François Pallu

François Pallu (1626–1684) was a French bishop. He was a founding member of the Paris Foreign Missions Society and became a missionnary in Asia.

Contents

Life

Born in Tours, now in Indre-et-Loire, Pallu was recruited by Alexander de Rhodes as secular clergy volunteers to become a missionnary in Asia, together with Pierre Lambert de la Motte and Ignace Cotolendi. They were sent to the Far-East as Apostolic vicariate.[1][2][3]

In 1658 Mgr Pallu became Bishop of Heliopolis, Vicar apostolic of Tonkin, Laos, and five provinces of southwest China.[4] The three bishops left France (1660-62) to go to their respective missions, and crossed Persia and India on foot, since Portugal would have refused to take non-Padroado missionnaries by ship, and the Dutch and the English refused to take Catholic missionnaries.[5] Mgr Lambert left Marseilles on 26 November 1660, and reached Mergui in Siam 18 months later. Mgr Pallu with nine associates left on 3 January 1662.[6] He joined Mgr Lambert in the capital of Siam Ayutthaya after 24 months overland, but Mgr Cotolendi died upon arrival in India on 6 August 1662.[7]

With Lambert, Pallu founded in 1665-66 the general seminary in Ayutthaya, Siam[8] (the Seminary of Saint Joseph, at the origin of the College General now in Penang, Malaysia).

From 1667 to 1673 Pallu was in France, where he published an account of the French missions in Southeast Asia.[9] He returned to Siam in 1673.[10]

In 1674, Mgr Pallu was sailing to his archdiocese in Tonkin, but met with a storm and had to land in Manila. He was emprisonned by the Spanish and put on a ship to Acapulco and from there to Spain to be judged. He was finally freed through the intervention of Pope Innocent XI and Louis XIV.[11][12] After this involuntary trip around the world, he would only be able to return to Siam on July 1682.[13]

In 1684, Pallu arrived in China, where he was in charge of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Fuzhou.[14] He died in the same year in Muyang, Jiangsu.

Works

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Viet Nam By Nhung Tuyet Tran, Anthony Reid p.222 [1]
  2. ^ An Empire Divided by James Patrick Daughton, p.31 [2]
  3. ^ Asia in the Making of Europe, p.229-230 [3]
  4. ^ Asia in the Making of Europe, p.231 [4]
  5. ^ Missions, p.4
  6. ^ Asia in the Making of Europe, p.232 [5]
  7. ^ Missions, p.4
  8. ^ The Cambridge History of Southeast Asia By Nicholas Tarling, p.191 [6]
  9. ^ Asia in the Making of Europe, p.413 [7]
  10. ^ Les Missions Etrangeres, p.48
  11. ^ Failure in the Far East By Malcolm Vivian Hay, p.41 [8]
  12. ^ Christianity in China, Tartary, and Thibet By Evariste Régis Huc, p.104 [9]
  13. ^ Les Missions Etrangeres, p.51
  14. ^ Asia in the Making of Europe, p.262 [10]
  15. ^ Asia in the Making of Europe, p.416 [11]
  16. ^ Asia in the Making of Europe, p.416 [12]

References