The Benedictines, officially the Order of Saint Benedict (Latin: Ordo Sancti Benedicti, abbreviated as O.S.B. or OSB), are a mainly contemplativemonasticorder of the Catholic Church for men and for women who follow the Rule of Saint Benedict. Initiated in 529, they are the oldest of all the religious orders in the Latin Church. The male religious are also sometimes called the Black Monks, especially in English speaking countries, after the colour of their habits, although some, like the Olivetans, wear white. They were founded by Benedict of Nursia, a 6th-century Italian monk who laid the foundations of Benedictine monasticism through the formulation of his Rule. Benedict's sister, Scholastica, possibly his twin, also became a religious from an early age, but chose to live as a hermit. They retained a close relationship until her death.
Order of Saint Benedict
Ordo Sancti Benedicti
Coat of arms of the order
Design on the obverse side of the Saint Benedict Medal
Abbreviation
O.S.B.
Formation
529; 1496 years ago (529)
Founder
Benedict of Nursia
Founded at
Subiaco Abbey
Type
Catholic religious order
Headquarters
Sant'Anselmo all'Aventino
Members
6,802 (3,419 priests) as of 2020[update]
Abbot Primate
Jeremias Schröder, OSB
Main organ
Benedictine Confederation
Parent organization
Catholic Church
Website
osb.org
Despite being called an order, the Benedictines do not operate under a single hierarchy. They are instead organized as a collection of autonomous monasteries and convents, some known as abbeys. The order is represented internationally by the Benedictine Confederation, an organization set up in 1893 to represent the order's shared interests. They do not have a superior general or motherhouse with universal jurisdiction but elect an Abbot Primate to represent themselves to the Vatican and to the world.
In some regions, Benedictine nuns are given the title Dame in preference to Sister.
Historical development
Saint Benedict of Nursia (c. 480–543); detail from a fresco by Fra Angelico (c. 1400–1455) in the Friary of San MarcoFlorence
The monastery at Subiaco in Italy, established by Benedict of Nursia c. 529, was the first of the dozen monasteries he founded. He later founded the Abbey of Monte Cassino. There is no evidence, however, that he intended to found an order and the Rule of Saint Benedict presupposes the autonomy of each community. When Monte Cassino was sacked by the Lombards about the year 580, the monks fled to Rome, and it seems probable that this constituted an important factor in the diffusion of a knowledge of Benedictine monasticism.
Copies of Benedict's Rule survived; around 594 Pope Gregory I spoke favorably of it. The rule is subsequently found in some monasteries in southern Gaul along with other rules used by abbots. Gregory of Tours says that at Ainay Abbey, in the sixth century, the monks "followed the rules of Basil, Cassian, Caesarius, and other fathers, taking and using whatever seemed proper to the conditions of time and place", and doubtless the same liberty was taken with the Benedictine Rule when it reached them. In Gaul and Switzerland, it gradually supplemented the much stricter Irish or Celtic Rule introduced by Columbanus and others. In many monasteries it eventually entirely displaced the earlier codes.
Abbey of Monte Cassino
By the ninth century, however, the Benedictine had become the standard form of monastic life throughout the whole of Western Europe, excepting Scotland, Wales, and Ireland, where the Celtic observance still prevailed for another century or two. Largely through the work of Benedict of Aniane, it became the rule of choice for monasteries throughout the Carolingian empire.
Monastic scriptoria flourished from the ninth through the twelfth centuries. Sacred Scripture was always at the heart of every monastic scriptorium. As a general rule those of the monks who possessed skill as writers made this their chief, if not their sole, active work. An anonymous writer of the ninth or tenth century speaks of six hours a day as the usual task of a scribe, which would absorb almost all the time available for active work in the day of a medieval monk.
In the Middle Ages monasteries were often founded by the nobility. Cluny Abbey was founded by William I, Duke of Aquitaine, in 910. The abbey was noted for its strict adherence to the Rule of Saint Benedict. The abbot of Cluny was the superior of all the daughter houses, through appointed priors.
One of the earliest reforms of Benedictine practice was that initiated in 980 by Romuald, who founded the Camaldolese community. The Cistercians branched off from the Benedictines in 1098; they are often called the "White monks".
The dominance of the Benedictine monastic way of life began to decline towards the end of the twelfth century, which saw the rise of the mendicantFranciscans and nomadic Dominicans. Benedictines by contrast, took a vow of "stability", which professed loyalty to a particular foundation in a particular location. Not being bound by location, the mendicants were better able to respond to an increasingly "urban" environment. This decline was further exacerbated by the practice of appointing a commendatory abbot, a lay person, appointed by a noble to oversee and to protect the assets of the monastery. Often, however, this resulted in the appropriation of the assets of monasteries at the expense of the community which they were intended to support.
Austria & Germany
Melk Abbey
Saint Blaise Abbey in the Black Forest of Baden-Württemberg is believed to have been founded around the latter part of the tenth century. Between 1070 and 1073 there seem to have been contacts between St. Blaise and the Cluniac Abbey of Fruttuaria in Italy, which led to St. Blaise following the Fruttuarian reforms. The Empress Agnes was a patron of Fruttuaria, and retired there in 1065 before moving to Rome. The Empress was instrumental in introducing Fruttuaria's Benedictine customs, as practiced at Cluny, to Saint Blaise Abbey in Baden-Württemberg. Other houses either reformed by, or founded as priories of, St. Blasien were Muri Abbey (1082), Ochsenhausen Abbey (1093), Göttweig Abbey (1094), Stein am Rhein Abbey (before 1123) and Prüm Abbey (1132). It also had significant influence on the abbeys of Alpirsbach (1099), Ettenheimmünster (1124) and Sulzburg (c. 1125), and the priories of Weitenau (now part of Steinen, c. 1100), Bürgel (before 1130) and Sitzenkirch (c. 1130).
France
Abbatiale Saint-Benoit, southern aspect as in 1893Basilica of Saint-Martin d'Ainay
Fleury Abbey in Saint-Benoît-sur-Loire, Loiret was founded in about 640. It is one of the most celebrated Benedictine monasteries of Western Europe, and possesses the relics of St. Benedict. Like many Benedictine abbeys it was located on the banks of a river, here the Loire. Ainey Abbey is a ninth century foundation on the Lyon peninsula. In the twelfth century on the current site there was a romanesque monastery, subsequently rebuilt.
The seventeenth century saw a number of Benedictine foundations for women, some dedicated to the indigent to save them from a life of exploitation, others dedicated to the Perpetual Adoration of the Blessed Sacrament such as the one established by Catherine de Bar (1614–1698). In 1688 Dame Mechtilde de Bar assisted Marie Casimire Louise de La Grange d'Arquien, queen consort of Poland, to establish a Benedictine foundation in Warsaw.
Abbeys were among the institutions of the Catholic Church swept away during the French Revolution. Monasteries and convents were again allowed to form in the 19th century under the Bourbon Restoration. Later that century, under the Third French Republic, laws were enacted preventing religious teaching. The original intent was to allow secular schools. Thus in 1880 and 1882, Benedictine teaching monks were effectively exiled; this was not completed until 1901.
In 1898 Marie-Adèle Garnier, in religion, Mother Marie de Saint-Pierre, founded in Montmartre (Mount of the Martyr), Paris a Benedictine house. However, the Waldeck-Rousseau's Law of Associations, passed in 1901, placed severe restrictions on religious bodies which were obliged to leave France. Garnier and her community relocated to another place associated with executions, this time it was in London, near the site of Tyburn tree where 105 Catholic martyrs—including Saint Oliver Plunkett and Saint Edmund Campion had been executed during the English Reformation. A stone's throw from Marble Arch, the Tyburn Convent is now the Mother House of the Congregation.
Poland & Lithuania
Benedictine church in Warsaw's New Town, depicted by Bellotto
Benedictines are thought to have arrived in the Kingdom of Poland in the 11th-century. One of the earliest foundations is Tyniec Abbey on a promontory by the Vistula river. The Tyniec monks led the translation of the Bible into Polish vernacular. Other surviving Benedictine houses can be found in Stary Kraków Village, Biskupów, Lubiń. Older foundations are in Mogilno, Trzemeszno, Łęczyca, Łysa Góra and in Opactwo, among others. In the Middle Ages the city of Płock, also on the Vistula, had a successful monastery, which played a significant role in the local economy. In the 18th-century benedictine convents were opened for women, notably in Warsaw's New Town.[citation needed]
A 15th-century Benedictine foundation can be found in Senieji Trakai, a village in Eastern Lithuania.
Switzerland
Kloster Rheinau was a Benedictine monastery in Rheinau in the Canton of Zürich, Switzerland, founded in about 778. The abbey of Our Lady of the Angels was founded in 1120.
United Kingdom
The English Benedictine Congregation is the oldest of the nineteen Benedictine congregations. Through the influence of Wilfrid, Benedict Biscop, and Dunstan, the Benedictine Rule spread rapidly, and in the North it was adopted in most of the monasteries that had been founded by the Celtic missionaries from Iona. Many of the episcopal sees of England were founded and governed by the Benedictines, and no fewer than nine of the old cathedrals were served by the black monks of the priories attached to them. Monasteries served as hospitals and places of refuge for the weak and homeless. The monks studied the healing properties of plants and minerals to alleviate the sufferings of the sick.
During the English Reformation, all monasteries were dissolved and their lands confiscated by the Crown, forcing those who wished to continue in the monastic life to flee into exile on the Continent. During the 19th century English members of these communities were able to return to England.[citation needed]
The two sides of a Saint Benedict medal
St. Mildred's Priory, on the Isle of Thanet, Kent, was built in 1027 on the site of an abbey founded in 670 by the daughter of the first Christian King of Kent. Currently the priory is home to a community of Benedictine nuns. Five of the most notable English abbeys are the Basilica of St Gregory the Great at Downside, commonly known as Downside Abbey, The Abbey of St Edmund, King and Martyr commonly known as Douai Abbey in Upper Woolhampton, Reading, Berkshire, Ealing Abbey in Ealing, West London, and Worth Abbey. Prinknash Abbey, used by Henry VIII as a hunting lodge, was officially returned to the Benedictines four hundred years later, in 1928. During the next few years, so-called Prinknash Park was used as a home until it was returned to the order.
St. Lawrence's Abbey in Ampleforth, Yorkshire was founded in 1802. In 1955, Ampleforth set up a daughter house, a priory at St. Louis, Missouri which became independent in 1973 and became Saint Louis Abbey in its own right in 1989.
Interior of Stanbrook Abbey Church, Wass, Yorkshire
As of 2015, the English Congregation consists of three abbeys of nuns and ten abbeys of monks. Members of the congregation are found in England, Wales, the United States of America, Peru and Zimbabwe.
In England there are also houses of the Subiaco Cassinese Congregation: Farnborough, Prinknash, and Chilworth: the Solesmes Congregation, Quarr and St Cecilia's on the Isle of Wight, as well as a diocesan monastery following the Rule of Saint Benedict: The Community of Our Lady of Glastonbury.
Since the Oxford Movement, there has also been a modest flourishing of Benedictine monasticism in the Anglican Church and Protestant Churches. Anglican Benedictine Abbots are invited guests of the Benedictine Abbot Primate in Rome at Abbatial gatherings at Sant'Anselmo.
In 1168 local Benedictine monks instigated the anti-semitic blood libel of Harold of Gloucester as a template for explaining child deaths. According to historian Joe Hillaby, the blood libel of Harold was crucially important because for the first time an unexplained child death occurring near the Easter festival was arbitrarily linked to Jews in the vicinity by local Christian churchmen: "they established a pattern quickly taken up elsewhere. Within three years the first ritual murder charge was made in France."
Monastic libraries in England
The forty-eighth Rule of Saint Benedict prescribes extensive and habitual "holy reading" for the brethren. Three primary types of reading were done by the monks in medieval times. Monks would read privately during their personal time, as well as publicly during services and at mealtimes. In addition to these three mentioned in the Rule, monks would also read in the infirmary. Monasteries were thriving centers of education, with monks and nuns actively encouraged to learn and pray according to the Benedictine Rule. Rule 38 states that 'these brothers' meals should usually be accompanied by reading, and that they were to eat and drink in silence while one read out loud.
Benedictine monks were not allowed worldly possessions, thus necessitating the preservation and collection of sacred texts in monastic libraries for communal use. For the sake of convenience, the books in the monastery were housed in a few different places, namely the sacristy, which contained books for the choir and other liturgical books, the rectory, which housed books for public reading such as sermons and lives of the saints, and the library, which contained the largest collection of books and was typically in the cloister.
