enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Abbess - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abbess

    The first to make this change was the Abbey of Quedlinburg, whose last Catholic Abbess died in 1514. [1] These are collegiate foundations, which provide a home and an income for unmarried ladies, generally of noble birth, called canonesses ( German : Kanonissinen ), or more usually, Stiftsdamen or Kapitularinnen .

  3. Prior (ecclesiastical) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prior_(ecclesiastical)

    (The superior of the major houses of Camaldolese nuns, however, is called an abbess.) This title, in its feminine form prioress, is used for monasteries of nuns in the Dominican and Carmelite orders. An Obedientiary Prior heads a monastery created as a satellite of an abbey. When an abbey becomes overlarge, or when there is need of a monastery ...

  4. Gertrude of Hackeborn - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gertrude_of_Hackeborn

    During her time as abbess, Benedictine practice, Cistercian austerity, and Dominican and Beguine spirituality came together to make the convent of Helfta famous across the Holy Roman Empire for its practices of asceticism and mysticism. [3] [4] Gertrude required her nuns to be educated in the liberal arts, but most importantly in the Bible.

  5. Abbey - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abbey

    The concept of the abbey has developed over many centuries from the early monastic ways of religious men and women where they would live isolated from the lay community about them. Religious life in an abbey may be monastic. An abbey may be the home of an enclosed religious order or may be open to visitors. The layout of the church and ...

  6. Our Lady of the Mississippi Abbey - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Our_Lady_of_the...

    The original site was to be in Argentina, where there was already a new monastery founded by the monks of the Trappist abbey near to Wrentham. That site did not work out, however, so the abbess, Mother Angela, O.C.S.O., asked the Trappists abbots of the United States for possible sites.

  7. St Cecilia's Abbey, Ryde - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/St_Cecilia's_Abbey,_Ryde

    In his last years, he oversaw, in collaboration with the first abbess, Mother Cécile Bruyère, the establishment of a community of women under the Rule of St Benedict at the abbey of Ste-Cécile de Solesmes. Neither he nor Florence de Werquignoeul desired to create a new form of religious life but to return to an ancient but living tradition.

  8. Power, Religion and the Place of Women Dominate Antonio ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/entertainment/power-religion-place...

    A Malaga competition contender, Antonio Chavarrías returns to the festival with “Holy Mother,” (“La abadesa”). His latest venture, sold by Film Constellation, transports us to the 9th ...

  9. Double monastery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Double_monastery

    In the Catholic Church, monks and nuns would live in separate buildings but were usually united under an Abbess as head of the entire household. Examples include the original Coldingham Priory in Scotland, Barking Abbey in London, and also Einsiedeln Abbey and Fahr Convent in separate cantons of Switzerland , controlled by the male abbot of ...