Visionary · 19th century · Paris

St. Catherine Labouré

A quiet French sister whose recognized apparitions at Rue du Bac gave the Church one of its most widely diffused Marian devotions.

Lifespan
1806–1876 lived 70 years
Feast Day
November 28
Region
France
Known for
The Rue du Bac apparitions and the Miraculous Medal
Saint Catherine Labouré, Daughter of Charity, visionary of the Miraculous Medal at Rue du Bac
01 · Remembered Witness

Sister Labouré gave her account of the apparitions simply, consistently, and without seeking any notice for herself; her concern was only that the medal be struck and the devotion the Blessed Virgin had asked for be made available to the faithful.

Fr. Jean-Marie Aladel, CM, Notice historique sur l'origine et les effets de la nouvelle médaille (Paris, 1834) and the canonical inquiry into the Rue du Bac apparitions

02 · Why Follow

The Daughter of Charity whose Rue du Bac vision gave the Church the Miraculous Medal

Catherine Labouré was a Daughter of Charity in 19th-century Paris whose visions of the Blessed Virgin Mary in the chapel at 140 Rue du Bac, in 1830, gave the Church the devotion known as the Miraculous Medal. The Church has recognized the apparitions as worthy of belief, and her body has been venerated at the chapel since its translation there in 1933.

Catherine was born Zoé Labouré on May 2, 1806, at Fain-lès-Moutiers, a farming village in Burgundy. She was one of ten surviving children of a prosperous farming family, lost her mother at the age of nine, and grew up running the household while her older sister entered religious life. She had little formal schooling and was illiterate when she first sought to follow her vocation. In January 1830 she began her postulancy with the Daughters of Charity at Châtillon-sur-Seine and on April 21 of that year arrived at the motherhouse on the Rue du Bac in Paris.

On the night of July 18, 1830, Catherine was woken in the dormitory by what she described as a child of light who led her to the chapel, where she encountered the Blessed Virgin Mary and spoke with her at length. On November 27 of the same year, during evening meditation, she saw the Virgin standing on a globe, with rays of light streaming from her hands; the figure was framed by the invocation that became the legend of the medal: O Mary, conceived without sin, pray for us who have recourse to thee. Catherine reported what she had seen only to her confessor, Fr. Jean-Marie Aladel, CM, and asked that medals be struck according to the pattern she had been shown. The first medals were produced in 1832, and during the Paris cholera epidemic of that year their distribution by the Daughters of Charity spread the devotion rapidly through the city and then beyond it. Catholics came to call it the Miraculous Medal — a Marian sacramental tied to a recognized apparition, given as a sign of intercession and prayer rather than as a charm.

In 1836 Catherine was sent from the motherhouse to the hospice of Enghien at Reuilly, on the eastern edge of Paris, where she served the sick and elderly poor for the remaining forty years of her life. She kept the secret of the apparitions throughout — only Fr. Aladel knew her identity — and the sisters at Reuilly recognized her holiness only gradually, through her care of the dying and the steadiness of her hidden life. She died at Reuilly on December 31, 1876, at the age of seventy. During the beatification process in 1933 her body was exhumed and found incorrupt; it was translated to the chapel at 140 Rue du Bac, where Catholics have venerated it since. Pope Pius XI beatified her in 1933, and Pope Pius XII canonized her on July 27, 1947.

Catherine's witness binds three things together: the small chapel on the Rue du Bac, where the apparitions occurred and where her body now rests; the hidden charity of forty years at Reuilly; and the medal whose global diffusion long outran the visionary who asked only to be forgotten.

03 · A Life in Time

A life, in years and approximate ages.

  1. 1806
    Birth
    Birth at Fain-lès-Moutiers
    Zoé Labouré is born on May 2 to a prosperous Burgundian farming family at Fain-lès-Moutiers, in the Côte-d'Or. She is one of ten surviving children.
  2. 1830
    23
    Enters the Daughters of Charity at Châtillon-sur-Seine
    Catherine begins her postulancy with the Daughters of Charity of Saint Vincent de Paul at Châtillon-sur-Seine in Burgundy, taking the religious name Catherine.
  3. 1830
    23
    Arrives at the motherhouse, 140 Rue du Bac
    Catherine transfers to the motherhouse of the Daughters of Charity at 140 Rue du Bac in Paris, where she will receive the apparitions later that year.
  4. 1830
    24
    First apparition in the chapel at Rue du Bac
    On the night of July 18 and into July 19, Catherine reports being led from the dormitory to the chapel, where she encountered the Blessed Virgin Mary and spoke with her at length. She tells only her confessor, Fr. Jean-Marie Aladel, CM.
  5. 1830
    24
    Apparition of the Miraculous Medal
    During evening meditation Catherine sees the Blessed Virgin Mary standing on a globe, with rays of light streaming from her hands, framed by the invocation "O Mary, conceived without sin, pray for us who have recourse to thee." She asks Fr. Aladel that medals be struck according to the pattern she has been shown.
  6. 1832
    26
    First medals struck; devotion spreads during the cholera epidemic
    The first Miraculous Medals are struck at Fr. Aladel's request. During the Paris cholera epidemic of the same year, their distribution by the Daughters of Charity spreads the Marian devotion rapidly through the city and then beyond.
  7. 1836
    30
    Sent to Reuilly to serve the sick and elderly
    Catherine is sent from the motherhouse to the hospice of Enghien at Reuilly, on the eastern edge of Paris. She will serve the sick and elderly poor there in obscurity for the remaining forty years of her life. Only Fr. Aladel knows she is the visionary of the Rue du Bac.
  8. 1876
    70
    Death at Reuilly
    After forty years of hidden service to the sick and elderly poor, Catherine dies at the hospice of Reuilly on December 31, 1876. The sisters had recognized her holiness only gradually, through the steadiness of her hidden life.
  9. 1933
    After death
    Exhumation and translation of her body to Rue du Bac
    As part of the beatification process her body is exhumed and found incorrupt. It is translated to the chapel of Our Lady of the Miraculous Medal at 140 Rue du Bac, where Catholics have venerated it since.
  10. 1947
    After death
    Canonization by Pope Pius XII
    Pope Pius XII canonizes Catherine Labouré on July 27, 1947, recognizing in the universal Church the witness of the visionary of Rue du Bac and the hidden Daughter of Charity at Reuilly.

