Biography
Bishop de Miollis was the son of councillor in the Parliament of Provence. He had two brothers, one a lieutenant general ( Sextius Alexandre François de Miollis), the other a prefect.http://www.chanvrerie.net/history/miollis_en.html On 20 September 1777 he was ordained to the priesthood at Carpentras and dedicated himself to the ministry of teaching catechism in rural areas. During the French Revolution in 1791, he refused to take the oath and emigrated to Rome, where he remained for 10 years. In 1801, he returned to Aix. He was appointed vicar of Brignoles in 1804. On 28 August 1805, he succeeded Irénée-Yves Desolle as the Bishop of Digne, which he remained until his resignation on 31 August 1838 at the age of 85 due to his health, becoming Bishop Emeritus of Digne. By then, he had earned the name "Bienvenu" (French for "welcome") due to his charitable nature and evangelical virtues he had shown. He then retired to Aix where he died in 1843, aged 90. He was succeeded by Marie-Dominique-Auguste Sibour. In the diocese of Digne, he is still remembered with much veneration. Bishop de Miollis attended the Council of Paris of 1811, during which he resistedRelations
Bishop de Mazenod and the Missionary Oblates of Mary Immaculate
Bishop de Miollis had frequent contacts with the Oblates. While they often preached in the diocese of Digne, Bishop de Miollis did not easily allow his priests to enter the congregation. The Oblate's founder, Bishop de Mazenod, recognised that Bishop de Miollis was "without doubt a holy bishop", despite complaining about Bishop de Miollis not easily allowing his priests to enter the Congregation. In January 1826, Bishop de Mazenod was astonished to hear that Bishop de Miollis, after signing a letter of approval of the Rule, had also added his signature to a letter from Bishop Arbaud, the bishop of Gap, opposing Rome's approbation of the Rule. They claimed that the statutes had been too hastily examined, and were contrary to the rights of the bishops and to the civil laws of the Realm. Still, Bishop de Mazenod and Bishop de Miollis continued to correspond when Bishop de Miollis went to live in Aix from 1838 until his death in 1843.Comparisons between Bishop de Miollis and Bishop Myriel
Bishop de Miollis was the inspiration forSimilarities
Both Bishop Myriel and Bishop de Miollis were the son of councillors; both were named vicar of Brignoles in 1804 and bishop of Digne in 1806; both were known by the name of Bienvenu (French for the word "welcome") due to their charitable natures and evangelical virtues. Myriel used his own silver candlesticks to redeem Jean Valjean, and Miollis used his own silver coin to redeem the church and the presbytery of the sanctuary of Notre-Dame du Laus.Differences
Victor Hugo wrote that "...his ishop Myriel'sfather had married him at a very early age, eighteen or twenty. In spite of this marriage, however, it was said that Charles Myriel created a great deal of talk. He was well formed, though rather short in stature, elegant, graceful, intelligent; the whole of the first portion of his life had been devoted to the world and to gallantry..." However, Bishop Miollis, on whom Bishop Myriel was based, was never married. His nephew, Francis de Miollis, wrote that "...the first portion of his life was devoted neither to the world nor to gallantry, and he did not offer the sad spectacle of the regrettable violences Victor Hugo has given to Bishop Myriel."Sources
* http://couleursdenuit.over-blog.com/m/article-4037652.html (French)References
* Louis Jêrome Bondil, ''Discours sur la vie et les vertus de Charles François Melchior Bienvenu de Miollis: évêque de Digne'', 1843 *"Miollis (Charles-François-Melchior-Bienvenu)", in Pierre Larousse's ''Grand Dictionnaire universel du xixe siècle, 15 vol., 1863–1890''See also
{{DEFAULTSORT:Miollis, Bienvenu de 1753 births 1843 deaths Bishops of Digne 18th-century French Roman Catholic priests 19th-century French Roman Catholic bishops