- The
Cistercians (/sɪˈstɜːrʃənz/),
officially the
Order of
Cistercians (Latin: (Sacer) Ordo Cisterciensis,
abbreviated as
OCist or SOCist), are a Catholic...
-
Reformed Cistercians of Our Lady of La Trappe, are a
Catholic religious order of
cloistered monastics that
branched off from the
Cistercians. They follow...
- centuries,
Cistercian barns consisted of a
stone exterior,
divided into nave and
aisles either by
wooden posts or by
stone piers. The
Cistercians acquired...
- are
compounded on a
single stave to
indicate more
complex numbers. The
Cistercians eventually abandoned the
system in
favor of the
Arabic numerals, but...
-
entitled Reformed Cistercians of the
Strict Observance. The
status of
Cistercian nuns had been
ambiguous from the start. Over time, the
Cistercian orders put...
-
Anglican Cistercians are
members of the
Anglican Communion who live a
common life
together according to the
Cistercian tradition. This
tradition is usually...
- habit, the
Cistercians were
eager to
preserve their textual versions of the hymns, even when
scholarly research showed that the
Cistercian texts did not...
-
exempted the
Cistercians,
because their rite had been more than 200
years in existence.
Under Claude Vaussin,
General of the
Cistercians in the middle...
- hundred-acre property, a
mansion and its
walled garden to the
Cistercians. The
Cistercians moved into
Roscrea from
their abbey at
Mount Melleray in February...
- The
Cistercians are a
Catholic religious order of
enclosed monks and nuns
formed in 1098,
originating from Cîteaux Abbey.
Their monasteries spread throughout...