READING HALLTHE DOORS OF WISDOM |
THE CHRISTIAN ROMAN EMPIRE AND THE FOUNDATION OF THE TEUTONIC KINGDOMS 300-500
CHAPTER XVIII.
MONASTICISM
CHRISTIAN Monasticism was a natural
outgrowth of the earlier Christian asceticism, which had its roots in the
gospel. For it is now recognised that such sayings as: “If thou wouldest be perfect, go
sell that thou hast, and give to the poor ... and come, follow me”; and: “There
are eunuchs, which made themselves eunuchs for the kingdom of heaven's sake: he
that is able to receive it, let him receive it”; and the teaching of St Paul on
celibacy, did as a matter of fact give an impetus to the tendency so common in
seriously religious minds towards the practice of asceticism. These tendencies
are clearly discernible among Christians from the beginning; and not only among
the sects, but also in the great Church. Celibacy was the first and always the
chief asceticism; but fasting and prayer, and the voluntary surrender of
possessions, and also works of philanthropy, were recognized exercises of those
who gave themselves up to an ascetical life. This was done at first without
withdrawal from the world or abandonment of home or the ordinary avocations of
life. At an early date female ascetics received ecclesiastical recognition
among the virgins and widows, and there are grounds for believing that at the
middle of the third century there already were organized communities of
women—for in the Life of Anthony we are told that before withdrawing from the
world he placed his sister in a pantheon or house of virgins,
the name later used for a nunnery. At this date there was nothing of the kind
for men; but, at any rate in Egypt, the male ascetics used to leave their homes
and dwell in huts in the gardens near the towns. For when, c. 270, St Anthony
left the world, it was this manner of life he embraced at
first.
St Anthony was born in middle Egypt about
the year 250. When he was twenty, on hearing in church the gospel text “If
thou wouldest be
perfect”, as cited above, he took the words as a personal call to himself and
acted on them, going to practice the ascetical life among the ascetics who
dwelt at his native place. After 15 years so spent, he went into complete
solitude, taking up his abode in a deserted fort at a place called Pispir, on the east bank of the
Nile opposite the Fayum, now called Der-el-Memun (c. 285). In this
retreat Anthony spent twenty years in the strictest seclusion, wholly given up
to prayer and religious exercises. A number of those who wished to lead an
ascetic life congregated around him, desiring that he should be their teacher
and guide. At last he complied with their wishes and came forth from his
seclusion, to become the inaugurator and first organizer of Christian monachism.
This event took place about the beginning
of the fourth century —305 is the traditional date; only a few years later did
Pachomius found, in the far south, the first Christian monastery properly so
called. It will be convenient to trace separately the two streams of monastic
tradition that flowed respectively from the two great founders, Anthony and
Pachomius.
The form of monachism that drew its
inspiration from St Anthony prevailed throughout Lower or Northern Egypt. All
along the Nile to the north of Lycopolis (Asyut),
and in the adjacent deserts, and on the sea-board near Alexandria, there were
at the end of the fourth century vast numbers of monks, sometimes living alone,
sometimes two or three together, sometimes in large congregations — but even
then the life was semi-eremitical.
Antonian monachism reached its greatest
and most characteristic development in the deserts of Nitria and Scete, and it is here that we have the most
abundant materials for forming a picture of the life of these monks. Palladius and Cassian both
lived in this district for many years during the last decade of the fourth
century; St Jerome, Rufinus, and the writer of
the Historia Monachorum visited
it; and they have left on record their impressions. Nitria, the present Wady Natron, is a valley round some nitre
lakes, lying out in the desert to the west of the Nile, some 60 miles due south
of Alexandria. Those who began the monastic life here were Amoun and Macarius of Egypt, himself a disciple of Anthony. A
few miles from Nitria was
the desert called Cellia from
the number of hermits' cells that studded it, and further away still, out in
the “utter solitude”, was the monastic settlement of Scete. Rufinus and
the writer of the Historia Monachorum describe Cellia: “The cells stood out of
sight and out of earshot of one another; only on the Saturday and Sunday did
the monks assemble for the services; all the other time was spent in complete
solitude, no one ever visiting another except in case of sickness or for some
spiritual need”. Palladius says
that 600 lived in Cellia.
This was a purely eremitical life; but
in Nitria it was
otherwise. The following is Palladius’
account, as he saw it in 390.
“In Mount Nitria 5000 monks dwell following different
manners of life, each according to his power and desire; so that anyone could
live alone, or with another, or with several. In the mountain there are seven
bakeries and a great church by which stand three palm trees, each with a whip
hanging from it; one is for the monks who misbehave themselves, one for
thieves, and one for chance corners: so that anyone who offended and was judged
worthy of stripes, embraced the palm tree and made amends by receiving on the
back the fixed number of blows. Close to the church is the guest house, and any
guest who comes is entertained until he goes of his own accord, even if he stay
for two or three years. For the first week they let him stay, in idleness, but
after that they make him work, either in the garden or the bake-house or the
kitchen. Or if he be a man of position they give him a book to read, but do not
allow him to have intercourse with anyone till noon. Physicians dwell in this
mountain, and confectioners; they use wine, and wine is sold. They all make
linen with their hands, so that they have no needs. And about three in the
afternoon one may stand and hear how the psalmody arises from each habitation,
and fancy oneself rapt aloft into Paradise. But they assemble at the church
only on Saturday and Sunday”.
Palladius tells,
too, of one Apollonius, a merchant, who became a monk in Nitria, and being too old to
learn a handicraft, purchased medicines and stores at Alexandria and cared for
all the brotherhood in their sicknesses, for twenty years going the round of
the cells from daybreak till three in the afternoon, knocking at the doors to
see if anyone was sick: and of another who on becoming a monk retained his
money and devoted it wholly to works of hospitality towards the poor, the aged
and the infirm, and was judged by the fathers to be equal in merit to his
brother, who had dispossessed himself of his belongings and given himself up
wholly to a life of strict asceticism.
What has been said will bring out the
special feature of this type of monasticism—its voluntariness: even when the
monks lived together, there was not any common life according to rule. A large
discretion was left to each one to follow his own devices in the employment of
his time and the practice of his asceticism. In short, this form of monachism
grew out of the eremitical life, and it retained its eremitical or
semi-eremitical character even in the great monastic colonies of Nitria and Scete.