Dates are approximate where the surviving record is traditional or incomplete.

04 · Where to Go

One place where this witness remains visible.

Chapel of Our Lady of the Miraculous Medal, Rue du Bac
RELIC SITE

Chapel of Our Lady of the Miraculous Medal, Rue du Bac

140 RUE DU BAC, 7TH ARRONDISSEMENT, PARIS

The chapel of the Daughters of Charity where Catherine received the apparitions in 1830, and where Catholics have venerated her body since its translation there in 1933. The shrine preserves the place of the visions and her resting place together.

05 · Tomb & Relics · tomb

Where the body is venerated.

Relic tradition
Tomb tradition

The saint is publicly venerated at a named tomb.

BODY OF SAINT CATHERINE LABOURé

Chapel of Our Lady of the Miraculous Medal, Rue du Bac

140 Rue du Bac, 7th arrondissement, Paris

The chapel of the Daughters of Charity where Catherine received the apparitions in 1830, and where Catholics have venerated her body since its translation there in 1933. The shrine preserves the place of the visions and her resting place together.

  • The body of Saint Catherine Labouré, beneath the altar of Our Lady of the Chair
Pilgrim note

A small, quiet chapel with global devotional reach. Approach Rue du Bac as a place of prayer rather than display. Pair with the nearby Vincentian Paris when the schedule allows.

07 · Feast & Devotion

Kept on November 28.

November 28 is Catherine's feast day, observed with particular devotion at the chapel of Our Lady of the Miraculous Medal on the Rue du Bac and at houses of the Daughters of Charity around the world. The Miraculous Medal itself is also marked by a feast on November 27, the day of the principal 1830 apparition; the two days are often kept together as a Marian novena tied to the Rue du Bac devotion.

A Catherine pilgrimage is small in geography. The chapel at 140 Rue du Bac holds both the place of the apparitions and her body; an honest visit gives time to prayer, to the Rosary, and to the Vincentian charism of charity rather than to spectacle. Pair it with the nearby Vincentian Paris if the schedule allows.

08 · Sacred Geography

How Paris holds Catherine Laboure

Saint and place

Catherine's geography is small and almost entirely Parisian. The 1830 apparitions, the medal they gave the Church, and her incorrupt body all gather at one chapel on the Rue du Bac, while the hidden charity of the Daughters of Charity carried her witness out to the world.

The apparitions of 1830 at the Rue du Bac are recognized by the Church as worthy of belief and, like all private revelation, invite prayer and conversion rather than adding to the deposit of faith. Catherine's body, found incorrupt at the 1933 exhumation, has been venerated at the chapel since that year.

09 · Notes & Sources

A calmer record of what we rely on.

We rely on primary writings, official Church and shrine sources, and careful traditional accounts where modern documentation is limited.

Dates and relic traditions are named plainly when they are approximate, traditional, or contested.

Corrections can be sent through the contact page.

Primary sources

  • Written accounts of Catherine Labouré, recorded at the request of Fr. Jean-Marie Aladel, CM (1830s)

    Catherine's own narrative of the Rue du Bac apparitions, written under obedience to her confessor and preserved in the archives of the Daughters of Charity.

  • Fr. Jean-Marie Aladel, CM — Notice historique sur l'origine et les effets de la nouvelle médaille (Paris, 1834)

    The earliest published account of the apparitions and the diffusion of the medal, written by Catherine's confessor without naming her.

  • Process for beatification of Catherine Labouré, Sacred Congregation of Rites (concluded 1933)

    Canonical investigation, including the 1933 exhumation and translation of her body to Rue du Bac.

Church sources

  • Canonization of Catherine Labouré by Pope Pius XII (July 27, 1947)

    Formal recognition of her sanctity in the universal Church.

  • Beatification of Catherine Labouré by Pope Pius XI (1933)

    The earlier act of recognition that accompanied the exhumation and translation of her body to Rue du Bac.

Shrine sources

Portrait: Contemporary devotional rendering inspired by traditional iconography.