Category
page 1Catholic Church and minority language rights

Gregory XI
pope of the Catholic Church from 1370 to 1378
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Carlism
thumb|Carlist flag from the Third Carlist War (c. 1875), with the Carlist motto [[Dios, patria y rey ("God, Fatherland and King")]]
Carlism (; ; ; ) is a traditionalist and legitimist political movement in Spain aimed at establishing an alternative branch of the Bourbon dynasty, one descended from Don Carlos, Count of Molina (1788–1855), on the Spanish throne.
Jean de Brébeuf
Jesuit missionary and martyr (1593-1649)
Mekhitar of Sebaste
Armenian Catholic monk and theologian who founded the Mekhitarist Order
Saunders Lewis
Welsh writer and politician (1893-1985)
Pavol Peter Gojdič
Greek Catholic Basilian monk (1888-1960)

Frederic Baraga
Catholic missionary and bishop (1797-1868)
American Indian boarding school
residential schools established to assimilate Native American children into a white American society
Prayer Book Rebellion
popular revolt in Devon and Cornwall in 1549

John Ireland
Catholic archbishop (1838–1918)
Fabijan Abrantovich
religious leader (1884-1946)
Pêr-Jakez Helias
Breton author (1914–1995)
Ceslaus Sipovich
Belarusian-British Catholic bishop (1914-1981)

Alasdair mac Mhaighstir Alasdair
British poet, lexicographer, political writer and memoirist
John Joseph Frederick Otto Zardetti
American Roman Catholic archbishop (1847-1902)
Jean-Pierre Calloc'h
writer (1888–1917)
Glasney College
college in Penryn, Cornwall, England, UK
Vincuk Advažny
British opinion journalist, writer and poet (1890-1976)
Huron Carol
song
Rosendo Salvado
Catholic bishop (1814–1900)
P. C. Devassia
Indian Sanskrit scholar and writer (1906–2006)
Frederick Katzer
Catholic archbishop (1844–1903)
Allan MacDonald
Scottish Roman Catholic priest, poet, folklore collector, and activist
Petre Kharischirashvili
Georgian Catholic priest
Francis Xavier Pierz
American-Slovenian writer and priest (1785–1880)
Margaret Shaw
American folklorist and musicologist (1903-2004)