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・ Daulia argyrophoralis
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・ Daughters of Darkness
・ Daughters of Destiny
・ Daughters of Destiny (novel)
・ Daughters of Divine Charity
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Daughters of Jesus (Spain)
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・ Daughters of Light
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・ Daughters of Mary
・ Daughters of Mary (Lutheran)
・ Daughters of Mary Help of Christians Siu Ming Catholic Secondary School
・ Daughters of Mary of the Immaculate Conception
・ Daughters of Mary, Health of the Sick
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Daughters of Jesus (Spain) : ウィキペディア英語版
Daughters of Jesus (Spain)

The Daughters of Jesus ((ラテン語:Filiae Iesu), abbreviated as F.I., (スペイン語:Hijas de Jesús)) is a Roman Catholic congregation of Religious Sisters founded on 8 December 1871 in Salamanca, Spain, by Saint Candida Maria of Jesus (1845-1912). Known as ''Jesuitinas'' (or ''Jesuitesses'') in Spain, their work is primarily educational, and includes the administration of schools and colleges. The congregation is devoted to education in all its forms, and is inspired by the spirituality of St. Ignatius of Loyola, also offering the Ignatian Spiritual Exercises to women and girls.〔
==History==

(詳細はBasque town of Andoain, Gipuzkoa, went to Salamanca as a young girl to help support her family. She worked as a servant in various homes. Cipitria was deeply affected, however, by the depth of poverty she saw in a society undergoing the social effects of the Industrial Revolution in her country. She would spend whatever free time she had helping the poor, even at the risk of losing her employment.
Seeking to find God's will for herself in this, Cipitria was led to founding this congregation through a vision of Jesus she experienced on Good Friday of 1869. Two years later, together with five other women, the congregation was established, at which time the foundress, like her companions, took the religious name by which she is now known. They were assisted in this by Jesuit Father Miguel José Herranz.〔(Founder of Daughters of Jesus, Mother Candida, to be canonized ) (Feb 24, 2010). Villa, Carmen Elena. ''Zenit News Agency''. Retrieved 20 January 2012.〕
The congregation expanded rapidly in Spain, receiving formal approval by Pope Leo XIII on 31 July 1901. Within ten years, the foundress was able to begin their first foreign mission in Brazil, founding a school there〔 This was later followed by a mission to China in 1931.

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