The Medieval Monastery
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About this ebook
Monasteries are among the most intriguing and enduring symbols of Britain's medieval heritage. Simultaneously places of prayer and spirituality, power and charity, learning and invention, they survive today as haunting ruins, great houses and as some of our most important cathedrals and churches.
This book examines the growth of monasticism and the different orders of monks; the architecture and administration of monasteries; the daily life of monks and nuns; the art of monasteries and their libraries; their role in caring for the poor and sick; their power and wealth; their decline and suppression; and their ruin and rescue.
With beautiful photographs, it illustrates some of Britain's finest surviving monastic buildings such as the cloisters of Gloucester Cathedral and the awe-inspiring ruins of Rievaulx Abbey in North Yorkshire.
Roger Rosewell
Roger Rosewell is the News and Features Editor of Vidimus, the international online magazine about medieval stained glass. Educated at St Edmund Hall, Oxford University, he is the author of an award-winning study of medieval wall paintings and is a member of the Royal Photographic Society.
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- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5
Sep 27, 2021
Brief, clear and interesting. A good book for the casual reader - Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5
Apr 25, 2021
A liberal arts education is vital for understanding the world. It is a shame that specialization is emphasized.
Book preview
The Medieval Monastery - Roger Rosewell
INTRODUCTION
FOR NEARLY A THOUSAND YEARS , religiously devout men and women in medieval Britain joined monasteries in the hope that, if they separated themselves from others and followed the words of Jesus in the Bible – ‘Everyone that hath forsaken houses, or brethren or lands for my name’s sake’ – they would find ‘everlasting life’.
This book explores the purpose of those monasteries and describes the daily life of monks and nuns. It explains the differences between the four Monastic Orders (Benedictine, Cluniac, Carthusian and Cistercian), and outlines how monasteries were designed and managed. Separate chapters focus on nunneries and the various quasi-monastic orders. The book concludes with an account of the Dissolution of the Monasteries and a gazetteer where medieval abbeys and priories can be visited today.
The first monks were third-century Christian hermits in North Africa who sought a contemplative life in desert caves or mud huts until they began to form small communities (monasteries) for mutual protection and support. In Britain the earliest recorded of these monastery-type settlements date from the fifth century at Tintagel (Cornwall), Wales as early as AD 500 and Scotland in AD 563 when monks from Ireland colonised Iona, a small island off the west coast in the Inner Hebrides.
The left lobe of this mid-thirteenth-century quatrefoil at Croyland Abbey (Benedictine: formerly Lincolnshire, now Cambridgeshire) shows the figure of St Guthlac with the Anglo-Saxon prince who endowed the Abbey.
The arrival of Italian priests in England on a papal mission to convert the Anglo-Saxons to Christianity and their subsequent founding of a monastery church at Canterbury (Kent) around AD 597 redirected those efforts and laid the foundations for the great abbeys of medieval Britain.
Enriched by lavish donations from pious kings and landowners, by the sixteenth century their successors had amassed huge estates and owned around twenty-five per cent of England and Wales.
Fifteenth-century tomb effigy of King Athelstan (d. AD 939), who endowed Malmesbury Abbey (Benedictine: Wiltshire).
While their spiritual motivations may have been similar, the lives of monks towards the end of the Middle Ages were considerably more comfortable than those of their predecessors who had entered monasteries three hundred years earlier. Paradoxically, such wealth also made them dangerously vulnerable when the clamour of the protestant Reformation merged with the avarice of Henry VIII (reigned 1509–47). The upshot was a wave of upheaval and change that saw all but one of the kingdom’s monasteries dissolved in 1540 – their buildings sold, their inhabitants evicted, their buildings reduced to what William Shakespeare (1564–1616) called ‘bare ruined choirs’.
Byland Abbey ruins (Cistercian: Yorkshire), built in the thirteenth century. Note the remains of the mosaic tile pavement.
Detail of a Benedictine monk on the tomb of Bishop William Wykeham (d. 1404), Winchester Cathedral Priory (Benedictine: Hampshire).
THE FOUR MONASTIC ORDERS
BETWEEN THE SIXTH AND TWELFTH CENTURIES , a variety of monastic networks evolved across Europe which eventually consolidated into four main Orders or organisations. Those monasteries ruled by an abbot were called abbeys; those governed by a subordinate prior, priories.
THE BENEDICTINES (BLACK MONKS)
By far the largest and wealthiest of these Orders were the Benedictines. They took their name from a set of rules for communal living which had been adapted from an earlier text by the sixth-century Italian abbot, St Benedict of Nursia (c.480–c.547). These rules – the Regula Benedicti – spelled out how monks should spend their time between spiritual and physical work, what they should eat, what clothing they should wear, and much more. The rules were simultaneously humane, devout, practical … and very demanding: a framework not just for daily living but an act of submission which defined the essence of monastic life itself. They were called Black monks after the colour of their loose-fitting tunics (habits) which symbolised humility.
Many monasteries added to the Regula Benedicti by producing their own books of customs and rules known as ‘customaries’, prescribing procedures for every contingency: what should happen if a monk had a nose-bleed during a service, how a monk should tidy his bed after getting up, how a diner should hold a cup, for example.
Although Benedictine ideas were known in England from at least the seventh century, none of the first wave of Anglo-Saxon monasteries such as St Augustine’s Canterbury (Kent), Glastonbury (Somerset), Malmesbury (Wiltshire) and Wearmouth/Jarrow (Northumbria) followed St Benedict’s edicts to the letter. Other customs and traditions also thrived, in part because these monasteries were also important institutions in the life of the church and of the kings, who provided their land and wealth. Many became important centres for the preservation, study and dissemination of classical and Christian culture.
Such lavish patronage inevitably made monasteries irresistible targets when Viking pirates launched repeated raids on Britain between the eighth and tenth centuries. The first to suffer was Lindisfarne on the Northumbrian coast, which was plundered in AD 793. Over the next century scores of others were burned and looted;