Canons regular are members of certain bodies of
Canons living in community under the
Augustinian Rule
("regula" in Latin), and sharing their property in common. Distinct
from monks, who live a cloistered, contemplative life and sometimes
engage in ministry to those from outside the monastery, the purpose
of the life of a canon is to engage in public ministry of liturgy
and sacraments for those who visit their churches, historically the
monastic life was by its nature lay, whereas canonical life was
essentially clerical. Distinct from
Clerks Regular (Regular Clerics)—an example
of which is the
Society of
Jesus—they are members of a particular community of a
particular place, and are bound to the public praying of the
Liturgy of the Hours in
choir.
Secular canons by contrast belong to
a community of priests attached to a church but do not take vows or
live under a rule.
Canons Regular are sometimes called Black or White Canons,
depending on the order to which they belong.
Canons Regular
The Canons Regular of Saint Augustine, also
referred to as
Augustinian Canons or
Austin Canons ('Austin' being a corruption of
'Augustinian'), is one of the oldest
Latin
Rite orders. The canons live together in community and take the
three
vows of chastity, poverty and obedience;
though this is a later development, the first communities of Canons
took vows of common property and stability. Some congregations of
Canons Regular have retained the vow of stability, e.g. the members
of the Austrian Congregation of Canons Regular take a vow of
stability for the house which they join. Famous Canons Regular
include the only English
Pope Adrian
IVSources quoted in the
New
Advent Encyclopaedia, cf.
Cardinal Boso's life, published
by Muratori (SS. Rer. Ital. III, I 441-446)
and reprinted in Migne (Patrologia Latina CLXXXVIII,
135-160), also edited by Watterich (Vitae Pontificum II, 323-
374), cf. also Duchesne's edition of the
Liber Pontificalis (II, 388-397; cf.
proleg XXXVII-XLV), mystic
Thomas à
Kempis and Christian humanist
Desiderius Erasmus.
According to the
Congregation for Institutes of Consecrated Life and Societies of
Apostolic Life of the
Holy See, "Canons
Regular, who combine the clerical office and state with the
observance of community religious life and the
evangelical counsels, have their origin
in the communities of clergy which lived with their bishop. It was
Saint Augustine who, at the end
of the fourth and the beginning of the fifth centuries, gave this
form of religious life its most characteristic features.
Historically, the French Canons had the care
of St. Victor's
Abbey, Paris
, pre-cursor body to the University of Paris, and
the pre-Reformation English Canons were the custodians of the
shrine of Our Lady of
Walsingham.
The characteristic
habit of canons
regular is the
rochet. With regard to the
other parts of their dress, as a general rule, they wear the white
habit and black cloak, although some have added a
scapular and others have taken to wearing the black
soutane (cassock) of the secular clergy. Most wear the rochet as
part of their daily dress, though sometimes reduced to a small
linen band hanging from the shoulders in front and behind - as it
is currently worn in some houses in Austria e.g.
Klosterneuburg
Monastery
.
In 1959, four congregations of Canons Regular came together to form
a confederated Order, which with time has grown to the extent that
there are currently nine congregations. These Congregations of
Canons Regular elect an
Abbot primate
who is currently Rt. Rev. Fr. Maurice Bitz, Abbot of St. Pierre,
and Abbot General of the Congregation of Canons Regular of St.
Victor. The Order has houses in Argentina, Austria, Brazil, Canada,
the Czech Republic, England, Italy, France, Belgium, Germany, the
Netherlands, Norway, Spain, Switzerland, Poland, Peru, Uruguay and
Taiwan.
The
Austrian Congregation of Canons Regular, based in the monasteries
of Herzogenburg
Priory
, Klosterneuburg Priory
, Neustift Priory,
Reichersberg Priory, St. Florian's
Priory
and Vorau Priory, look
after over 100 parishes in Austria.
The concept of "canon"
According to St.
Thomas Aquinas, a
canon regular is essentially a
religious
cleric; "The Order of Canons Regular is
necessarily constituted by religious clerics, because they are
essentially destined to those works which relate to the Divine
mysteries, whereas it is not so with the monastic Orders."
(II-II:189:8 ad 2 um, and II-II:184:8). This is what
constitutes a canon regular and what distinguishes him from a monk.
The clerical state is essential to the Order of Canons Regular,
whereas it is only accidental to the Monastic Order.
Erasmus, himself a canon regular, declared
that the canons regular are a "median point" between the monks and
the secular clergy. And for the same reason
Nigellus Vireker, a Benedictine monk of
Canterbury in the twelfth century, contrasts the life of canons
regular with that of his own fellow-monks and the
Cistercians, pointing out the advantages of the
former. The canons, he tells us, were spared the long choral
duties, the sharp reproofs, the stern discipline of the Black
Monks, and were not bound to the Spartan simplicity of clothing and
diet of the field-working
Cistercianscf.
Speculum Stultorum
Rolls Series:
The Anglo-Latin
Satirical poets of the Twelfth Century. The "Llanthony
Chronicler" relates how the first founders of his famous abbey,
having consulted among themselves, decided to become canons
regular, first, because on account of the charity they were well
liked by all, and then because they were satisfied with a modest
manner of living, their habit, though clean, being decent, neither
too coarse, nor too rich. In this moderation of life we may say
that canons regular follow the example of their lawgiver, St.
Augustine, of whom St. Possidius, his
biographer, relates that his habit, his furniture, his clothes were
always decent, neither too showy nor too humble and shabby. The
spirit of the canonical order is also explained in the "Observances
in Use at the Augustinian Priory at Barnwell,
Cambridge,"cf.edited with a translation by F.W. Clarke
Rolls "The road along which Canons Regular walk in order to reach
the heavenly Jerusalem is the rule of Blessed Augustine. Further
lest Canons Regular should wander away from the rule, there are
given to them, in addition, observances in accordance with it
handed down from remote ages and approved among holy fathers in all
quarters of the world. This rule is simple and easy, so that
unlearned men and children can walk in it without stumbling. On the
other hand it is deep and lofty, so that the wise and strong can
find in it matter for abundant and perfect contemplation. An
elephant can swim in it and a lamb can walk in it safely. As a
lofty tower surrounded on all sides by walls makes the soldiers who
garrison it safe, fearless, and impregnable, so the rule of Blessed
Augustine, fortified on all sides by observances in accordance with
it, makes its soldiers, that is, Canon Regular, undismayed at the
attacks, safe and invincible." .
According to St. Augustine, a canon regular professes two things,
"sanctitatem et clericatum". He lives in community, he leads the
life of a religious, he sings the praises of God by the daily
recitation of the Divine Office in choir; but at the same time, at
the bidding of his superiors, he is prepared to follow the example
of the Apostles by preaching, teaching, and the administration of
the sacraments, or by giving hospitality to pilgrims and
travellers, and tending the sick.
But the canons regular do not confine themselves exclusively to
canonical functions. They also give hospitality to pilgrims and
travelers on the Great St. Bernard
and on the Simplon, and in
former times the hospitals of St.
Bartholomew's Smithfield
, in London, of S. Spirito, in Rome, of
Lochleven
, Monymusk
and St.