The first record of a monastic library in England is in Canterbury. To assist with Augustine of Canterbury's English mission, Pope Gregory the Great gave him nine books which included the Gregorian Bible in two volumes, the Psalter of Augustine, two copies of the Gospels, two martyrologies, an Exposition of the Gospels and Epistles, and a Psalter.: 23–25 Theodore of Tarsus brought Greek books to Canterbury more than seventy years later, when he founded a school for the study of Greek.: 26
United States
The first Benedictine to live in the United States was Pierre-Joseph Didier. He came to the United States in 1790 from Paris and served in the Ohio and St. Louis areas until his death. The first actual Benedictine monastery founded was Saint Vincent Archabbey, located in Latrobe, Pennsylvania. It was founded in 1832 by Boniface Wimmer, a German monk, who sought to serve German immigrants in America. In 1856, Wimmer started to lay the foundations for St. John's Abbey in Minnesota. In 1876, Herman Wolfe, of Saint Vincent Archabbey established Belmont Abbey in North Carolina. By the time of his death in 1887, Wimmer had sent Benedictine monks to Kansas, New Jersey, North Carolina, Georgia, Florida, Alabama, Illinois, and Colorado.
Wimmer also asked for Benedictine sisters to be sent to America by St. Walburg Convent in Eichstätt, Bavaria. In 1852, and two other sisters founded St. Marys, Pennsylvania. Soon they would send sisters to Michigan, New Jersey, and Minnesota.
By 1854, Swiss monks began to arrive and founded St. Meinrad Abbey in Indiana, and they soon spread to Arkansas and Louisiana. They were soon followed by Swiss sisters.
There are now over 100 Benedictine houses across America. Most Benedictine houses are part of one of four large Congregations: American-Cassinese, Swiss-American, St. Scholastica, and St. Benedict. The congregations mostly are made up of monasteries that share the same lineage. For instance the American-Cassinese congregation included the 22 monasteries descended from Boniface Wimmer.
Benedictine vows and life
A sense of community has been the defining characteristic of the order since the beginning. To that end, section 17 in chapter 58 of the Rule of Saint Benedict specifies the solemn vows candidates joining a Benedictine community are required to make: a vow of stability, to remain in the same community), and to adopt a "conversion of habits", in Latin, conversatio morum and obedience to the community's superior. The "Benedictine vows" are equivalent to the evangelical counsels accepted by all candidates entering a religious order. The interpretation of conversatio morum understood as "conversion of the habits of life" has generally been replaced by notions such as adoption of a monastic manner of life, drawing on the Vulgate's use of conversatio as indicating "citizenship" or "local customs", see Philippians 3:20. The Rule enjoins monks and nuns "to live in this place as a religious, in obedience to its rule and to the abbot or abbess."
Benedictine abbots and abbesses have jurisdiction over their abbey and thus canonical authority over the monks or nuns who are resident. This authority includes the power to assign duties, to decide which books may or may not be read, to regulate comings and goings, and to punish and to excommunicate, in the sense of an enforced isolation from the monastic community.
A tight communal timetable – the horarium – is meant to ensure that the time given by God is not wasted but used in God's service, whether for prayer, work, meals, spiritual reading or sleep. The order's motto is Ora et Labora "pray and work".
Although Benedictines do not take a vow of silence, hours of strict silence are set, and at other times silence is maintained as much as is practically possible. Social conversations tend to be limited to communal recreation times. Such details, like other aspects of the daily routine of a Benedictine house are left to the discretion of the superior, and are set out in its customary, the code adopted by a particular Benedictine house by adapting the Rule to local conditions.
According to the norms of the 1983 Code of Canon Law, a Benedictine abbey is a "religious institute" and its members therefore participate in consecrated life which Canon 588 §1 explains is intrinsically "neither clerical nor lay." Males in consecrated life, however, may be ordained.
Benedictines' rules contain a reference to ritual purification, which is inspired by Benedict's encouragement of bathing. Benedictine monks have played a role in the development and promotion of spas.
Organization
Benedictine monasticism differs from other Christian religious orders in that as congregations sometimes with several houses, some of them in other countries, they are not bound into a unified religious order headed by a "Superior General". Each Benedictine congregation is autonomous and governed by an abbot or abbess.
The autonomous houses are characterised by their chosen charism or specific dedication to a particular devotion. For example, In 1313 Bernardo Tolomei established the Order of Our Lady of Mount Olivet. The community adopted the Rule of Saint Benedict and received canonical approval in 1344. The Olivetans are part of the Benedictine Confederation. Other specialisms, such as Gregorian chant as at Solesmes in France, or Perpetual Adoration of the Holy Sacrament have been adopted by different houses, as at the Warsaw Convent, or the Adorers of the Sacred Heart of Montmartre at Tyburn Convent in London. Other houses have dedicated themselves to books, reading, writing and printing them as at Stanbrook Abbey in England. Others still are associated with the places where they were founded or their founders centuries ago, hence Cassinese, Subiaco, Camaldolese or Sylvestrines.
All Benedictine houses became federated in the Benedictine Confederation brought into existence by Pope Leo XIII's Apostolic Brief "Summum semper" on 12 July 1893. Pope Leo also established the office of Abbot Primate as the abbot elected to represent this Confederation at the Vatican and to the world. The headquarters of the Benedictine Confederation and the Abbot Primate is the Primatial Abbey of Sant'Anselmo built by Pope Leo XIII in Rome.
Other orders
The Rule of Saint Benedict is also used by a number of religious orders that began as reforms of the Benedictine tradition such as the Cistercians and Trappists.[citation needed] These groups are separate congregations and not members of the Benedictine Confederation.
Although Benedictines are traditionally Catholic, there are also other communities that follow the Rule of Saint Benedict. For example, of an estimated 2,400 celibate Anglican religious (1,080 men and 1,320 women) in the Anglican Communion as a whole, some have adopted the Rule of Benedict. Likewise, such communities can be found in the Eastern Orthodox Church, and the Lutheran Church.
Saints and Blesseds of the Order
Saint Boniface (c. 680 – 750), Pope Gregory I (c. 540 – 604, Pope 590–604), Adalbert of Egmond (8th century) and priest Jeroen van Noordwijk, depicted in a 1529 painting by Jan Joostsz van Hillegom currently on display at the Frans Hals MuseumLate Gothic sculpture of Rupert of Salzburg (c. 660 – 710)A Carolingian manuscript, c. 840, depicting Rabanus Maurus (left), supported by Alcuin (middle), presenting his work to Otgar of Mainz
Male Saints
Benedict of Nursia (2 March 480 – 21 March 547), Founder of the Order and Patron Saint of Europe
Laurence of Canterbury (died 2 February 619), the second Archbishop of Canterbury
Mellitus (died 24 April 624), the third Archbishop of Canterbury
Justus (died on 10 November between 627 and 631), the fourth Archbishop of Canterbury
Paulinus of York (died 10 October 644), the first Bishop of York
Cuthbert of Lindisfarne (c. 634 – 20 March 687), the first Archbishop of Canterbury
Benedict Biscop (c. 628 – 12 January 690), founder of Monkwearmouth-Jarrow Priory
Erkenwald (c. 630 – c. 693), Bishop of London
Wilfrid (c. 633 – c. 709), Bishop of York
Bertin (c. 615 – c. 709), abbot of a monastery in Saint-Omer later named the Abbey of Saint Bertin
Aldhelm (c. 639 – 25 May 709), Abbot of Malmesbury Abbey, Bishop of Sherborne, and a writer and scholar of Latin poetry
Rupert of Salzburg (c. 660 – 27 March 710), Bishop of Worms as well as the first Bishop of Salzburg
Swidberth of Kaiserwerdt (died c. 713), who accompanied Willibrord on the Anglo-Saxon mission
John of Beverley (died 7 May 721), Bishop of York, canonized in 1037
Leudwinus (c. 660 – 29 September 722), Count of Treves who later became Archbishop of Treves and Laon
Bede the Venerable (672/3 – 26 May 735), scholar, "The Father of English History" and Doctor of the Church
Willibrord c. 658 – 7 November 739), Bishop of Utrecht and "Apostle to the Frisians"
Boniface (c. 675 – 5 June 754), Bishop of Mainz, Apostle to the Germans and martyr of the Anglo-Saxon missions
Wilfrido della Gherardesca (died 15 February 756), monk, canonized on 12 September 1861
Sturm of Fulda (c. 705 – 17 December 779), disciple of Boniface and founder and first abbot of the Benedictinemonastery and abbey of Fulda, canonized on 19 April 1139
Benedict of Aniane (747 – 12 February 821), "The Second Benedict"
Adalard of Corbie c. 751 – 2 January 827), Abbot of Corbie, canonized in 1026
Rabanus Maurus (c. 780 – 4 February 856), Archbishop of Mainz and "The Teacher of Germany"
Swithun (c. 800 - 2 July 863), Bishop of Winchester
Paschasius Radbertus (c. 785 – c. 865), abbot of Corbie, canonized on 12 July 1073
Ansgar (8 September 801 – 3 February 865), Archbishop of Hamburg-Bremen and "Apostle of the North"
Altfrid von Hildesheim (died 15 August 874), Bishop of Hildesheim, and founder of Essen Abbey, canonized on 16 February 1965
Hincmar (806 – 21 December 882), Archbishop of Reims
Bertario di Montecassino (c. 810 - 22 October 883), abbot and martyr, canonized on 26 August 1727
Berno of Cluny (c. 850 – 13 January 927), the first abbot of Cluny and began the tradition of the Cluniac reforms
Odo of Cluny (c. 878 – 18 November 942), the second abbot of Cluny
Oda of Canterbury (died 2 June 958), the twenty-third Archbishop of Canterbury
Aymard of Cluny (died c. 965), the third abbot of Cluny
Æthelwold of Winchester (between 904 and 909 - 1 August 984), Bishop of Winchester
Dunstan (c. 909 – 19 May 988), Archbishop of Canterbury, canonized in 1029
Majolus of Cluny (c. 906 – 11 May 994), the fourth abbot of Cluny
Wolfgang of Regensburg (c. 934 – 31 October 994), Bishop of Regensburg, canonized on 8 October 1052
Adalbert of Prague (c. 956 – 23 April 997), missionary Bishop of Prague and martyr, canonized in 999
Attilanus (c. 937 – c. 1007), Bishop of Zamora and prior of Moreruela Abbey, canonized in 1095
Andrew Zorard (c. 980 - c. 1009), monk, canonized in 1083
Benedict of Skalka (died c. 1012), monk and martyr, canonized in 1083
Simeon of Mantua (died 1016), hermit, canonized in 1016
Emperor Henry II (6 May 973 – 13 July 1024), Holy Roman Emperor and oblate of the order, canonized on 4 March 1146
Bononio of Lucedio (died 30 August 1026), Abbot of Lucedio, canonized in 1026
Romuald (c. 951 - 19 June 1027), founder of the Camaldolese Order, canonized on 9 July 1595
Guido da Pomposa (c. 970 - 31 March 1046), Abbot of Pomposa
