Victoire Conen de Saint-Luc


Victoire Conen de Saint-Luc was a French noble and nun. She was executed during The Terror, sentenced for allegedly supporting the War in the Vendée. She was regarded a religious martyr and declared a Servant of God. The process of Beatification was instigated in her favor in 1919, though never completed.

Life

Victoire Conen de Saint-Luc was born in Rennes on January 27, 1761, the daughter of the Breton noble and judge Gilles Conen de Saint-Luc and Françoise Marie du Bot. In February 1782, she became a nun of the Dames de la Retraite in Quimper. The convent specialized in offering retreats for women.
During the French Revolution, the convent was closed, and the nuns accept the hospitality of the Benedictines of Calvary in Quimper. In June 1792, Victoire returned to her family, residing at the castle of Bot, Quimerc'h, where her father had settled in 1775 after resigning his office in the Parliament of Brittany. Practicing devotion to the Sacred Heart, she had painted pictures and insignia like those worn by many Vendée insurgents, and which she had also given to a sympathizer of the rebellion. This incriminated her as a rebel sympathizer, and she was suspected for knowingly having contact with the rebels and for being a supporter of the uprising. In 1793, she was arrested and interned in Carhaix prison, where she spends her time in prayer, consoling other prisoners, reading, embroidery, and writing.
Her parents were soon incriminated and accused of being her accomplices. On October 10, 1793, her father Gilles Conen de Saint-Luc, former president of the Parliament of Brittany, her mother Francoise Marie du Bot and Victoire were arrested and taken to Carhaix prison and from there to Quimper, then, separately, to Paris, where their file had been sent to the Revolutionary Tribunal. They found themselves in the prison of the Conciergerie. She had some talent for painting, and several portraits painted by her are preserved, some made in the prison.
On July 19, 1794 Victoire and her parents appeared before the Revolutionary Court, which convened two days earlier to condemn to death as "fanatical and seditious" the Carmelites of Compiegne. They did not have legal counsel, nor an opportunity to explain or defend themselves. They were condemned to death as "enemies of the people, for having seconded the revolt of the Vendée brigands and fanaticism" and executed by guillotine in the Place de la Nation. Victoire asked to be executed first, telling her parents: "You taught me to live; with the grace of God, I will teach you how to die." Their corpses were thrown into a common grave hastily dug not far away, at the end of the garden of a convent of canonesses of St. Augustine which had been closed and requisitioned. This place is today Picpus Cemetery.

Legacy

The beatification cause of Victoire Conen de Saint Luc was joined in 1919 to that of the Martyrs of the Revolutionary Tribunal of Paris. Reviews by the Archdiocese of Paris took place in 1920 and 1921 and in 1925 documents were sent to the Sacred Congregation of Rites. However, the death of the postulator then caused the interruption of the cause.
Victoire Conen de Saint-Luc was considered a martyr executed for religious reasons by counter revolutionaries, and the new retreat, which was re-founded after the revolution, was dedicated to her. She was depicted in several churches in Brittany, and in 1923 a school, the "Victoire Conen de Saint-Luc", was named after her.
A portrait of Victoire Conen de Saint-Luc, and another of hre uncle Bishop Toussaint Conen of Saint-Luc, the last bishop of Cornouaille, who died in 1790, are in the church of Saint-Jacques de Pouldavid in Douarnenez.

Victoire Conen de Saint-Luc is represented on a stained glass window in four churches and chapels of the diocese of Quimper:
In 1923, a private primary school of girls "Victoire Conen de Saint-Luc", with internship, was built in Landudec.