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Cistercian |
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Cistercianor White Monk or BernardineMember of a Roman Catholic monastic order founded by St. Stephen Harding (1098) at Cîteaux (Latin, Cistercium), Burgundy, by Benedictines dissatisfied with their abbey's laxity. Cistercians were severely ascetic, rejected feudal revenues, and engaged in manual labor. Uniform rules applied to all houses, and all abbots were to meet annually at Cîteaux. St. Bernard de Clairvaux founded 68 abbeys in his lifetime. Discipline declined as the order grew, and Cistercians disappeared from northern Europe after the Reformation. The order underwent reforms in the 16th–17th century; members of the reformed order are popularly known as Trappists after the abbey of La Trapp. Until the 1960s, they slept, ate, and worked in perpetual silence. The original order, which underwent more moderate reforms, also survives. Cistercian a. a member of a Christian order of monks and nuns founded in 1098, which follows an especially strict form of the Benedictine rule b. (as modifier): a Cistercian monk How to thank TFD for its existence? Tell a friend about us, add a link to this page, add the site to iGoogle, or visit webmaster's page for free fun content. |
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Bernardine of Siena Catholic Church, all in Woodland Hills; Temple Judea in Tarzana; New Christ Memorial Church of God in Christ in San Fernando; and Calvary Baptist Church on West 59th Street in Los Angeles. From Britain's historical fiction author Bernardine Evaristo to the Southern-raised writer ZZ Packer, the participants of the three-day festival vary as widely as the voices and cultures they represent. 8), in which portraits of Cistercian clerics are pres ented in the guise of Saint Bernard, bespeak an intense and pervading devotion to Mary and to Bernardine ideals. |
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