Kirkstall Abbey 
Adresse : Abbey Rd, LS5 3 Leeds, Royaume-Uni(voir les coordonnées GPS)N 53°49'24'', W 1°36'51''
Mots-clés : visiter
ajouté le 11/03/2008
Kirkstall AbbeyCompleted between 1152 and 1182, Kirkstall Abbey still stands substantially to its full height, its massive structure presenting a unique example of early Cistercian architecture. Although its community was disbanded in 1539, it has continued to attract the attention of increasing numbers of visitors, for no other building so completely illustrates this early period of English monastic life.
The ideal of the monastic life is that a man who enters it shall give up all share and interest in the affairs of the world and devote his whole life to the service of God. About 525 St. Benedict gathered together a community of such men at Monte Cassino between Rome and Naples, where he drew up a series of rules to guide their daily life and worship. Monasteries following the Benedictine rule were soon established in most European countries, but their increasing laxity led to a number of revivals, the most important of these beginning in 1098 with the foundation of the Abbey of Citeaux in Burgundy in eastern France.
Stephen Harding, an Englishman, became abbot here in 1109. Within the next decade he drew up the 'Charter of Charity', the constitution which bound together the Cistercian order under the government of a general chapter, or assembly of abbots. In addition, a series of 'customs' were established which ensured that all Cistercian monasteries followed the same interpretation of St. Benedict's rule as practised at Citeaux. By 1120 some twelve Cistercian monasteries had been founded, but by 1152 their number had increased to three hundred and thirty. In Yorkshire the major expansion took place in the 1130s and 1140s, the community which was to found Kirkstall Abbey leaving Fountain Abbey near Ripon in 1147.
The ideal of the monastic life is that a man who enters it shall give up all share and interest in the affairs of the world and devote his whole life to the service of God. About 525 St. Benedict gathered together a community of such men at Monte Cassino between Rome and Naples, where he drew up a series of rules to guide their daily life and worship. Monasteries following the Benedictine rule were soon established in most European countries, but their increasing laxity led to a number of revivals, the most important of these beginning in 1098 with the foundation of the Abbey of Citeaux in Burgundy in eastern France.
Stephen Harding, an Englishman, became abbot here in 1109. Within the next decade he drew up the 'Charter of Charity', the constitution which bound together the Cistercian order under the government of a general chapter, or assembly of abbots. In addition, a series of 'customs' were established which ensured that all Cistercian monasteries followed the same interpretation of St. Benedict's rule as practised at Citeaux. By 1120 some twelve Cistercian monasteries had been founded, but by 1152 their number had increased to three hundred and thirty. In Yorkshire the major expansion took place in the 1130s and 1140s, the community which was to found Kirkstall Abbey leaving Fountain Abbey near Ripon in 1147.
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