Gerard of Csanád (23 April 977/1000 – 24 September 1046), Bishop of Csanád and martyr, canonized in 1083
Odilo of Cluny (c. 962 – c. 1 January 1049), the fifth abbot of Cluny
Alferio (c. 930 - 12 April 1050), founder of the Abbey of La Trinità della Cava and became its first abbot, canonized on 21 December 1893
Íñigo of Oña (c. 1000 - 1 June 1057) Abbot of San Salvador at Oña, canonized in 1259
Pier Damiani (c. 1007 – 21 or 22 February 1072 or 1073), Cardinal and Doctor of the Church
Giovanni Gualberto (c. 985 – 12 July 1073), founder of the Vallumbrosan Order, canonized on 24 October 1193
Maurus of Pécs (c. 1000 – c. 1075), Bishop of Pécs, canonized on 22 July 1848
Pope Gregory VII (c. 1015 – 25 May 1085), Bishop of Rome, canonized on 24 May 1728
Arnulf of Soissons (c. 1040 - c. 1087), Bishop of Soissons and founder of the Abbey of St. Peter in Oudenburg, canonized on 6 January 1120
Leone I (died 1079), second abbot of La Trinità della Cava, canonized on 21 December 1893
Wulfstan of Worcester (c. 1008 – 20 January 1095), Bishop of Worcester, canonized on 14 May 1203
Alberto da Prezzate (or da Pontida) (c. 1025 - 2 September 1095), abbot, canonized on 7 July 1961
Walter of Pontoise (c. 1030 – c. 1099), abbot of Pontoise, canonized in 1153
Pietro de Anagni (died 3 August 1105), Bishop of Anagni and papal legate, canonized on 4 June 1109
Anselm of Canterbury (c. 1033 – 21 April 1109), Archbishop of Canterbury and Doctor of the Church, canonized on 4 October 1494
Hugh of Cluny (13 May 1024 – 29 April 1109), Abbot of Cluny and one of the most influential leaders of the monastic orders from the Middle Ages, canonized on 6 January 1120
Lidanus (c. 1026 - c. 1118), founder of Sezze Abbey
Pietro di Pappacarbone (died 4 March 1123), third abbot of La Trinità della Cava, canonized on 21 December 1893
Bruno di Segni (c. 1045 – 18 July 1123), Bishop of Segni and Abbot of Montecassino, canonized on 5 September 1181
Constabile (c. 1070 – 17 February 1124), fourth abbot of La Trinità della Cava, canonized on 21 December 1893
William of Montevergine (c. 1085 – 25 June 1142), founder of the Congregation of Monte Vergine, or "Williamites"
Ernest (died c. 1148), abbot of Zwiefalten Abbey
Étienne d'Obazine (c. 1085 – 8 March 1159), hermit, canonized in 1701
Franco da Assergi (c. 1154 or 1159 - 12th century), hermit, canonized in 1757
Rinaldo di Nocera (c. 1150 - 9 February 1217), Bishop of Nocera Umbra
Edmund Rich of Abingdon (perhaps 20 November c. 1174 - 16 November 1240), canonized on 16 December 1246
Silvestro Gozzolini (c. 1177 – 26 November 1267), founder of the Sylvestrine Order, canonized on 29 August 1890
Pope Celestine V (1209/1210 or 1215 – 19 May 1296), Bishop of Rome and founder of the now-extinct Celestine Order, canonized on 5 May 1313
Bernardo Tolomei (10 May 1272 – 20 August 1348), founder of the Olivetan Order, canonized on 26 April 2009
John Roberts (c. 1577 – 10 December 1610), martyred during the English Reformation and one of the Forty Martyrs of England and Wales, canonized on 25 October 1970
Ambrose Barlow (before 30 November 1585 – 10 September 1641), martyred during the English Reformation and one of the Forty Martyrs of England and Wales, canonized on 25 October 1970
Alban Roe ((20 July 1583 – 21 January 1642), martyred during the English Reformation and one of the Forty Martyrs of England and Wales, canonized on 25 October 1970
Oliver Plunkett (1 November 1625 – 1 July 1681), Archbishop of Armagh and Primate of All Ireland and oblate of the order, victim of Titus Oates' "Popish Plot", canonized on 12 October 1975
Female Saints
Scholastica (c. 480 – 10 February 543), sister of Saint Benedict and traditionally the founder of the Benedictine nuns
Æthelthryth (c. 636 – 23 June 679), Abbess of Ely
Hilda of Whitby (c. 614 – 17 November 680), virgin and abbess
Werburh (c. 650 - 3 February 700), princess who later became a nun
Mildrith (c. 660 - after 732), abbess of the Abbey at Minster-in-Thanet, canonized in 1388
Walpurga (c. 710 – 25 February 777 or 779), Anglo-Saxon missionary to the Frankish Empire, canonized on 1 May c. 870
Wiborada of St. Gall (died c. 926), anchoress and martyr, canonized on 5 January 1047
Edith of Wilton (c. 961 – c. 984), the daughter of Edgar, King of England (r. 959–975) and Saint Wulfthryth, who later became a nun together with her mother and retired to Wilton Abbey
Wulfthryth of Wilton (c. 937 – 21 September c. 1000), the mother of Edith of Wilton and the second known consort of Edgar, King of England and later became abbess of Wilton Abbey
Adelaide of Vilich (c. 970 – 5 February 1015), abbess, canonized on 27 January 1966
Cunigunde of Luxembourg (c. 975 – 3 March 1033), Holy Roman Empress, canonized on 29 March 1200
Hildegard of Bingen (c. 1098 – 17 September 1179), abbess and Doctor of the Church, canonized on 10 May 2012
Mechtilde of Hackeborn (c. 1240 or 1241 – 19 November 1298), nun
Gertrude the Great (6 January 1256 – 17 November 1302), mystic who was a member of the Monastery of Helfta, canonized on 20 July 1738
Frances of Rome (c. 1384 – 9 March 1440), Patroness of Benedictine Oblates, canonized on 29 May 1608
Benedetta Cambiagio Frassinello (2 October 1791 - 21 March 1858), founder of the Benedictine Sisters of Providence, canonized on 19 May 2002
Male Blesseds
Alcuin (c. 735 – 19 May 804), a leading scholar and teacher at the Carolingian court, declared Blessed by popular acclaim
Utto of Metten (died 3 October 829), first abbot of Metten Abbey, beatified on 25 August 1909
Notker the Stammerer (c. 840 – 6 April 912), composer, poet and scholar, beatified in 1512
Hermann of Reichenau (18 July 1013 – 24 September 1054), the possible composer of "Salve Regina", "Veni Sancte Spiritus", and "Alma Redemptoris Mater", beatified in 1863
Pope Victor III (c. 1026 – 16 September 1087), Bishop of Rome, beatified on 23 July 1887
Lanfranc (c. 1005 or 1010 – 24 May 1089), Archbishop of Canterbury, declared Blessed by popular acclaim
William of Hirsau (c. 1030 – 5 July 1091), abbot of Hirsau Abbey and father of the Hirsau Reforms, declared Blessed by popular acclaim
Robert of Arbrissel (c. 1045 – c. 1116), founder of Fontevraud Abbey, declared Blessed by popular acclaim
Simeone (died 16 November 1140), fifth abbot of La Trinità della Cava, beatified on 16 May 1928
Falcone (died 6 June 1140), sixth abbot of La Trinità della Cava, beatified on 16 May 1928
Berthold de Rachez of Garsten (c. 1060 – 27 July 1142), monk, beatified on 8 January 1970
Rupert von Ottobeuren (died 15 August 1145), prior, beatified on 2 August 1963
Peter the Venerable (c. 1092 – 25 December 1156), the ninth abbot of Cluny, beatified in 1862
Marino (died 15 December 1170), seventh abbot of La Trinità della Cava, beatified on 16 May 1928
Giovanni de Surdis Cacciafronte (c. 1125 - 16 March 1184), Bishop of Vicenza and martyr, beatified on 30 March 1824
Pietro Acotanto (died 23 September 1187), monk, beatified on 8 August 1759
Benincasa (died 10 January 1194), eighth abbot of La Trinità della Cava, beatified on 16 May 1928
Pietro II (died 13 March 1208), tenth abbot of La Trinità della Cava, beatified on 16 May 1928
Balsamo (died 24 November 1232), eleventh abbot of La Trinità della Cava, beatified on 16 May 1928
Conrad of Ottobeuren (died 27 July 1227), Abbot of Ottobeuren Abbey, beatified in 1555
the Benedictine prior of Avignonet (whose name is unknown) (died 28 May 1242), inquisitor martyred at Avignonet in a mission to eradicate the Cathar heresy, beatified on 6 September 1866
Giordano Forzate (c. 1158 - 7 August 1248), monk, beatified on 6 September 1769
Leonardo (died 18 August 1255), twelfth abbot of La Trinità della Cava, beatified on 16 May 1928
Leone II (c. 1239 - 19 August 1295), sixteenth abbot of La Trinità della Cava, beatified on 16 May 1928
Pope Urban V (c. 1310 – 19 December 1370), Bishop of Rome, beatified on 10 March 1870
Hugh Cook Faringdon (died 14 November 1539), the last Abbot of Reading Abbey, martyred during the English Reformation (Dissolution of the Monasteries), beatified on 13 May 1895
John Rugg (died 14 November 1539), martyred alongside Abbot Hugh Faringdon during the English Reformation (Dissolution of the Monasteries), beatified on 13 May 1895
John Eynon (died 14 November 1539), martyred alongside Abbot Hugh Faringdon during the English Reformation (Dissolution of the Monasteries), beatified on 13 May 1895
Richard Whiting (c. 1461 – 15 November 1539), the last Abbot of Glastonbury Abbey, martyred during the English Reformation (Dissolution of the Monasteries), beatified on 13 May 1895
John Thorne and Roger James (died 15 November 1539), martyred alongside Abbot Richard Whiting during the English Reformation (Dissolution of the Monasteries), beatified on 13 May 1895
John Beche (died 1 December 1539), the last Abbot of Colchester Abbey, martyred during the English Reformation (Dissolution of the Monasteries), beatified on 13 May 1895
Mark Barkworth (c. 1572 - 27 February 1601), martyred during the English Reformation, beatified on 15 December 1929
George Gervase (c. 1571 - 11 April 1608), martyred during the English Reformation, beatified on 15 December 1929
William (Maurus) Scott (c. 1579 - 30 May 1612), martyred during the English Reformation, beatified on 15 December 1929
Philip Powell (Morgan) (2 February 1594 – 30 June 1646), martyred during the English Reformation, beatified on 15 December 1929
Thomas Pickering (c. 1621 - 9 May 1679), martyred during the English Reformation as a victim of Titus Oates' "Popish Plot", beatified on 15 December 1929
Louis Barreau de la Touche (6 June 1758 – 2 September 1792), martyr of the French Revolution, beatified on 17 October 1926
Ambroise-Augustin Chevreux (13 February 1728 – 2 September 1792), martyr of the French Revolution, beatified on 17 October 1926
René-Julien Massey (c. 1732 – 2 September 1792), martyr of the French Revolution, beatified on 17 October 1926
Claude Richard (19 May 1741 - 9 August 1794), martyr of the French Revolution, beatified on 1 October 1995
Louis-Francois Lebrun (4 April 1744 - 20 August 1794), martyr of the French Revolution, beatified on 1 October 1995
Giuseppe Benedetto Dusmet (15 August 1818 - 14 April 1894), Archbishop of Catania and Cardinal, beatified on 25 September 1988
Tommaso (Placido) Riccardi (24 June 1844 - 25 March 1915), priest, beatified on 5 December 1954
Joseph (Columba) Marmion (1 April 1858 - 30 January 1923), Irish priest, beatified on 3 September 2000
Abel Ángel (Mauro) Palazuelos Maruri and 17 Companions (died between 26 July to 28 August 1936), Martyrs of the Spanish Civil War from El Pueyo, beatified on 13 October 2013
José Antón Gómez and 3 Companions (died between 25 September to 31 December 1936), Martyrs of the Spanish Civil War from Madrid, beatified on 29 October 2016
Jaume (Bernat) Vendrell Olivella and 19 Companions, (died between 25 July 1936 to 15 February 1937), Martyrs of the Spanish Civil War from the Archdiocese of Tarragona, beatified on 13 October 2013
Alfredo Ildefonso Schuster (18 January 1880 – 30 August 1954), CardinalArchbishop of Milan, beatified on 12 May 1996
Female Blesseds
Irmgard of Chiemsee (c. 831 or 833 – 16 July 866), nun, beatified on 17 July 1929
Gisela of Hungary (c. 985 – 7 May 1065), the first queen consort of Hungary by marriage to Saint Stephen I of Hungary, beatified on 11 July 1975.
