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Pelagie (or Pélagie) is a name, a French form of the Greek ''Pelagia,'' The name refers to a saint of the early Christian Church called Pelagia. People * Pelagie Doane (1906–1966), American illustrator and writer * Pélagie Gbaguidi (born 1965), Beninese artist * Pélagie Uwera (born 1974), Rwandan politician * Joseph-Marie-Pélagie Havard (1790–1838) French bishop, missionary in Vietnam * Nora Coton-Pélagie (born 1988), French footballer Other uses * ''Pélagie,'' a Canadian musical first produced in 2004 * Pelagie Islands * Sainte-Pélagie Prison, a prison in Paris, used from 1790 to 1899 * ''Pélagie-la-Charrette'' (1979), a novel by Antonine Maillet See also * Pelagia (other) Saint Pelagia, Pelagia of Antioch, Pelagia the Penitent or Pelagia the Harlot was a legendary Christian saint and hermit in the 4th or 5th century. Pelagia may also refer to: People * Pelagia the Virgin or Pelagia of Antioch ( 3rd century) ... * Marina (given name) Gi ...
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Lebrun Pelagie Sapiezyna
Lebrun, LeBrun, or Le Brun is a surname and a given name. Notable people with the name include: Surname * Albert Lebrun (1879–1950), French politician and President of France * Alexis Lebrun (born 2003), French table tennis player * Céline Lebrun (born 1976), French judoka * Charles Le Brun (1619–1690), French painter * Charles-François Lebrun (1739–1824), 1st duc de Plaisance, French statesman * Christopher Le Brun (born 1951), British artist, primarily a painter * Claude LeBrun (born 1956), American mathematician * Élisabeth Vigée Le Brun (1755–1842), French painter * Eugénie Le Brun (died 1908), French-born Egyptian feminist intellectual and salon host * Félix Lebrun (born 2006), French table tennis player * Francesca Lebrun (1756–1791), German singer and composer * Fromund Le Brun (died 1283), cleric and judge in Ireland and Lord Chancellor of Ireland * Garin lo Brun or le Brun (died 1156/1162), French troubadour * Jean Lebrun (born 1950), French journalist ...
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Pelagia
Pelagia (), distinguished as Pelagia of Antioch, Pelagia the Penitent, and Pelagia the Harlot, was a Christian saint and hermit in the 4th or 5th century. Her feast day was celebrated on 8 October, originally in common with Saints Pelagia the Virgin and Pelagia of Tarsus. Pelagia died as a result of extreme asceticism, which had emaciated her to the point she could no longer be recognized. According to Orthodox tradition, she was buried in her cell on the Mount of Olives. Upon the discovery that the renowned monk had been a woman, the holy fathers tried to keep it a secret, but the gossip spread and her relics drew pilgrims from as far off as Jericho and the Jordan valley. Saint Pelagia is one of several classical Christian desert ascetics whose gender identity is often up for debate. This is due to physical descriptors used within the mythos often leaning towards masculine. Legend Pelagia's story is attributed to James or Jacob (), deacon of the church of Heliopolis (mode ...
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Pelagie Doane
Pelagie Doane Hoffner (April 11, 1906 – December 9, 1966) was an American illustrator and writer of children's books. Early life and education Doane was born in Ambler, Pennsylvania or Palmyra, New Jersey (sources vary), the daughter of Warren Finney Doane and Pelagie Judith Plasschaert Doane. Her father was an editor. She went to art school in Philadelphia. "For many generations there has been a Pelagie in the family," explained one profile, about her unusual given name. Career Doane was a prolific illustrator of children's books from the 1930s into the 1960s, especially known for her work on books with Christian themes, and on Margaret Sutton's Judy Bolton Series, Judy Bolton mysteries. She also wrote books for children, again often on religious subjects. "Children are people, so I paint up to their level, not down," she explained about her work. ''A Small Child's Bible'' (1946), with seventy stories written and illustrated by Doane, was described as "a standard" in 1960. "H ...
