A SHORT HISTORY OF
MONKS
AND MONASTERIES
_By_ ALFRED WESLEY WISHART
Sometime _Fellow_ in _Church History_ in _The University of Chicago_
ALBERT BRANDT, PUBLISHER TRENTON, NEW JERSEY MDCCCC
1900
PREFACE
The aim of this volume is to sketch the history of the monastic institution from its origin to its overthrow in the Reformation period, for although the institution is by no means now extinct, its power was practically broken in the sixteenth century, and no new orders of importance or new types have arisen since that time.
A little reflection will enable one to understand the great difficulties in the execution of so broad a purpose. It was impracticable in the majority of instances to consult original sources, although intermediate authorities have been studied as widely as possible and the greatest caution has been exercised to avoid those errors which naturally arise from the use of such avenues of information. It was also deemed unadvisable to burden the work with numerous notes and citations. Such notes as were necessary to a true unfolding of the subject will be found in the appendix.
A presentation of the salient features of the whole history was essential to a proper conception of the orderly development of the ascetic ideal. To understand the monastic institution one must not only study the isolated anchorite seeking a victory over a sinful self in the Egyptian desert or the monk in the secluded cloister, but he must also trace the fortunes of ascetic organizations, involving multitudes of men, vast aggregations of wealth, and surviving the rise and fall of empires. Almost every phase of human life is encountered in such an undertaking. Attention is divided between hermits, beggars, diplomatists, statesmen, professors, missionaries and pontiffs. It is hoped the critical or literary student will appreciate the immense difficulties of an attempt to paint so vast a scene on so small a canvas. No other claim is made upon his benevolence.
There is a process of writing history which Trench describes as "a moral whitewashing of such things as in men's sight were as blackamoors before." Religious or temperamental prejudice often obscures the vision and warps the judgment of even the most scholarly minds. Conscious of this infirmity in the ablest writers of history it would be absurd to claim complete exemption from the power of personal bias. It is sincerely hoped, however, that the strongest passion in the preparation of this work has been that commendable predilection for truth and justice which should characterize every historical narrative, and that, whatever other shortcomings may be found herein, there is an absence of that unreasonable suspicion, not to say hatred, of everything monastic, which mars many otherwise valuable contributions to monastic history.
The author's grateful acknowledgment is made, for kindly services and critical suggestions, to Eri Baker Hulbert, D.D., LL.D., Dean of the Divinity School, and Professor and Head of the Department of Church History; Franklin Johnson, D.D., LL.D., Professor of Church History and Homiletics; Benjamin S. Terry, Ph.D., Professor of Medieval and English History; and Ralph C.H. Catterall, Instructor in Modern History; all of The University of Chicago. Also to James M. Whiton, Ph.D., of the Editorial Staff of "The Outlook"; Ephraim Emerton, Ph.D., Winn Professor of Ecclesiastical History in Harvard University; S. Giffard Nelson, L.H.D., of Brooklyn, New York; A.H. Newman, D.D., LL.D., Professor of Church History in McMaster University of Toronto, Ontario; and Paul Van Dyke, D.D., Professor of History in Princeton University.
Table of contents (by pages)
- 1: A Short History of Monks and Monasteries
- 2: 106 The Spread of Monasticism in Europe
- 3: Jean Joseph Weerts was born at Roubaix Nord
- 4: He was a son of Luciano Bozzoni
- 5: English Monasticism Its Rise and Influence
- 6: Each tended toward ascetic practices
- 7: His whole plan singularly suggests monasticism
- 8: An ascetic body similar to the Essenes
- 9: Christian monasticism was slowly evolved
- 10: They interpreted them in favor of a monastic mode of life
- 11: Jerome wrote the story of his life
- 12: For hours Anthony lay at the door craving admission
- 13: Knowing the character of Athanasius
- 14: But the hero resists the fiend with fastings and faith
- 15: Overcome by a pitiful weakness for cleanliness
- 16: Prayed the admiring worshipers
- 17: Came to carry Simeon to the skies
- 18: I pass now to the cenobitic C life
- 19: The hermit Abraham said to John Cassian
- 20: He added to the three monastic vows a fourth
- 21: The brilliant champion of Christian monasticism
- 22: The story was carried to the Eternal City by Athanasius
- 23: Squandered princely incomes in a single night
- 24: They walk on tiptoe across a damp road
- 25: These men despise luxury and contemn riches
- 26: Disgusted with his self seeking career
- 27: Ending disastrously at Antioch
- 28: Hear him describe the home of Bonosus
- 29: Jerome vividly portrays his own spiritual conflicts
- 30: Jerome was always fond of the classics
- 31: Illustrious Here rests the lady Paula
- 32: Marcella lavished her wealth upon the poor
- 33: Hermit life was unsuited to women