Beatrice I d'Este (c. 1192 – 10 May 1226), nun, beatified on 19 November 1763
Beatrice II d'Este (c. 1230 – 18 January 1262), nun, beatified on 23 July 1774
Giuliana di Collalto (c. 1186 – 1 September 1262), nun, beatified on 30 May 1753
Giustina Francucci Bezzoli (c. 1260 - 12 March 1319), professed religious, beatified on 14 January 1891
Eustochio (Lucrezia) Bellini di Padova (c. 1444 - 13 February 1469), professed religious, beatified on 22 March 1760
Giovanni Maria Bonomo (15 August 1606 - 1 March 1670), professed religious, beatified on 9 June 1783
[fr] (12 August 1745 - 27 January 1794), martyr of the French Revolution from the Benedictine Nuns of Our Lady of Calvary, beatified on 19 February 1984
[fr] (4 February 1741 - 6 July 1794), martyr of the French Revolution, beatified on 10 May 1925
Gertrude (Maria Luisa Angelica) Prosperi (19 August 1799 - 13 September 1847), professed religious, beatified on 12 November 2012
Maria Adeodata Pisani (29 December 1806 - 25 February 1855), professed religious, beatified on 9 May 2001
Anna Felicia (Maria Fortunata) Viti (10 February 1827 - 20 November 1922), professed religious, beatified on 8 October 1967
Colomba Gabriel (3 May 1858 - 24 September 1926), Ukrainian founder of the Benedictine Sisters of Charity, beatified on 16 May 1993
Maria della Trinità (Itala Mela) (28 August 1904 – 29 April 1957), virgin and oblate of the order, beatified on 10 June 2017
Hanna Helena Chrzanowska (7 October 1902 – 29 April 1973), nurse and oblate of the order, beatified on 28 April 2018
Other Notable Benedictines
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Bernard of Clairvaux (1090–1153) featured in a 13th-century illuminated manuscriptSelf portrait of Matthew Paris (c. 1200 – 59)Abbot Suger (c. 1081 – 1135) in a medieval stained-glass windowDom Pérignon
Popes
Pope Sylvester II (c. 946–1003, r. 999–1003)
Pope Paschal II (d. 1118, r. 1099–1118)
Pope Gelasius II (d. 1119, r. 1118–19)
Pope Clement VI (1291–1352, r. 1342–52)
Pope Pius VII (1742–1823, r. 1800–23); Servant of God
Pope Gregory XVI (1765–1846, r. 1831–46)
Founders of abbeys and congregations and prominent reformers
St Erkenwald, Saxon Prince, bishop and saint known as the "Light of London"Abbot of Montserrat
Robert of Molesme (c. 1028 – 1111)
Alberic of Cîteaux (d. 1109)
Stephen Harding (d. 1134)
Bernard of Clairvaux (1090–1153)
Laurent Bénard (1573–1620)
Prosper Guéranger (1805–1875)
Jean-Baptiste Muard (1809–1854)
Boniface Wimmer (1809–1887)
Maurus Wolter (1825–1890)
Martin Marty (1834–1896)
Andreas Amrhein (1844–1927)
Lambert Beauduin (1873–1960)
Anscar Vonier (1875–1938) supervised the reconstruction of Buckfast Abbey
Scholars, historians, and spiritual writers
Jonas of Bobbio (600–659)
Guido of Arezzo (991–1050)
Paul the Deacon (c. 720 – 99)
Eadmer (c. 1060 – c. 1126)
Florence of Worcester (d. 1118)
Symeon of Durham (d. 1130)
Jocelyn de Brakelond (d. 1211)
Matthew Paris (c. 1200 – 1259)
William of Malmesbury (c. 1095 – c. 1143)
Gervase of Canterbury (c. 1141 – c. 1210)
Roger of Wendover (d. 1236)
Peter the Deacon (d. 1140)
Adam Easton (d. 1397)
Honoré Bonet (c. 1340 – c. 1410)
John Lydgate (c. 1370 – c. 1451)
John Whethamstede (d. 1465)
Johannes Trithemius (1462–1516)
Louis de Blois (1506–66)
Benedict van Haeften (1588–1648)
Augustine Baker (1575–1641)
Anthony Batt (d. 1651)
Jean Mabillon (1632–1707)
Mariano Armellino (1657–1737)
Antoine Augustin Calmet (1672–1757)
Magnoald Ziegelbauer (1689–1750)
Marquard Herrgott (1694–1762)
Pietro Luigi Galletti (1724–1790)
Luigi Tosti (1811–97)
Saint Oliver Plunkett, archbishop and martyrJean Baptiste François Pitra (1812–89)
Oswald William Moosmuller (1842–1901)
Suitbert Bäumer (1845–94)
Francis Aidan Gasquet (1846–1929)
Fernand Cabrol (1855–1937)
Germain Morin (1861–1946)
Henri Quentin (1872–1935)
John Chapman (1865–1933)
Cuthbert Butler (1858–1934)
Maurists
Members of the Congregation of Saint Maur, a prerevolutionary French congregation of Benedictines known for their scholarship:
Nicolas-Hugues Ménard (1585–1644)
Luc d'Achery (1609–85)
Antoine-Joseph Mège (1625–91)
Thierry Ruinart (1657–1709)
François Lamy (1636–1711)
Pierre Coustant (1654–1721)
Edmond Martène (1654–1739)
Ursin Durand (1682–1771)
Bernard de Montfaucon (1655–1741)
René-Prosper Tassin (1697–1777)
Bishops and martyrs
Abbot Suger (c. 1081 – 1151)
Sigebert Buckley (c. 1520 – c. 1610)
Gabriel Gifford (1554–1629)
Philip Michael Ellis (1652–1726)
Charles Walmesley (1722–97)
William Placid Morris (1794–1872)
John Polding (1794–1877)
William Bernard Ullathorne (1806–89)
Roger Vaughan (1834–83)
Guglielmo Sanfelice d'Acquavilla (1834–1897)
Joseph Pothier (1835–1923)
John Cuthbert Hedley (1837–1915)
Domenico Serafini (1852–1918)
Placidus Nkalanga (1918–2015)
Twentieth century
Cardinal Schuster
Lambert Beauduin (1873–1960)
Bede Griffiths (1906–1993)
Paul Augustin Mayer (1911–2010)
Hans Hermann Groër (1919–2003)
Basil Hume (1923–1999)
Willigis Jäger (1925–2020)
Rembert Weakland (1927–2022)
Daniel M. Buechlein (1938–2018)
Jerome Hanus (1940-)
Anselm Grün (1945–)
Knut Ansgar Nelson (1906–1990)
Benedictine Dames
Dame Catherine GascoigneAdèle Garnier
Alice Henley (died 1470)
Magdalena Mortęska (1554–1631)
Catherine Gascoigne (1601–1676)
Gertrude More (1606–1633)
Barbara Constable (1617–1674)
[fr] (1838–1924)
Laurentia McLachlan (1866–1953)
Margit Slachta (or Schlachta, 1884–1974)
Werburg Welch (1898–1990)
Felicitas Corrigan (1908–2003)
Hildelith Cumming (1909–1990)
Mary Boulding (1929–2009)
Joan Chittister (1936–)
Thomas Welder (1940–2020)
Noella Marcellino (1951–)
Teresa Forcades (1966–)
Oblates
Benedictine Oblates endeavor to embrace the spirit of the Benedictine vow in their own life in the world. Oblates are affiliated with a particular monastery.
Joris-Karl Huysmans (1848–1907)
Jacques Maritain (1882–1973)
Romano Guardini (1885–1968)
Dorothy Day (1897–1980)
Walker Percy (1916–1990)
Kathleen Norris (1947– )
See also
Catholicism portal
Dom Pierre Pérignon
Benedictine Confederation
Catholic religious order
Cistercians
French Romanesque architecture
Sisters of Social Service
Trappists
References
Almond, Joseph Cuthbert. "Order of St Benedict" The Catholic Encyclopedia Vol. 11. New York: Robert Appleton Company, 1911. 16 July 2024
Almond, Joseph Cuthbert. "Olivetans." The Catholic Encyclopedia Vol. 11. New York: Robert Appleton Company, 1911. 10 April 2019
Mary Richard Boo OSB and Joan M. Braun OSB, Emerging from the Shadows: St. Scholastica, in Medieval Women Monastics, (Miriam Schmitt OSB and Linda Kulzer OSB, eds) The Liturgical Press, Collegeville, 1996 ISBN9780814622926
Stanford, P. (2003). "Dame Felicitas Corrigan". UK Guardian. Retrieved 5 October 2023. Dame Felicitas - the title Dame is given to English Benedictine nuns in preference to Sister ...
Alston, Cyprian (1907). "Benedictine Order" . In Herbermann, Charles (ed.). Catholic Encyclopedia. Vol. 2. New York: Robert Appleton Company.
Oliver OSB, Richard . "A Brief History of the Benedictine Order", OSB.org
"The Benedictines: An Introduction by Abbot Primate Jerome Theisen OSB. Liturgical Press". www.osb.org. Archived from the original on 26 March 2023. Retrieved 19 July 2021.
Huddleston, Gilbert Roger (1912). "Scriptorium" . In Herbermann, Charles (ed.). Catholic Encyclopedia. Vol. 13. New York: Robert Appleton Company.
One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Butler, Edward Cuthbert (1911). "Camaldulians". In Chisholm, Hugh (ed.). Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 5 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 79–80.
Butler, Edward Cuthbert (1911). "Cistercians" . In Chisholm, Hugh (ed.). Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 6 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 393–395.
One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Ott, Michael (1908). "Commendatory Abbot". In Herbermann, Charles (ed.). Catholic Encyclopedia. Vol. 4. New York: Robert Appleton Company.
Robinson, I. S., Henry IV of Germany 1056–1106, Cambridge University Press, 2003, p. 126ISBN9780521545907
Butler, Alban (1845). The Lives of the Fathers, Martyrs, and Other Principal Saints, Volume 3. Dublin. p. 218.
"Abbaye de Fleury". Archived from the original on 16 August 2010. Retrieved 19 June 2010.
"Mother Mectilde De Bar", Silverstream Priory
"Fundacja w Warszawie". mechtylda.info (in Polish). 18 December 2013. Retrieved 2 September 2020.
"History I". st-benoit-du-lac.com. Archived from the original on 30 March 2009.
Chadwick, Owen (1998). A History of the Popes, 1830–1914. Clarendon Press. pp. 495–. ISBN978-0-19-826922-9.
Wootton and Fishbourne. Ryde.shalfleet.net (4 August 2013). Retrieved on 7 September 2013.
RGM 2005 OCSO. Citeaux.net (28 February 1947). Retrieved on 7 September 2013.
Tyburn Foundress Archived 5 February 2012 at the Wayback Machine at Tyburn Convent official website. Retrieved 23 February 2012
Tyburn Martyrs Archived 21 January 2012 at the Wayback Machine at Tyburn Convent official website. Retrieved 23 February 2012
Clark, James Midgley. The Abbey of St. Gall as a Centre of Literature & Art, Chapter XII, CUP Archive, 1926, 1926
Christen, Beat (April 2020). "Auf den Tag genau vor 900 Jahren wurde das Kloster Engelberg gegründet". Luzerner Zeitung (in German). Retrieved 18 October 2022.
Cross, F. L.; Livingstone, E. A., eds. (1997). The Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church (3rd ed.). Oxford University Press, US. p. 514
Dom Bruno Hicks (2009). "The Benedictines". Archived from the original on 5 November 2017. Retrieved 15 February 2015.
Colin Battell, OSB (2 December 2006). "Spirituality on the beach". The Tablet. pp. 18–19. The late Cardinal Basil Hume was Abbot of Ampleforth Abbey before being appointed Archbishop of Westminster.
Martin, Christopher (2007). A Glimpse of Heaven: Catholic Churches in England and Wales. London: English Heritage. Examines the abbeys rebuilt after 1850 (by benefactors among the Catholic aristocracy and recusant squirearchy), mainly Benedictine but including a Cistercian Abbey at Mount St. Bernard (by Pugin) and a Carthusian Charterhouse in Sussex. There is a review of book by Richard Lethbridge "Monuments to Catholic confidence," The Tablet 10 February 2007, 27.
Mian Ridge (12 November 2005). "Prinknash monks downsize". The Tablet. p. 34.
"History". Saint Louis Abbey.
"History – The English Benedictine Congregation". benedictines.org.uk. Archived from the original on 11 February 2015. Retrieved 11 February 2015.
Rees, Daniel (2000). "Anglican Monasticism". In Johnston, William (ed.). Encyclopedia of Monasticism. New York: Fitzroy Dearborn Publisher. p. 29. ISBN1-57958-090-4.
Hillaby, Joe (1994–1996). "The ritual-child-murder accusation: its dissemination and Harold of Gloucester". Jewish Historical Studies. 34: 69–109. JSTOR 29779954.
Kaur, Nirmal (2005). History of Education. Mittal Publications. p. 44. ISBN81-7099-984-7.
Wormald, Francis; Wright, C.E. (1958). The English Library before 1700. London: The Athlone Press. p. 15 – via University of London.
Savage, Ernest (1912). Old English Libraries. London: Methuen & Co. Ltd.
"'History of Belmont Abbey', Belmont Abbey, North Carolina". Archived from the original on 16 April 2018. Retrieved 4 November 2017.
St Benedict (1981). RB 1980: the rule of St. Benedict in Latin and English with notes. Translated by Fry, Timothy. Collegeville, MN: The Liturgical Press. pp. 136–141. ISBN0-8146-1211-3. OL 4255653M.
"The Benedictine Congregations and Federations of North America in the Benedictine Confederation". www.osb.org. Archived from the original on 3 September 2017. Retrieved 24 November 2015.
"The Defining Features of the Benedictine Order". Durham World Heritage Site.
"Order of Saint Benedict". Saint John's Abbey.
Customary of Mount Michael Abbey
Hembry, Phyllis (1990). The English Spa, 1560–1815: A Social History. Fairleigh Dickinson Univ Press. ISBN9780838633915.
Bradley, Ian (2012). Water: A Spiritual History. Bloomsbury Publishing. ISBN9781441167675.
"Benedictine Abbeys and Priories in the U.S. | Encyclopedia.com". www.encyclopedia.com. Retrieved 25 April 2022.
"Directory of OSB Congregations". OSB DOT ORG. Retrieved 25 April 2022.
"The Benedictine Confederation". OSB.org. Retrieved 24 October 2018.
