The Benedictine Culture of Medieval Iceland

The monastic tradition of St Benedict of Nursia inspired and influenced Iceland’s medieval monasteries. Four communities, two each of men and women, which were identified in contemporary records as ‘under the rule of Saint Benedict’, endured for four hundred years, until the Protestant suppressions...

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Published in:Religions
Main Author: James G. Clark
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14070851
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spelling ftmdpi:oai:mdpi.com:/2077-1444/14/7/851/ 2023-08-20T04:07:24+02:00 The Benedictine Culture of Medieval Iceland James G. Clark 2023-06-28 application/pdf https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14070851 EN eng Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute https://dx.doi.org/10.3390/rel14070851 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Religions; Volume 14; Issue 7; Pages: 851 Iceland monasteries Benedictine Text 2023 ftmdpi https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14070851 2023-08-01T10:40:01Z The monastic tradition of St Benedict of Nursia inspired and influenced Iceland’s medieval monasteries. Four communities, two each of men and women, which were identified in contemporary records as ‘under the rule of Saint Benedict’, endured for four hundred years, until the Protestant suppressions of the mid-sixteenth century. The monasteries of men emerged as Iceland’s most important centres of literary production; each of the churches was the focus of public worship and popular cults, and at times in their history, they may also have maintained the largest monastic populations seen in the island. With no visible trace of their physical environment, material evidence only now being revealed in excavations and very few documentary records describing their form of Benedictinism, their observant customs and broader Benedictine culture remain elusive. Drawing on the inventories (máldagar) of their property made at intervals between the thirteenth and sixteenth centuries, together with the representation of their regular life in contemporary biskupa sögur, this paper reveals a monastic practice that did diverge from that of Benedictines elsewhere in northern Europe but that nonetheless expressed a powerful attachment to some of the principal ideals of the Benedictine Rule: abbacy, conventual fraternity and the interplay of contemplative and active occupation. Above all, these communities appear to have propagated a cult interest in the figure of Benedict himself, placing him at the centre of their worship life long after Benedictines elsewhere in Europe had allowed him to be eclipsed by national and regional cults of more recent creation. Text Iceland MDPI Open Access Publishing Benedict ENVELOPE(-66.585,-66.585,-66.157,-66.157) Religions 14 7 851
institution Open Polar
collection MDPI Open Access Publishing
op_collection_id ftmdpi
language English
topic Iceland
monasteries
Benedictine
spellingShingle Iceland
monasteries
Benedictine
James G. Clark
The Benedictine Culture of Medieval Iceland
topic_facet Iceland
monasteries
Benedictine
description The monastic tradition of St Benedict of Nursia inspired and influenced Iceland’s medieval monasteries. Four communities, two each of men and women, which were identified in contemporary records as ‘under the rule of Saint Benedict’, endured for four hundred years, until the Protestant suppressions of the mid-sixteenth century. The monasteries of men emerged as Iceland’s most important centres of literary production; each of the churches was the focus of public worship and popular cults, and at times in their history, they may also have maintained the largest monastic populations seen in the island. With no visible trace of their physical environment, material evidence only now being revealed in excavations and very few documentary records describing their form of Benedictinism, their observant customs and broader Benedictine culture remain elusive. Drawing on the inventories (máldagar) of their property made at intervals between the thirteenth and sixteenth centuries, together with the representation of their regular life in contemporary biskupa sögur, this paper reveals a monastic practice that did diverge from that of Benedictines elsewhere in northern Europe but that nonetheless expressed a powerful attachment to some of the principal ideals of the Benedictine Rule: abbacy, conventual fraternity and the interplay of contemplative and active occupation. Above all, these communities appear to have propagated a cult interest in the figure of Benedict himself, placing him at the centre of their worship life long after Benedictines elsewhere in Europe had allowed him to be eclipsed by national and regional cults of more recent creation.
format Text
author James G. Clark
author_facet James G. Clark
author_sort James G. Clark
title The Benedictine Culture of Medieval Iceland
title_short The Benedictine Culture of Medieval Iceland
title_full The Benedictine Culture of Medieval Iceland
title_fullStr The Benedictine Culture of Medieval Iceland
title_full_unstemmed The Benedictine Culture of Medieval Iceland
title_sort benedictine culture of medieval iceland
publisher Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute
publishDate 2023
url https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14070851
long_lat ENVELOPE(-66.585,-66.585,-66.157,-66.157)
geographic Benedict
geographic_facet Benedict
genre Iceland
genre_facet Iceland
op_source Religions; Volume 14; Issue 7; Pages: 851
op_relation https://dx.doi.org/10.3390/rel14070851
op_rights https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
op_doi https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14070851
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