- 34: And Professor Dill would gladly believe it to be exaggerated
- 35: Jerome says I praise wedlock
- 36: And Chrysostom was banished from Constantinople
- 37: Did much to further monasticism
- 38: And that monasticism arose some time in the fifth century
- 39: But Jovinian was far in advance of his age
- 40: Continuing his journey with Romanus
- 41: The Lombards destroyed the buildings
- 42: As Benedict described his monastery
- 43: As applied to the Benedictines
- 44: Carlyle quotes Jocelin on Abbot Samson
- 45: Wherever a Benedictine house arose
- 46: Followed the example of Cassiodorus
- 47: In every rich valley arose a Benedictine abbey
- 48: He found monasticism had preceded him
- 49: Principally in Ireland and Wales
- 50: He indignantly charged Columba with theft
- 51: The monastic vows were sadly neglected
- 52: The monastery began with twelve monks under Bruno
- 53: Thus forming The Congregation of Cluny
- 54: In his elaborate History of Sacerdotal Celibacy
- 55: When Dunstan commenced his reforms
- 56: The Carthusians differed in many respects from other orders
- 57: So named because their mother house was at Citeaux Latin
- 58: The monastic institution keeps on crumbling
- 59: The Hospitallers wore black mantles with white crosses
- 60: To convince the world that monasticism was not dead
- 61: He returned somewhat crestfallen to Assisi
- 62: The kneeling Francis fervently responded
- 63: His hermit's tunic appearing too delicate
- 64: He giveth you your plumes of down
- 65: Francis had retired to Mount Alverno
- 66: Not only because he accepts the evidence
- 67: The Rule of 1210 was thoroughly Franciscan
- 68: Half way between Osma and Aranda in Old Castile
- 69: To tell the whole story of this Albigensian movement
- 70: Special courts for trying heretics were established
- 71: Dominic now made his headquarters at Rome
- 72: At this juncture the Mendicant friars appeared
- 73: And formed a new sect called the Fratricelli
- 74: It began in 1228 and did not end until 1259
- 75: Humorous discourse of the beggar friar
- 76: The Jesuit discards the monastic gown
- 77: Loyola went on a pilgrimage to the Holy Land
- 78: Ignatius and his companions met at Rome
- 79: Loyola cited the obedience of Abraham
- 80: Will you be loyal to Beelzebub
- 81: As the Jesuits made war upon individual authority
- 82: He describes Loyola as the knightly
- 83: The Jesuits still toiled on with marvelous zeal
- 84: Loyola is the last type of monastic life
- 85: As embodied in the monastic institution
- 86: A burner of heretics yet a heretic himself
- 87: The Lollards had ceased to exist
- 88: While the courage of this friar is unquestioned
- 89: And to Elizabeth as his successor
- 90: Channey says the year 1533 was ushered in with signs
- 91: And not because the monks were immoral
- 92: Commanded the attention of Cardinal Wolsey
- 93: Dean Layton wrote the most disgusting letters to Cromwell
- 94: Abbots bought and sold land in a fraudulent manner
- 95: Until even the monastic hospitals
- 96: And the clergy for the supreme power
- 97: Cromwell acted most cautiously
- 98: The king was granted the revenues of the monasteries
- 99: Desecration and wanton destruction
- 100: The defenders of monasticism proceed with fervid
- 101: Had confiscated alien priories
- 102: English monasteries and churches were given to foreigners
- 103: The monks stood for opposition to reform
- 104: Into whose hands the monastic lands fell
- 105: The monks were forced to retire from the field
- 106: From many a proud monastic pile
- 107: The primary cause of all monasticism
- 108: Turning now to Christian monasticism
- 109: Toward retirement and solitude
- 110: When Christian monasticism came into being
- 111: Without entirely abandoning his cloistral life
- 112: Does the new age reject monastic seclusion
- 113: Living in times when wealth was abused
- 114: In defending the celibacy of existing religious orders
- 115: It was Christianity in monasticism
- 116: Monasticism was the friend and the foe of true religion
- 117: Even in the best days of monasticism
- 118: Eulogizes the solitude of the monastic cell
- 119: Whatever may be thought of later monasticism
- 120: The legislative enactments against heretics
- 121: The general effect of monasticism on the state is
- 122: Until the right arm of monasticism was struck down
- 123: While many monks fled with the multitude
- 124: Monasticism and Religion No doctrine in theology
- 125: That became visionary and introspective
- 126: Stripped of its rigid vows of celibacy
- 127: Modern monasticism has forsaken the column of St
- 128: Who wander from monastery to monastery
- 129: Follows after matins and lauds
- 130: The total number of monasteries suppressed in Italy
- 131: On Dominic and the Albigensian crusade
- 132: Comments on his visit to Monte Cassino
- 133: On exaggerations of monasticism
- 134: Quarrel over the vow of poverty
- 135: Lecky on his use of monastic funds
- 136: Organizes monastic brotherhood
- 137: Lombards destroy Monte Cassino
- 138: On monks and natural affections
- 139: On the motives and spirit of Oriental asceticism
- 140: Affected by Anthony's biography
- 141: On monasteries as centers of learning
- 142: See Franciscans and Dominicans
