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Pierre De BrullePierre de Brulle (February 4, 1575 - October 2, 1629) was a French cardinal and statesman. He was born at Srilly, near Troyes. He was educated by the Jesuits and at the university of Paris. Soon after his ordination in 1599, he assisted Cardinal Duperron in his controversy with the Protestant Philippe de Mornay, and made numerous converts. He founded the Congregation of the French Oratory in 1611 and introduced the Carmelite nuns into France, notwithstanding the opposition of the friars of that order, who were jealous of his ascendancy. Brulle also played an important part as a statesman. He obtained the necessary dispensations from Rome for Henrietta Maria's marriage to Charles I, and acted as her chaplain during the first year of her stay in England. In 1626, as French ambassador to Spain, he concluded the treaty of Monzon. After the reconciliation of Louis XIII with his mother, Marie de Medici, through his agency, he was appointed a councillor of state, hut had to resign this office, owing to his Austrian policy, which was opposed by Richelieu. Brulle encouraged Descartes' philosophical studies, and it was through him that the Samaritan Pentateuch, recently brought over from Constantinople, was inserted in Lejay's Polyglot Bible. His treatise, Des Grandeurs de Jesus, was a favourite book with the Jansenists. His works, edited by P Bourgoing (2 vols., 1644) were reprinted, by Migne in 1857. See M. de Brulle et les Carmlites; Le Pre de Brulle et l'oratoire de Jsus; Le Cardinel de Brulle et Richelieu (3 vols., 1872-1876), by the Abb M. Houssaye; and H Sidney Lear's Priestly Life in France in the Seventeenth Century (London, 1873). Brulle, Pierre de Brulle, Pierre de Berulle, Pierre
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