"St Benedict & The Order | Benedictine Monks".
Simpson, Fr. Benedict (2016). "Directory of Parishes". The Western Rite Communities of the Russian Orthodox Church Outside Russia. Retrieved 26 August 2019.
"Holy Monasteries of Our Lady and Saint Laurence Antiochian Orthodox Christian Archdiocese of North America, Western Rite Vicariate". The Benedictine Fellowship of Saint Laurence. Archived from the original on 4 April 2018. Retrieved 10 March 2018.
"Who we are…". Saint Augustine's House. 2018. Retrieved 26 August 2019.
"Concession of Mass". newsaints.faithweb.com. Retrieved 6 March 2025.
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Cite error: The named reference Catholic5 was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
"Spanish Civil War (37)". newsaints.faithweb.com. Retrieved 25 February 2025.
"Spanish Civil War (10)". newsaints.faithweb.com. Retrieved 25 February 2025.
"French Revolution (04)". newsaints.faithweb.com. Retrieved 25 February 2025.
"French Revolution". newsaints.faithweb.com. Retrieved 25 February 2025.
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Cite error: The named reference Catholic3 was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
"Bishop Gervas Placidus Nkalanga, OSB, of Hanga Abbey Celebrates 50 Years as a Bishop". Hanga News. 9 June 2011.
"928: Secular institutes". Catechism of the Catholic Church – Part 1 Section 2 Chapter 3 Article 9 Paragraph 4. Retrieved 26 August 2019.
Further reading
Dom Columba Marmion, Christ the Ideal of the Monk – Spiritual Conferences on the Monastic and Religious Life (Engl. edition London 1926, trsl. from the French by a nun of Tyburn Convent).
Mariano Dell'Omo, Storia del monachesimo occidentale dal medioevo all'età contemporanea. Il carisma di san Benedetto tra VI e XX secolo. Jaca Book, Milano 2011. ISBN978-88-16-30493-2
The Benedictines officially the Order of Saint Benedict Latin Ordo Sancti Benedicti abbreviated as O S B or OSB are a mainly contemplative monastic order of the Catholic Church for men and for women who follow the Rule of Saint Benedict Initiated in 529 they are the oldest of all the religious orders in the Latin Church The male religious are also sometimes called the Black Monks especially in English speaking countries after the colour of their habits although some like the Olivetans wear white They were founded by Benedict of Nursia a 6th century Italian monk who laid the foundations of Benedictine monasticism through the formulation of his Rule Benedict s sister Scholastica possibly his twin also became a religious from an early age but chose to live as a hermit They retained a close relationship until her death Order of Saint BenedictOrdo Sancti BenedictiCoat of arms of the orderDesign on the obverse side of the Saint Benedict MedalAbbreviationO S B Formation529 1496 years ago 529 FounderBenedict of NursiaFounded atSubiaco AbbeyTypeCatholic religious orderHeadquartersSant Anselmo all AventinoMembers6 802 3 419 priests as of 2020 update Abbot PrimateJeremias Schroder OSBMain organBenedictine ConfederationParent organizationCatholic ChurchWebsiteosb wbr org Despite being called an order the Benedictines do not operate under a single hierarchy They are instead organized as a collection of autonomous monasteries and convents some known as abbeys The order is represented internationally by the Benedictine Confederation an organization set up in 1893 to represent the order s shared interests They do not have a superior general or motherhouse with universal jurisdiction but elect an Abbot Primate to represent themselves to the Vatican and to the world In some regions Benedictine nuns are given the title Dame in preference to Sister Historical developmentSaint Benedict of Nursia c 480 543 detail from a fresco by Fra Angelico c 1400 1455 in the Friary of San Marco Florence The monastery at Subiaco in Italy established by Benedict of Nursia c 529 was the first of the dozen monasteries he founded He later founded the Abbey of Monte Cassino There is no evidence however that he intended to found an order and the Rule of Saint Benedict presupposes the autonomy of each community When Monte Cassino was sacked by the Lombards about the year 580 the monks fled to Rome and it seems probable that this constituted an important factor in the diffusion of a knowledge of Benedictine monasticism Copies of Benedict s Rule survived around 594 Pope Gregory I spoke favorably of it The rule is subsequently found in some monasteries in southern Gaul along with other rules used by abbots Gregory of Tours says that at Ainay Abbey in the sixth century the monks followed the rules of Basil Cassian Caesarius and other fathers taking and using whatever seemed proper to the conditions of time and place and doubtless the same liberty was taken with the Benedictine Rule when it reached them In Gaul and Switzerland it gradually supplemented the much stricter Irish or Celtic Rule introduced by Columbanus and others In many monasteries it eventually entirely displaced the earlier codes Abbey of Monte Cassino By the ninth century however the Benedictine had become the standard form of monastic life throughout the whole of Western Europe excepting Scotland Wales and Ireland where the Celtic observance still prevailed for another century or two Largely through the work of Benedict of Aniane it became the rule of choice for monasteries throughout the Carolingian empire Monastic scriptoria flourished from the ninth through the twelfth centuries Sacred Scripture was always at the heart of every monastic scriptorium As a general rule those of the monks who possessed skill as writers made this their chief if not their sole active work An anonymous writer of the ninth or tenth century speaks of six hours a day as the usual task of a scribe which would absorb almost all the time available for active work in the day of a medieval monk In the Middle Ages monasteries were often founded by the nobility Cluny Abbey was founded by William I Duke of Aquitaine in 910 The abbey was noted for its strict adherence to the Rule of Saint Benedict The abbot of Cluny was the superior of all the daughter houses through appointed priors One of the earliest reforms of Benedictine practice was that initiated in 980 by Romuald who founded the Camaldolese community The Cistercians branched off from the Benedictines in 1098 they are often called the White monks The dominance of the Benedictine monastic way of life began to decline towards the end of the twelfth century which saw the rise of the mendicant Franciscans and nomadic Dominicans Benedictines by contrast took a vow of stability which professed loyalty to a particular foundation in a particular location Not being bound by location the mendicants were better able to respond to an increasingly urban environment This decline was further exacerbated by the practice of appointing a commendatory abbot a lay person appointed by a noble to oversee and to protect the assets of the monastery Often however this resulted in the appropriation of the assets of monasteries at the expense of the community which they were intended to support Austria amp Germany Melk Abbey Saint Blaise Abbey in the Black Forest of Baden Wurttemberg is believed to have been founded around the latter part of the tenth century Between 1070 and 1073 there seem to have been contacts between St Blaise and the Cluniac Abbey of Fruttuaria in Italy which led to St Blaise following the Fruttuarian reforms The Empress Agnes was a patron of Fruttuaria and retired there in 1065 before moving to Rome The Empress was instrumental in introducing Fruttuaria s Benedictine customs as practiced at Cluny to Saint Blaise Abbey in Baden Wurttemberg Other houses either reformed by or founded as priories of St Blasien were Muri Abbey 1082 Ochsenhausen Abbey 1093 Gottweig Abbey 1094 Stein am Rhein Abbey before 1123 and Prum Abbey 1132 It also had significant influence on the abbeys of Alpirsbach 1099 Ettenheimmunster 1124 and Sulzburg c 1125 and the priories of Weitenau now part of Steinen c 1100 Burgel before 1130 and Sitzenkirch c 1130 France Abbatiale Saint Benoit southern aspect as in 1893 Basilica of Saint Martin d Ainay Fleury Abbey in Saint Benoit sur Loire Loiret was founded in about 640 It is one of the most celebrated Benedictine monasteries of Western Europe and possesses the relics of St Benedict Like many Benedictine abbeys it was located on the banks of a river here the Loire Ainey Abbey is a ninth century foundation on the Lyon peninsula In the twelfth century on the current site there was a romanesque monastery subsequently rebuilt The seventeenth century saw a number of Benedictine foundations for women some dedicated to the indigent to save them from a life of exploitation others dedicated to the Perpetual Adoration of the Blessed Sacrament such as the one established by Catherine de Bar 1614 1698 In 1688 Dame Mechtilde de Bar assisted Marie Casimire Louise de La Grange d Arquien queen consort of Poland to establish a Benedictine foundation in Warsaw Abbeys were among the institutions of the Catholic Church swept away during the French Revolution Monasteries and convents were again allowed to form in the 19th century under the Bourbon Restoration Later that century under the Third French Republic laws were enacted preventing religious teaching The original intent was to allow secular schools Thus in 1880 and 1882 Benedictine teaching monks were effectively exiled this was not completed until 1901 In 1898 Marie Adele Garnier in religion Mother Marie de Saint Pierre founded in Montmartre Mount of the Martyr Paris a Benedictine house However the Waldeck Rousseau s Law of Associations passed in 1901 placed severe restrictions on religious bodies which were obliged to leave France Garnier and her community relocated to another place associated with executions this time it was in London near the site of Tyburn tree where 105 Catholic martyrs including Saint Oliver Plunkett and Saint Edmund Campion had been executed during the English Reformation A stone s throw from Marble Arch the Tyburn Convent is now the Mother House of the Congregation Poland amp Lithuania Benedictine church in Warsaw s New Town depicted by Bellotto Benedictines are thought to have arrived in the Kingdom of Poland in the 11th century One of the earliest foundations is Tyniec Abbey on a promontory by the Vistula river The Tyniec monks led the translation of the Bible into Polish vernacular Other surviving Benedictine houses can be found in Stary Krakow Village Biskupow Lubin Older foundations are in Mogilno Trzemeszno Leczyca Lysa Gora and in Opactwo among others In the Middle Ages the city of Plock also on the Vistula had a successful monastery which played a significant role in the local economy In the 18th century benedictine convents were opened for women notably in Warsaw s New Town citation needed A 15th century Benedictine foundation can be found in Senieji Trakai a village in Eastern Lithuania Switzerland Kloster Rheinau was a Benedictine monastery in Rheinau in the Canton of Zurich Switzerland founded in about 778 The abbey of Our Lady of the Angels was founded in 1120 United Kingdom The English Benedictine Congregation is the oldest of the nineteen Benedictine congregations Through the influence of Wilfrid Benedict Biscop and Dunstan the Benedictine Rule spread rapidly and in the North it was adopted in most of the monasteries that had been founded by the Celtic missionaries from Iona Many of the episcopal sees of England were founded and governed by the Benedictines and no fewer than nine of the old cathedrals were served by the black monks of the priories attached to them Monasteries served as hospitals and places of refuge for the weak and homeless The monks studied the healing properties of plants and minerals to alleviate the sufferings of the sick During the English Reformation all monasteries were dissolved and their lands confiscated by the Crown forcing those who wished to continue in the monastic life to flee into exile on the Continent During the 19th century English members of these communities were able to return to England citation needed The two sides of a Saint Benedict medal St Mildred s Priory on the Isle of Thanet Kent was built in 1027 on the site of an abbey founded in 670 by the daughter of the first Christian King of Kent Currently the priory is home to a community of Benedictine nuns Five of the most notable English abbeys are the Basilica of St Gregory the Great at Downside commonly known as Downside Abbey The Abbey of St Edmund King and Martyr commonly known as Douai Abbey in Upper Woolhampton Reading Berkshire Ealing Abbey in Ealing West London and Worth Abbey Prinknash Abbey used by Henry VIII as a hunting lodge was officially returned to the