Andrew's, in Scotland, and others like them, were all served by
canons regular. Many congregations of canons worked among
the poor, the lepers, and the infirm. The clerics established by
St. Patrick in Ireland had a Guest House
for pilgrims and the sick whom they tended by day and by night. And
the rule given by Chrodegang to this
canons enjoined that a hospital should be near their house that
they might tend the sick. The Council of Aix-la-Chapelle
(Aachen) also ordains the erection of a hospital for pilgrims over
which a canon regular is to preside.
Origin of the canons
The historic origins are disputed. Some writers, like
Joachim Coriolanus
Marquez, held that the canonical order began about 1100.
According
to others the order dates from the time of Charlemagne, who expressed the wish that all the
clergy should be either monks or canons living in common, as
prescribed by the Council of
Aix la Chapelle, in 789, and Mainz
, in
813.
St Augustine of Hippo is also
regarded by the Canons as their founder. Ives, bishop of Chartres promoted
the order in Italy through the newly founded congregation of
Blessed Peter de Honestis, and
elsewhere through the congregation of St.
Rufus. History tells us that about the eleventh century the
regular or canonical life hitherto observed almost everywhere by
the clergy was given up in many churches, and thus a distinction
was made between the clerics who lived in separate houses and those
who still preserved the old discipline. The former were called
canonici saeculares> (Secular Canons), the latter
canonici regulares(Canons Regular). It is
also true that in the year 763 Chrodegang, Bishop of Metz, assembled the clergy
of his cathedral around him, led with them a community life, and
gave them a rule taken from the statutes of ancient orders and
canons, a discipline also recommended shortly after by the Councils
of Aix-la-Chapelle and Mainz; but in doing this he was only
following the example of Augustine of Hippo who had introduced
among his own clergy the manner of life which he had seen practiced
at Milan.]
Eusebius, the historian, relates that St.
Mark, the disciple of St. Peter, established this discipline at
Alexandria, as did St. Crescentius in Gaul, St. Saturninus in
Spain, and St. Maternus in Germany. We know that St. Eusebius
introduced it at Vercelli in Italy, and St.
Ambrose at Milan. Popes Urban I (A.D.
227), Paschal II (1099), Benedict XII (1334), Eugenius IV (1431), Sixtus
V and Pius V in various Letters and
bulls, are quoted by the historians of the order, to prove
distinctly that St. Augustine,
Bishop of Hippo, only restored, or
caused to reflourish, the order of canons regular, which was first
instituted by the Apostles.
St. Antoninus, Vincent of Beauvais, Sigebert, Peter of
Cluny, Prospero Fagnani and
many others tell us that the canonical order traces back its origin
to the earliest ages of the Church. Suarez sums up the case very
clearly, after having stated that the Apostles taught by Christ
formed the first order of clerics, and that the order did not
perish with the Apostles, but was preserved by continuous
succession in their disciples, as proved by letters of Pope St.
Clement and Urban I (though these letters are Pseudo-Isidorain in
character): 'The Life of St. Augustine says when he was made
priest, he instituted a monastery within the church and began to
live with the servants of God according to the manner and rules
constituted by the holy Apostles.
Many therefore suppose that the Order of Regular Clerics, or Canons
Regular, was not instituted by St. Augustine, but was either
reformed by him or introduced by him into Africa and furnished with
a special rule. Pius IV maintains that the
Order of Regular Clerics was instituted by the Apostles, and this
Benedict XII confirms in his preface to
the Constitutions of the Canons Regular. There is no question as
regards the continuance of this state from the time of St.
Augustine to this time, although with great variety as far as
various institutes are concerned.'When a controversy arose between
the Benedictine monks and the canons
regular with regard to precedence, the question was settled by
Pius V in favour of the canons, on account of
their Apostolic origin.
Cardinal Pie, addressing the Canons
Regular of the Lateran congregation, says: 'These that are clothed
in white robes, who are they, and whence come they? Come, I shall
tell you. Their origin is nothing else but the society and the
common life of Jesus and the Apostles, the original model of
community life between the bishop and his clergy. On that account
they chiefly come from Hippo and from the home of Augustine, who
has given them a Rule, which they still glory to observe.'
The name Austin (or Augustinian) Canons is commonly used instead of
Canons Regular, and there are some who erroneously think that
Austin Canons are so styled because they were instituted by St.
Augustine, but St. Augustine did not found the order of canons
regular, not even those who are called Austin Canons, there were
canons regular before St. Augustine as various authorities prove;
all St. Austin did was to induce his clergy to live secundum
regulam sub sanctis Apostolis constitutam, which he had seen
practised at Milan, adding to the Apostolic Rule hitherto observed
by clerics living in common, some regulations, afterwards called
the "Rule of St. Augustine."
Or, in the words of Pope Paschal II in a
Bull quoted by Pennott, "Vitæ regularis propositum in primitiva
ecclesia cognoscitur ab Apostolis institutum quam B. Augustinus tam
gratanter amplexus est ut eam regulis informaret" (A regular mode
of life is recognized in the Early Church as instituted by the
Apostles, and adopted earnestly by Blessed Augustine, who provided
it with new regulations) -- Hist. Tripart., Lib. II, c. iv, 4.
These regulations which St. Austin had given to the clerics who
lived with him soon spread and were adopted by other religious
communities of canons regular in Italy, in France and elsewhere.
When, in and after the eleventh century, the various congregations
of canons regular were formed, and adopted the Rule of St.
Augustine, they were usually called Canonici Regulares Ordinis S.
Augustini Congregationis, and in England Austin Canons or Black
Canons, but there have always been canons regular who never adopted
the Rule of St. Augustine. Giraldus Cambrenisis mentions some in
his day in England. In a word, canons regular may be considered as
the genus, and Austin Canons as the species; or we may say that all
Austin Canons are canons regular, but not all canons regular are
Austin canons.
If further proofs of the Apostolic origin of the canonical order
are desired, many may be found in the work of Abbot Ceasare
Benvenuti, who century by century, from councils, Fathers, and
other ecclesiastical sources, proves that from the first to the
twelfth century there had always been clerics living in common
according to the example of the Apostles. It will be enough to
citehere the authority of Döllinger who, after saying that from the
time of the Apostles there have been in the Church, virgins,
laymen, and ecclesiastics named ascetics, continues:
At Vercelli, Bishop Eusebius introduced the severe discipline of
the Oriental monks among his clergy both by word and example.
Before the gate of Milan was a cloister for monks under the
protection of St. Ambrose. St. Augustine, when a priest, founded a
cloister at Hippo
, in which
with other clerics he lived in humility and community of
goods. (Eccl. History, tr. by the Rev. E. Cox, II, 270).To
this again may be added, among many others, the words of popes
Benedict XII, Eugenius IV, Pius IV and
Pius V, in their bulls, all asserting almost
in as many words, what has been here said. The following words,
taken from the Martyrologium
for canons regular and approved by the Congregation of Sacred Rites,
will suffice for the purpose:Ordo Canonicorum Regularium, qui
in primaevis Ecclesiae saeculis Clerici nominabantur utque ait
S. Pius V. in Bullâ (Cum ex ordinum 14 Kal. Jan., 1570): 'ab
Apostolis originem traxerunt, quique ab Augustiono eorum
Reformatore iterum per reformationis viam mundo geniti fuere', per
universum orbem diffusus innumerabilium SS. agmine fulget.
