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  2. Dissolution of the monasteries - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dissolution_of_the_monasteries

    The dissolution of the monasteries, occasionally referred to as the suppression of the monasteries, was the set of administrative and legal processes between 1536 and 1541, by which Henry VIII disbanded Catholic monasteries, priories, convents, and friaries in England, Wales, and Ireland; seized their wealth; disposed of their assets, and provided for their former personnel and functions.

  3. Suppression of monasteries - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Suppression_of_monasteries

    The monasteries, being landowners who never died and whose property was therefore never divided among inheritors (as happened to the land of neighboring secular land owners), tended to accumulate and keep considerable lands and properties - which aroused resentment and made them vulnerable to governments confiscating their properties at times of religious or political upheaval, whether to fund ...

  4. Monastery death - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monastery_death

    Monastery death (German: Klostertod; French: mort civile des religieux) [1] was a form of civil death – the loss of legal capacity of living persons – known to common and civil law. The monastery death happened in some jurisdictions when a person entered a monastery or nunnery and professed into consecrated life .

  5. Christian monasticism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christian_monasticism

    Lérins became, in time, a center of monastic culture and learning, and many later monks and bishops would pass through Lérins in the early stages of their career. [32] Honoratus was called to be Bishop of Arles. John Cassian began his monastic career at a monastery in Palestine and Egypt around 385 to study monastic practice there. In Egypt ...

  6. List of defunct Catholic religious institutes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_defunct_Catholic...

    This page lists religious institutes of the Catholic Church that are now defunct.This refers to institutes that have merged, been suppressed, disbanded or died out.. Merged refers to institutes who have either formed a new institute with another group, or joined another institute altogether.

  7. English Benedictine Reform - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/English_Benedictine_Reform

    The "anti-monastic reaction" was short-lived, but the reformed monasteries went into a long-term decline, and they were hard hit by the renewal of Viking attacks and high taxation from the 980s. Blair comments: "For all their great and continuing achievements, the reformed houses after the 970s lived more on inherited capital than on dynamic ...

  8. 35 Bible Verses About Grief to Help You Mourn the Loss of a ...

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/35-bible-verses-grief-help...

    35 Bible Verses About Grief to Help You Mourn the Loss of a Loved One. Elizabeth Berry, Ysolt Usigan. December 20, 2023 at 11:59 PM.

  9. Cluniac Reforms - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cluniac_Reforms

    In the early 10th century, Western monasticism, which had flourished several centuries earlier with St Benedict of Nursia, was experiencing a severe decline due to unstable political and social conditions resulting from the nearly continuous Viking raids, widespread poverty and, especially, the dependence of abbeys on the local nobles who controlled all that belonged to the territories under ...