We may now pass to the Pachomian monachism
dominant in the southern parts of Egypt. Pachomius was a pagan by birth; he was
born about 290, and became a Christian at the age of twenty. He adopted the
eremitical life under Palaemon,
a hermit who lived by the Nile in the diocese of Tentyra (Denderah). The legend of his call to be the creator
of Christian cenobitical life
is thus told by Palladius.
“Pachomius was in an extraordinary degree
a lover of mankind and a lover of the brotherhood. While he was sitting in his
cave an angel appeared unto him and said: Thou hast rightly ordered thy own
life; needlessly therefore dost thou sit in the cave; come forth and bring
together all the young monks and dwell with them, and legislate for them
according to the exemplar I will give thee. And he gave him a brazen tablet
whereon was engraved the Rule”. There follows what probably is the most
authentic epitome of the earliest Christian Rule for Monks.
St Pachomius founded his first monastery
at Tabennisi near Denderah c. 315-320, and by
the time of his death in 346 his order counted nine monasteries of men and one
of women, all situated between Panopolis (Akhmim) to the north and Latopolis (Esneh) to the south, and peopled
by some 3000 monks in all. After his death other monasteries were founded, one
at Canopus near Alexandria, and several in Ethiopia; so that by the end of the
century Palladius tells
us there were 7000 Pachomian or Tabennesiot monks—St
Jerome’s 50,000 may safely be rejected.
Palladius visited
the Pachomian monastery
at Panopolis (Akhmim) and has left us what is
by far the most actual and living picture of the daily life. He tells us that
there were 300 monks in this monastery, who practiced all the handicrafts and
out of their superabundance contributed to the support of nunneries and
prisons. The servers of the week got up at daybreak and some worked in the
kitchen while others laid the tables, getting them ready by the appointed hour,
spreading on them loaves of bread, mustard leaves, olive salad, cheeses, herbs
chopped up, and pieces of meat for the old and the sick.
“And some come in and have their meal at
noon, and others at 1 or at 2 or at 3 or at 5, or in the late evening, and
others every second day. And their work was in like fashion: one worked in the
fields, another in the garden, another in the smithy, another in the bakery,
another at carpentry, another at fulling, another at basket-making, another in
the tanyard, another
at shoemaking, another at tailoring, another at calligraphy”; he mentions also
that they keep camels and herds of swine: he adds that they learn by heart all
the Scriptures. From the Rule it appears that they assembled in the church four
times a day, and approached Communion on Saturday and Sunday.
Here we have a fully constituted and
indeed highly organized cenobitical life,
the day being divided between a fixed routine of church services, Bible
reading, and work seriously undertaken as an integral factor of the life.
Herein lies one of the most significant differences between Pachomian and
Antonian monachisms.
In the latter the references to work are few, and the work is of a sedentary
kind, commonly basket-making and linen-weaving, which could be carried on in
the cell; and the work was undertaken merely in order to supply the necessaries
of life, or to fill up the time that could not be spent in actual prayer or
contemplation or the reading of the Bible. Palladius’ picture of the Pachomian monastery, on the other hand, is
that of a busy, well-organized, self-supporting agricultural colony, in which
the daily religious exercises only alternated with, and did not impede, the
daily labour that was so large an element of the life: and so this picture is
of extraordinary, value. Whatever may be thought of the life led by the hermits
or quasi-hermits of northern Egypt, there will hardly be two opinions as to 0
the strenuousness and virility of the ideal aimed at by St Pachomius. The
Antonian ideal is the one that (even in accentuated forms) has been in all ages
dominant in the East, and it was the form of monachism first propagated
throughout Western Europe. It was not the least of St Benedict's contributions
to Western monachism that he introduced, with the modifications called for by
differences of climate and national character, a type of monachism more akin to
the Pachomian, in
which work of one kind or another, undertaken for its own sake, forms an
essential part of the life.
Having thus traced in the briefest manner
the external phenomena of the earliest Christian monachism, we must say a word
on its inner spirit. The theory or philosophy of primitive Christian monachism
finds its fullest expression in Cassian’s Collations. These are 24 conferences
of considerable length, which purport to be utterances of several of the most
prominent of the Nitriot and Scetic monks, made in
response to queries and difficulties put by Cassian himself and his,
friend Germanus, who lived for a number of
years in Scete between
390 and 400. The Collations were not written till 25 years later, and the
question has been raised how far they reproduce actual discourses uttered by
the various monks named; or are compositions of Cassian’s, a literary device
for presenting the teaching and ideas current in Scete. In any case, there can be no reasonable
doubt that they do faithfully represent the substance and spirit of that
teaching — and this is all that is of historical importance. Cassian puts into
the foreground, in his first Collation, an exposition of the purpose or scope
of the monastic life: Abbot Moses declares it to be the attainment of Purity of
Heart, so that the mind may rest fixed on God and divine things: for this
purpose only are fastings, watchings, meditation of
Scripture, solitude, privations to be undertaken: such asceticisms are not perfection, but only the
instruments of perfection. This conference supplies the key to the fundamental
conception of the monastic state. It is a systematic and ordered attempt to
exercise the tendencies symbolized by the terms Mysticism and Asceticism—two of
the most deeply rooted religious instincts of the human heart, but which beyond
most others need regulation and control. Egyptian monachism was probably at its
highest point of development about the year 400, just when Cassian and Palladius came in contact
with it. Without accepting the probably apocryphal figures given by some of the
authorities, there can be no doubt that there were at that date very many
thousands of monks in Egypt. And the original enthusiasms and spirituality of
the movement still, on the whole, held sway. But with the fifth century the
decay set in, which has gone on progressively till our day. The Egyptian monks,
who had been the great adherents of the Catholic faith in the Arian times,
became the chief supporters of Dioscorus in
making the Egyptian Church Monophysite. As the Mahommedan invasion swept over
Egypt the monasteries were in great measure destroyed, and Egyptian monasticism
has ever since been gradually dying out; at the present day only a few
monasteries survive, and the institution is in a moribund condition, unless
some unlooked-for revival come about.
When we pass from Egypt to the oriental
lands, we find that in Palestine monastic life was introduced from Egypt by
Hilarion early in the fourth century. He had been a disciple of Anthony, and
the life he led in Palestine was purely eremitical. There are traces of cenobitic monasteries in
Palestine during the fourth century, especially those established under Western
influences—as by St Jerome and Paula, Rufinus and
the two Melanias. But
the glimpses of Palestinian monachism the end of the century given us by Palladius in the Lausiac History, reveal the
fact that it remained in large measure eremitical.