(The order of canons regular, who in the early ages of the Church
were called clerics, and who, as St. Pius V says in the Bull Cum ex
ordinum, 1570, derived their origin from the Apostles, and who
later were born anew to the world through a process of reformation,
by their reformer, Augustine, being spread throughout the universe,
are renowned for an army of innumerable saints).
Development
This rule, which, in the words of Giraldus Cambrensis, happily joins the
canonical and clerical life together, was soon adopted by many
prelates, not only in Africa, but elsewhere also. After the death of the
holy Doctor, it was carried into Italy
and France
by his
disciples. One of them, Pope
Gelasius, about the year 492, re-established the regular life
in the Lateran Basilica. From St. John
Lateran (the Mother and Mistress of all Churches) the reform
spread till at length the Rule was universally adopted by almost
all the canons regular. It was in the same Lateran Basilica,
tradition tells us, that St. Patrick, the future Apostle of
Ireland, professed the canonical institute which he afterwards
introduced with the Christian faith, into his own country. At the
voice of the great apostle the Irish nation not only embraced
Christianity, but many also, following his example, embraced the
canonical life.
On the authority of Sir James Ware, Canon Burke (Life and Labours
of St. Augustine) asserts that "all the monasteries founded in
Ireland by St. Patrick, were for canons regular." This opinion is
also maintained by Allemande, who affirms (Histoire monastique de
l'Irlande) that "the Regular Canons of St. Augustine were so early
or considerable in Ireland before the general suppression of
monasteries, that the number of houses they are said to have had
seems incredible. They alone possessed, or had been master of, as
many houses as all the other orders together, and almost all the
chapters of the cathedral and collegiate churches in Ireland
consisted of canons regular." To these authorities we might add
that of the Rev. R. Butler, who, in his notes to the "Registrum
Omnium Sanctorum", expressly affirms that the "old foundations in
Ireland were exclusively for Canons."
We might also quote the words of Bishop Thomas De Burgo, who, in his "Hibernia
Dominicana", does not hesitate to say that St. Patrick was a canon
regular, and that, having preached the Christian faith in Ireland,
he established there many monasteries of the canonical institute.
After this no one will think that the same writer exaggerates when
he appends to his work a catalogue of 231 monasteries which at some
time or other belonged to canons and canonesses regular. The Irish
clerics became the most learned scholars in Europe, Ireland's seats
of learning, monasteries, nunneries and charitable institutions
were unsurpassed in number or excellence by those of any other
nation. The Abbots or Priors of Christ Church and All
Hallows in Dublin, of Connell, Kells, Athessel, Killagh, Newton and Raphoe
had seats in
Parliament.
There seems very little doubt that the canonical institute was
introduced into Scotland by St. Columba.
This saint, called "monasteriorum pater et fundator", in reference
to the numerous churches and monasteries built either by him or by
his disciples in Ireland and Scotland, was formed to the religious
life in the monastery of St. Finnian. The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle,
anno 565, relates that Columba, Masspreost (Mass-Priest),
"came to the Picts to convert them to Christ", or, as another
manuscript says: "This year, 565, Columba the Messa-preost, came
from the parts of the Scots (Ireland) to the Britons to teach the
Picts, and built a monastery in the island of Hy." To what order
this monastery, founded by Columba, belonged, we may judge from
other monasteries built by the saint in Ireland and Scotland. As we
have already stated, St. Columba was the disciple of St. Finnian, who was a follower of St. Patrick; both then had learned and embraced
the regular life which the great Apostle had established in
Ireland.
Moreover, such writers as Ware, De Burgo, Mervyn Archdall, Cardinal Moran, Bower, expressly tell
us that Columba built monasteries for canons
regular in Ireland and Scotland. So, for instance, Ware, in his
"Antiquitates Hiberniae", writing of Derry, says: "St. Columba
built (this monastery) for Canons Regular in the year 545." This
monastery was a filiation of the monastery of SS. Peter and Paul at
Armagh
-- which,
according to the same writer, had been founded by "St. Patrick for
Canons Regular." Again, tradition places the first landing
of the saint on leaving Ireland at Oronsay, and Fordun (Bower)
notices the island as "Hornsey, ubi est monasterium nigrorum
Canonicorum, quod fundavit S. Columba" (where is the monastery of
Black Canons which St. Columba founded). Speaking of the very
monastery built by the saint at Hy, the historian Gervase of Canterbury, in his "Mappa
Mundi", informs us that the monastery belonged to the Black Canons.
Some writers think that the monasteries established by St. Columba
in Scotland were for Culdees. Numerous opinions have been expressed
concerning the origin and the institute of the Culdees, some
calling them monks, some secular canons and hospitallers, and
others going so far as to say that they were Independents, or
Dissenters, or even the forefathers of
the modern Freemasons. Others are of
opinion that the Culdees originally, and some even to the very end,
were nothing else but clerics living in common just as those
St. Patrick had established in Ireland
and St. Columba had introduced into Scotland.
At the time of the Reformation
there were in Scotland at least thirty-four houses of canons
regular and one of canonesses. These included six Premonstratensian houses, one Gilbertine,
and one of the Order of St. Anthony. The others seem to
have been chiefly of the Aroasian Congregation, first introduced
into Scotland from Nostall
Priory
, in England. The chief houses were:
- St. Andrews
, the Metropolitan of Scotland, founded by Angus,
King of the Picts. The church was at first served by
Culdees, but in 1144 Bishop Robert, who had been a canon regular at
Scone, established here members of his own community. The prior was
mitred and could pontificate. In Parliament he had precedence of
all abbots and priors.
- Scone, founded by King
Alexander I of Scotland.
Here the Scottish kings were crowned. The stone on which the
coronation took place was said to be that on which Jacob rested his
head; it was at Westminster until 1996, having been removed by
Edward I. Tradition says that
the Culdees were at Scone before Alexander brought canons regular
from Nostall Priory in 1115.
- Holy rood, of which King David
was the founder, in 1128, for canons regular, in the "vail that
lyis to the Eist frae the Castell, quhare now lyis the Cannongait,
and which at that time was part of ane gret forest full of hartis,
hyndis, toddis and sicklike manner of beistis", as Bellenden, the
translator of Bower, expresses it. This famous abbey was burnt down
at the instigation of John Knox in 1544,
but some efforts were made to restore Divine service in the chapel
as late as 1688, when Father G. Hay, a Scottish canon regular, of
the French congregation, performed there a funeral as he says, "in
his habit with surplice and aulmess after the rites of Rome." Next
the abbey was the Royal Palace, and we are told that the Scottish
kings often went Unto the saintly convent, with good monks to dine
and quaff to organ music the pleasant cloister wine.
Many of the houses founded by St. Columba remained in
possession of the canons till the Reformation. Oronsay and Crusay
were of the number.