Benedictines four hundred years later in 1928 During the next few years so called Prinknash Park was used as a home until it was returned to the order St Lawrence s Abbey in Ampleforth Yorkshire was founded in 1802 In 1955 Ampleforth set up a daughter house a priory at St Louis Missouri which became independent in 1973 and became Saint Louis Abbey in its own right in 1989 Interior of Stanbrook Abbey Church Wass Yorkshire As of 2015 the English Congregation consists of three abbeys of nuns and ten abbeys of monks Members of the congregation are found in England Wales the United States of America Peru and Zimbabwe In England there are also houses of the Subiaco Cassinese Congregation Farnborough Prinknash and Chilworth the Solesmes Congregation Quarr and St Cecilia s on the Isle of Wight as well as a diocesan monastery following the Rule of Saint Benedict The Community of Our Lady of Glastonbury Since the Oxford Movement there has also been a modest flourishing of Benedictine monasticism in the Anglican Church and Protestant Churches Anglican Benedictine Abbots are invited guests of the Benedictine Abbot Primate in Rome at Abbatial gatherings at Sant Anselmo In 1168 local Benedictine monks instigated the anti semitic blood libel of Harold of Gloucester as a template for explaining child deaths According to historian Joe Hillaby the blood libel of Harold was crucially important because for the first time an unexplained child death occurring near the Easter festival was arbitrarily linked to Jews in the vicinity by local Christian churchmen they established a pattern quickly taken up elsewhere Within three years the first ritual murder charge was made in France Monastic libraries in England The forty eighth Rule of Saint Benedict prescribes extensive and habitual holy reading for the brethren Three primary types of reading were done by the monks in medieval times Monks would read privately during their personal time as well as publicly during services and at mealtimes In addition to these three mentioned in the Rule monks would also read in the infirmary Monasteries were thriving centers of education with monks and nuns actively encouraged to learn and pray according to the Benedictine Rule Rule 38 states that these brothers meals should usually be accompanied by reading and that they were to eat and drink in silence while one read out loud Benedictine monks were not allowed worldly possessions thus necessitating the preservation and collection of sacred texts in monastic libraries for communal use For the sake of convenience the books in the monastery were housed in a few different places namely the sacristy which contained books for the choir and other liturgical books the rectory which housed books for public reading such as sermons and lives of the saints and the library which contained the largest collection of books and was typically in the cloister The first record of a monastic library in England is in Canterbury To assist with Augustine of Canterbury s English mission Pope Gregory the Great gave him nine books which included the Gregorian Bible in two volumes the Psalter of Augustine two copies of the Gospels two martyrologies an Exposition of the Gospels and Epistles and a Psalter 23 25 Theodore of Tarsus brought Greek books to Canterbury more than seventy years later when he founded a school for the study of Greek 26 United States The first Benedictine to live in the United States was Pierre Joseph Didier He came to the United States in 1790 from Paris and served in the Ohio and St Louis areas until his death The first actual Benedictine monastery founded was Saint Vincent Archabbey located in Latrobe Pennsylvania It was founded in 1832 by Boniface Wimmer a German monk who sought to serve German immigrants in America In 1856 Wimmer started to lay the foundations for St John s Abbey in Minnesota In 1876 Herman Wolfe of Saint Vincent Archabbey established Belmont Abbey in North Carolina By the time of his death in 1887 Wimmer had sent Benedictine monks to Kansas New Jersey North Carolina Georgia Florida Alabama Illinois and Colorado Wimmer also asked for Benedictine sisters to be sent to America by St Walburg Convent in Eichstatt Bavaria In 1852 and two other sisters founded St Marys Pennsylvania Soon they would send sisters to Michigan New Jersey and Minnesota By 1854 Swiss monks began to arrive and founded St Meinrad Abbey in Indiana and they soon spread to Arkansas and Louisiana They were soon followed by Swiss sisters There are now over 100 Benedictine houses across America Most Benedictine houses are part of one of four large Congregations American Cassinese Swiss American St Scholastica and St Benedict The congregations mostly are made up of monasteries that share the same lineage For instance the American Cassinese congregation included the 22 monasteries descended from Boniface Wimmer Benedictine vows and lifeA sense of community has been the defining characteristic of the order since the beginning To that end section 17 in chapter 58 of the Rule of Saint Benedict specifies the solemn vows candidates joining a Benedictine community are required to make a vow of stability to remain in the same community and to adopt a conversion of habits in Latin conversatio morum and obedience to the community s superior The Benedictine vows are equivalent to the evangelical counsels accepted by all candidates entering a religious order The interpretation of conversatio morum understood as conversion of the habits of life has generally been replaced by notions such as adoption of a monastic manner of life drawing on the Vulgate s use of conversatio as indicating citizenship or local customs see Philippians 3 20 The Rule enjoins monks and nuns to live in this place as a religious in obedience to its rule and to the abbot or abbess Benedictine abbots and abbesses have jurisdiction over their abbey and thus canonical authority over the monks or nuns who are resident This authority includes the power to assign duties to decide which books may or may not be read to regulate comings and goings and to punish and to excommunicate in the sense of an enforced isolation from the monastic community A tight communal timetable the horarium is meant to ensure that the time given by God is not wasted but used in God s service whether for prayer work meals spiritual reading or sleep The order s motto is Ora et Labora pray and work Although Benedictines do not take a vow of silence hours of strict silence are set and at other times silence is maintained as much as is practically possible Social conversations tend to be limited to communal recreation times Such details like other aspects of the daily routine of a Benedictine house are left to the discretion of the superior and are set out in its customary the code adopted by a particular Benedictine house by adapting the Rule to local conditions According to the norms of the 1983 Code of Canon Law a Benedictine abbey is a religious institute and its members therefore participate in consecrated life which Canon 588 1 explains is intrinsically neither clerical nor lay Males in consecrated life however may be ordained Benedictines rules contain a reference to ritual purification which is inspired by Benedict s encouragement of bathing Benedictine monks have played a role in the development and promotion of spas OrganizationBenedictine monasticism differs from other Christian religious orders in that as congregations sometimes with several houses some of them in other countries they are not bound into a unified religious order headed by a Superior General Each Benedictine congregation is autonomous and governed by an abbot or abbess The autonomous houses are characterised by their chosen charism or specific dedication to a particular devotion For example In 1313 Bernardo Tolomei established the Order of Our Lady of Mount Olivet The community adopted the Rule of Saint Benedict and received canonical approval in 1344 The Olivetans are part of the Benedictine Confederation Other specialisms such as Gregorian chant as at Solesmes in France or Perpetual Adoration of the Holy Sacrament have been adopted by different houses as at the Warsaw Convent or the Adorers of the Sacred Heart of Montmartre at Tyburn Convent in London Other houses have dedicated themselves to books reading writing and printing them as at Stanbrook Abbey in England Others still are associated with the places where they were founded or their founders centuries ago hence Cassinese Subiaco Camaldolese or Sylvestrines All Benedictine houses became federated in the Benedictine Confederation brought into existence by Pope Leo XIII s Apostolic Brief Summum semper on 12 July 1893 Pope Leo also established the office of Abbot Primate as the abbot elected to represent this Confederation at the Vatican and to the world The headquarters of the Benedictine Confederation and the Abbot Primate is the Primatial Abbey of Sant Anselmo built by Pope Leo XIII in Rome Other ordersThe Rule of Saint Benedict is also used by a number of religious orders that began as reforms of the Benedictine tradition such as the Cistercians and Trappists citation needed These groups are separate congregations and not members of the Benedictine Confederation Although Benedictines are traditionally Catholic there are also other communities that follow the Rule of Saint Benedict For example of an estimated 2 400 celibate Anglican religious 1 080 men and 1 320 women in the Anglican Communion as a whole some have adopted the Rule of Benedict Likewise such communities can be found in the Eastern Orthodox Church and the Lutheran Church Saints and Blesseds of the OrderSaint Boniface c 680 750 Pope Gregory I c 540 604 Pope 590 604 Adalbert of Egmond 8th century and priest Jeroen van Noordwijk depicted in a 1529 painting by Jan Joostsz van Hillegom currently on display at the Frans Hals Museum Late Gothic sculpture of Rupert of Salzburg c 660 710 A Carolingian manuscript c 840 depicting Rabanus Maurus left supported by Alcuin middle presenting his work to Otgar of Mainz Male SaintsBenedict of Nursia 2 March 480 21 March 547 Founder of the Order and Patron Saint of Europe Laurence of Canterbury died 2 February 619 the second Archbishop of Canterbury Mellitus died 24 April 624 the third Archbishop of Canterbury Justus died on 10 November between 627 and 631 the fourth Archbishop of Canterbury Paulinus of York died 10 October 644 the first Bishop of York Cuthbert of Lindisfarne c 634 20 March 687 the first Archbishop of Canterbury Benedict Biscop c 628 12 January 690 founder of Monkwearmouth Jarrow Priory Erkenwald c 630 c 693 Bishop of London Wilfrid c 633 c 709 Bishop of York Bertin c 615 c 709 abbot of a monastery in Saint Omer later named the Abbey of Saint Bertin Aldhelm c 639 25 May 709 Abbot of Malmesbury Abbey Bishop of Sherborne and a writer and scholar of Latin poetry Rupert of Salzburg c 660 27 March 710 Bishop of Worms as well as the first Bishop of Salzburg Swidberth of Kaiserwerdt died c 713 who accompanied Willibrord on the Anglo Saxon mission John of Beverley died 7 May 721 Bishop of York canonized in 1037 Leudwinus c 660 29 September 722 Count of Treves who later became Archbishop of Treves and Laon Bede the Venerable 672 3 26 May 735 scholar The Father of English History and Doctor of the Church Willibrord c 658 7 November 739 Bishop of Utrecht and Apostle to the Frisians Boniface c 675 5 June 754 Bishop of Mainz Apostle to the Germans and martyr of the Anglo Saxon missions Wilfrido della Gherardesca died 15 February 756 monk canonized on 12 September 1861 Sturm of Fulda c 705 17 December 779 disciple of Boniface and founder and first abbot of the Benedictine monastery and abbey of Fulda canonized on 19 April 1139 Benedict of Aniane 747 12 February 821 The Second Benedict Adalard of Corbie c 751 2 January 827 Abbot of Corbie canonized in 1026 Rabanus Maurus c 780 4 February 856 Archbishop of Mainz and The Teacher of Germany Swithun c 800 2 July 863 Bishop of Winchester Paschasius Radbertus c 785 c 865 abbot of Corbie canonized on 12 July 1073 Ansgar 8 September 801 3 February 865 Archbishop of Hamburg Bremen and Apostle of the North Altfrid von Hildesheim died 15 August 874 Bishop of Hildesheim and founder of Essen Abbey canonized on 16 February 1965 Hincmar 806 21 December 882 Archbishop of Reims Bertario di Montecassino c 810 22 October 883 abbot and martyr canonized on 26 August 1727 Berno of Cluny c 850 13 January 927 the first abbot of Cluny and began the tradition of the Cluniac reforms Odo of Cluny c 878 18 November 942 the second abbot of Cluny Oda of Canterbury died 2 June 958 the twenty third Archbishop of Canterbury Aymard of Cluny died c 965 the third abbot of Cluny AEthelwold of Winchester between 904 and 909 1 August 984 Bishop of