In Syria and Mesopotamia, whether in the
Roman or in the Persian territories, there was at the beginning of the fourth
century what appears to have been an indigenous growth of asceticism analogous
to the pre-monastic asceticism found in Egypt and elsewhere. The institution
was known as the Sons of the Covenant, and the members were bound to celibacy
and the usual ascetical practices, but they were not monks properly so called.
We hear much of them from Aphraates (c.
330); and Rabbula,
bishop of Edessa a century later, wrote a code of regulations for priests and
Sons of the Covenant. As he wrote also a Rule for monks, it seems clear that
the Sons of the Covenant did not develop into a monastic system, but the two
institutions existed alongside of each other till at any rate the middle of the
fifth century. The beginnings of monachism proper in the Syrian lands are
difficult to trace. It is probable that the story of Eugenius, who was said to
have introduced monasticism from Egypt in the early years of the fourth
century, must be rejected as legendary. Theodoret opens his Historia Religiosa,
or lives of the Syrian monks, with an account of one Jacob who lived as a
hermit near Nisibis before 325; but as this was a century before Theodoret’s time, the facts
must remain somewhat doubtful. He gives accounts of a number of Syrian monks in
the end of the fourth century and the beginning of the fifth: most of them were
hermits; and even when disciples gathered around them, the life continued to be
strongly individualistic and eremitical. This has continued to be the tendency
of Syrian monachism, both Nestorian and Monophysite. Cenobitical life was commonly only the first
stage of a monk's career; the goal aimed at was to be a hermit; after a few
years each monk withdrew to a cell at a distance from the monastery, to live in
solitude, frequenting the monastic church only on Sundays and feasts. Rabbula’s Admonitions for
Monks (c. 425) are of great interest: he lays down that no one is thus to
become a hermit until he has been proved in a monastery for a considerable
time. The following regulation is of special interest: “Those who have been
made priests and deacons in the monasteries, and have been entrusted with
churches in the villages, shall appoint as superiors those who are able to rule
the brotherhood; and they themselves shall remain in charge of their churches”.
The practice here indicated, of monks serving churches, is probably unique in
the East; it has been done in the West in later times, but has always been regarded
as abnormal.
Thus while in Egypt the tendency was to
abandon the eremitical life for the cenobitical, in Syria the opposite tendency set in.
In another respect, too, Syrian monachism developed along lines different from
those that prevailed in Egypt. Egyptian monks practiced, it is true,
austerities and mortifications of the severest kind; but they were what may be
called natural, as prolonged abstinence from food and sleep, exposure to heat
and cold, silence and solitude, heavy labour and physical fatigue. In Syria on
the contrary austerities of a highly artificial character became the vogue: the
extraordinary life of the pillar hermits, who abode for years on the summits of
pillars, at once presents itself in illustration. Theodoret and the other authorities speak as
if it were a common practice that monks should carry continually fastened to
their backs great stones or iron weights—Rabbula forbids this except to hermits. Sozomen tells us of a kind
of Syrian monk called ‘Grazers’, who used to go out into the fields at
meal-times and eat grass like cattle. A good picture of the lines on which
Syrian monachism settled down after the sixth century is afforded by Thomas
of Marga’s Book
of the Governors, or history of the great Nestorian monastery of Beth Abhe in Mesopotamia.
All the evidence shows that the ingrained
oriental hankering after asceticism, still found in Hindu fakirs, asserted
itself in Syrian monachism from the beginning, and it has there at all times
been a characteristic feature of the system.
Monasticism seems to have made its entry
into Greek-speaking lands from the East. It first appears in the Roman province
of Armenia in connection with Eustathius of Sebaste, c. 330-340. The claim
has been made, indeed, that monasteries were established in Constantinople by
Constantine, but this must be regarded as legend; there probably were none
there before the end of the fourth century. The monasticism of Eustathius was of a highly
ascetical character, with strongly developed Manichaean tendencies, which were
condemned at the Council of Gangra,
c. 340. Similar in character, but carrying the same tendencies to still greater
extremes, were the Messalians or Euchitae, in Paphlagonia,
described by Epiphanius.
The real father of Greek monachism was St
Basil. After spending a year in visiting the monks of Egypt and Syria, he
retired, c. 360, to a lonely spot near Neocaesarea in Pontus, and there began to lead
a monastic life with the disciples who quickly gathered round him. His
conception of the monastic life was in many important points a new departure,
and it proved epoch-making in the history of monachism: it has continued to
this day the fundamental conception of Greek and Slavonic monasticism; and St
Benedict, though he borrowed more in matter of detail from Cassian, in matter
of principles and ideas owed more to St Basil than to any other monastic
legislator. Thus in the monasticism of both East and West, St Basil's ideas
still live on. For this reason it will be proper to give a somewhat full
account of his monastic legislation. The materials are to be found chiefly in
the two sets of Rules (the Longer and the Shorter), the authenticity of which
is now recognised, and in certain of his Letters, supplemented by letters of St
Gregory Nazianzen to him.
St Basil's construction of the monastic
life was fully cenobitical,
in this respect advancing beyond that of St Pachomius. In the Pachomian system the monks
dwelt in different houses within the monastery precincts; the meals were at
different hours; and all assembled in the church only for the greater services.
But St Basil established a common roof, a common table, a common prayer always;
so that we meet here for the first time in Christian monastic legislation the
idea of the cenobium,
and common life properly so called. Again, St Basil declared against even the
theoretical superiority of the eremitical life over the cenobitical. He asserted the
principle that monks should endeavour to do good to their fellow men; and in
order to bring works of charity within reach of his monks, orphanages were
established, separate from the monasteries but close at hand and under the care
of the monks, in which apparently children of both sexes were received. Boys
also were taken into the monasteries to be educated, and not with the view of
their becoming monks. Another new feature in St Basil's conception of the
monastic life was his discouragement of excessive asceticism; he enunciated the
principle that work is of greater value than austerities, and drew the
conclusion that fasting should not be practiced to such an extent as to be
detrimental to work. All this represents a new range of ideas.
