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・ Franz Herterich
・ Franz Hessel
・ Franz Hettinger
・ Franz Hiermann
・ Franz Hildebrandt
・ Franz Hillenkamp
・ Franz Dübbers
・ Franz Eckerle
・ Franz Eckert
・ Franz Eckhardt
・ Franz Edelman Award for Achievement in Operations Research and the Management Sciences
・ Franz Edmund Weirotter
・ Franz Egenieff
・ Franz Egon of Fürstenberg
・ Franz Eher Nachfolger
Franz Ehrle
・ Franz Ehrlich
・ Franz Eichhorst
・ Franz Eilhard Schulze
・ Franz Eisenach
・ Franz Eisenhut
・ Franz Elbern
・ Franz Emmerich Kaspar von Waldbott von Bassenheim
・ Franz Engel (naturalist)
・ Franz Engstler
・ Franz Erdl
・ Franz Ergert
・ Franz Ernst
・ Franz Ernst Brückmann
・ Franz Ernst Christian Neumann


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Franz Ehrle : ウィキペディア英語版
Franz Ehrle

Franz Ehrle, S.J., (17 October 1845 – 31 March 1934) was a German Jesuit priest and a cardinal of the Roman Catholic Church. He served as the Archivist of the Secret Archives of the Vatican, in the course of which he became a leading agent in the revival of Thomism in the teachings of the Catholic Church.〔(Cardinal Deaconry S. Cesareo in Palatio ) GCatholic.org〕
==Early years and formation==
He was born in Isny im Allgäu in the Kingdom of Württemberg, the son of Franz Ehrle, a physician, and Berta von Frölich. He was educated at the Jesuit school Stella Matutina in Feldkirch. He joined the Society of Jesus on 20 September 1861. After completing the two years of his novitiate program of formation at Groheim, Hohenzollern, he followed the course of humanities at the College of Friedricksburg in Münster, and later at the Jesuit college at Maria Laach Abbey, where he studied philosophy (1865–1868). For the regency phase of his training in the Society of Jesus, from 1868-1873 Ehrle was sent to teach at his old secondary school, Stella Matutina, where he taught English, French and philosophy. Because of an anti-Jesuit policy that followed the publication of the Kulturkampf in Germany, Ehrle, along with other German companions, had to carry on his studies abroad. He did his studies in theology at Ditton Hall, the Jesuit seminary in Liverpool, England (1873–1877).
After being ordained a priest on 24 September 1876 in Liverpool, Ehrle did pastoral work in a home for the poor at Preston, Lancashire, before being transferred in 1878 to Tervuren, Belgium, where the German Jesuit periodical ''Stimmen aus Maria-Laach'' (''Voices from Maria Laach'') had established its office in exile, to serve as its editor.

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