160 likes | 310 Views
Episode 6: Early Western Monasticism. Music: Gregorian Chant and/or St. Patrick’s Hymn. TIMELINE. Theme: two monastic developments that evangelized Europe and preserved ancient education after fall of Roman Empire in the West.
E N D
Episode 6: Early Western Monasticism Music: Gregorian Chant and/or St. Patrick’s Hymn
TIMELINE • Theme: two monastic developments that evangelized Europe and preserved ancient education after fall of Roman Empire in the West
Religious and Educational Light in the Darkness: European Monasteries • Benedictines • Irish Monasticism
Waypoint: Iona Scotland • Iona is an island off west coast of Scotland • Early expansion of Irish monasticism • Founded by St. Columba c. 563 • Iona quickly became leading center of Irish monasticism • Center of learning • Important scriptorium • Missionary activities to England and Northern Europe
Irish Church • Ireland never part of Roman Empire; • not affected by 5th, 6th C barbarian invasions • St. Patrick (d. 490) returned to Ireland from England after having been a slave in Ireland to preach Christianity • Organizes parishes around monasteries • Makes Latin the scholarly language in Ireland • Feast day, March 17 • Irish monasteries are cutoff from Roman world due to barbarian invasions, develop different customs • Different calculation for Easter • Discipline (penance, private confession) • Organization: abbots rather than bishops • In early Sixth Century Irish monks led by St. Columba establish a monastery at Iona, Scotland
6th C Italian Monastic Developments • St. Benedict of Nursia (480-547) • Greatly influenced by St. Pachomius • Established an order of Monks, now known as Benedictines, governed by his Rule • Feast Day July 11 • Sister, Scholastica, founded an order of nuns to follow the Rule • Feast Day February 10 • Most popular religious order in West until 13th C
Waypoint: Monte Cassino • Monastery established by St, Benedict c. 530 • High mountain outside of Rome to try to remove monks from war between Justinian and German barbarians • Benedict died at Monte Cassino in 543 • Monks lived by Benedict’s Rule • Benedictines and various off-shoots dominated Western monasticism
Development of Christian Monasticism: Egyptian Monasticism Early 4th C • Desert Monks (from Greek for solitary), primarily in Egypt: anchorites withdrawn from society • Most famous: Anthony (251-356), • St. Athanasius, Bishop of Alexandria, wrote a very influential life of Anthony, example: Augustine Confessions Book VIII • Communal monasticism • Many attracted to this way of life, come together in groups • Rule of St. Pachomius (286 – 346) • Pachomius’ sister, Mary, established an Egyptian monastery for women with their own Rule
What’s a Rule • Prescribes the way of life for the community • Includes what prayers are said when • Defines balance between work, study, prayer • Community organization (abbot, monks, novices) and how leaders are selected • Process for acceptance into community • How new communities are created • Relation between community and diocese
Key Historical Events 5th Century • Increasingly West was under pressure from northern tribes (Goths, Visigoths, Vandals) • Goths sacked Rome in 410 • St. Augustine dies in 430 as Hippos is besieged by Vandals • Center of power in Roman Empire is only in Constantinople • Attila the Hun reaches Rome in 452, persuaded by Pope St. Leo the Great not to sack Rome • Last Roman emperor in West abdicated in 476 • Europe enters a period ruled by warring Germanic tribes • Tremendous social and cultural disruption
6th and 7th Century Monastic Missionary Activities in Western Europe • Parallel, independent missionary activities from Rome and Ireland (Iona) • Irish monks in 6th Century travel far beyond Ireland as missionaries to preach Christianity • St. Columban(us) travels extensively through Europe establishing Irish style monasteries, including one in Northern Italy (d. 615) • St. Brendan the Navigator may have reached Iceland, Greenland and perhaps North America • Meanwhile, missionaries from Rome are also trying to convert Pagan Germanic tribes • Conversion of Chlodwech (Clovis), King of the Franks, 496 • Pope St. Gregory the Great sends St. Augustine of Canterbury (a Benedictine) to England 597 • Differences between Irish and Roman Churches resolved at Synod of Whitby, 664, in favor or Roman customs
The Pope Who Brought the Two Monastic Movements Together: Pope St. Gregory the Great • Pope St. Gregory Great (546-604) • Benedictine • Wrote a life of Benedict • Reformed Roman clergy around monastic model • Reformed the liturgy and Church music • Encouraged Irish monks, St. Columbanus, to found monasteries in northern Italy • Earliest extant life of Gregory written by an English nun, 8th C • Feast Day is September 3
Later Monastic Developments • Revitalization of Benedictine monasticism during the Middle Ages • Cluniac Reforms of 10th C • Cistercian Reforms of 11th C • Monasteries were primary locus of education for boys and girls until later Middle Ages • Monastic orders continue to live a life of Christian witness • Benedictines • Cistercians • Trappists
Later History of Iona and Monte Cassino • Both destroyed by warfare • Iona destroyed by Vikings in 9th C • Recent excavations and a popular tourist site • Monte Cassino destroyed by Allied forces in 1943 • Rebuilt after WWII, reconsecrated by Pope Paul VI in 1964