The following is an outline of the actual
daily life in St Basil’s monasteries. A period of novitiate or probation, of
indeterminate length, had to be passed, at the end of which a profession of
virginity was made, but no monastic vows were taken: Palladius, writing in 420, says in the Prologue to
the Lausiac History,
that it is better to practice the monastic life freely, without the constraint
of a vow. But though there were no vows, St Basil's monks were considered to be
under a strict obligation of persevering in the monastic life, and of abiding
in their own monastery. Their time was divided between prayer, work, and the
reading of Holy Scripture. They rose for the common psalmody while it was still
night and chanted the divine praises till the dawn; six times each day did they
assemble in the church for prayer. Their work was field labour and farming—St
Gregory Nazianzen speaks of the ploughing and vine-dressing, the wood-drawing
and stone-hewing, the planting and draining. The food and clothing, too, the
housing and all the conditions of life, he describes as being coarse and rough
and austere. The monastic virtues of obedience to the superior, of personal
poverty, of self-denial, and the cultivation of the spiritual life and of
personal religion, are insisted on.
The Basilian form of monachism was the one
that spread in the adjacent provinces of Asia Minor and in Armenia; and under
the influence of the Council of Chalcedon, which passed several canons
regulating the monastic life, and of the civil law, it gradually made its way
and became recognised throughout the Greek portion of the Empire as the
official form of monastic life. But the Eastern tendency towards the practice
of extreme austerity and the eremitical life has always struggled to find
expression, and to this day there are hermits on Mount Athos and at other
monastic centers of
the Orthodox Church.
In the fifth century the Holy Land became
the head centre of Greek monachism, and monasteries of two kinds arose in
considerable numbers. There were the cenobia, or monasteries proper, where the
life was according to the lines laid down by St Basil; and there were the lauras, wherein a
semi-eremitical life was followed, the monks living in separate huts within the
enclosure. St Sabas,
a Cappadocian, was the great organizer of this manner of life—he founded no
fewer than seven lauras in
Palestine, and drew up a Typicon or code of rules for their
guidance.
Sabas was
appointed Exarch of all the lauras of
Palestine, while his compatriot and contemporary Theodosius became
Archimandrite of all the cenobia of
Palestine. Under the stress of the Origenistic controversy
and of the Arab invasion Palestinian monachism waned, and in the seventh
century the centre of gravity of Greek monasticism shifted to Constantinople,
where in the early years of the ninth century it underwent a reorganization at
the hands of Theodore, abbot of the monastery of the Studium. In the eleventh and twelfth centuries the
centre of gravity again shifted, this time to Mount Athos, where it has ever
since remained.
Since the time of Theodore the Studite
Greek and Slavonic monachism has undergone little change: it is still St
Basil's monachism, but the elements of hard labour and
of works of charity have been almost wholly eliminated from the life, and
intellectual work has not, as in the West, taken their place on any large scale
— indeed, it has usually been discouraged; so that for the past thousand years
Greek and Slavonic monks have been almost wholly given up, in theory at any
rate, and in great measure in practice too, to a life of purely devotional
contemplation. They do not call themselves Basilians, but simply Monks, and St Basil's Rules
scarcely hold a leading place in the code of monastic legislation that
regulates their life.
While the monastic system was in its
primitive unorganized state it lent itself to certain obvious abuses. Anyone who
chose could become a hermit and live according to his own devices. Impostors
and charlatans under the guise of pretended austerities deceived the simple and
lived upon alms received on false pretences. These abuses seem to have attained
a great magnitude in Syria at the middle of the fifth century, if we may judge
from the vigorous protests of Isaac of Antioch; but they existed everywhere.
They led to the gradual regulating of the monastic life and the subjecting of
the monks to the authority of the bishops. In this way a body of legislation,
both ecclesiastical and civil, grew up, which restricted the voluntariness of
the system, and made it an integral part of the general polity of both Church
and State.
This ‘ecclesiasticizing’ of the monks is often deplored;
but it was part of the inevitable march of events and a condition of the
continued existence of the institution. In the fifth and sixth centuries other
tendencies made themselves felt, and the monks in great numbers became
embroiled in the ecclesiastical politics and the theological controversies of
the time. Sometimes they were on the orthodox side, sometimes on the heterodox;
but on whatever side they stood, they were only too often violent and
fanatical, and some of the most discreditable episodes of Church history in
those days were the work of Eastern monks — as the murder of Flavian at the
Robber Synod of Ephesus.
Before we pass to the West, it will be
well to speak of the nuns in Egypt and the East. It has already been said at
the beginning of this chapter, when speaking of the premonastic Christian ascetics, that
communities of women existed at an earlier date than communities of men—in
Egypt as early as the middle of the third century. The records of Egyptian
monachism agree in representing women as taking part in great numbers in every
phase of the monastic movement. There were women who lived as hermits and as
recluses, shut up in tombs; there are various stories of women disguising
themselves as men and living in monasteries, and being discovered only after
death. Pachomius founded two nunneries, one, under his sister, at Tabennisi, the other, which
numbered 400 nuns, near Panopolis (Akhmim); and after his death
many others were founded in his order. The famous Coptic abbot Senuti of Atripè governed a great community of nuns in
addition to the monks of the White Monastery. We learn from Palladius that at the end
of the fourth century there were numerous nunneries in all parts of monastic
Egypt, and the glimpses he lets us see of their inner life are graphic and
interesting. He tells us of one Dorotheus who
had the spiritual charge of a nunnery, and used to sit at a window overlooking
the convent, “keeping the peace among the nuns”; also of an old nun, Mother
Talis, superioress of a convent at Antina,
so beloved by her nuns that there was no need of a key in that convent, as in
others, to keep the nuns from wandering, “as they were fast tied by love of
her”.
In Syria there were at the beginning of
the fourth century ‘Daughters of the Covenant’, analogous to the ‘Sons of the
Covenant’, spoken of above. Whether they led a full community life is
uncertain; but in one of Rabbula's regulations,
at the beginning of the fifth century, it is prescribed that ‘Sons or Daughters
of the Covenant who fall from their estate be sent to the monasteries for
penance’, which implies the existence of convents of women. In all probability
there were in Syria, as elsewhere, fully organized nunneries, though there is
not much Syrian evidence concerning them. Certainly in Palestine at this time
there were many convents of women, including those established under the
influence of the Roman ladies Paula and Eustochium and the Melanias. When St Basil began his monastic life
about 360, his mother and sister were already living in a community of nuns in
the immediate vicinity, with a river between them; and throughout
Greek-speaking Christendom, in Asia Minor and above all in Constantinople,
women practiced the monastic life hardly less than men. No Eastern nuns,
however, have at any time devoted themselves to external works of charity like
the modern active congregations of women in the West.
