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  2. Benedictine Rite - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Benedictine_Rite

    The Benedictine Rite is the particular form of Mass and Liturgy ... the Benedictine Liturgy of the Hours would occupy some four to five hours of a monk's day; with ...

  3. Benedictines - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Benedictines

    Anglican Benedictine Abbots are invited guests of the Benedictine Abbot Primate in Rome at Abbatial gatherings at Sant'Anselmo. [33] In 1168 local Benedictine monks instigated the anti-semitic blood libel of Harold of Gloucester as a template for explaining child deaths. According to historian Joe Hillaby, the blood libel of Harold was ...

  4. Benedict of Nursia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Benedict_of_Nursia

    To this day, The Rule of St. Benedict is the most common and influential Rule used by monasteries and monks, more than 1,400 years after its writing. A basilica was built upon the birthplace of Benedict and Scholastica in the 1400s. Ruins of their familial home were excavated from beneath the church and preserved.

  5. Rule of Saint Benedict - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rule_of_Saint_Benedict

    This 1862 painting by John Rogers Herbert depicts monks at work in the fields. Saint Benedict's model for the monastic life was the family, with the abbot as father and all the monks as brothers. Priesthood was not initially an important part of Benedictine monasticism – monks used the services of their local priest.

  6. Benedict of Aniane - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Benedict_of_Aniane

    Benedict of Aniane (Latin: Benedictus Anianensis; German: Benedikt von Aniane; c. 747 – 12 February 821 AD), born Witiza and called the Second Benedict, was a Benedictine monk and monastic reformer who had a substantial impact on the religious practice of the Carolingian Empire.

  7. Saint Meinrad Archabbey - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saint_Meinrad_Archabbey

    The Benedictine community at Saint Meinrad consists of men who dedicate their lives to prayer and work. They gather in community five times a day—for morning prayer, Mass, noon prayer, evening prayer and compline—to pray for the Church and the world. Guests often join the monks in prayer in the Archabbey Church.

  8. Dominic of Silos - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dominic_of_Silos

    Born in Cañas, La Rioja, to a family of peasants, he worked as a shepherd before becoming a Benedictine monk at the Monasteries of San Millán de la Cogolla.He was ordained a priest and soon became master of novices and then prior, before being driven out with two of his fellow monks by King García Sánchez III of Navarre, for opposing his intention to annex the monastery's lands.

  9. English Benedictine Congregation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/English_Benedictine...

    The congregation as it exists to day is the result of Pope Paul V's 1619 unification of two groups of English Benedictines, a group of continental houses for exiles founded in the early 17th century and a group of about 8 monks who had been aggregated to the ancient English Congregation by Dom Sigebert Buckley, the last surviving monk of ...