Information concerning many of the canonical houses may be found in
Fordun's Scoti-Chronicon, written before 1384 (ed. Skene,
Edinburgh, 1871-72). As Walter Bower, its continuator and
annotator, was a canon regular, and abbot of Inchcolm, he no doubt
derived all his materials at firs hand from the archives of the
order, and thus many important particulars are related by him
concerning the foundations of the houses, their inmates, and
particular events.
There are not wanting writers who, on the authority of Jocelin of Soissons, William of Malmesbury, "Gesta
Pontificum" and others, are of opinion that the canonical order was
established in Britain by St. Patrick,
on his return from Rome to Ireland. Be this as it may, the Saxon
conquerors of the country extirpated not only the religious
establishments, but almost the faith of Christ from the land. The
faithful either were obliged to dwell in the fastnesses of Wales or
were made slaves. It was in these circumstances that Pope Gregory the Great sent to England St. Augustine with forty clerics,
who according to the Bull of Pope Eugenius
IV (quoted by Lingard in his Anglo-Saxon Church, I, iv), by
which, in 1446, he restored the Lateran Basilica
to the canons regular, formed a Canonical
Institute.
Speaking of the order founded by the Apostle and reformed by the
holy Bishop of Hippo, the pope says: "Blessed Gregory commanded
St. Augustine, the Bishop of
England, to establish it as a new plantation among the nation
entrusted to his care and spread it to the utmost distant parts of
the West." And William of
Coventry, in his Chronicle, A.D. 620, tells us that "Paulinus
with twelve clerics was sent by the Pope to help Augustine." In the
North also the disciples of St. Columba were preaching the Gospel
and establishing the canonical order among the nation they were
converting to Christ.
The Roman and British clergy amalgamated, and were learn from
English historians that most if not all the cathedral and large
churches were served by regular clerics or canons regular till the
tenth century, when they were replaced by Benedictine monks by
royal authority, and sometimes by means even less lawful. Dr.
Lingard clearly states that: 'in many of these religious
establishments the inmates had been Canons Regular from the
beginning. In many they had originally been monks and had converted
themselves into Canon, but all considered themselves bound by their
rule to reside within the precincts of their monasteries, to meet
daily in the church for the performance of divine service, to take
their meals in the same hall, and to sleep in the same
dormitory.'
In fact, this same historian is of opinion that St. Augustine and
his companions were clerics living in common. Writing of the clergy
in Anglo-Saxon times, Dr. Lingard says: 'The chief resource of the
Bishop lay in the Cathedral monastery, where the clergy were
carefully instructed in their duties and trained in the exercise of
their holy profession. They were distinguished by the name of
Canons because the rule which they observed had been founded in
accordance with the canons enacted in different councils.' and he
adds this explanatory note from the Excerptiones of Egbert:
Canonen dicimus regulas quas sancti Patres constiturerunt in
quibus scriptum est quomodo canonici, id est clerici regulares,
vivere debeant. (By the term canons we designate those rules
which the holy Fathers have laid down, in which it has been written
how canons (canonici), i.e. regular clerics, ought to
live).
In the
twelfth century many churches served by secular canons, like
Plympton
, Twynham
, Taunton
, Dunnow, Gisburn
, were given to canons regular, who, it would seem,
were the original owners. This view is confirmed by various
historians. In his History of the Archbishops (ed.
William Stubbs, Rolls Series, London, 1876), Ralph Diceto tells us that at Dunstan's suggestion King Edgar drove the clerics out of most of the
churches of England and placed monks in their stead. In Liber
de Hyda we find that canons had been introduced at Winchester
by King Ethelred, and that
Bishop Grimbald, a zealous reformer of the clergy, had established
a community of clerics whose duty it was to perform the Divine
Office. Speaking of Ælfric, a monk who
had been elected Archbishop of
Canterbury, the Anglo-Saxon
Chronicle, A.D. 995, remarks that when he came to his cathedral
he was received by a community of clerics, when he would have
preferred monks.
It would seem, then, that writers like Tanner, the modern editors
of William Dugdale's
Monasticon, and others, who think that the canons regular
were introduced into England after the year 1100, or after the
coming of William the
Conqueror, may have been misled by the fact that it was only
after the eleventh century that the canons regular were so styled
generally; nevertheless these are the same ecclesiastics, until
then commonly called religious or regular clerics. It is also true
that, as elsewhere so in England, in the twelfth century there was
a great revival in the canonical order on account of various
congregations newly found in France, Italy and the Low countries,
and it was some of these new canons that came with the Conqueror;
but this does not prove that the canonical life was unknown
before.
In England alone, from the Conquest to the death of Henry II Plantagenet, no fewer than
fifty-four houses were founded where the canons regular were
established. Colchester in 1096 was the first, followed ten years
later by Holy Trinity in London. In 1100 Ralph Mortimer, by consent of Gerard, Bishop of Hereford, founded a canonical
house at Wigmore, and in 1110 another house for Austin Canons was
built at Haghmond. At Taunton
a colony of secular priests became a monastery of
canons regular. Secular canons were also replaced by canons
regular at Twynham
, Plympton
, Waltham
and other places. In the period
mentioned there were, among others, the foundations of the Austin
houses at Dunmow, Thremhall, Southampton
, Gisburn
, Newnham
in Bedfordshire, Norton
in Cheshire,
Stone in Staffordshire, Anglesey
and Barnwell
in Cambridgeshire,
Berden
in
Essex. This was a period of great prosperity for the
canonical order in England, but soon evil days came.
There was first the Black Plague, and
like every other ecclesiastical institution, the canons regular
were fairly decimated, and we may say that they never quite
recovered. To remedy the evil Cardinal
Wolsey thought it expedient to introduce a general reform of
the whole canonical order in England. In the capacity of papal delegate, on 19 March 1519, he issued
the Statuta, which were to be observed by all the Austin Canons.
These ordinances, as F. A. Gasquet
observes, are evidence as to the state of the Augustinian Order at
that time in England. The statutes provide for the union of all the
Austin Canons; for the assembly of a general chapter every three
years; for various matters concerning obedience, poverty, and the
general discipline of the cloister. Special regulations are given
for the daily recitation of the Divine Office and singing of
Masses.
Directions are laid down for the reception
and profession of novices, for uniformity in the religious habit,
and sending young students to Oxford University
. But troubled days soon came over the land,
and these statutes, good though they were, could not keep off the
evil times. The canonical houses were suppressed, and the religious
dispersed, persecuted, little by little disappeared from the land
altogether. Yet, in spite of the previous disasters, by Abbot
Gasquet's computation ninety-one houses belonging to the canons
regular wee suppressed or surrendered at the time of the
Reformation between 1538 and 1540, with one thousand and
eighty-three inmates—namely, Austin Canons, fifty-nine houses and
seven hundred and seventy-three canons; Premonstratensians,
nineteen houses and one hundred and fifty-one religious. This
number of houses and religious does not include the lesser
monasteries with an aggregate of one house and five hundred monks
and canon, nor the nuns of the various orders estimated at one
thousand five hundred and sixty.