There is a considerable body of evidence
showing that the ascetical life was pursued in the West—notably at Carthage and
Rome—as in the East, before the introduction of monasticism proper; but there
is no sufficient reason for questioning the tradition that attributes the
knowledge of the monastic life in Western Europe to the influence of St
Athanasius. In the year 339 he came to Rome, accompanied by two Egyptian monks,
and thus spread in the City and its neighbourhood the knowledge of the manner
of life that was then being practiced in Egypt. Many candidates presented
themselves, and we learn from Ambrose, Jerome, and Augustine that in the last
quarter of the fourth century there were numerous monasteries of men and of
women in Rome. Among the high-born patrician ladies the movement had a great
vogue and became so fashionable that an agitation against it arose, of which St
Jerome had to bear the brunt. These ladies, brought up in every luxury, gave up
all things and surrendered themselves to lives of hardship and devotional
exercises. The most famous of them, as Paula and Melania, even left Rome and
went to the Holy Land, where they established sisterhoods. Monasteries rapidly
spread over Central and Southern Italy, and the islands of the Tyrrhenian Sea
were peopled by hermits. In North Italy, too, monasteries existed by the end of
the fourth century at the chief cities —at Aquileia, where Rufinus and Jerome were trained in the monastic life;
at Milan, where Ambrose had a great monastery of men; at Ravenna and Pavia and
many other towns.
Eusebius, bishop of Vercelli (d. 371),
introduced a change in the idea of the monastic life that merits for him a more
prominent place among monastic legislators than is commonly accorded to him: he
combined the clerical and monastic states, making the clerics of his cathedral
live together in community according to the monastic rule. This was the
starting-point of the practice destined to prevail both in West and East,
whereby monks as by ordinary rule become priests, though it was several
centuries before the custom was established.
It was in the form initiated by Eusebius
at Vercelli that the monastic life was introduced into Africa by St Augustine
on his return from Italy in 388. In 391 he was ordained presbyter at Hippo and
established a community of clerics living together according to rule; and when
in 396 he became bishop of Hippo, he continued to follow the same manner of
life along with his clerics. Several bishops went forth from this community to
other sees, and in most cases they established similar monasteries of clerics
in their episcopal cities. This union of the clerical and monastic lives was widely
prevalent in Africa, and it became the exemplar both of the institution of
secular canons in the Carolingian reform, and of that of canons regular, or
Augustinian canons, in the Hildebrandine.
Monasteries of the type normal in those
days also arose in Africa. In the times of Tertullian and Cyprian veiled
virgins were recognised; but it is doubtful whether they had developed into a
proper monastic system before St Augustine's time. During his episcopate there
certainly were many nunneries, one being presided over by his sister; and his
Letter 211—the only authentic ‘Rule of St Augustine’—was written for the
guidance of a nunnery. Thus in the early years of the fifth century monachism
was strong and flourishing in the African Church.
The beginnings of Spanish monachism are
obscure, and the records scanty. The first reference is a canon of the Council
of Zaragoza in 380, forbidding clerics to become monks: this shows that the
monastic institute must by that date have spread considerably in Spain; but there
seems to be no extant evidence of the existence of a monastery in Spain till
the beginning of the sixth century. There is a tradition that then one Donatus
carried monasticism from Africa into Spain; but the names to be associated with
early Spanish monachism are Martin, bishop of Braga, a Pannonian and the
apostle of the Arian Sueves, who died in 580,
and Fructuosus, also
bishop of Braga, about a century later. The latter was the great organizer and
propagator of monachism in the Peninsula, establishing several monasteries and
writing (probably) two rules for their guidance. It is chiefly from these rules
that we get glimpses of the earlier Spanish monachism. It seems to have been a
common practice for a man to call his house a "monastery," and to
live in it with his wife, children and servants: against this abuse, and
others, St Fructuosus legislates.
One feature of his Rule is unique: it contains a pact between the abbot and
monks, whereby the latter bind themselves to the performance of the duties of the
monastic life under the abbot, and empower him to inflict specified punishments
for certain offences; and on the other hand reserve to themselves, in case the
abbot should act in an arbitrary or tyrannical way, the right of appeal to
other abbots or to the bishop. St Fructuosus lived
a century after St Benedict's death; but throughout the Gothic period there is
no trace of Benedictine monachism in Spain. In the extant rules of Spanish
origin—those of Leander, of Isidore, and of Fructuosus—it is possible to discern certain
reminiscences which betray a knowledge of the Benedictine Rule; but Mabillon greatly
exaggerates their significance. These rules are in no sense declarations or
commentaries on St Benedict's, and Spanish monachism was not at all Benedictine
before the time of the Christian Reconquest. Early Spanish monachism was
indigenous, and it retained its individuality till the fall of the Gothic
kingdom. Our only glimpses of it have to be obtained through these later rules,
and so it has been necessary to carry our view forward beyond the strict limits
of this survey. It may be doubted whether monasteries were numerous in the
Gothic period: the Councils of Toledo throughout the seventh century used to be
attended by fifty or sixty bishops; but there were never more than ten abbots
present, and often only six, or five, or four.
We have little information concerning the
origins of monachism in the Celtic lands, though the system played a prominent
part in the Christianizing of most of them. It seems that the earliest Celtic
monasteries were missionary stations, closely connected with the tribal system.
St Patrick, who had passed some years as a monk in Lerins, built up the Irish Church in large measure
on a monastic framework, and this initial tendency became more and more
accentuated, till the bishops came to be subordinated to the abbots of the
great monasteries. Our first definite knowledge of an organized cenobitical life in Ireland
comes to us from the sixth century, during the course of which several great
monasteries were established in various parts of the island, some of them
counting more than a thousand monks. But any full knowledge of early Irish
monachism has to be gathered, not on Irish soil, but from the documents
connected with St Columba, who towards the end of the sixth century established
a great monastery in the island of Iona or Hy, the missionary influence whereof
spread over southern Scotland and northern England; and from the documents
connected with St Columbanus, who early in the seventh century founded a number
of Irish monasteries in Central Europe. St Columbanus’ Rule is the only Irish
monastic rule, properly so called, that has come down to us from the early
period of Irish monachism: it was not composed in Ireland, but undoubtedly it
embodies the Irish traditions of monasticism and ascetical discipline.
Irish cenobitical life
as seen in these documents, was one of extreme rigor and austerity. At all
times the eremitical life had a great vogue in Celtic monachism; and in spite
of all difficulties of climate, the Irish hermits successfully rivalled in their extraordinary penances and
austerities and vigils, the hermits of Egypt, and even those of Syria. In
Ireland, where the population continued purely Celtic, the Irish rules and Irish
monasticism maintained themselves throughout the Middle Ages; but in England
and on the Continent, where they came into contact with populations Teutonic
or teutonized, they
succumbed before the Roman Rule of St Benedict.
