She was born in
Belle-Isle-en-Terre,
Cotes-du-Nord, on 4 May 1864 into a family of Breton farmers. She learned to read at the local school. Having lost her mother as a child, she was in charge of overseeing the household. She entered the convent at
Saint-Brieuc in 1887. She was a member of the
Franciscan Missionaries of Mary. In 1899 she was one of a group of seven sisters from the order who went to
Taiyuan, China, arriving on 4 May 1899, to set up an orphanage at the mission there under bishop
Gregorio Grassi. It was proposed that the nuns should escape when the situation got worse but it was the Mother Superior who is reported to have protested that the nuns should not be denied the sacrifice of dying for their faith on 27 June 1900. She argued that they should be allowed to stay when the level of threat to the community rose. On 5 July 1900, during the
Boxer Rebellion, the Christians at the mission were ordered to renounce their faith or face death; at 16:00 on 9 July the priests, nuns, seminarians and Christian lay workers were all killed, in what is known as the
Taiyuan massacre. During the
Boxer Rebellion she was martyred by decapitation on 9 July 1900 at
Taiyuan with seven of the other sisters. They became saints after they were beatified by
Pope Pius XII in 1946 and then later canonised by
Pope John Paul II on 1 October 2000 among a group of 120
Martyr Saints of China. == References ==