Their
best known canonical houses were at: Walsingham
, Waltham
, St. Mary's Overy,
Bolton
, St.
Bartholomew's Smithfield
, Nostall, Bridlington
, Bristol
, Carlisle
, Newbury
, Hexham, Lanercost, Bodmin, Colchester
, Dunstable
, Merton, Kertmele, Llanthony
, Plympton, St.
Frideswide's at Oxford
and
Osney
.
At Walshingham there was a famous shrine of
Our Lady, a model of the Holy House of Nazareth, founded two
hundred years before the miraculous removal to Loretto. Erasmus, writing in the sixteenth century, gives a
vivid description of the shrine and the canons, its custodians. At
Bourne Abbey lived from 1300 to 1340 Robert de Brunne, a canon regular, who had
been styled the "Father of the English language." In his monastic
seclusion he welded together the diverse dialects, which then
divided shire from shire, into the grammatical structure which the
language has since retained. Bridlington Priory, where William de
Newbridge and several other historians lived, was also sanctified
by the life, virtues, and miracles of its holy prior, John de
Tweng, the last English saint to be canonized prior to the
Reformation. He died in 1379. In 1386 a mandate was issued to
collect evidence with a view to canonization.
The body was translated in 1405 de mandato Domini papae, and
Boniface IX by a Bull, the original of
which was found in the Vatican Archives by J. A. Twemlow, formally
canonized him. The holy prior was a very popular saint in the North
of England. A rich shrine had been built over his tomb, from which
the people begged Henry VIII Tudor
to withhold his hand; but all in vain. Lest the people should be
reduced in the offering of their money, the shrine was pulled down
and destroyed. Sempringham saw the beginning by St. Gilbert, and
the wonderful growth of the only pre-Reformation institute of
distinctly English origin.
Here, too, Peter de Langtoft, the historian, lived and wrote his
well-known works. Within the walls of Merton Abbey Thomas of
Canterbury, when a youth, received his education and made his
profession as a canon regular before he was consecrated archbishop.
Chic Priory, whence came William de Corbeil, Archbishop of
Canterbury, was renowned for the learning of its religious clerics:
"clerical litteraturâ insignes." Thurgarton was the home of the
spiritual writer Walter Hilton, who,
about the year 1400, wrote the Scala perfectionis 'ladder
of perfection', usually attributed to some Carthusian monk. St.
Frideswide's, founded for canons regular at Castle Tower by Robert
d'Oiley, and translated to Osney in 1149, became, as Cardinal
Newman tells, "a nursery for secular students, subject to the
Chancellor's jurisdiction." At Lilleshall Priory lived John Myrk,
the author of Instructions for Parish Priests, a work written in
irregular couplets, doubtless that they might be easily committed
to memory; it was edited by the Early English Text Society. The
following verses, where Myrk gives excellent and explicit
directions for behaviour in church, are a fair sample of the
author's style:
- That when they do to Church fare,
- Then bid them leave their many words,
- Their idle speech and nice border {jests}
- And put away all vanity
- And say their Pater Noster and their Ave.
- None in the church stand shall,
- Nor lean to pillar not to wall,
- But fair on knees they shall them set,
- Kneeling down upon the flat,
- And pray God with heart meek
- To give them grace and mercey eke.
- Suffer them to make no bere {noise}
- But aye to be in their prayer.
Some twenty-five years ago the canons regular of the Lateran
Congregation returned to this Cornish town where before the
Reformation their brethren the Austin Canons had a beautiful priory
in honour of St. Mary and St. Petrock. The new prior became the
residence of the provincial, or visitor, the novitiate-house for
England, and the centre from which several Missions—as Truro, St.
Ives and Newquay—were served by canons regular.
When the English religious houses were dissolved, many canons
regular gave up Catholicism. Others retained their faith: Of this
number were W. Wold, Prior of Bridlington, the Sub-Prior of Walsingham
, with sixteen canons, and Laurence Vaux.
The
canonical order was in the early 20th century represented in
England by Premonstratensians at Crowley, Manchester
, Spalding
and Storrington
; the Canons Regular of the Lateran Congregation at
Bodmin
, Truro
, St
Ives
, and Newquay
, in Cornwall; at Spettisbury and Swanage
, in Dorsetshire; at Stroud
Green and Eltahm, in London.
Besides the occupations of the regular life at home and the public
recitation of the Divine Office in choir, they were chiefly
employed in serving missions, preaching retreats, supplying for
priests who ask their service, and hearing confessions, either as
ordinary or extraordinary confessors to convents or other religious
communities.
The canonical order must have been introduced into the New World
soon after its 'discovery' by Columbus. In fact, tradition tells us
that some canons regular from Spain were his companions in one or
other of his voyages. Certain it is that at the general chapter of
the Lateran Congregation held at Ravenna in 1558, at the request of
many Spanish canons, Don Francis de Agala, a professed canon
regular from Spain, who for some ten years had already laboured in
the newly-discovered country, was created vicar-general in America,
with powers to gather into communities all the members of the
canonical institute who were then dispersed in those parts, and the
obligation to report to the authorities of the order. There are
canons regular of the Lateran Congregation in the Argentine, and in
Canada the Canons of the Immaculate Conception serve different
missions. The premonstratensian Canons also are in different places
in South America.
Reforms and congregations
In the eleventh and twelfth centuries a great reform and
revival took place in the canonical order. A great number of
congregations of canons regular sprang into existence, each with
its own distinctive constitutions, grounded on the Rule of St.
Augustine and the statutes which blessed Peter de Honestis, about the year 1100,
gave to his canons at Ravenna
, where also he instituted the first sodality, called "The Children of Mary." In
order to preserve uniformity and regularity among these numerous
congregations Pope Benedict XII, in the
year 1339, issued his Papal Bull
Ad decorem, which may be rather
called a book of constitutions to be observed by all canons regular
then existing. By this Bull the order, then extending through
Europe and Asia, was divided into twenty-two ecclesiastical provinces or
"kingdoms", among them being Ireland, England and Scotland, forming
each a province. The abbots and visitors were to be convened at a
provincial chapter to be held in each province every four years.
Visitors were to be elected to make a canonical visitation of every
house in their respective provinces. Minute regulations are laid
down for the daily recitation or singing of the Divine Office in choir, clothing,
professions, studies at the universities, expenses and other
details in the clerical life and the general discipline of the
canons in the cloister. The Roman
Martyrology mentions the existence of more than thirty-three
different congregations of canons regular. The historian of the
order number no fewer than fifty-four. It would be impossible to
give here even an account of each in particular, therefore we only
mention a few.
Lateran Congregation
By common consent the Lateran Congregation, officially styled
Congregatio
SS. Salvatoris
Lateranensis, stands first in antiquity and importance.
As the
title implies, this congregation takes its origin from the Roman
Basilica of
St. John Lateran
, the pope's own cathedral. History,
confirmed by the authority of Pontifical Bulls, informs us that
Pope Sylvester I established in the
basilica built by the Emperor Constantine clerics living in common
after the manner of the Primitive Church. In the year 492,
Gelasius, a disciple of St. Augustine, introduced in the
patriarchal basilica the regular discipline which he had learnt at
Hippo.