Gaul is the country of Western Europe in
which early monachism was most widely propagated and flourished most, and for
which the records of pre-Benedictine monachism are the most abundant. It is
said that St Athanasius introduced the knowledge of the monastic life at Trier
during his exile there (336-7); and the well-known story of St Augustine's
conversion shows that before the end of the century there were monks living an
eremitical life there.
But it is with the name of St Martin of
Tours that the beginnings of Gallic monachism are rightly associated. A
Pannonian by race, born early in the fourth century, he had practiced the
monastic life for some years before becoming bishop of Tours in 372. Nearly ten
years earlier he had established a monastery near Poitiers, and on becoming bishop
of Tours he formed one just outside of his episcopal city, at the place
afterwards called Marmoutier.
Here he gathered together eighty monks, and lived with them a life of great
solitude and austerity. They dwelt singly in caves and huts, meeting only for
the church services and for meals; they fasted rigorously and prayed long — it
was indeed a reproduction of the life of the Egyptian monks. Our information
concerning this earliest Gallic monachism is mainly derived from the writings
of St Martin's biographer, Sulpitius Severus,
and from his correspondence with St Paulinus of Nola. From these sources we
learn that by the end of the fourth century monasteries and monks and nuns were
already numerous not only in the province of Tours, but in Rouen and the territory
that afterwards became Normandy and Picardy.
The beginning of the fifth century
witnessed the inauguration of monachism in Provence, at Marseilles under the
influence of John Cassian, and in the island of Lerins under that of Honoratus. From Lerins went forth a number
of monk-bishops, who throughout the fifth and sixth centuries, by the
monasteries they set up in their episcopal cities, and by the monastic rules
they composed for their government, spread far and wide through south-eastern
Gaul the influence and ideas of Lerins.
In other parts of Gaul, too, monasteries arose in the fifth century, the most
famous being Condat in
the Jura mountains.
After the Frankish conquest of Gaul and
under the early Merovingian kings the monastic movement continued throughout
the sixth century to spread all over Frankland. A twofold tendency set in—one
towards relaxation of life and observance; the other towards the eremitical
life and the extremest forms
of asceticism, such as are met with among the Syrian hermits. Gregory of Tours
gives numerous examples of hermits, especially in Auvergne, who in their
fantastic austerities equalled those of Syria; and his evidence is corroborated
by other documents. It was not till the seventh century that Benedictine
monachism got a foothold in Gaul, and about the same time St Columbanus
imported his Rule and manner of life from Ireland. For a time the three forms
of monachism—the old Gallic, the Columbanian,
and the Benedictine—existed side by side in Gaul. In order to understand why
the Benedictine gradually and inevitably supplanted the earlier monachisms in France, in
Italy, and in England, and was destined to become the only monachism of
Teutonic Europe, it is necessary to survey the character of the earlier types.
The early African and Spanish monachisms were
swept away by Vandals and Moors; the Irish remained insular and isolated from
the great currents of monastic development; so that Italy, France and England
are the countries in which the transformation of the earlier types of Western
monachism into the Benedictine was worked out.
It has to be remembered that in those days
neither in the West nor in the East, outside the Pachomian system, was there anything
resembling the present Western idea of different ‘Orders’ of monks—there was
only the monastic order. Monasteries were autonomous, each having its own
practices and its own rule, or selection of rules, depending mainly on the
abbot's choice. Before St Benedict's time there were current in the West
translations of certain Eastern rules—that of Pachomius, translated by Jerome;
that of Basil, translated by Rufinus; and a
rule attributed to Macarius. There was a rule
made up out of the writings of Cassian; there was St Augustine’s Letter (No.
211) on the government of a nunnery. It is doubtful whether Honoratus of Lerins wrote a rule. The
only extant Western rules, properly so called, which are certainly earlier than
St Benedict's, are that of Caesarius of
Arles for monks and his somewhat longer rule for nuns; but these are quite
short, and not one of the rules that came into contact with St Benedict's in
his own time, or for a century afterwards, not even the Rule of Columbanus,
could claim to be an ordered and practical code of laws regulating the life and
working of a monastery. This St Benedict’s Rule pre-eminently was; and the fact
that it supplied' so great a want doubtless was one of the chief reasons why it
supplanted all its rivals.
But there was another and still more
powerful reason: St Benedict was the man who adapted monasticism to Western
ideas and Western needs. Monasticism in Italy and Gaul was an Eastern
importation, and up to St Benedict it bore the marks of its origin. The life of
the hermits of the Egyptian deserts, with their prolonged fasts and vigils and
their other bodily austerities, was looked upon as the highest ideal—the true
ideal—of the monastic life; and the monks of Italy and Gaul endeavoured to
emulate a manner of life hard enough in oriental climes, but doubly hard in
Western Europe. This straining after severe bodily austerities can clearly be
discerned in the fragmentary records that have survived of pre-Benedictine
monachism in Italy and France, where the practice of a purely eremitical life
was very common.
St Benedict, while recognizing the
eremitical life, says definitely that he legislates for cenobites only; moreover,
he did away with the oriental spirit of rivalry in asceticism, whereby the
monks used to vie with one another in their mortifications. St Benedict laid
down the principle that all should live by the Rule and conform themselves in
all things to the life of the community; and even during Lent, when the
undertaking of some extra mortification was recommended, it was all to be under
the abbot's control. Moreover, the common community life which St Benedict
established in his monasteries was not one of great severity: a hard life it
was of course, and one of self-denial; but if judged by the ideals and ideas
current in his day, his Rule must have appeared to his contemporaries to be in
the matter of diet, of sleep, of work, and of hours of prayer, nothing else
than what he describes it—“A little rule for beginners”. Italian and French
monks were at that time trying to live up to ideals that were impossible for
most in the Western lands, and the general failure was producing a widespread
disorganization and decay. St Benedict came and eliminated these incongruous
Eastern elements, and made a reconstruction of the monastic life admirably
suited to Western, and especially to Teutonic, conditions. To this must be
attributed in greatest measure the success achieved by his Rule.
