Terms of the Religious Life April 1, 1991
abbess: the female head, or superior, of an abbey. An abbey may be either a convent or monastery, though more often the word designates a convent. (An abbess’s male counterpart is called an abbot.) anchoress: a woman who lives a solitary life of silence and prayer, especially one who remains in confined quarters, usually a single small room (or cell). In the later Middle Ages, an anchoress’s quarters (the anchorhold) were often attached to the wall of a church. (This life was also pursued by men, who were called anchorites.) beguine: a laywoman who belonged to certain sisterhoods that arose in Belgium and the Netherlands in the late eleventh and twelfth centuries. A beguine took no vows, or temporary ones, usually of chastity and simplicity, and devoted herself to good works. Though often living in community, a beguine was free to hold private property and to leave the community and marry. (The male counterparts to the beguines were called beghards.) cenobite: a member of a religious community (the word is taken from the Greek for common life). The opposite of eremite. convent: a community of nuns who take vows and live under the direction of a superior. (Historically, the word could refer to a religious community of either men or women.) eremite: a person who isolates himself or herself from society in order to pursue the religious life. Related terms include recluse, solitary, and hermit. mendicant order: a group of friars, such as the early Franciscans, that depends upon begging alms. religious: a member of a religious order. In canon law a religious is a person who lives in community and takes vows of obedience, chastity, and poverty. tertiary: a member of a Third Order (see next entry). Third Order: an organization of lay people ...
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