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Cistercian Abbots in Late Medieval Central Europe: Between the Cloister and the World

from Part III - Identity and Display

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 November 2014

Emilia Jamroziak
Affiliation:
University of Leeds
Martin Heale
Affiliation:
Senior Lecturer in Late Medieval History, University of Liverpool
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Summary

From the very beginning of monasticism, the role of the abbot was central to the way in which communities of monks functioned on a practical and spiritual level. The abbot was the father and spiritual leader of the community, responsible for guiding the monks towards salvation by preaching, taking confessions, and officiating in the liturgy, while, at the same time, he was head of the monastic community in all its temporal functions. In the twelfth century, the abbot was often the only ordained priest in many Cistercian communities. The Benedictine tradition emphasized hierarchical dependence and total obedience to the abbot: ‘the Abbot represented Christ, and his monks obeyed his command as if they were wishes from God’. Although Cistercian observance was based on the Rule of St Benedict, the white monks curbed the autocratic power of their abbots by the structure of the Chapter General, the filiation system and visitations. This uniformity of practice was also intended to prevent arbitrary decisions of abbots in the very important matter of the liturgy – the leaders of individual communities were not supposed to introduce any changes to the order-wide form of liturgy. Unlike Benedictine abbots who held their position for life, it was not unusual for Cistercian abbots to resign and occasionally even to be deposed if they were seen, by the abbot of the mother house or other delegate of the General Chapter, to fail seriously in their duties.

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Publisher: Boydell & Brewer
Print publication year: 2014

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