In 1710, the Assembly of the French Clergy offered four thousand livres to (1650–1725), a Benedictine monk of the
Congregation of Saint-Maur renowned for his polemics against the Trappist
Armand Jean le Bouthillier de Rancé on the subject of monastic studies, on condition that he should bring the revision of the
Gallia Christiana to a successful conclusion. The Assembly required that the first volume should appear at the end of four years, and that de Sainte-Marthe's congregation should continue the undertaking after his death. Through de Sainte-Marthe's efforts, the first volume appeared in 1715, devoted to the ecclesiastical provinces of Albi, Aix, Arles, Avignon, and Auch. In 1720, de Sainte-Marthe produced the second volume dealing with the provinces of Bourges and Bordeaux; and in 1725 the third, which treated Cambrai, Cologne, and Embrun. After de Sainte-Marthe's death, the Benedictines issued the fourth volume (1728) on Lyons, and the fifth volume (1731) on Mechelen and Mainz.
Félix Hodin and
Etienne Brice, who were preparing the latter volumes of the
Gallia Christiana, were expelled from
Saint-Germain-des-Prés between 1731 and 1740, on account of the controversies over the bull
Unigenitus. They returned to Paris in 1739 and issued the sixth volume, dealing with Narbonne, also (1744) the seventh and eighth volumes on Paris and its
suffragan sees. united his efforts with Hodin and Brice, and the ninth and tenth volumes, both on the
province of Reims, appeared in 1751. The eleventh volume (1759), dealing with the
province of Rouen, was issued by
Pierre Henri and
Jacques Taschereau. In 1770, the twelfth volume, on the
province of Sens and
province of Tarentaise, appeared, and in 1785 the thirteenth, on the provinces of Toulouse and Trier. At the outbreak of the revolution, four volumes were lacking: Tours, Besançon, Utrecht, and Vienne.
Barthélemy Hauréau published (in 1856, 1860 and 1865), for the provinces of Tours, Besançon and Vienne, respectively, and according to the Benedictine method, the fourteenth, fifteenth and sixteenth volumes of the . The province of Utrecht alone has no place in this great collection, but this defect has been remedied in part by the , edited by
Gisbert Brom, and extending from the earliest times to 1378 (The Hague, 1891–96). Volumes I to V and XI to XIII of the new were reprinted by between 1870 and 1877, and volumes VI to IX and XII by the publisher H. Welter. The new edition places after each metropolitan see its suffragan sees, and after each see the abbeys belonging to it. The original documents, instead of encumbering the body of the articles, are inserted at the end of each diocese under in a section titled . == Later works ==