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Encyclopedia > Friary
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Buddhist monastery near Tibet

A monastery is the habitation of monks. Originally: a hermit's cell.


Christian monasteries are also called abbey, priory, charterhouse, friary, and preceptory


The habitation of nuns is also called a convent.


The communal life of a monastery is called cenobitic, as opposed to the anachoretic life of an hermit.

Contents

Etymology

The word monastery comes from the Greek "monasterion", from the root "monos" = one, or alone (originally all Christian monks were hermits).


In England the word monasterium was also applied to the habitation of a bishop and the cathedral clergy who lived apart from the lay community. Thus in English-language usage, cathedrals, which were never monasteries, developed named such as York Minster, and abbeys could likewise be termed "minster" such as Westminster Abbey. See the entry cathedral.


For a discussion of the history and development of monasteries see monasticism and abbey.


Christian monasteries

Christian cenobitic monasticism started in Egypt. Originally, all Christian monks were hermits, and especially in the Middle East this continued to be very common until the decline of Syrian Christianity in the late Middle Ages. But not everybody is fit for solitary life, and numerous cases of hermits losing their grips are reported.


The need for some form of organized spiritual guidance was obvious, and around 300 St. Anthony started to organize his many followers in what was to become the first Christian monastery. Soon the Egyptian desert abounded with similar institutions.


The idea caught on, and other places followed:

  • Mar Awgin founded a monastery on Mt. Izla above Nisibis in Mesopotamia (~350), and from this monastery the cenobitic tradition spread in Mesopotamia, Persia, Armenia, Georgia and even India and China.
  • Mar Saba organized the monks of the Judean Desert in a monastery close to Betlehem (483), and this is considered the mother of all monsteries of the Eastern Orthodox churches.

Roman Catholic monasteries

A number of distinct monastic orders developed within Roman Catholicism. Eastern Orthodoxy does not have a system of individual Orders, per se.

Augustinian canons ('The Black Canons'), which evolved from the Priests Canons who would normally work with the Bishop: now living together with him as monks under St. Augustine's rule
Augustinian friars
Benedictine monks ('The Black Monks') , founded by St. Benedict, stresses manual labor in a self-subsistent monastery.
Bridgettine
Carmelite friars ('The White Friars'), Contemplative Order
Carthusian monks
Celestines
Cistercian monks ('The White Monks')
Cluniac monks
Dominican friars, ('The Black Friars'/'The Friars Preachers') Mendicant (preaching) order. They blend the active and the contemplative life: namely they practice contemplation, and go out to preach the fruits of that contemplation and encourage others to contemplate.
Franciscan friars ('The Grey Friars'/'Friars Minor'), another Mendicant order, they were charged with preaching to the poor.
Gilbertine
Poor Clares
Premonstratensian canons ('The White Canons')
Tironensian monks ('The Grey Monks')
Trinitarians ('The Red Friars')
Trappist
Redemptorist
Christian Brothers
Valliscaulian monks
Visitation Sisters
Knights Templar
Knights Hospitaller

The Society of Jesus (Jesuits) is a religious order, having vows; but, it is not a monastic order, strictly speaking, as all its members live in the world.


Famous Catholic monasteries include:

Famous dissolved monasteries:

Orthodox Christian monasteries

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One of the 20 major monasteries on Mount Athos

In the Eastern Orthodox Church, monks and nuns follow a similar ascetic discipline. Unlike Roman Catholics, there is only one form of monasticism for the Orthodox. Monastics, male or female, live lives away from the world, in order to pray for the world. They do not run hospitals and orphanages, they do not teach or care for the sick; it is expected for lay people to do these things to work out their own salvation. Monasteries can be very large or very small. The largest monasteries can hold many thousands of monks and are called lavras. Small monasteries are often called “sketes” and usually only have one elder and 2 or 3 disciples. There are higher levels to ascetic practice but the monks who practice these do not live in monasteries, but alone. When monks live together, work together, and pray together, following the directions of the abbot and the elder monks, this is called a cenobium. The idea behind this is when you put many men together, like rocks with sharp edges, their “sharpness” becomes worn away and they become smooth and polished.


One of the great centers of Orthodox monasticism is the Holy Mountain (also called Mt. Athos) in Greece, an isolated, self-governing peninsula approximately 20 miles long and 5 miles wide (similar to the Vatican, being a separate government), administered by the heads of the 20 major monasteries, and dotted with hundreds of smaller monasteries, sketes, and hesicaterons. Even today the population of the Holy Mountain numbers in the tens of thousands of monastics (men only) and cannot be visited except by men with special permission granted by both the Greek government and the government of the Holy Mountain itself.


Other famous Orthodox monasteries include:

Buddhist monasteries

External links

  • Photographs of the 11-15th century monastery at Sant Miquel del Fai (http://www.lodgephoto.com/galleries/ES/santmiquel), in Spain

See also

monasticism, list of Buddhist temples, pilgrimage


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  Results from FactBites:
 
The Friary (557 words)
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Membership in the Friary is open to men and women of 18 years of age or older, and we do not discriminate on the basis of race, religion or sexual preference.
The Friary, by Adeptus Minor Recognition, is certifying that this particular magician is capable and skilled in the esoteric arts and philosophy, and has all the tools necessary to begin to effect the "Great Work," The Knowledge and Conversation of the Holy Guardian Angel.
Bonamargy Friary - Ballycastle - County Antrim - Northern Ireland (642 words)
Other stories tell of her murder on the stone stairs leading up to the second floor of the friary and that she still haunts these steps at night, a small cross with a hole through the centre near the west gable of the chapel is believed to mark her grave.
Another story tell of the friars, before fleeing from the friary during one of the many raids, having buried the friary's valuables 'at the furthest reach of the light from a candle burning in the east window of the chapel'.
The friary is steeped in a wealth of history from being attacked and burnt to it being used as a billet and stables for soldiers.
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