On October 18, 1881, relying on the descriptions in the book by Brentano based on his conversations with Emmerich, a French priest, the Abbé
Julien Gouyet discovered a small stone building on a mountain overlooking the
Aegean Sea and the ruins of ancient
Ephesus in Turkey. He believed it was the house described by Emmerich and where the Virgin Mary had lived the final years of her life. Abbé Gouyet's discovery was not taken seriously by most people, but ten years later, urged by Sister
Marie de Mandat-Grancey, DC, two
Lazarist missionaries, Father Poulin and Father Jung, from
Smyrna rediscovered the building on July 29, 1891, using the same source for a guide. They learned that the four-walled, roofless ruin had been venerated for a long time by members of the mountain village of
Şirince, distant, who were descended from the early Christians of Ephesus. Every year pilgrims made a
pilgrimage to the site on August 15, the date on which most of the
Christian world celebrated Mary's Dormition/Assumption. Sister Marie de Mandat-Grancey was named Foundress of Mary's House by the Catholic Church and was responsible for acquiring, restoring and preserving Mary's House and surrounding areas of the mountain from 1891 until her death in 1915. The discovery revived and strengthened a Christian tradition dating from the 12th century, 'the tradition of Ephesus', which has competed with the older 'Jerusalem tradition' about the place of the
Dormition of the Mother of God. Due to the actions of
Pope Leo XIII in 1896 and
Pope John XXIII in 1961, the Catholic Church first removed
plenary indulgences from the
Church of the Dormition in Jerusalem and then bestowed them for all time to pilgrims to Mary's House in Ephesus. ==Archaeology==