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Pélagie Gbaguidi
Pélagie Gbaguidi (born 1965) is a Beninese multi-media artist who lives and works in Brussels. Gbaguidi self-identifies as a contemporary griot, using her artistic mediums to create pieces related to colonial and post-colonial history, trauma, and the reframing of stories, experiences, and identities which have been overlooked in these historical legacies. Her work is included in the permanent collections of cultural institutions such as the Mémorial ACTe centre in Guadeloupe, Illinois Holocaust Museum & Education Center in Chicago, Casa África in Las Palmas de Gran Canaria, Artothèque of Saint Denis de la Réunion, Mu.ZEE in Belgium, and Kanal - Centre Pompidou in Belgium. Biography Gbaguidi was born in Dakar in 1965. She studied art in Liège, Belgium, at l'École des beaux-arts Saint-Luc, and graduated in 1995. Work The artist calls herself a contemporary "griot” — traditionally meaning a vessel for West African oral tradition, it is an intermediary between t ...
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Pélagie Uwera
Pélagie Uwera (born 1974) is a Rwandan politician, since 2019 she has been a member of the Senate of Rwanda, elected as a Senator for Southern Province.Senators Profiles: Details
, parliament.gov.rw. Accessed May 5, 2020.


Career

Pélagie Uwera graduated with a bachelor's degree in and a master's degree in development studies from Kigali Independent University. From 1998 to 2009 she was a secondary school teacher. From 2012 to 2019 Uwera was a Commissioner for the
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Joseph-Marie-Pélagie Havard
Joseph-Marie-Pélagie Havard (2November 17907July 1838) was a 19th-century Catholic bishop who worked as a missionary in Vietnam. Life Havard was born in 1790 in Thourie, in the ancient Province of Brittany, during the final days of the Kingdom of France. Nothing is recorded of his upbringing or how he fared during the turmoil of the French Revolution and the First French Empire. Some time about 1815, Havard entered the seminary of the Paris Foreign Missions Society to give his service to the Church in Asia. After completing his studies there, he was sent to Vietnam, where he received Holy Orders on 16 June 1821 from Bishop Jacques-Benjamin Longer, M.E.P., who had served as the Apostolic Vicar of the Vicariate Apostolic of Western Tonkin since 1787. Havard was appointed Longer's coadjutor bishop by the Holy See in March 1828, for which office he was named the titular bishop of Castoria. He automatically succeeded to the office upon Longer's death on 8 February 1831. Havard ov ...
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Nora Coton-Pélagie
Nora Coton-Pélagie (born 22 April 1988) is a French football player. She plays as an attacking midfielder and is a former women's youth international having played at all levels. Coton-Pélagie played at both the 2006 UEFA Women's Under-19 Championship and 2008 FIFA U-20 Women's World Cup where she formed excellent partnerships with current senior internationals Eugénie Le Sommer and Marie-Laure Delie. She is the daughter of Bruno Coton-Pélagie, who is currently the manager of Championnat de France amateur 2 club FC Les Lilas. Career Coton-Pélagie began playing football at the club where her father coached and he brother played as amateur, FC Les Lilas. She played in the lower levels of French football with Blanc-Mesnil and CNFE Clairefontaine before joining D1 sides ASJ Soyaux and Paris Saint-Germain. Coton-Pélagie joined D2 side Olympique de Marseille Olympique de Marseille (, ; , ), also known simply as Marseille, or by the abbreviation OM (, ), is a French ...
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Pélagie
''Pélagie'' is a Canadian epic musical written by Allen Cole and Vincent de Tourdonnet. It is based on the 1979 novel ''Pélagie-la-Charette'' ( fr) by Acadian writer Antonine Maillet. It is about the Acadian widow Pélagie LeBlanc who in the late 1770s led her Acadian people back to Grand Pré from the American South, where they had been deported in 1755. Productions The play was first produced in 2004 by CanStage in Toronto and the National Arts Centre The National Arts Centre (NAC) () is a Arts centre, performing arts organization in Ottawa, Ontario, along the Rideau Canal. It is based in the eponymous National Arts Centre (building), National Arts Centre building. History The NAC was one ... in Ottawa and starred Susan Gilmour as Pélagie and Rejean Cournoyer as Joseph Beausoleil. A second production, in English and French, starring Marie Denise Pelletier and Rejean Cournoyer toured Canada's Maritime provinces, ended in Quebec in 2005. References {{DEFAULT ...