St Benedict’s Life
St Benedict was born in Nursia, near Spoleto, probably
about the year 480; he was of a noble Umbrian family, and he was sent to Rome
to follow the courses in the schools. The licentiousness there prevalent made
him determine to withdraw not only from Rome, but also from the world, and to
become a monk. Full of this idea he fled away from Rome to the Sabine hills,
and buried himself in a cave overlooking Nero's artificial lake on the Anio at Subiaco, forty
miles from Rome. It is probable that he was not a mere boy, but a youth old
enough to have become enamoured with a lady in Rome: consequently the date was
within a few years of 500. There can be no doubt that the Sacro Speco at Subiaco is the
cave inhabited by St Benedict during the first years of his monastic life; its
solitude was complete, and the wild severe grandeur of the surrounding scenery
was well calculated to inspire his young heart with deep religious feeling. In
this cave he lived for three years, only a single monk of a monastery in the
neighbourhood knowing of his existence and supplying him with the necessaries
of life. It is not a little remarkable that he who was destined to turn Western
monasticism definitely away from the eremitical ideal, should himself, as a
matter of course, have gone to live as a hermit on determining to become a
monk: it was only after very thorough personal experience of the hermit's life
that St Benedict decided it was not to be for his disciples.
In another matter also did he turn his
back on his own early ideas: after passing three years of solitude in his cave,
his existence gradually became known and disciples flocked to him in such
numbers that he was able to establish not only a monastery ruled over by
himself, but also twelve others in the neighbourhood, over which he exercised
the sort of control which the superior-general of a group or congregation of
monasteries would now be said to exercise. But when he was compelled to leave
Subiaco, and migrated to Monte Cassino, he confined himself exclusively to the
government of his own community there, without continuing to exercise control
over the other monasteries he had founded. And so his Rule is concerned with
the government of a single monastery only, without any provision for the
grouping of monasteries into congregations or orders, as became the vogue later
on in the West. This continued the Benedictine practice for many centuries;
during the greatest period of Black Monk history the great Benedictine houses
stood in isolation, each self-governed and self-contained. It was not till the
thirteenth century that, under the inspiration of Cluny and Citeaux, the policy
was adopted of federating the Benedictine abbeys of the different
ecclesiastical provinces; and to this day the essential autonomy of each house
is the foundation stone and central idea of Black Monk polity.
It is impossible to fix the date at which
St Benedict founded his monastery at Monte Cassino — probably about 520. He
lived there till his death, and Monte Cassino is the place above all others
associated with his name. The rest of his life was quite uneventful; in 543 he
was visited by Totila, and he died about the
middle of the century.
As Benedictine life soon became, and for
well-nigh seven centuries continued to be, the norm of monastic life in the
Latin Church, it will be to the point to give a rough picture of the daily life
that obtained in St Benedict's monasteries, as it may be reconstructed from the
Rule.
St Benedict’s monks rose early in the
morning—usually about 2, but the hour varied with the season of the year. They
had had, however, an ample period of unbroken sleep, usually not less than 8
hours: the midnight office between two periods of sleep, so common a feature of
later monasticism in the West, had no place in Benedictine life as conceived by
St Benedict. The monks repaired to the church for the night office, which
consisted of fourteen psalms, and certain readings from Scripture; it was
chanted throughout, and must have taken from an hour to an hour and a half. It
was followed by a break, which varied from a few minutes in the summer to a
couple of hours at midwinter, and which was devoted to private reading of
Scripture, or prayer. The Matin office, now called Lauds, was celebrated at
dawn, and Prime at sunrise; each took about half an hour. Prime was followed by
work —i.e. field work for most of the monks—or reading, according to the time
of the year; and these exercises filled up the time till dinner, which was at
12 or at 3, the short offices of Tierce, Sext, and None being celebrated in the
church at the appropriate hours. In summer, when the night sleep was short, the
usual Italian siesta was allowed after dinner. The afternoon was passed in work
and reading, like the forenoon. Vespers or Evensong was sung some time before
sunset, and in the summer was followed by an evening meal. Before dark, while
there yet was enough light to read by, they assembled once again in the church,
and after a few pages had been read, Compline was said, and they retired to
rest in the dusk, before there was need of an artificial light. On Sundays
there was no work, and the time assigned to the church services and to reading
was considerably lengthened.
According to St. Benedict's scheme of the
monastic life, work occupied notably more time daily than either the church
services or reading; and this work was manual, either in the fields or garden,
or about the house. This element of work was intended to be an integral part of
the life; not a mere occupation, but a very real factor of the monk’s service
of God, and from six to seven hours were devoted to it daily. These long hours
of manual labour, coupled with the unbroken fast till midday, or 3 p.m., or
even till sunset during Lent, and the perpetual abstinence from flesh meat, may
convey the impression that, after all, the life in St Benedict's monastery was
one of great bodily austerity. But it has to be remembered that though members
of patrician families were to be found in his community, still the great
majority was recruited from the ranks of the Italian peasantry, or from those
of the Goths and other barbarians who were then overrunning Italy. Neither the
fasting nor the abstinence from meat would appear to Italian peasants in the
present day, and still less in the sixth century, so onerous as they do to us
in northern climes.
The other exercise of the monks, outside
the direct worship of God, was reading, to which from three to five hours were
assigned daily, according to the season. There can be little doubt that this
reading was wholly devotional, confined to the Bible and the writings of the
fathers, St Basil and Cassian being recommended by name. Out of this germ grew
in the course of ages those works of erudition and of historical science with
which the Benedictine name in later ages became associated: the first step
forward along the path of monastic studies was taken not by St Benedict, but by
his younger contemporary Cassiodorus in his Calabrian monastery at Squillace.
But the chief work of the monk was, in St
Benedict's eyes, neither field work nor literary work: all the services of
Benedictines to civilization and education and letters have been but
by-products. Their primary and essential work is what St Benedict calls the
‘Work of God’—Opus Dei—the daily chanting of the canonical Office in the choir.
To this work he says nothing is to be preferred, and this principle has been
the keynote of Benedictine life throughout the ages. The daily
"course" of psalmody ordinarily consisted of 40 psalms with certain
canticles, hymns, responses, prayers, and lections from Scripture and the
fathers. It was divided into the eight canonical hours, the Vigils or night
office being considerably the longest. It is probable that this daily common
prayer took some 4 hours, being chanted throughout, and not merely recited in a
monotone. Mass was celebrated only on Sundays and holydays. Private prayer was
taken for granted, and was provided for, but not legislated for, being left to
personal devotion.
The abbot governed the monastery with full
patriarchal authority. He was elected by the monks, and held office for life.
