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・ Léon Krier
・ Léon la lune
・ Léon Labbé
・ Léon Lalanne
・ Léon Larive
・ Léon Laya
・ Léon Le Calvez
・ Léon Lecornu
・ Léon Leduc
・ Léon Lemartin
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・ Léon Letsch
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Léon Livinhac
・ Léon Lommel
・ Léon Lortie
・ Léon Louyet
・ Léon Lécuyer
・ Léon Lévy Brunswick
・ Léon M'ba
・ Léon Maisonnave
・ Léon Maquenne
・ Léon Mart
・ Léon Martin Fourichon
・ Léon Martinaud-Déplat
・ Léon Mathot
・ Léon Matthieu Cochereau
・ Léon Mbou Yembi


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Léon Livinhac : ウィキペディア英語版
Léon Livinhac

Léon-Antoine-Augustin-Siméon Livinhac (13 July 1846 - 12 November 1922) was a Catholic priest who established the church in what is modern Uganda and became head of the White Fathers (Society of the Missionaries of Africa). He oversaw a major expansion of the missionary society that coincided with the European colonial annexation of most of Africa.
==Birth and education==

Léon Livinhac was born on 13 July 1846 in the parish of Buzeins, in the Aveyron department of the south of France, one of three children of a farmer.
His father, Antoine Simon Livinhac, died when he was two years old. His mother, Marie Aimée, died when he was five. He was raised by his grandmother and his aunts.
He suffered from poor health as a child, but was an excellent and industrious scholar.
He attended primary school at Saint-Geniez-d'Olt from 1855 to 1860, then entered Saint Denis, the diocesan college at Saint Geniez.
He entered the Sulpician major seminary of Rodez in October 1867, received the tonsure in May 1869, minor orders in June 1870 and was ordained to the diaconate in May 1872.

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