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30miller
Guest
Thank you very much. I had tried internet searches and just came up with dead ends - even the usually thorough Catholic Encyclopedia didn’t really lay it out enough that I “got it”.Neither of the above. In Gone With the Wind the name refers to a place. In the Kennedy case, the name is a family name. The Kennedys are not a royal house.
I gave the example of young Prince William of Wales. His legal name is William Mountbatten. But he is Prince of Wales. Therefore he is William of Wales. His anscestors are of the Royal House of Windsor. When he entered the Briths Armed Forces, he was registered as William of Windsor and his badge simply said Windsor, just like a Armed Forces people have a badge with their family name: Smith etc.
Francis de says was of royal lineage. He belong to the Royal House of Sales. He did not use his last name, but his royal name. Francis of Sales or in French Francois de Sales.
This is not the same as Francis of Assisi. In his case, his legal name remains. St. Francis of Assisi was burried as Giovanni Bernadone or John Bernadone. Francesco was his nickname and Assisi was his home town. There was no royal house of Assisi. There is an interesting anecdote about this, which has nothing to do with this thread. But some people may enjoy it.
For over 200 years no one could find the grave of St. Francis of Assisi. The reason was that everyone looked for a grave with that name. It was by accident that the grave of Giovanni Bernadone was discovered. Then everyone remembered that that was his real name. But no one knows him by that name, unless you’re a Franciscan.
Another example is Teresa of Calcutta. Her baptismal name was Agnes and there is no Royal House of Cacutta. In de Sales case, he was an aristocrat from the Royal House of Sales
Fraternally,
Br. JR, OSF![]()
Very interesting indeed as well is that Francis de Sales (of Royal lineage) became a saint - and so did Jane de Chantal (also of Royal lineage) - and they knew each other with Jane having been influenced by Francis’s preaching. 2 “Royals” who knew each other achieving sainthood. Remarkable.
Your explanation confirms my suspicion that a great disservice was done when “Allentown College of St. Francis de Sales” changed it’s name to "DeSales " University (nearby there is a Kutztown University which did not change it’s name to “Town University” when it changed from a college to a university - it simply went from Kutztown State College to Kutztown University). The clear and unambiguous Catholic identity of “St. Francis de Sales” was intentionally abandoned. And making 1 word (DeSales) out of 2 (de Sales) further “conceals” the Catholic identity of the institution. The best “translation” to make of the new name “DeSales” University would be “Of the House of Sales” University - which, of course, is only gibberish to Americans and can only be explained in the sense I have about intentionally “losing” Catholic identity. In today’s “Catholic” world I would venture the guess that virtually none could share much if any understanding whatsoever about what DeSales means. At best some might state that it “means” Francis de Sales - which, of course, is what it is alluding to in it’s own ambiguous way. Beyond that they would have no clue about anything about Francis, his work, one of the few Doctors of the Church, etc…and losing the “Francis” from Francis de Sales further buries the Catholic identity of the school from the population at large. Living in the general area in Pennsylvania - I ask people all the time what DeSales means and they are clueless, and that’s people of all faiths and from all walks of life.
Anyway, thanks again for your great assistance.