Pierre Lambert de la Motte

Pierre Lambert de la Motte, MEP (16 January 1624 – 15 January 1679) was a French bishop. He was a founding member of the Paris Foreign Missions Society and became a missionary in Asia.

Most Reverend

Pierre Lambert de la Motte
Apostolic Vicar of Cochin
ChurchCatholic Church
DioceseApostolic Vicararite of Cochin
PredecessorNone
SuccessorGuillaume Mahot
Orders
ConsecrationJune 11, 1660
by Victor Le Bouthillier
Personal details
BornJanuary 16, 1624
La Boissière, Calvados, France
DiedJanuary 15, 1679(1679-01-15) (aged 54)
NationalityFrench

Biography

Lambert de la Motte was born 16 January 1624 in La Boissière, Calvados. He was ordained a priest on 27 December 1655[1] and was recruited by Alexander de Rhodes, SJ, as a secular clergy volunteer to become a missionary in Asia, together with François Pallu and Ignace Cotolendi. These were sent to the Far East as Apostolic vicars.[2][3][4]

On July 29, 1658, Pope Alexander VII appointed him as the first Apostolic Vicar of Cochin and as titular bishop of Beirut.[1] On June 11, 1660, he was consecrated bishop by Victor Le Bouthillier, Archbishop of Tours.[1] 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 missionaries by ship, and the Dutch and the English refused to take Catholic missionaries.[5]

Mgr Lambert left Marseilles on 26 November 1660 accompanied by Fathers De Bourges and Deydier,[6] and reached Mergui in Siam 18 months later. Mgr Pallu 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. Siam thus became the first country to receive the evangelization efforts of the Paris Foreign Missions Society, to be followed by new missions 40 years later in Cochinchina, Tonkin and parts of China.[5]

The 1665 "Instructions to Missionaries", based on the instructions of Pope Clement IX, written by François Pallu and Pierre Lambert de la Motte.

Mgr Lambert together with Pallu founded in 1665-66 the general seminary in Ayutthaya, Siam[7] (the Seminary of Saint Joseph[8] then Seminary of the Holy Angels, at the origin of the College General now in Penang, Malaysia).

In 1670, Mgr Lambert went to Tonkin together with the secular priests Jacques de Bourges and Gabriel Bouchard to establish a church there, and created the congregation of the Lovers of the Holy Cross (Amantes de la Croix de Jésus-Christ).[9]

On 23 July 1677, after 12 years in Siam, Mgr Lampert went to Cochinchina to take up his see.[10]

He soon returned to Siam, where he died in 1679, in the capital Ayutthaya.

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See also

  • France-Thailand relations

Notes

References

  • Missions étrangères de Paris. 350 ans au service du Christ 2008 Editeurs Malesherbes Publications, Paris ISBN 978-2-916828-10-7


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