-
expanding the
provision of nunneries, and the
charismatic orders of the
Savigniacs and Tironensians. He was an avid
collector of relics,
sending an emb****y...
- The
monastic Congregation of
Savigny (
Savigniac Order)
started in the
abbey of Savigny,
situated in
northern France, on the
confines of
Normandy and Brittany...
-
Savigniac house but
became Cistercian in 1147 upon the
absorption of the order. The
abbey was
founded in 1140 as the last of the
seventeen Savigniac houses...
- "Vale of Nightshade", now on the
outskirts of the town.
Founded for the
Savigniac order, it was
built on the
orders of King
Stephen in 1123. Soon after...
-
Calder Abbey in ****bria was a
Savigniac monastery founded in 1134 by
Ranulph de Gernon, 2nd Earl of Chester, and
moved to this site
following a refoundation...
- Rome. A
considerable reinforcement to the
Order was the
merger of the
Savigniac houses with the Cistercians, at the
insistence of
Eugene III. Thirteen...
-
known as Yoredale. The
valley is now
called Wensleydale.
Initially a
Savigniac foundation out of Normandy, the
abbey was
later taken over by the Cistercian...
-
Abbey Orford Priory Stixwould Priory Tupholme Abbey West
Ravendale Priory Savigniac Revesby Abbey Swineshead Abbey Tironensian Humberston Abbey Independent...
- the
western region of
Morgannwg two
monastic foundations were sited, a
Savigniac house in
Neath in 1130 and the
Cistercian Margam Abbey in 1147. In the...
- soldiers.
Buildwas Abbey Abbey 1135
Remains A
Cistercian (originally
Savigniac) monastery,
founded by the
local bishop, then
under Abbot Ranulf in the...