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St. Vincent de Paul : ウィキペディア英語版
Vincent de Paul

St. Vincent de Paul (24 April 1581 – 27 September 1660) was a French Roman Catholic priest who dedicated himself to serving the poor. He is venerated as a saint in the Catholic Church and the Anglican Communion. He was canonized in 1737.〔Donald Attwater (1982) ''The Penguin Dictionary of Saints'' p 337, Aylesbury〕 He was renowned for his compassion, humility, and generosity and is known as the "Great Apostle of Charity".
Vincent was born in 1581 in the village of Pouy in Gascony, in the Province of Guyenne and Gascony, the Kingdom of France, to peasant farmers, father Jean and mother Bertrande de Moras de Paul.〔Pierre Coste (1932) ''Monsieur Vincent: Le Grand Saint du grand siècle'', Desclée de Brouwer, Paris, France〕 There was in the vicinity, a stream named the "Paul" and it is believed that this might have been the derivation of the family name. He wrote the name as one word – Depaul, possibly to avoid the inference that he was of noble birth, but none of his correspondents did so.〔 He had three brothers – Jean, Bernard and Gayon, and two sisters – Marie and Marie-Claudine.〔Michael Walsh, ed. (1991) ''Butler's Lives of the Saints'' p 304, HarperCollins Publishers, New York〕 He was the third child.〔 At an early age, he showed a talent for reading and writing but during his childhood, his work was as a herder of his family's livestock.〔 At 15, his father sent him to seminary, managing to pay for it by selling the family’s oxen.〔("St. VinceHealthcare )〕
For two years, Vincent received his education at a college in Dax, France adjoining a monastery of the Friars Minor where he and others resided.〔 In 1597, he began his studies in the Faculty of Theology at the University of Toulouse. The atmosphere at the university was anything but pious or conducive to spiritual contemplation. Fights broke out between various factions of students which escalated into armed battles. During the course of the unrest, an official was murdered by two students.〔 Nevertheless, he continued his studies and was able to help pay for his education by tutoring others. He was ordained on 23 September 1600 at the age of nineteen in Château-l'Évêque, near Périgueux.〔 This was against the regulations established by the Council of Trent which required a minimum of 24 years of age for ordination, so when he was appointed parish priest in Tilh, the appointment was appealed against in the Court of Rome.〔 Rather than respond to a lawsuit in which he would probably not have prevailed, he resigned from the position and continued his studies. On 12 October 1604 he received his Bachelor of Theology from the University of Toulouse. Later he received a Licentiate in Canon Law from the University of Paris.〔
==Abduction and enslavement==
In 1605, Vincent sailed from Marseilles on his way back from Castres where he had gone to sell some property he had received in an inheritance from a wealthy patron in Toulouse, and was taken captive by Barbary pirates, who brought him to Tunis.〔(Dégert, Antoine (1912) "St. Vincent de Paul", ''The Catholic Encyclopedia''. Vol. 15, Robert Appleton Company, New York, accessed 9 Jan. 2013 )〕 De Paul was auctioned off as a slave to the highest bidder, and spent two years in bondage.
His first master was a fisherman, but Vincent was unsuitable for this line of work due to sea-sickness and was soon sold. His next master was a spagyrical physician, alchemist and inventor. He became fascinated by his arts and was taught how to prepare and administer his master's spagyric remedies.〔 At that time, science and medicine were far more advanced in Muslim countries than in Europe, where medicine was little more than speculative medical quackery, the exception being those herbalists and traditional healers whose knowledge of the medicinal properties of plants, fungi and minerals had been passed down through generations. These traditional healers, who lacked any formal education for the most part, were almost completely obscured by the pseudo-science of the "learnéd".
The fame of Vincent's master became so great that it attracted the attention of men who summoned him to Istanbul. During the passage, the old man died and he was sold once again.〔 His new master was a former priest and Franciscan from Nice, named Guillaume Gautier. He had converted to Islam in order to gain his freedom from slavery and was living in the mountains with three wives. The second wife, a Muslim by birth, was drawn to and visited him in the fields to question him about his faith. She became convinced that his faith was true and admonished her husband for renouncing his Christianity. He became remorseful and decided to escape back to France with his slave. They had to wait ten months, but finally they secretly boarded a small boat and crossed the Mediterranean, landing in Aigues-Mortes on 28 June 1607.〔

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