Emily Mary Loveday (born 1799) was an English woman at the centre of a case where her father accused her Parisian boarding school of seducing her into the Roman Catholic church. The case attracted wide interest in England and France but it was rejected and she continued to live in a Paris convent.

Emily Loveday
1822 pamphlet describing her conversion
Born28 December 1799 Edit this on Wikidata
Died1850 Edit this on Wikidata (aged 50–51)

Life

edit

Loveday was born in 1799. She was baptised at St Pauls church in Hammersmith in London in February 1800. Her parents were Eliza (born Sharp) and Douglas Charles Loveday. Her father would become a lawyer in the Middle Temple in 1812 and four years later he bought land near Paris at Auteuil. In 1817 her father became a French citizen.[1]

In 1819 their father decided to return to Britain and he paid for her, her younger sister, Matilda Susan, and her cousin, Mary, to live in a boarding school in Paris maintained by Ernestine Reboul.[1]

Her father was annoyed when he returned and he discovered that they had been converted to Roman Catholicism while at the school in Paris. The sisters were removed from the school in October 1821 and their cousin sometime later. They had all become Catholics and although Matilda was willing to return to being a Protestant, Emily refused to recant.[1] He documented his accusation and sent it to the Chamber of Deputies.[2]

Emily decided to leave and join a convent.[3]

In December 1821 her father accused the headmistress of seducing his daughters and accused her of rapt de séduction. Rapt de séduction was an unusual accusation in this case as the crime was intended to cover a situation where a minor was seduced into an elopement not into a religious conversion.[3]

12,000 copies of his accusation were printed[4] and the affair was discussed in British newspapers including The Times. In France over twenty pamphlets were published[3] including "The Miraculous Host Tortured by the Jew Under the Reign of Philip the Fair in 1290. Being One of the Legends which Converted the Daughters and Niece of Douglas Loveday" which was translated into English.[5] It was published by William Hone to expose the "priest-ridden Bourbon regime".[1] By 1822 the issue was mentioned in parliament and the press published accounts of what Emily had said and the headmistress's defence.[3]

French law had a principle of paternal authority, but as Emily was an adult the chamber of deputies and the chamber of peers did not uphold her father's case. Emily remained at the convent in Paris.[1]

References

edit
  1. ^ a b c d e Matthew, H. C. G.; Harrison, B.; Goldman, L., eds. (2004-09-23). "The Oxford Dictionary of National Biography". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford: Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/96076. Retrieved 2023-08-03. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  2. ^ Loveday, Douglas (1822). The Petition of Mr. Loveday, to the Chamber of Deputies, Complaining of the Conversion of His Daughters to the Catholic Faith ; Together with Miss Emily Loveday's Reply. Extracted from the Paris Papers. T. Bolland.
  3. ^ a b c d Ford, Caroline (1994). "Private Lives and Public Order in Restoration France: The Seduction of Emily Loveday". The American Historical Review. 99 (1): 21–43. doi:10.2307/2166161. ISSN 0002-8762. JSTOR 2166161.
  4. ^ "Private Lives and Public Order in Restoration France: The Seduction of Emily Loveday". The American Historical Review. February 1994. doi:10.1086/ahr/99.1.21. ISSN 1937-5239.
  5. ^ Macé, Jean (1822). The Miraculous Host Tortured by the Jew Under the Reign of Philip the Fair in 1290. Being One of the Legends which Converted the Daughters and Niece of Douglas Loveday ... in 1821. From the Original French Work ... Illustrated by the Cuts Copied from the Same Work. With Mr. Loveday's Narrative. 4th Ed. William Hone.