All the officials of the monastery were appointed by him, and were removable at
his will. He should take counsel with his monks—in matters of moment with the
whole community, in lesser matters with a few seniors. He was bound to listen
to what each had to say; but at the end, it rested with him to decide what was
to be done, and all had to obey. The great—in a sense it might be said, the only—restraining
influence upon the abbot to which St Benedict appeals, was that of religion—the
abiding sense, impressed on him again and again by St Benedict, that he was directly
and personally responsible, and would have to answer before the judgment seat
of God for all his actions, for all his judgments, nay, even for the soul of
each one of his monks as well as for his own. But his government must be
according to the Rule, and not at his own mere will and pleasure, as had been
the case in the earlier forms of monachism; and he is warned not to overburden
his monks, or overdrive them, but to be considerate always and give no one
cause for just complaint. The chapters specially written for the abbot (2, 3,
27, 64) are the most characteristic in the Rule, and form a body of wise
counsel, not easily to be surpassed, for anyone in office or authority of any
kind. This formation of a regular order of life according to rule, this
provision for the disciplined working of a large establishment, was St
Benedict's great contribution to Western monachism, and also to Western
civilization. For as Benedictine abbeys came gradually to be established more
and more thickly in the midst of the wild Teutonic populations that were
settling throughout Western Europe, they became object-lessons in disciplined
and well-ordered life, in organized work, in all the arts of peace, that could
not but impress powerfully the minds of the surrounding barbarians, and bring
home to them ideals of peace and order and work, no less than of religion.
Another point of far-reaching consequence
was that St Benedict laid upon the monk the obligation of abiding till death,
not only in the monastic life, but in his own monastery in which he was
professed. This special Benedictine vow of stability cut off what was the very
common practice of monks, when they grew dissatisfied in one monastery, going
to another. St Benedict bound the monks of a monastery together into a
permanent family, united by bonds that lasted for life. This idea that the
monks of each Benedictine monastery form a permanent community, distinct from
that of every other Benedictine monastery, is a characteristic feature of
Benedictine monachism, and a chief distinction between it and the mendicant and
other later Orders; without doubt it has also been the great source of the
special influence and strength of the Benedictines in history.
Another distinction lies in the fact that
St Benedict, in common with the early monastic legislators, set before his
monks no special object or purpose, no particular work to be done, other than
the common work of monks—the living in community according to the ‘evangelical
counsels’, and thereby sanctifying their souls and serving God. "A school
of the service of the Lord" is St Benedict's definition of a monastery,
and the one thing he requires from the novice is that “in very deed he seek
God”. Nothing probably was further from his thoughts than that his monks were
to become apostles, bishops, popes, civilizers, educators, scholars, men of
learning. His idea simply was to make them good: and if a man is good, he will
do good. The ascetical side of the training in the Rule lies chiefly in
obedience and humility. The very definition of a monk is “one who renounces his
own wishes, and comes to fight for Christ, taking up the arms of obedience”; it
is the temper of renunciation and obedience rather than the actual obeying
that is of value. The chapter on humility (7), the longest in the Rule, has
become a classic in Christian ascetical literature; it embodies St Benedict's
teaching on the spiritual life. The general spirit of the Rule is beautifully
summed up in the short chapter “on the good zeal which monks ought to have”
(72): “As there is an evil and bitter emulation which separates from God and
leads to hell, so there is a good spirit of emulation which frees from vices
and leads to God and life everlasting. Let monks therefore practice this
emulation with most fervent love; that is to say, let them in honour prefer one
another. Let them bear most patiently with each other’s infirmities, whether of
body or of character. Let them contend with one another in their obedience. Let
no one follow what he thinks most profitable to himself, but rather what is
best for another. Let them show brotherly charity with a chaste love. Let them
fear God and love their abbot with sincere and humble affection, and set
nothing whatever before Christ, Who can bring us unto eternal life”.
In view of the great influence exercised
on the course of European history and civilization in things both
ecclesiastical and civil, from the sixth century to the thirteenth, by St
Benedict and his sons, it seemed proper to supply the foregoing somewhat
detailed account of the Benedictine Rule and life. With an outline sketch of
the steps whereby St Benedict’s supremacy in Western monachism was achieved,
this chapter will be concluded.
Though the Rule was written as a code of
regulations for the government of one monastery, it is evident that St Benedict
contemplated the likelihood of its being observed in different monasteries, and
even in different countries. Besides Monte Cassino, his own monastery at
Subiaco, and perhaps the twelve others, continued after he had left them; and
there is mention of one founded by him from Monte Cassino, at Terracina. These
are the only Benedictine monasteries of which there is any record as existing
in St Benedict's lifetime, for the stories of the missions of St Placidus to Sicily and St
Maurus to Gaul must be regarded as apocryphal. It is said of Simplicius, the third abbot of
Monte Cassino, that “he propagated into all the hidden work of the master”; and
this has been understood as indicating that the spread of the Rule to other
monasteries began in his abbacy. But the historical determining point was the
sacking of Monte Cassino by the Lombards about
580-590, when the monks fled to Rome, and were placed in a monastery attached
to the Lateran Basilica, in the heart of Latin Christendom, under the eyes of
the Popes. It is now generally agreed by critical students of the period that
the monachism which St Gregory the Great established in his palace on the Coelian Hill, wherein he
himself became a monk, was in an adequate and true sense Benedictine, being
based on that Rule which St Gregory eulogises as “conspicuous for its
discretion”. From the Coelian Hill
it was carried to England by Augustine, the prior of the monastery, and his
companions (596), and it is probable that the monastery of SS. Peter and Paul,
later St Augustine's, Canterbury, was the first Benedictine monastery out of
Italy. As has been said above, it was not till the seventh century that
Benedictine monarchism got a foothold in Gaul; but during that century it
spread steadily and at last rapidly throughout Gaul and England, and from
England it was carried into Friesland and the other Germanic lands by the great
English Benedictine missioners, Willibrod, Boniface, and the
rest. Being well adapted to the spirit and character of the Teutonic peoples
then overrunning Western Europe, the Benedictine Rule inevitably and quickly
absorbed and supplanted all those previously in vogue—so completely that
Charles the Great could ask the question, if there had ever been any other
monastic Rule than St Benedict's? The Benedictines shared fully in the effects
of the Carolingian revival, and from that date, for three centuries, St
Benedict's spirit ruled supreme throughout Western monachism, Ireland alone
excepted.
All through the Benedictine centuries,
Benedictine nuns flourished no less than Benedictine monks, and nowhere more
than in England.
SOCIAL
AND ECONOMIC CONDITIONS
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