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The Imperial Abbey at Farnborough, 1883–1920
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 16 September 2015
Extract
‘Those who establish religious foundations are very closely linked with the life their benefaction has made possible. Their influence takes from day to day its part in the life of the foundation.’ So wrote the pseudonymous Robert Sencourt in 1948 as the start of an article about the Empress Eugénie. This present article will explore the elements in Eugénie's character and past life which motivated her to make such an unusual foundation as a mausoleum-abbey at Farnborough, her establishment of its church and house, the relationship between her and its clergy, and the lives of the religious communities (first Premonstratensian, then Benedictine) that staffed the abbey from its foundation until her grand funeral there, which provides the climax of the article.
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References
Notes
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68 Hogg-Conway, p. 35.
69 Hogg-Conway, p. 35; see also Moreau, p. 40.
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76 FAA, ‘Assorted Farnborough Notes’, p. 3.
77 Ridley, Napoleon III and Eugénie, p. 644.
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79 Anon., ‘St. Michael's Abbey, Farnborough’, in Prinknash Abbey Archives.
80 In FAA.
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