Winchester Dunstan c 909 19 May 988 Archbishop of Canterbury canonized in 1029 Majolus of Cluny c 906 11 May 994 the fourth abbot of Cluny Wolfgang of Regensburg c 934 31 October 994 Bishop of Regensburg canonized on 8 October 1052 Adalbert of Prague c 956 23 April 997 missionary Bishop of Prague and martyr canonized in 999 Attilanus c 937 c 1007 Bishop of Zamora and prior of Moreruela Abbey canonized in 1095 Andrew Zorard c 980 c 1009 monk canonized in 1083 Benedict of Skalka died c 1012 monk and martyr canonized in 1083 Simeon of Mantua died 1016 hermit canonized in 1016 Emperor Henry II 6 May 973 13 July 1024 Holy Roman Emperor and oblate of the order canonized on 4 March 1146 Bononio of Lucedio died 30 August 1026 Abbot of Lucedio canonized in 1026 Romuald c 951 19 June 1027 founder of the Camaldolese Order canonized on 9 July 1595 Guido da Pomposa c 970 31 March 1046 Abbot of Pomposa Gerard of Csanad 23 April 977 1000 24 September 1046 Bishop of Csanad and martyr canonized in 1083 Odilo of Cluny c 962 c 1 January 1049 the fifth abbot of Cluny Alferio c 930 12 April 1050 founder of the Abbey of La Trinita della Cava and became its first abbot canonized on 21 December 1893 Inigo of Ona c 1000 1 June 1057 Abbot of San Salvador at Ona canonized in 1259 Pier Damiani c 1007 21 or 22 February 1072 or 1073 Cardinal and Doctor of the Church Giovanni Gualberto c 985 12 July 1073 founder of the Vallumbrosan Order canonized on 24 October 1193 Maurus of Pecs c 1000 c 1075 Bishop of Pecs canonized on 22 July 1848 Pope Gregory VII c 1015 25 May 1085 Bishop of Rome canonized on 24 May 1728 Arnulf of Soissons c 1040 c 1087 Bishop of Soissons and founder of the Abbey of St Peter in Oudenburg canonized on 6 January 1120 Leone I died 1079 second abbot of La Trinita della Cava canonized on 21 December 1893 Wulfstan of Worcester c 1008 20 January 1095 Bishop of Worcester canonized on 14 May 1203 Alberto da Prezzate or da Pontida c 1025 2 September 1095 abbot canonized on 7 July 1961 Walter of Pontoise c 1030 c 1099 abbot of Pontoise canonized in 1153 Pietro de Anagni died 3 August 1105 Bishop of Anagni and papal legate canonized on 4 June 1109 Anselm of Canterbury c 1033 21 April 1109 Archbishop of Canterbury and Doctor of the Church canonized on 4 October 1494 Hugh of Cluny 13 May 1024 29 April 1109 Abbot of Cluny and one of the most influential leaders of the monastic orders from the Middle Ages canonized on 6 January 1120 Lidanus c 1026 c 1118 founder of Sezze Abbey Pietro di Pappacarbone died 4 March 1123 third abbot of La Trinita della Cava canonized on 21 December 1893 Bruno di Segni c 1045 18 July 1123 Bishop of Segni and Abbot of Montecassino canonized on 5 September 1181 Constabile c 1070 17 February 1124 fourth abbot of La Trinita della Cava canonized on 21 December 1893 William of Montevergine c 1085 25 June 1142 founder of the Congregation of Monte Vergine or Williamites Ernest died c 1148 abbot of Zwiefalten Abbey Etienne d Obazine c 1085 8 March 1159 hermit canonized in 1701 Franco da Assergi c 1154 or 1159 12th century hermit canonized in 1757 Rinaldo di Nocera c 1150 9 February 1217 Bishop of Nocera Umbra Edmund Rich of Abingdon perhaps 20 November c 1174 16 November 1240 canonized on 16 December 1246 Silvestro Gozzolini c 1177 26 November 1267 founder of the Sylvestrine Order canonized on 29 August 1890 Pope Celestine V 1209 1210 or 1215 19 May 1296 Bishop of Rome and founder of the now extinct Celestine Order canonized on 5 May 1313 Bernardo Tolomei 10 May 1272 20 August 1348 founder of the Olivetan Order canonized on 26 April 2009 John Roberts c 1577 10 December 1610 martyred during the English Reformation and one of the Forty Martyrs of England and Wales canonized on 25 October 1970 Ambrose Barlow before 30 November 1585 10 September 1641 martyred during the English Reformation and one of the Forty Martyrs of England and Wales canonized on 25 October 1970 Alban Roe 20 July 1583 21 January 1642 martyred during the English Reformation and one of the Forty Martyrs of England and Wales canonized on 25 October 1970 Oliver Plunkett 1 November 1625 1 July 1681 Archbishop of Armagh and Primate of All Ireland and oblate of the order victim of Titus Oates Popish Plot canonized on 12 October 1975 Female Saints Scholastica c 480 10 February 543 sister of Saint Benedict and traditionally the founder of the Benedictine nuns AEthelthryth c 636 23 June 679 Abbess of Ely Hilda of Whitby c 614 17 November 680 virgin and abbess Werburh c 650 3 February 700 princess who later became a nun Mildrith c 660 after 732 abbess of the Abbey at Minster in Thanet canonized in 1388 Walpurga c 710 25 February 777 or 779 Anglo Saxon missionary to the Frankish Empire canonized on 1 May c 870 Wiborada of St Gall died c 926 anchoress and martyr canonized on 5 January 1047 Edith of Wilton c 961 c 984 the daughter of Edgar King of England r 959 975 and Saint Wulfthryth who later became a nun together with her mother and retired to Wilton Abbey Wulfthryth of Wilton c 937 21 September c 1000 the mother of Edith of Wilton and the second known consort of Edgar King of England and later became abbess of Wilton Abbey Adelaide of Vilich c 970 5 February 1015 abbess canonized on 27 January 1966 Cunigunde of Luxembourg c 975 3 March 1033 Holy Roman Empress canonized on 29 March 1200 Hildegard of Bingen c 1098 17 September 1179 abbess and Doctor of the Church canonized on 10 May 2012 Mechtilde of Hackeborn c 1240 or 1241 19 November 1298 nun Gertrude the Great 6 January 1256 17 November 1302 mystic who was a member of the Monastery of Helfta canonized on 20 July 1738 Frances of Rome c 1384 9 March 1440 Patroness of Benedictine Oblates canonized on 29 May 1608 Benedetta Cambiagio Frassinello 2 October 1791 21 March 1858 founder of the Benedictine Sisters of Providence canonized on 19 May 2002 Male Blesseds Alcuin c 735 19 May 804 a leading scholar and teacher at the Carolingian court declared Blessed by popular acclaim Utto of Metten died 3 October 829 first abbot of Metten Abbey beatified on 25 August 1909 Notker the Stammerer c 840 6 April 912 composer poet and scholar beatified in 1512 Hermann of Reichenau 18 July 1013 24 September 1054 the possible composer of Salve Regina Veni Sancte Spiritus and Alma Redemptoris Mater beatified in 1863 Pope Victor III c 1026 16 September 1087 Bishop of Rome beatified on 23 July 1887 Lanfranc c 1005 or 1010 24 May 1089 Archbishop of Canterbury declared Blessed by popular acclaim William of Hirsau c 1030 5 July 1091 abbot of Hirsau Abbey and father of the Hirsau Reforms declared Blessed by popular acclaim Robert of Arbrissel c 1045 c 1116 founder of Fontevraud Abbey declared Blessed by popular acclaim Simeone died 16 November 1140 fifth abbot of La Trinita della Cava beatified on 16 May 1928 Falcone died 6 June 1140 sixth abbot of La Trinita della Cava beatified on 16 May 1928 Berthold de Rachez of Garsten c 1060 27 July 1142 monk beatified on 8 January 1970 Rupert von Ottobeuren died 15 August 1145 prior beatified on 2 August 1963 Peter the Venerable c 1092 25 December 1156 the ninth abbot of Cluny beatified in 1862 Marino died 15 December 1170 seventh abbot of La Trinita della Cava beatified on 16 May 1928 Giovanni de Surdis Cacciafronte c 1125 16 March 1184 Bishop of Vicenza and martyr beatified on 30 March 1824 Pietro Acotanto died 23 September 1187 monk beatified on 8 August 1759 Benincasa died 10 January 1194 eighth abbot of La Trinita della Cava beatified on 16 May 1928 Pietro II died 13 March 1208 tenth abbot of La Trinita della Cava beatified on 16 May 1928 Balsamo died 24 November 1232 eleventh abbot of La Trinita della Cava beatified on 16 May 1928 Conrad of Ottobeuren died 27 July 1227 Abbot of Ottobeuren Abbey beatified in 1555 the Benedictine prior of Avignonet whose name is unknown died 28 May 1242 inquisitor martyred at Avignonet in a mission to eradicate the Cathar heresy beatified on 6 September 1866 Giordano Forzate c 1158 7 August 1248 monk beatified on 6 September 1769 Leonardo died 18 August 1255 twelfth abbot of La Trinita della Cava beatified on 16 May 1928 Leone II c 1239 19 August 1295 sixteenth abbot of La Trinita della Cava beatified on 16 May 1928 Pope Urban V c 1310 19 December 1370 Bishop of Rome beatified on 10 March 1870 Hugh Cook Faringdon died 14 November 1539 the last Abbot of Reading Abbey martyred during the English Reformation Dissolution of the Monasteries beatified on 13 May 1895 John Rugg died 14 November 1539 martyred alongside Abbot Hugh Faringdon during the English Reformation Dissolution of the Monasteries beatified on 13 May 1895 John Eynon died 14 November 1539 martyred alongside Abbot Hugh Faringdon during the English Reformation Dissolution of the Monasteries beatified on 13 May 1895 Richard Whiting c 1461 15 November 1539 the last Abbot of Glastonbury Abbey martyred during the English Reformation Dissolution of the Monasteries beatified on 13 May 1895 John Thorne and Roger James died 15 November 1539 martyred alongside Abbot Richard Whiting during the English Reformation Dissolution of the Monasteries beatified on 13 May 1895 John Beche died 1 December 1539 the last Abbot of Colchester Abbey martyred during the English Reformation Dissolution of the Monasteries beatified on 13 May 1895 Mark Barkworth c 1572 27 February 1601 martyred during the English Reformation beatified on 15 December 1929 George Gervase c 1571 11 April 1608 martyred during the English Reformation beatified on 15 December 1929 William Maurus Scott c 1579 30 May 1612 martyred during the English Reformation beatified on 15 December 1929 Philip Powell Morgan 2 February 1594 30 June 1646 martyred during the English Reformation beatified on 15 December 1929 Thomas Pickering c 1621 9 May 1679 martyred during the English Reformation as a victim of Titus Oates Popish Plot beatified on 15 December 1929 Louis Barreau de la Touche 6 June 1758 2 September 1792 martyr of the French Revolution beatified on 17 October 1926 Ambroise Augustin Chevreux 13 February 1728 2 September 1792 martyr of the French Revolution beatified on 17 October 1926 Rene Julien Massey c 1732 2 September 1792 martyr of the French Revolution beatified on 17 October 1926 Claude Richard 19 May 1741 9 August 1794 martyr of the French Revolution beatified on 1 October 1995 Louis Francois Lebrun 4 April 1744 20 August 1794 martyr of the French Revolution beatified on 1 October 1995 Giuseppe Benedetto Dusmet 15 August 1818 14 April 1894 Archbishop of Catania and Cardinal beatified on 25 September 1988 Tommaso Placido Riccardi 24 June 1844 25 March 1915 priest beatified on 5 December 1954 Joseph Columba Marmion 1 April 1858 30 January 1923 Irish priest beatified on 3 September 2000 Abel Angel Mauro Palazuelos Maruri and 17 Companions died between 26 July to 28 August 1936 Martyrs of the Spanish Civil War from El Pueyo beatified on 13 October 2013 Jose Anton Gomez and 3 Companions died between 25 September to 31 December 1936 Martyrs of the Spanish Civil War from Madrid beatified on 29 October 2016 Jaume Bernat Vendrell Olivella and 19 Companions died between 25 July 1936 to 15 February 1937 Martyrs of the Spanish Civil War from the Archdiocese of Tarragona beatified on 13 October 2013 Alfredo Ildefonso Schuster 18 January 1880 30 August 1954 Cardinal Archbishop of Milan beatified on 12 May 1996 Female Blesseds Irmgard of Chiemsee c 831 or 833 16 July 866 nun beatified on 17 July 1929 Gisela of Hungary c 985 7 May 1065 the first queen consort of Hungary by marriage to Saint Stephen I of Hungary beatified on 11 July 1975 Beatrice I d Este c 1192 10 May 1226 nun beatified on 19 November 1763 Beatrice II d Este c 1230 18 January 1262 nun beatified on 23 July 1774 Giuliana di Collalto c 1186 1 September 1262 nun beatified on 30 May 1753 Giustina Francucci Bezzoli c 1260 12 March 1319 professed religious beatified on 14 January 1891 Eustochio Lucrezia Bellini di Padova c 1444 13 February 1469 professed religious beatified on 22 March 1760 Giovanni Maria Bonomo 15 August 1606 1 March 1670 professed religious beatified on 9 June 1783 fr 12 August 1745 27 January 1794 martyr of the French Revolution from the Benedictine Nuns of Our Lady of Calvary beatified on 19 February 1984 fr 4 February 1741 6 July 1794 martyr of the French Revolution beatified on 10 May 1925 Gertrude Maria Luisa Angelica Prosperi 19 August 1799 13 September 1847 professed religious beatified on 12 November 2012 Maria Adeodata Pisani 29 December 1806 25 February 1855 professed religious beatified on 9 May 2001 Anna Felicia Maria Fortunata Viti 10 February 1827 20 November 1922 professed religious beatified on 8 October 1967 Colomba Gabriel 3 May 1858 24 September 1926 Ukrainian founder of the Benedictine Sisters of Charity beatified on 16 May 1993 Maria della Trinita Itala