- or
obedientiary priories are
dependencies of abbeys.
Their superior, who is
subject to the
abbot in everything, is
called a
simple or
obedientiary prior...
- In the
Middle Ages, an
obedientiary or
obedienciary (from the
Latin obedientiarius,
meaning someone in an 'obedient', i.e. subordinate, position) was a...
-
three kinds of priors: the
claustral prior the
conventual prior the
obedientiary prior The
Claustral prior (Latin
prior claustralis),
called dean in a...
-
Archimandrite Religious superior -
Monastic superiors Abbot conventual prior Obedientiary prior Second Claustral prior or
Deans Sub-prior Archimandrite, honorary...
- of
Abingdon Abbey (imperfect),
including a
treatise on the abbey's
obedientiaries (1st half of the 13th century);
Miniature of a battle-scene by the Boethius...
- had been
founded by
monks from France.
Griffiths was
chosen to be the
obedientiary prior for the
monastery at
Farnborough in Hampshire. He led that house...
-
could graze, as well as a cellarer's
garden or
private gardens for
obedientiaries,
monks who held
specific posts within the monastery.
Islamic gardens...
- Encyclopedia. New York:
Robert Appleton Company. Harvey,
Barbara F. The
Obedientiaries of
Westminster Abbey and
Their Financial Records, C. 1275-1540. Boydell...
-
small castles were
built for the
minor nobles. The
Kellner of
Sarnen (
Obedientiaries of the main family)
lived in the
Lower Castle in Sarnen. In
Giswil the...
- ISBN 978-0-19-861412-8. (Subscription or UK
public library membership required.)
Cheney &
Jones 2000, p. 9. Cox 1974, p. 173.
Accounts of the
Obedientiaries, ****ix–xl...