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Pelagie Islands
The Pelagie Islands (; ), from the Greek , meaning "open sea", are the three small islands of Lampedusa, Lampione, and Linosa, located in the Mediterranean Sea between Malta and Tunisia, south of Sicily. To the northwest lie the island of Pantelleria and the Strait of Sicily. All three islands are part of the ''comune'' of Lampedusa e Linosa. Geologically, part of the archipelago (Lampedusa and Lampione) is on the African continental shelf, while Linosa is of volcanic origin. Politically and administratively though, the islands fall within the Sicilian province of Agrigento and represent the southernmost part of Italy. Despite pockets of agriculture, the islands are unnaturally barren due to wanton deforestation and the disappearance of the native olive groves, juniper and carob plantations. Fifty years ago much of the landscape was farmland bounded by dry stone walls but today, the local economy is based on sponge fishing and canning, supplemented by tourism in Lampedus ...
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Sainte-Pélagie Prison
Sainte-Pélagie was a prison in Paris, in active use from 1790 to 1899. It was founded earlier than that, however, in 1662, as place for "repentant girls" and later "debauched women and girls." The former Parisian prison was located between the current group of buildings bearing No. 56 Rue de la Clef with Rue du Puits-de-l'Ermite in the 5th arrondissement of Paris at the old Place Sainte-Pélagie. The penal structure held many noted prisoners during the French Revolution, with Madame Roland, Grace Dalrymple Elliott and Marie-Louise O'Murphy being among the known prisoners. After the revolution, the Marquis de Sade was imprisoned here, as was the young mathematician Évariste Galois. During the July Monarchy, the "April insurgees" were also detained there, and some managed to escape through a tunnel. The painter Gustave Courbet was also imprisoned here for his activities in the Paris Commune. He painted a self-portrait titled, '' Gustave Courbet: Self-Portrait at Sainte-Pélagi ...
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Antonine Maillet
Antonine Maillet (10 May 1929 – 17 February 2025) was an Acadian novelist, playwright and scholar. Early life and education Maillet was born on 10 May 1929 in Bouctouche, New Brunswick"Antonine Maillet." ''Paroles d'Acadie : Anthologie de la littérature acadienne (1958-2009)'', edited by David Lonergan, Prise de paroles, pp. 41-68. as one of nine children in her family. Her mother died when she was 14 and her father died 10 years after. Following high school, Maillet received her BA from the Collège Notre-Dame d'Acadie in 1950, followed by an MA from the Université de Moncton in 1959. She then received her PhD in literature in 1971 from the Université Laval. Her thesis is entitled ''Rabelais et les traditions populaires en Acadie''.Bottos, Katia. ''Antonine Maillet conteuse de l'Acadie ou l'encre de l'aède.'' L'Harmattan, 2011. Career Maillet taught literature and folklore at the collège Notre-Dame d'Acadie (1954–1960), the Université de Moncton (1965–1967), ...
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Pelagia (other)
Saint Pelagia, Pelagia of Antioch, Pelagia the Penitent or Pelagia the Harlot was a legendary Christian saint and hermit in the 4th or 5th century. Pelagia may also refer to: People * Pelagia the Virgin or Pelagia of Antioch ( 3rd century), a Christian saint, virgin, and martyr * Marina the Monk, Pelagia or Mary of Alexandria, a Christian saint of Byzantine Syria * Januarius and Pelagia (died 320), Christian martyrs and saints in Armenia * Pelagia of Tarsus or Pelagia the Martyr ( 4th century), a legendary Christian saint and martyr in Cilicia * Pelagia of Tinos (19th c.), a Christian saint who found the lost icon Our Lady of Tinos in 1822 * Pelagia Gesiou-Faltsi (born 1935), scholar in the field of civil procedure in Greece * Pelagia Goulimari (born 1964), Greek-British academic * Pelagia Papamichail (born 1986), Greek basketball player * Pelagia Mendoza y Gotianquin (1867–1939), the first female sculptor in the Philippines * Sister Pelagia, the fictional heroine ...
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