Mela 28 August 1904 29 April 1957 virgin and oblate of the order beatified on 10 June 2017 Hanna Helena Chrzanowska 7 October 1902 29 April 1973 nurse and oblate of the order beatified on 28 April 2018Other Notable BenedictinesThis article s factual accuracy is disputed Relevant discussion may be found on the talk page Please help to ensure that disputed statements are reliably sourced December 2021 Learn how and when to remove this message Bernard of Clairvaux 1090 1153 featured in a 13th century illuminated manuscript Self portrait of Matthew Paris c 1200 59 Abbot Suger c 1081 1135 in a medieval stained glass window Dom Perignon Popes Pope Sylvester II c 946 1003 r 999 1003 Pope Paschal II d 1118 r 1099 1118 Pope Gelasius II d 1119 r 1118 19 Pope Clement VI 1291 1352 r 1342 52 Pope Pius VII 1742 1823 r 1800 23 Servant of God Pope Gregory XVI 1765 1846 r 1831 46 Founders of abbeys and congregations and prominent reformers St Erkenwald Saxon Prince bishop and saint known as the Light of London Abbot of Montserrat Robert of Molesme c 1028 1111 Alberic of Citeaux d 1109 Stephen Harding d 1134 Bernard of Clairvaux 1090 1153 Laurent Benard 1573 1620 Prosper Gueranger 1805 1875 Jean Baptiste Muard 1809 1854 Boniface Wimmer 1809 1887 Maurus Wolter 1825 1890 Martin Marty 1834 1896 Andreas Amrhein 1844 1927 Lambert Beauduin 1873 1960 Anscar Vonier 1875 1938 supervised the reconstruction of Buckfast Abbey Scholars historians and spiritual writers Jonas of Bobbio 600 659 Guido of Arezzo 991 1050 Paul the Deacon c 720 99 Eadmer c 1060 c 1126 Florence of Worcester d 1118 Symeon of Durham d 1130 Jocelyn de Brakelond d 1211 Matthew Paris c 1200 1259 William of Malmesbury c 1095 c 1143 Gervase of Canterbury c 1141 c 1210 Roger of Wendover d 1236 Peter the Deacon d 1140 Adam Easton d 1397 Honore Bonet c 1340 c 1410 John Lydgate c 1370 c 1451 John Whethamstede d 1465 Johannes Trithemius 1462 1516 Louis de Blois 1506 66 Benedict van Haeften 1588 1648 Augustine Baker 1575 1641 Anthony Batt d 1651 Jean Mabillon 1632 1707 Mariano Armellino 1657 1737 Antoine Augustin Calmet 1672 1757 Magnoald Ziegelbauer 1689 1750 Marquard Herrgott 1694 1762 Pietro Luigi Galletti 1724 1790 Luigi Tosti 1811 97 Saint Oliver Plunkett archbishop and martyrJean Baptiste Francois Pitra 1812 89 Oswald William Moosmuller 1842 1901 Suitbert Baumer 1845 94 Francis Aidan Gasquet 1846 1929 Fernand Cabrol 1855 1937 Germain Morin 1861 1946 Henri Quentin 1872 1935 John Chapman 1865 1933 Cuthbert Butler 1858 1934 Maurists Members of the Congregation of Saint Maur a prerevolutionary French congregation of Benedictines known for their scholarship Nicolas Hugues Menard 1585 1644 Luc d Achery 1609 85 Antoine Joseph Mege 1625 91 Thierry Ruinart 1657 1709 Francois Lamy 1636 1711 Pierre Coustant 1654 1721 Edmond Martene 1654 1739 Ursin Durand 1682 1771 Bernard de Montfaucon 1655 1741 Rene Prosper Tassin 1697 1777 Bishops and martyrs Abbot Suger c 1081 1151 Sigebert Buckley c 1520 c 1610 Gabriel Gifford 1554 1629 Philip Michael Ellis 1652 1726 Charles Walmesley 1722 97 William Placid Morris 1794 1872 John Polding 1794 1877 William Bernard Ullathorne 1806 89 Roger Vaughan 1834 83 Guglielmo Sanfelice d Acquavilla 1834 1897 Joseph Pothier 1835 1923 John Cuthbert Hedley 1837 1915 Domenico Serafini 1852 1918 Placidus Nkalanga 1918 2015 Twentieth century Cardinal Schuster Lambert Beauduin 1873 1960 Bede Griffiths 1906 1993 Paul Augustin Mayer 1911 2010 Hans Hermann Groer 1919 2003 Basil Hume 1923 1999 Willigis Jager 1925 2020 Rembert Weakland 1927 2022 Daniel M Buechlein 1938 2018 Jerome Hanus 1940 Anselm Grun 1945 Knut Ansgar Nelson 1906 1990 Benedictine Dames Dame Catherine Gascoigne Adele Garnier Alice Henley died 1470 Magdalena Morteska 1554 1631 Catherine Gascoigne 1601 1676 Gertrude More 1606 1633 Barbara Constable 1617 1674 fr 1838 1924 Laurentia McLachlan 1866 1953 Margit Slachta or Schlachta 1884 1974 Werburg Welch 1898 1990 Felicitas Corrigan 1908 2003 Hildelith Cumming 1909 1990 Mary Boulding 1929 2009 Joan Chittister 1936 Thomas Welder 1940 2020 Noella Marcellino 1951 Teresa Forcades 1966 Oblates Benedictine Oblates endeavor to embrace the spirit of the Benedictine vow in their own life in the world Oblates are affiliated with a particular monastery Joris Karl Huysmans 1848 1907 Jacques Maritain 1882 1973 Romano Guardini 1885 1968 Dorothy Day 1897 1980 Walker Percy 1916 1990 Kathleen Norris 1947 See alsoCatholicism portal Dom Pierre Perignon Benedictine Confederation Catholic religious order Cistercians French Romanesque architecture Sisters of Social Service TrappistsReferencesAlmond Joseph Cuthbert Order of St Benedict The Catholic Encyclopedia Vol 11 New York Robert Appleton Company 1911 16 July 2024 Almond Joseph Cuthbert Olivetans The Catholic Encyclopedia Vol 11 New York Robert Appleton Company 1911 10 April 2019 Mary Richard Boo OSB and Joan M Braun OSB Emerging from the Shadows St Scholastica in Medieval Women Monastics Miriam Schmitt OSB and Linda Kulzer OSB eds The Liturgical Press Collegeville 1996 ISBN 9780814622926 Stanford P 2003 Dame Felicitas Corrigan UK Guardian Retrieved 5 October 2023 Dame Felicitas the title Dame is given to English Benedictine nuns in preference to Sister Alston Cyprian 1907 Benedictine Order In Herbermann Charles ed Catholic Encyclopedia Vol 2 New York Robert Appleton Company Oliver OSB Richard A Brief History of the Benedictine Order OSB org The Benedictines An Introduction by Abbot Primate Jerome Theisen OSB Liturgical Press www osb org Archived from the original on 26 March 2023 Retrieved 19 July 2021 Huddleston Gilbert Roger 1912 Scriptorium In Herbermann Charles ed Catholic Encyclopedia Vol 13 New York Robert Appleton Company One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Butler Edward Cuthbert 1911 Camaldulians In Chisholm Hugh ed Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 5 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 79 80 Butler Edward Cuthbert 1911 Cistercians In Chisholm Hugh ed Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 6 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 393 395 One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Ott Michael 1908 Commendatory Abbot In Herbermann Charles ed Catholic Encyclopedia Vol 4 New York Robert Appleton Company Robinson I S Henry IV of Germany 1056 1106 Cambridge University Press 2003 p 126ISBN 9780521545907 Butler Alban 1845 The Lives of the Fathers Martyrs and Other Principal Saints Volume 3 Dublin p 218 Abbaye de Fleury Archived from the original on 16 August 2010 Retrieved 19 June 2010 Mother Mectilde De Bar Silverstream Priory Fundacja w Warszawie mechtylda info in Polish 18 December 2013 Retrieved 2 September 2020 History I st benoit du lac com Archived from the original on 30 March 2009 Chadwick Owen 1998 A History of the Popes 1830 1914 Clarendon Press pp 495 ISBN 978 0 19 826922 9 Wootton and Fishbourne Ryde shalfleet net 4 August 2013 Retrieved on 7 September 2013 RGM 2005 OCSO Citeaux net 28 February 1947 Retrieved on 7 September 2013 Tyburn Foundress Archived 5 February 2012 at the Wayback Machine at Tyburn Convent official website Retrieved 23 February 2012 Tyburn Martyrs Archived 21 January 2012 at the Wayback Machine at Tyburn Convent official website Retrieved 23 February 2012 Clark James Midgley The Abbey of St Gall as a Centre of Literature amp Art Chapter XII CUP Archive 1926 1926 Christen Beat April 2020 Auf den Tag genau vor 900 Jahren wurde das Kloster Engelberg gegrundet Luzerner Zeitung in German Retrieved 18 October 2022 Cross F L Livingstone E A eds 1997 The Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church 3rd ed Oxford University Press US p 514 Dom Bruno Hicks 2009 The Benedictines Archived from the original on 5 November 2017 Retrieved 15 February 2015 Colin Battell OSB 2 December 2006 Spirituality on the beach The Tablet pp 18 19 The late Cardinal Basil Hume was Abbot of Ampleforth Abbey before being appointed Archbishop of Westminster Martin Christopher 2007 A Glimpse of Heaven Catholic Churches in England and Wales London English Heritage Examines the abbeys rebuilt after 1850 by benefactors among the Catholic aristocracy and recusant squirearchy mainly Benedictine but including a Cistercian Abbey at Mount St Bernard by Pugin and a Carthusian Charterhouse in Sussex There is a review of book by Richard Lethbridge Monuments to Catholic confidence The Tablet 10 February 2007 27 Mian Ridge 12 November 2005 Prinknash monks downsize The Tablet p 34 History Saint Louis Abbey History The English Benedictine Congregation benedictines org uk Archived from the original on 11 February 2015 Retrieved 11 February 2015 HOME Glastonbury Monastery Somerset Mysite Rees Daniel 2000 Anglican Monasticism In Johnston William ed Encyclopedia of Monasticism New York Fitzroy Dearborn Publisher p 29 ISBN 1 57958 090 4 Hillaby Joe 1994 1996 The ritual child murder accusation its dissemination and Harold of Gloucester Jewish Historical Studies 34 69 109 JSTOR 29779954 Kaur Nirmal 2005 History of Education Mittal Publications p 44 ISBN 81 7099 984 7 Wormald Francis Wright C E 1958 The English Library before 1700 London The Athlone Press p 15 via University of London Savage Ernest 1912 Old English Libraries London Methuen amp Co Ltd History of Belmont Abbey Belmont Abbey North Carolina Archived from the original on 16 April 2018 Retrieved 4 November 2017 St Benedict 1981 RB 1980 the rule of St Benedict in Latin and English with notes Translated by Fry Timothy Collegeville MN The Liturgical Press pp 136 141 ISBN 0 8146 1211 3 OL 4255653M The Benedictine Congregations and Federations of North America in the Benedictine Confederation www osb org Archived from the original on 3 September 2017 Retrieved 24 November 2015 The Defining Features of the Benedictine Order Durham World Heritage Site Order of Saint Benedict Saint John s Abbey Customary of Mount Michael Abbey Hembry Phyllis 1990 The English Spa 1560 1815 A Social History Fairleigh Dickinson Univ Press ISBN 9780838633915 Bradley Ian 2012 Water A Spiritual History Bloomsbury Publishing ISBN 9781441167675 Benedictine Abbeys and Priories in the U S Encyclopedia com www encyclopedia com Retrieved 25 April 2022 Directory of OSB Congregations OSB DOT ORG Retrieved 25 April 2022 The Benedictine Confederation OSB org Retrieved 24 October 2018 St Benedict amp The Order Benedictine Monks Simpson Fr Benedict 2016 Directory of Parishes The Western Rite Communities of the Russian Orthodox Church Outside Russia Retrieved 26 August 2019 Holy Monasteries of Our Lady and Saint Laurence Antiochian Orthodox Christian Archdiocese of North America Western Rite Vicariate The Benedictine Fellowship of Saint Laurence Archived from the original on 4 April 2018 Retrieved 10 March 2018 Who we are Saint Augustine s House 2018 Retrieved 26 August 2019 Concession of Mass newsaints faithweb com Retrieved 6 March 2025 Cite error The named reference Catholic2 was invoked but never defined see the help page Cite error The named reference Catholic5 was invoked but never defined see the help page Spanish Civil War 37 newsaints faithweb com Retrieved 25 February 2025 Spanish Civil War 10 newsaints faithweb com Retrieved 25 February 2025 French Revolution 04 newsaints faithweb com Retrieved 25 February 2025 French Revolution newsaints faithweb com Retrieved 25 February 2025 Cite error The named reference Catholic4 was invoked but never defined see the help page Cite error The named reference Catholic3 was invoked but never defined see the help page Bishop Gervas Placidus Nkalanga OSB of Hanga Abbey Celebrates 50 Years as a Bishop Hanga News 9 June 2011 928 Secular institutes Catechism of the Catholic Church Part 1 Section 2 Chapter 3 Article 9 Paragraph 4 Retrieved 26 August 2019 Further readingDom Columba Marmion Christ the Ideal of the Monk Spiritual Conferences on the Monastic and Religious Life Engl edition London 1926 trsl from the French by a nun of Tyburn Convent Mariano Dell Omo Storia del monachesimo occidentale dal medioevo all eta contemporanea Il carisma di san Benedetto tra VI e XX secolo Jaca Book Milano 2011 ISBN 978 88 16 30493 2 Abbey s v Benedictine Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 1 11th ed 1911 p 13 External linksWikimedia Commons has media related to Order of Saint Benedict Official website Confoederatio Benedictina Ordinis Sancti Benedicti the Benedictine Confederation of Congregations archived 4 July 2008 Links of the Congregations Archived 24 August 2018 at the Wayback Machine Saint Vincent Archabbey archived 29 June 2016 Boniface WIMMER The Alliance for International Monasticism Benedictines Abbey of Dendermonde in ODIS Online Database for Intermediary Structures Benedictine rule for nuns in Middle English Manuscript ca 1320 at The Library of Congress