Abbey
Bible
Dictionary Entry
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An abbey is a
monastery of monks ruled by an abbot or a monastery of nuns
ruled by an abbess. Each abbey will normally follow a
particular religious order (like Benedictines, Augustinians,
Franciscans, and others). The word also refers to the
building or buildings used by the abbey.
Besides the abbot or
abbess, the abbey has many other officers. They include the
following:
- Prior,
who served in the abbot’s place when he was absent. Some
great abbeys had several priors.
-
Almoner, who had the oversight of the daily distribution
of alms to the poor at the gate.
-
Pitantarius, who had care for the pittances, which were
the allowances given on special occasions over and above
the usual provisions.
-
Sacristan (Sexton), who had the care of the vessels,
vestments, books, etc.; he also provided for the
sacrament and took care of burials.
-
Chamberlain, who looked after the dormitory or sleeping
quarters.
-
Cellarer, whose duty it was to procure provisions for
strangers.
-
Bursar, who received rents, etc.
-
Precentor, who presided over the choir.
-
Infirmarius, who attended to the hospital and sick
monks.
-
Refectionarius, who looked after the hall and provided
everything required there.
In the typical abbey
of the Middle Ages, the center of the entire group of
buildings was occupied by a quadrangle (an open rectangular
space). On the north side of this space was the church. On
the other three sides ran the cloister or ambulatory, a
vaulted passage open on the inner side. The cloister served
both as a covered walkway from building to building and as a
place for exercise in bad weather. Connected with the
cloister on the ground floor were the refectory (dining
hall), the kitchen, the chapter-house (in which the reading
and exposition of the rule of the order took place), the
winter dining room, and the reception room for outsiders.
On the second floor
was a passageway above the cloister which connected to the
choir loft of the church. The rooms on this floor included
the vestiarium (where the clothes were kept), the library,
the dormitory, the infirmary, the rooms for the novices, and
the apartments for the abbot (which were accessible directly
from the outside). Outside the main abbey there might be
various farm buildings and a house for pilgrims who came by.
These often surrounded a separate quadrangle. The entire
group of buildings was surrounded by a high, solid wall,
which was often fortified by towers and strong gates. The
burial ground for the monks was also within the enclosure.
England was at one
time home to many wealthy abbeys. In the years after King
Henry VIII broke with the Roman Catholic Church (1534), he
seized all 190 of the abbeys and used their wealth to
increase his own power and riches.
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