Marie-Alphonse Sonnois
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Marie-Alphonse Sonnois | |
|---|---|
| Archbishop of Cambrai | |
| Church | Roman Catholic Church |
| Archdiocese | Cambrai |
| Personal details | |
| Born | Etienne-Marie-Alphonse Sonnois 10 December 1828 |
| Died | 7 February 1913 (aged 84) |
| Coat of arms | |
Etienne-Marie-Alphonse Sonnois (10 December 1828, Lamargelle [Saint-Seine-l'Abbaye] in the Côte-d'Or in eastern France [1] – 7 February 1913, Cambrai within the Hauts-de-France region on the Scheldt river, was a French Catholic bishop,[2] bishop of Saint-Dié from 1889 to 1893[3] then archbishop of Cambrai de 1893 to 1913.[4][5][6]
Born to a doctor father named François who joined Saint-Seine-l'Abbaye when Sonnois was still very young, he belongs to a family which gave several of his children to the Church.[7] His brother Joseph-Emile-Alphonse, born on December 20, 1830, graduated from École spéciale militaire de Saint-Cyr and after taking part in numerous battles including the Crimean War, he became head general of the 16th Division of the Infantry and was later named Commandeur of the Légion D'Honneur on December 28, 1889. Another brother, Gustave-Eugène, was commander of the 6th brigade of infantry (Beauvais and Amiens) and was made Officier of the Légion D'Honneur on July 5, 1888.[8]
Priesthood
He was ordained a priest on October 3, 1852, for the diocese of Dijon. He first taught philosophy at the Grand Seminary of Dijon, then he was appointed pastor in various parishes of the diocese: Jouey, Santenay, then Auxonne.[9]
Bishop of Saint-Dié
Appointed Bishop of Saint-Dié on December 21, 1889, Mgr Sonnois received the canonical investiture of Pope Leo XIII on December 30 of the same year. He was consecrated bishop on March 19, 1890, by the future cardinal Victor-Lucien-Sulpice Lécot, then bishop of Dijon. He entered Saint-Dié on April 16, 1890. Sonnois was described as a discreet and benevolent man who strived to visit his entire diocese. However, he had to face difficulties with the government following the opposition of his vicars general to Minister Jules Ferry, elected from Saint-Dié. He relaunched the work of the Jeanne-d'Arc church at the Basilica of Bois-Chenu in Domrémy and encouraged pilgrimages[10][11][12] there by entrusting the church to the Eudists (Congregation of Jesus and Mary) who collected the necessary funds throughout France for the continued construction of the future basilica.[13][14]