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  2. Columbanus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Columbanus

    Saint Columbanus (Irish: Columbán; 543 – 23 November 615) [1] was an Irish missionary notable for founding a number of monasteries after 590 in the Frankish and Lombard kingdoms, most notably Luxeuil Abbey in present-day France and Bobbio Abbey in present-day Italy.

  3. Bobbio Abbey - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bobbio_Abbey

    Bobbio Abbey (Italian: Abbazia di San Colombano) is a monastery founded by Irish Saint Columbanus in 614, around which later grew up the town of Bobbio, in the province of Piacenza, Emilia-Romagna, Italy. It is dedicated to Saint Columbanus. It was famous as a centre of resistance to Arianism and as one of the greatest libraries in the Middle ...

  4. Luxeuil Abbey - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Luxeuil_Abbey

    The abbey was founded circa 590 by the Irish missionary Saint Columbanus. [1] Columbanus and his companions first settled in cells at Annegray, in the commune of Voivre, Haute-Saône. Looking for a more permanent site for his community, Columbanus decided upon the ruins of a well-fortified Gallo-Roman settlement, Luxovium, about eight miles away.

  5. Missionary Society of St. Columban - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Missionary_Society_of_St...

    The Missionary Society of St. Columban (Latin: Societas Sancti Columbani pro Missionibus ad Exteros) (abbreviated as S.S.C.M.E. or SSC), commonly known as the Columbans, is a missionary Catholic society of apostolic life of Pontifical Right founded in Ireland in 1917 and approved by the Holy See in 1918.

  6. Antiphonary of Bangor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antiphonary_of_Bangor

    Bobbio, situated in a gorge of the Apennines thirty-seven miles north-east of Genoa, was founded by Saint Columbanus, a disciple of Saint Comgall, founder of the great monastery at Bangor, in County Down, Northern Ireland. Columbanus died at Bobbio and was buried there in 615.

  7. Celtic Rite - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Celtic_Rite

    Portrait of St John from The Book of Mulling. The term "Celtic Rite" is applied [1] to the various liturgical rites used in Celtic Christianity in Britain, Ireland and Brittany and the monasteries founded by St. Columbanus and Saint Catald in France, Germany, Switzerland, and Italy during the Early Middle Ages.

  8. Double monastery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Double_monastery

    By the 7th century, the Irish missionary St. Columbanus had established the most famous convent in Gaul, Luxeuil Abbey.Following the death of her husband Clovis II in 657, St. Balthild, the Queen Regent of Neustria and Burgundy became patron of the community, thereby promoting the example of Luxeuil's mixed rule — a combination of Benedictine and Columbanian monasticism — throughout ...

  9. Territorial Abbey of Wettingen-Mehrerau - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Territorial_Abbey_of...

    The first monastery at Mehrerau was founded by Saint Columbanus who, after he was driven from Luxeuil, settled here about 611 and built a monastery after the model of Luxeuil. A monastery of nuns was soon established nearby.