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Yelizaveta Golitsyna

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25: 93: 258:, in Manhattan, then in Astoria, and finally at Manhattanville. During her stay in New York, Mother Gallitzin was a guest of the Parmentier family, noted New York philanthropists, at their Bridge Street mansion in Brooklyn. In 1842 Mme. Gallitzin founded establishments in the Pottawattamie missions, and at McSherrystown, Maryland. 229:
During one of her trips abroad, Golitsyna met Jesuit Father Rozaven, whom she asked to find for her a religious order devoted to education. Father Rozaven suggested the recently founded community, the "Society of the Sacred Heart of Jesus", created by
226:). Outraged by this "betrayal," Golitsyna vowed never to change her religion, but over the next four years, her rejection of Catholicism was replaced by interest and desire to know more. Eventually, Yelizaveta also joined the Catholic Church. 245:
Mother Barat highly valued the assistance of Golitsyna. After the General Council in 1839, Golitsyna was appointed Assistant General and sent to visit the American houses. She arrived in New York and promised
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that the Society of the Sacred Heart would open a house in New York. In May 1841, the first Religious arrived. A school was opened at the corner of
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Yelizaveta Golitsyna was born 22 February 1797 in Saint Petersburg, Russia to the family of Prince Alexei Andreevich Golitsyn and Princess
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Stuart, Janet. "Elizabeth Galitzin." The Catholic Encyclopedia. Vol. 6. New York: Robert Appleton Company, 1909. 12 Aug. 2014
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The Metropolitan: A Monthly Magazine, Devoted to Religion, Education, Literature, and General Information
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Mother Elizabeth died of yellow fever, at the age of 47, on 26 November 1844 in New Orleans, Louisiana.
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in order to spread education among Catholic women. Golitsyna took the veil in the city of
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When she was 15, she learned that her mother and her aunt converted to
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Ripley, George and Dana, Charles A., "Ladies Of The Sacred Heart",
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Elizabeth Gallitzin's family tree on Rodovid (in Russian)
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Rosenthal RSJC, Helen. "Mother Hardey becomes Superior",
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in 1828. Her final vows were taken in Paris in 1832.
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Converts to Roman Catholicism from Eastern Orthodoxy
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Saint Petersburg
Russian Empire
Louisiana
United States of America
Noble family
House of Golitsyn
Saint Petersburg
Russian Empire
Louisiana
United States of America
Russian
Catholic
Russian Orthodoxy
Alexandra Golitsyna
Russian Orthodox Church
Catholicism
Demetrius Gallitzin
Madeleine Sophie Barat
Metz
Rome
Bishop Hughes
Houston
Mulberry streets

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