Yahoo Suche Web Suche

Suchergebnisse

  1. Suchergebnisse:
  1. Raïssa Maritain (née Oumansoff) (September 12, 1883 in Rostov-on-Don – November 4, 1960 in Paris) was a French poet and philosopher. She was the wife of Jacques Maritain , with whom she worked and whose companion she was for more than half a century, at the center of a circle of French Catholic intellectuals.

  2. Raïssa Maritain ( 1883 - 1960 1 ), née Raïssa Oumançoff, est une philosophe et poétesse française. Elle était l'épouse de Jacques Maritain, avec qui elle travailla et dont elle fut la compagne pendant plus d'un demi-siècle, au centre d'un cénacle d'intellectuels catholiques français.

    • Raïssa Oumançoff
  3. 9. Aug. 2021 · Raïssa Maritain: more than a mystic. Driven by a desire for intellectual and spiritual truth, Raïssa Maritain's writings search for peace and justice - but are sadly forgotten in our own time. ‘Raissa Maritain, 1883-1960/And Jacques, 1882-1974’ reads the tombstone in the small cemetery of Kolbsheim, in Alsace.

  4. Raïssa Maritain was born into a pious Jewish family of modest means in the Russian port city of Rostov-on-Don in 1883. When she was two years old, her father, who was a tailor, moved his family to the Ukrainian port of Mariupol on the Sea of Azov. During the ten years that Raïssa lived in the Russian Empire, she was deeply shaped by the piety and traditions of her observant family ...

  5. Maritain, Raïssa (1883–1960) Russian-born French writer, wife and collaborator of the philosopher Jacques Maritain, who played a key role with her husband in the revival of Catholic intellectual life and advocated for a modern rekindling of the thoughts of the medieval philosopher St. Thomas Aquinas . Name variations: Raissa Maritain ...

  6. 1. Okt. 2013 · Raïssa Maritain was a Russian Jew who, with her husband Jacques, born a Protestant, converted to Catholicism in 1906. Along with a number of other convertis, both became prominent members of the intellectual and artistic renouveau catholique in France.

  7. 19. Jan. 2014 · In Sacred Dread: Raïssa Maritain, the Allure of Suffering, and the French Catholic Revival (1905–1944), Brenna Moore takes on the challenge of illuminating the history, culture, and theology of the least known of this cohort of female geniuses.