Isidore-Joseph du Rousseaux

Isidore-Joseph du Rousseaux (1826–1897) was a bishop of Tournai in Belgium.[1]

Isidore-Joseph du Rousseaux
DioceseDiocese of Tournai
SeeNotre-Dame de Tournai
Appointed1880
PredecessorEdmond Dumont
SuccessorCharles-Gustave Walravens
Orders
Ordination8 September 1849
Consecration1879
Personal details
Born(1826-01-19)19 January 1826
Halle, Province of Brabant, United Kingdom of the Netherlands
Died23 September 1897(1897-09-23) (aged 71)
Tournai, Province of Hainaut, Kingdom of Belgium
EducationMinor Seminary, Mechelen
Alma materMajor Seminary, Mechelen
MottoPax vobis

Life

Rousseaux was born in Halle on 19 January 1826.[1] He was educated in Mechelen and entered the major seminary there in 1846. He was ordained priest on 8 September 1849, and was appointed to teach in the junior seminary. He became the director of the school in 1868. He was heavily involved in organising the Catholic Congresses in Mechelen in 1863, 1864, and 1867.[1]

He was appointed apostolic administrator of the diocese of Tournai on 22 November 1879 as titular bishop of Eumenia, and was nominated bishop of Tournai on 12 November 1880.[1] His main concern as bishop was to mollify the partisanship that divided the "liberal" and "ultramontane" clergy of his diocese.[1]

He was instrumental in the 1882 appointment of Désiré-Joseph Mercier to a new Chair of Thomist Philosophy established at the Catholic University of Leuven by papal breve of 25 December 1880.[2]

Rousseaux held two diocesan synods, in 1882 and 1885. He increased the number of parishes in the industrial towns of the coalfields. His concern for the poor and his denunciation of the condition of workers in an 1886 pastoral letter led to him being dubbed "the workers' bishop".[1]

He died in Tournai on 23 September 1897.[1]

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References

  1. A. Simon, "Rousseaux (Isidore-Joseph du)", Biographie Nationale de Belgique, vol. 30 (Brussels, 1958), 752.
  2. Robert Wielockx, "De Mercier à De Wulf: Débuts de l'École de Louvain", in Gli studi di filosofia medievale fra otto e novecento, edited by Ruedi Imbach and Alfonso Maierù (Rome, 1991), p. 77. Preview on Google Books
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