The Ursulines was a religious order of women founded at Brescia Italy in 1535, by St. Angela Merici. The order was the first institute for women dedicated exclusively for their cause. This Roman Catholic religious order was founded primarily for 1] the education of girls and 2] the care of the sick and needy. Their patron saint was Saint Ursula.
The Ursuline Sisters were the first Catholic nuns to land in New France/Canada. The history of the Ursulines in Quebec began in Aug 1639, when its first members arrived. The monastery was established under the leadership of Mother St Marie of the Incarnation (1599–1672), an Ursuline nun of the monastery in Tours, and Madame Marie-Madeline de Chauvigny de la Peltrie (1603–1671), a rich widow from Alençon in Normandy. The letters patent sanctioning the foundation issued by King Louis XIII were dated 1639.
Marie de l'Incarnation, the founder of Quebec's Community of the Ursulines, played a key role during New France's first decades. The original monastery, whose construction she oversaw, also housed the colony's first school for young girls. Today this pioneering institution is an impressive teaching complex that has preserved the Ursuline's original mission intact to this day. The Ecole des Ursulines is among North America's oldest schools. Still operating as a private school for both girls and boys, it was founded in 1639.
In Aug 1639, Ursuline nuns from France, including Marie de l'Incarnation who spearheaded the missionary endeavor they'd come to America for, landed at Quebec. Two years later a first monastery was completed, and the Ursulines opened the colony's first school for at first a few Aboriginal girls, then students of French origin. 30 years later, this school was attended only by girls of French background.The first Ursulines acquired a reputation in embroidery art, know-how they passed down for three centuries. Over time they produced a vast quantity of altar frontals and liturgical vestments in silk, wool and gold thread. Much of this liturgical treasure has survived to the present day.
The monastery had first endured the siege and bombardment of Quebec under William Phips in 1690. During the Siege of Quebec in 1759, the Ursuline monastery was partly destroyed by the shelling. A second siege by James Wolfe in Sept 1759, called the Battle of the Plains of Abraham, was where the garrison of Quebec was defeated by Wolfe's army. After the battle, the French Gov Montcalm who had died there, was buried by night in the monastery chapel. The first English governor Murray used part of the monastery as his headquarters. On that occasion the rations served to the nuns for nursing the wounded and sick saved them from perishing of starvation. The governors and viceroys, both English and French, were always friendly to the institution.
The sculpted decor inside the monastery is one of only a few remaining examples of church interiors during the New France period. Its oldest section is open to the public, as is the funeral chapel of the founder, Marie de l’Incarnation. A more recent lateral wing is reserved for the Ursuline nuns.
Preserving and presenting their heritage
In addition to their teaching vocation, exercised almost without interruption since the first school began operating, the Ursulines opened a museum to display a part of their collections. However, the institution parted with one of its core traditions recently—now the elementary school admits boys, too. The Museum is housed in the Madame-de La Peltrie house, a building erected in 1836 and enhanced in 1868. This house is an integral part of the Ursuline monastery, the greatest treasure of convent architecture in Quebec, in the province of Quebec and probably in North America. The Museum presents high-quality permanent and temporary exhibitions on three floors highlighting the cultural legacy of the Ursulines.
Today the Ursulines face the same problem as many other religious communities grappling with a shortage of vocations: conservation, development and transmission of their invaluable material and spiritual legacy. With assistance from various working groups, they are trying to find the best way of ensuring that the legacy lives on.
The Ursuline Monastery of Quebec City was founded by a missionary group of Ursuline nuns in 1639 under leadership of Mother Marie of the Incarnation, O.S.U. It is the oldest institution of learning for women in North America. Today the monastery serves as the General Motherhouse of the Ursuline Sisters of the Canadian Union. The community there also operates an historical museum and continues to serve as a teaching centre. The complex was designated a National Historic Site of Canada in 1972.
The Constitutions, written by Father Jérôme Lalemant (1593–1673), uncle of the Jesuit martyr Gabriel Lalemant, combined the rules of the two Congregations of Paris and Bordeaux, and were observed until Bishop François de Laval decided in 1681 in favour of the former, which binds its members by a fourth vow to teach girls.
The Quebec Monastery founded new communities at Three Rivers in 1697, Roberval in 1882, Stanstead in 1884, and Rimouski, with a normal school, in 1906, besides sending missionaries to New Orleans in 1822, Charlestown (Boston) in 1824, Galveston in 1849 and Montana in 1893.
Ursuline Convent. This is one of the most impressive religious complexes in Quebec. From the schoolyard, visit the beautiful courtyard and garden, distinctive stone hallway, and attic where the sisters keep their personal lockers. You can also visit the marvellous chapel. Nestled in the heart of Old Quebec, the Ursuline Chapel is a jewel of history and architecture. Built in 1722, the chapel was rebuilt in its current form in 1902. It houses several treasures, including the carved wood decor, created by Pierre-Noël Levasseur and his workshop from 1726-36. It was the Ursulines who carried out the meticulous work of gilding the entire ensemble with gold leaf from 1736-9. Several art historians agree that this is the most beautiful set of wood sculptures from the New France era to survive in Canada. It is also the only example of religious decor from this period preserved in its entirety.




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The new permanent exhibition has 580 objects from collections and archival documents , some never before exhibited to the public. They reveal little-known aspects of the rich history of these women—nuns, teachers, aristocrats, artists, writers and scientists. Among these priceless pieces are a foundational document bearing the seal of King Louis XIII, a C19th Copernican planetarium, and magnificent altar frontals embroidered by the Ursuline nuns. A true historical treasure to discover in the heart of Old Quebec!
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