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St. Andrew Abbey-Cleveland is a Benedictine monastery in Cleveland, Ohio. [1] The monks of St. Andrew Abbey at the election of Abbot Gary Hoover, OSB. Monastic community
Assumption Abbey (Richardton, North Dakota): founded in 1893 under the name St. Gall's; transferred to Richardton in 1899 and renamed St. Mary's; became an abbey in 1903; renamed Assumption Abbey in 1928; joined American-Cassinese Congregation in 1932.
Benedictine High School was founded in 1927 by the Benedictine monks of Cleveland. The first location of the school was at East 51st Street and Superior Avenue in Cleveland. The original focus of the founders was to teach the sons of Slovak immigrants. The school grew quickly and in 1929 it relocated to the site of St. Andrew Abbey at 10510 ...
St. Andrew Abbey, a Benedictine monastery located in Cleveland. [64] St. Mark Serbian Orthodox Monastery, an Eastern Orthodox monastery located in Sheffield. [65] St. Paul's Episcopal Church, a Roman Catholic monastery located in Cleveland. [66]
Anson wrote, in The American Benedictine Review, that after Parrish left, it "appears that his followers were replaced or displaced by a group of young men who had been formed into a Benedictine brotherhood" by Brothers in Waukegan, Illinois, [7]: 24 located outside Grafton's Diocese of Fond du Lac and in the Episcopal Diocese of Chicago where ...
Benedictine monks cell, dependent on St Bees founded 1179 by John de Courcy, who granted land to St Bees (dependent on St Mary's, York), on site of earlier monastery (see immediately above) ;
This small community, not so far from Basel, has a Benedictine abbey, Mariastein Abbey. Father Francis de Sales Brunner, who established the Missionaries of the Precious Blood order that provides priests for St John's Church in Maria Stein, Ohio, entered the abbey in 1812 and remained there as a member of the convent until 1829. [5]
Mechtilde of Hackeborn, OSB, also known as Mechtilde of Helfta (1240/1241 – 19 November 1298), was a Saxon Christian saint (from what is now Germany) and a Benedictine nun. She was famous for her musical talents, gifted with a beautiful voice. At the age of 50, Mechtilde went through a grave spiritual crisis, as well as physical suffering.