauld (avocat) — Antoine Arnauld (1560 1619) Pour les articles homonymes, voir Antoine Arnauld et Arnauld. Antoine Arnauld (Paris, 6 août 1560 Paris, 29 décembre 1619) fut un avocat français. Issu d une ancienne famille d Auvergne, il se fit recevoir avocat au… …   Wikipédia en Français

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”