Popes Gregory the Great, Eugenius II, Sergius III and Alexander II, all endeavoured to maintain
the observance of the regular life established among the clergy of
the basilica. As relaxation had crept in, the last name
pope, at the request of St. Peter
Damian, called some canons from St. Frigidian at Lucca
, a house
of strict observance. The reform spread, till at length the
houses that had embrace it were formed into one large congregation.
In the eighteenth century the Lateran Congregation numbered
forty-five abbeys and seventy-nine other houses in Italy, besided
many affiliated convents of canonesses, monasteries, and colleges
of canons regular outside of Italy.
The canons regular served the Lateran Basilica from the time they
were put in possession till 1391, when secular canons were
introduced by Boniface VIII.
Several attempts were made to restore the basilica to its original
owners, and finally in 1445 Pope
Eugenius IV gave it over to them, an act which was confirmed by
Nicholas I. But the arrangement did not
last long, and eventually the canons regular were definitively
displaced, and the basilica made over to secular canons. All that
remains now to the canons regular is the nae they derive from the
basilica and a few other privileges, such as precedence over all
the other religious orders and the faculty of saying all the
Offices which are said by the Lateran Canons in all their
Church.
There are houses belonging to the Lateran Congregation in Italy,
Poland, France, Belgium, England, Spain and America. The
congregation is divided into six ecclesiastical provinces, each
presided over by a visitor or provincial. The abbot general and procurator general reside in Rome at S.
Pietro in Vincoli, where is also the directorate of the
confraternity called "The Children of Mary." There are novitiate
houses, where young men are prepared for the order, in Italy,
Belgium, Spain, England and Poland. The proper habit of the Lateran Congregation is a white
woolen cassock with a linen rochet, which is worn as an essential part of the
daily dress. Their work is essentially clerical, the recitation of
the Divine Office in church, the
administration of the Sacraments and preaching. In Italy they have
charge of parishes in Rome, Bologna, Genoa, Fano, Gubbio and
elsewhere.
Canons of the Holy Sepulchre
It is the opinion of Helyot and others
that no Canons of the Holy
Sepulchre existed before 1114, when some canons regular, who
had adopted the Rule of St. Augustine, were brought from the West
and introduced into the Holy City by Godfrey of Bouillon. On the other hand,
Suarez, Mauburn, Ferreri, Vanderspeeten and others, upholding the
tradition of the canonical order, maintain that James, the first Bishop of Jerusalem,
established clerics living in common the in the Holy City, where
also, after the crusades, flourished the Congregation of the Holy
Sepulchre. Driven away by the Moslems, the canons sought refuge
in Europe, where they had monasteries, in Italy, France, Spain,
Poland and the Low Countries. In these countries, except Italy,
they continued to exist until the French Revolution. In Italy they
seem to have been suppressed by Innocent VIII, who, in 1489, transferred
all their property to the Knights of
Malta. As regards men, the congregation seems now extinct, but
it is still represented by Sepulchrine Canonesses, who have
converts in Belgium, Holland, France, Spain and England.
According
to Dugdale's Monasticon, the canons had two houses in England, one
at Thetford
and the other at Warwick
. By a Bull, dated 10 January 1143, to be
found in the Bullarium Lateranense, Pope Celestine II confirms the church and
the Canons Regular of the Holy Sepulchre in all the possessions
they had received from Godfrey of Bouillon, King Baldwin of Jerusalem, and
other benefactors. Mention is also made in the Bull of several
churches in the Holy Land and in Italy belonging to the canons.
Cardinal de Vitry, a canon regular of
Oignies
and Cardinal, Patriarch of Jerusalem, who had lived
in Palestine some years, relates that the canons served, amongst
other churches, that of the Holy Sepulchre
and those on Mount Sion
and on Mount
Olivet
. The patriarch was also Abbot of the Holy
Sepulchre, and was elected by the canons regular.
Victorine Canons and the Gallican
Congregation
In
the year 1109 the scholar William
de Champeaux, formerly Archdeacon of Paris and afterwards a
canon regular, opened, at the request of his disciples, in his
monastery of
St. Victor
near the city, a school which drew students from
many parts. As the French writer Étienne Pasquier says, "Les lettres y
furent toujours logées a bonnes enseignes" (there, letters were
always entertained at good inns). So great was the reputation of
the monastery built by William that houses were soon established
everywhere after the model of St. Victor's, which was regarded as
their mother-house. At the death of Gilduin, the immediate
successor of William, who had been made Bishop of Châlons, the Congregation
already counted forty-four houses.
âFrom
this congregation, in 1149, sprang another, that of the Sainte-Geneviève Abbey
, which in its turn became very numerous and,
reformed as the Gallican
Congregation, in the sixteenth century, by a holy man called
Charles Faure, had, at the outbreak of the Revolution, no fewer
than one hundred abbeys and monasteries in France. Both
these congregations became extinct, as far as men are concerned,
but the ancient congregation of St. Victor is still represented by
a very old community of canonesses at Ronsbrugge, near Ypres in Flanders
(Belgium).
The Norbertines
The
Premonstratensian Order was
founded at Prémontré
, near Laon
, in
Picardy (northern France), by St. Norbert in the year 1120, and approved
by Pope Honorius II in 1126.
According to the spirit of its founder, this congregtion unites the
active with the contemplative life, the institute embracing in its
scope the sanctification of its members and the administration of
the sacraments. It grew large even during the lifetime of its
founder, and now has charge of many parishes and schools,
especially in the Habsburg provinces of Austria and Hungary. The
Premonstratensians wear a white habit with white cincture. They are
governed by an abbot general, vicars
and visitors.
The Crosiers
The origin of the Canons Regular of
the Order of the Holy Cross appears to be uncertain, although
all admit its great antiquity. It has been divided into four chief
branches: the Italian, the Bohemian, the Belgian and the Spanish.
Of this last very little is known. The branch once flourishing in
Italy, after several attempts at reformation, was finally
suppressed by Alexander VII in
1656. In Bohemia there are still some houses of Crosier
Canons, as they are called, who, however, seem to be different
from the well known Belgian Crosiers, who trace their origin to the
time of Innocent III and recognize
for their Father Blessed Theodore de
Celles, who founded their first house at Huy, near Liège. These
Belgian Croisier Canons have a great affinity with the Dominicans.
They follow the Rule of St. Augustine, and their constitutions are
mainly those compiled for the Dominican Order by St. Raymond of Penafort. Besides the
usual duties of canons in the church, they are engaged in
preaching, administering the sacraments, and teaching. Formerly
they had houses in Belgium, the Netherlands, Germany, France,
England, Ireland and Scotland. Till around 1900 they served
missions in North America, since they had five monasteries in
Belgium, of which St. Agatha is considered the mother-house. To
these Croisier Canons belongs the privilege, granted to them by
Pope Leo X and confirmed by Leo XIII, of blessing beads with an indulgence of 500 days. Their habit was formerly
black, but is now a white soutane with a black scapular and a
cross, white and red on the breast. In choir they wear in summer
the rochet with a black almuce.
