Tripti Joshi (Editor)

Édouard Charles Fabre

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
See
  
Parents
  
Edouard-Raymond Fabre

Installed
  
May 11, 1876

Successor
  
Paul Bruchesi


Term ended
  
December 30, 1896

Predecessor
  
Name
  
Edouard-Charles Fabre

Ordination
  
February 23, 1850

Edouard-Charles Fabre httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Other posts
  
Coadjutor Bishop of Montreal

Born
  
February 28, 1827Montreal, Lower Canada (
1827-02-28
)

Role
  
Edouard-Raymond Fabre\'s son

Died
  
December 30, 1896, Montreal, Canada

People also search for
  
Edouard-Raymond Fabre, Hector Fabre, Hortense Fabre

Édouard-Charles Fabre (February 28, 1827 – December 30, 1896) was Archbishop of Montreal in 1886 and of Sherbrooke and Saint-Hyacinthe in 1887.

Fabre was the eldest of 11 children in an important Montreal business family. Despite his father's, Édouard-Raymond Fabre, efforts to steer him in another direction, he began his study of philosophy in 1844 at the seminary of Saint-Sulpice at Issy-les-Moulineaux after a privileged education in Lower Canada.

In 1846 Fabre finished his studies at Saint-Sulpice, visited Rome and met Pope Pius IX and returned to Montreal. He was ordained in 1850.

In 1876 Fabre became the third bishop of Montreal and, in 1886, Pope Leo XIII made him Archbishop of Montreal, and the following year the dioceses of Sherbrooke and Saint-Hyacinthe.

The parish municipality of Saint-Édouard-de-Fabre, Quebec, was named after him. The Montreal metro station Fabre is also named after him.

References

Édouard-Charles Fabre Wikipedia


Similar Topics