-
political consequences, the
reforms demanded greater religious devotion. The
Cluniacs supported the
Peace of God, and
promoted pilgrimages to the Holy Lands...
- The head of
their order was the
Abbot at Cluny. All
English and
Scottish Cluniacs were
bound to
cross to
France to
Cluny to
consult or be
consulted unless...
- Priory, Mendham". www.outdooractive.com.
Retrieved 1 June 2024. "Who were the
Cluniacs? -
article from". www.monasticwales.org.
Retrieved 3
January 2024....
- such, the
priory came to
represent the
Benedictine ideals espoused by the
Cluniac reforms as smaller,
lesser houses of
Benedictines of Cluny.
There were...
-
determined who
would be
appointed to
ecclesiastical offices. In the wake of the
Cluniac Reforms, this
involvement was
increasingly seen as
inappropriate by the...
- and some
recruits from
Surrey joined the
Kentish rebel army. In 1082 a
Cluniac abbey was
founded at
Bermondsey by Alwine, a
wealthy English citizen of...
-
always by far the most
numerous in England. They were
followed by the
Cluniac order, the Cistercians,
Carthusians and
Augustinian Canons.
During the...
-
founded in the Mâcon
region of
France in 909, was
established as part of the
Cluniac Reforms, a
larger movement of
monastic reform in
response to this fear...
-
prestige within the
monastic orders,
eclipsing older orders such as the
Cluniacs. Stephen's
dispute with the
church had its
origins in 1140 when Archbishop...
- odds with
France and/or Burgundy. In the mid 14th
century the
English Cluniacs settled this
difficulty by
buying a
special legal recognition from the...