The Gilbertines
To St. Gilbert of
Sempringham is due the honour of founding the only religious
order of distinctly English origin. Having completed his studies in England
and in France, he returned to the diocese of Lincoln
, where he began to labour with great zeal for the
salvation of souls, becoming a canon regular in the monastery of
Bridlington
. But finding that the discipline of the
order was not strictly observed, he conceived, in 1148, the idea of
introducing a reform in those regions. After much prayer, thought,
and taking advice from holy men, he came to the conclusion that it
was necessary to establish a new congregation, composed of both men
and women, who should live under the same roof, though of course
separated. This idea he put into execution, giving the rule of St.
Benedict to the woman and that of canons regular to the men, with
special and carefully elaborated constitutions for both. The
Gilbertine Congregation
spread especially in the North of England, and as already stated,
at the time of the general dissolution it had twenty houses and one
hundred and fifty-one religious. At the temporary University of
Stamford, Sempringham Hall, founded
by Robert Lutrell in 1292, was especially for the students of the
Gilbertine Congregation.
Congregation of SS. Augustine, Bernard, and
Nicholas
The
canons regular, usually called monks, whom visitors find serving at
the Hospice on the Great St. Bernard
, belong to the Congregation
of St. Augustine, St. Bernard and St. Nicholas, as it is
officially called. They were established by Bernard of Menthon, a canon regular of
Aosta
(Italy), about the year 969, according to some, or
later, according to others. The religious institute in such
a place was only meant by the founder for the convenience of
pilgrims and travellers who cross the Alps at a point always full
of dangers. The hospice, the canons, their work are too well known
to need more than a short mention here. Besides lay brothers
and servants, thee are always at the hospice about fifteen canons,
who come from Martigny
, their mother-house, where also resides the
superior general of the congregation. Some canons have
charge of the hospice on the Simpion Pass, and a certain number of
parishes in the Canton Valais are served by canons of the same
congregation.
The Windesheim Congregation
The origin of the Windesheim Congregation is due to
Gerard Groot, a zealous preacher and
reformer of the fourteenth century, at Deventer in the Low
Countries. Touched by his preaching and example, many poor clerical
students gathered around him and, under his direction, "putting
together whatever they earned week by week, began to live in
common." Such was the beginning of the institute known as that of
the "Brothers and Sisters of the Common Life." This institution
spread rapidly, and in short time nearly every town in Holland and
the adjacent countries contained one or more houses of "The New
Devotion" as it was then called. But difficulties were not wanting.
The members of "The New Devotion" were not bound together by any
vows, and the institute had received no formal approval from the
ecclesiastical authorities. Groot foresaw that the only safeguard
for the continuance of the new institute was to affiliate it in
some way to some great religious order already approved by the
Church, to the authority of which the devout brethren and sisters
might look for guidance and protection. Having heard of the famous
Blessed John Ruysbrock, prior of a
house of canons regular at Groendael near
Brussels, he went to visit and consult him. Deeply edified by what
he saw and heard there, Gerard Groot resolved to place this new
institute under the spiritual guidance of the canons regular. The
execution of tis resolve was left by Gerard Groot, at his death, to
his beloved disciple, Florentius
Radwyn. A beginning was soon made, and the
foundation of the first house laid at Windersheim, near Zwolle
.
This became the mother-house of the famous congregation, which,
only sixty years after the death of Groot, possessed in Belgium
alone more than eighty well-organized monsteries, some of which,
according to the chronicler John Buschius, who had visited them
all, contained as many as a hundred, or even two hundred, inmates.
The congregation continued in its primitive fervour until the
devastations of the Reformers drove it from its native soil, and it
was at last utterly destroyed during the French Revolution. To this double
institute the Church owes many pious and learned men—as Raymond Jordan, called Idiota, John Ruysbroeck, Mauburn, Garetius, Latomus and Erasmus. Some,
like St. John Ostervick,
canonized by Pius IX, shed their blood
rather than deny their Faith. Chief among these learned and holy
men stands Thomas a Kempis, when
still a youth joined the institute, and knew the saintly Floretius
and the first founders of the congregation.
The Irish Congregation of St. Patrick
Although the canonical order possessed so many houses in
Ireland before the dissolution by Henry
VIII, on account of the persecution, little by little it
appears to have languished, and by 1620 to have been nearly
extinct; it somewhat revived, however, for canons regular were once
more to be found in the country not long after this. It is not
improbable that at the outbreak of the persecution, like many
members of other religious orders, some of the Irish canons may
have retired to foreign monasteries and maintained a
quasi-independent existence, and have been joined by others of
their compatriots who were desirous of entering the canonical
institute. In 1645 Dom Thaddeus
O'Conel was butchered at Sligo by the Scottish Puritans
together with the Archbishop of Tuam,
Malachy O'Quechly. At the
commencement of 1646 the canons were sufficiently numerous to be
formed by Innocent X into a separate
congregation of St.
Patrick, which the pope declared to inherit all the rights,
privileges and possessions of the old Irish canons.
In the year 1698 the Irish Congregation, by a Bull of Innocent XII, was affiliated and
aggregated to the Lateran Congregation. From the moment the union
was made the two congregations formed but one, and the members of
each enjoyed all the rights and privileges of the other. The
constitutions of the Lateran Congregation were adopted with some
little modification by the Irish. In 1703 Dom Milerius Burke, Abbot
of St. Thomas, Dublin, was appointed by the abbot general,
Clappini, with the approval of Clement
XI, vicar-general in the three kingdoms. In 1735 the Irish
canons were claiming before the Congregation of Propaganda their
right to several churches, parishes, and houses. The cause was
settled in their favour, but there were many difficulties, and they
could get possession of only a few. In the "Spicilegium Ossoriense"
(III, 148) we find that Henry O'Kelly, a canon regular, obtained
from Pope Benedict XIII letters
in virtue of which he not only called himself Abbot of St. Thomas,
Dublin, but also claimed the parochial rights over a great part of
the city, without any dependence upon the metropolitan. The last
canon of the Irish Congregation died towards the beginning of the
nineteenth century, but as the Irish Congregation has been united
with the Lateran Congregation, all its rights and privileges still
survive in the last-named.
Canons of the Immaculate Conception
After the French Revolution in 1789 and the subsequent
persecution of the Church all of the houses of the Canons Regular
in France died out. In 1871 a diocesan priest from the Jura, Dom
Adrien Gréa, Vicar-General of St.
Claude in France, founded a new house of Canons Regular in France,
this local congregation eventually developed into the Congregation
of the Canons Regular of
the Immaculate Conception. The laws of separation of Church and
State in France in 1904 made it difficult for most of the Canons Regular of
the Immaculate Conception to stay in France. A new home was
found for the congregation who moved to northern Italy, where it is
present until this day. Before their expulsion from France they
served the ancient Abbey of St. Anthony in the Dauphiné, The early period of this
congregation saw missions established in Canada and Peru, where
there are still houses today. The Canons Regular have houses in
Brasil, Canada, England, France, Italy, Peru and the United States.
Some years ago the congregation was revived, with some
modifications, by the Very Reverend Dom Gréa, then Vicar-General of St. Claude in France, under
the denomination of Canons Regular of the Immaculate
Conception (see below). Before their expulsion from France
they served the ancient Abbey of St. Anthony in the Dauphiné. Their habit is a white cassock, with
leather girdel, linen rochet, black cloak and hood, and black
biretta.
Austrian Congregation of Canons Regular
The Austrian Congregation of
Canons Regular was formed in 1907, composed of the various
ancient monasteries, abbeys, and collegiate churches of canons
regular in Austria: St. Florian, Klosterneuburg, Herzogenburg,
Reichersberg, Vorau and Neustift (now in Italy). The Abbot General,
who is head of the Austrian Congregation is at this time Rt.
Rev Fr
Bernhard Backovsky, Lord Provost of Klosterneuburg
Monastery
.
Extinct congregations
Extinct congregations include those of St.
Rufus, founded in 1039, and once flourishing in Dauphiné; of Aroasia (Diocese of Arras, in France), founded in
1097; Marbach (1100); of the Holy Redeemer of Bologna
, also called the Renana (1136), now united to the
Lateran Congregation; of the Holy Spirit in Sassia
(1198); of
St. George in Alga, at Venice (1404); of Our
Saviour in Lorraine, reformed in
1628 by St. Peter
Fourier.
Canonesses regular
There are canonesses regular, as
well as canons regular; the Apostolic
origin is common to both. As Suarez says , with regard to origin
and antiquity the same is to be said of orders of women both in
general and in particular as of orders of men. The one generally
began with the other. St. Basil in his
rules addresses both men and women. And St. Augustine founded his first
monastery for women in Africa at Tagaste
. Most, if not all, of the congregations
which go to form the canonical order had, or still have, a
correlative congregation for women. In Ireland St. Patrick
instituted canons regular, and St. Bridget was the first of
numberless canonesses. The monasteries of the Gilbertine Congregation were nearly
always double, for men and women.
In the tenth and eleventh centuries many of them became
canonicae saeclulares and though living in the same house,
no longer cherished the spirit of religious poverty or kept a
common table.
On the other hand many communities of canonesses willingly took the
name and the rule of life laid down for the congregations of
regular canons. There still exist in Italy
, France
, Spain
, Belgium
, Holland
, England
, Germany
, Africa, and America nuns
and convents belonging to the Lateran or to some other congregation
of canons regular. The contemplative life is represented by
such convents as Newton Abbot in England, Sta. Pudenziana at Rome,
Sta. Maria di Passione at Genoa, Hernani in Spain, St. Trudo at
Bruges. The Hospitalarians were till lately well
represented in France with convents of canonesses at Paris
, Reims
, Laon
, Soissons
, and elsewhere.
Occupied
in the education of children, there are besides some of the ancient
convents of canonesses of various congregations, the canonesses of
the Congregation of Notre Dame (in full: Congrégation de
Notre-Dame de chanoinesses de Saint Augustin), instituted in
1597 at Mattaincourt
, in Lorraine, by
St. Peter Fourier and the blessed
Alix Le Clerc. This
congregation, whose object is the gratuitous education of poor
girls, spread rapidly in France and Italy. There are now convents
of Notre Dame in France, Belgium, Holland, Austria, Germany, Italy,
and Africa. In France alone, until the persecution of 1907, they
had some thirty flourishing communities and as many schools for
externs and boarders. Driven away from France, some have taken
refuge in England, like those of the famous convent of Les Oiseaux,
Paris, who are now at Westgate, and those of Versailles who have
settled at Hull. With some modifications the work was soon
introduced into the New World in a remarkable way. The canonesses of the
convent at Troyes
had for
some time earnestly desired to carry on their institute in
Canada. Circumstances, however, prevented their going, but
at their request Marguerite
Bourgeoys, the president, of the confraternity attached to
their convent, gladly crossed the ocean. In 1657 she opened a
school at Montreal, in which, in accordance with the rules laid
down by Peter Fourier, the poor were taught gratuitously. The
school was a great success. Margaret returned to France to ask for
helpers, and found them among her sister, the Children of Mary of
Troyes. Returning to Canada with four fellow-workers, and soon
followed by others she opened a school for boarders as well as a
day school. In 1676 these pious women were formed into the
"Congregation of Notre Dame." Margaret died in 1700 and has since
been declared venerable. The work she had transferred to Canada is
still flourishing. At her death there were ten houses in the
Dominion; there are now more than a hundred spread over the whole
of North America under a superior general, who resides at the
mother-house, Montreal.
In 1809 Bishop George Michael
Wittman founded, in Bavaria, the Poor Sisters of the
Schools of Notre Dame, and institute similar to that founded by
St. Peter Fourier. This association is
now widespread in Europe and in America, and has done excellent
work in the field of education.
There are English canonesses at Bruges, and at Neuilly, near Paris.
In England there is a convent of the Holy Sepulchre at New Hall,
with a flourishing school, originally at Liège; also a filiation of
that at Bruges, at Hayward's heath, with a large school; at Newton
Abbot a numerous community, with a colony at Hoddesdon, devoted to
the contemplative life and the Perpetual Adoration. This last
convent is, as it were, a link with the pre-Reformation canonesses,
through Sister Elizabeth Woodford, who was professed at Barnharm,
Priory, Bucks, 8 December 1519. When the convent was suppressed, in
1539, she was received for some time into the household of Saint
Thomas More. Later on she went to the Low Countries and was
received into the convent of canonesses regular at St. Ursula's,
Louvain, of the Windersheim Congregation. So many English ladies,
daughters and sisters of martyrs, like Ann
Clitheroe, Margaret Clement,
Eleanor and Margaret Garnet,
followed her that, in 1609, they formed an English community, St.
Monica's, Louvain. Towards the end of the eighteenth century, this
community of English canonesses returned to England, first to
Spettisbury, afterwards to their present home at Newton Abbot. The
chronicles of this ancient convent are being published, and two
very interesting volumes have already appeared.
See also
Notes
Specific references:General references:
External links
- Canons Regular of the Mother of God,
France
- Canons Regular of Jesus the Lord, Vladivostok
Mission
- The
Canonesses in Jesus the Lord
- Canons Regular of St. John Lateran, The Italian Province's
Website
- Canons Regular of St. Victor, France &
Tanzania
- Canons Regular of Windesheim
- Canons Regular of the Mother of the Redeemer,
France
- Canons
Regular of Mount St. Bernard, Switzerland
- Canons Regular of St. Maurice, Switzerland
- Canons Regular of Saint John Cantius, Chicago,
USA
- Text of the Rule of St. Augustine
- Catholic Encyclopedia entry for "Canons and
Canonesses Regular"
- Canons Regular of the Austrian Congregation Stift
Klosterneuburg
- Canons Regular of Prémontré Our Lady of England
Priory, Storrington, West Sussex, England
- The Canons Regular of Prémontré The Canons Regular of
Prémontré in Chelmsford, Essex, England
- Canons
Regular of the Immaculate Conception International
website
- Canons Regular of Prémontré International
website
- The
Brethren of the Common Life