CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: MONASTERIES, DOUBLE

Double Monasteries

Religious houses comprising communities of both men and women, dwelling in 
contiguous establishments, united under the rule of one superior, and using one church 
in common for their liturgical offices.  The reason for such an arrangement was that the 
spiritual needs of the nuns might be attended to by the priests of the male community, 
who were associated with them more closely than would have been possible in the case 
of entirely separate and independent monasteries.  The system came into existence 
almost contemporaneously with monasticism itself, and like it had its origin in the East.  
Communities of women gathered around religious founders in Egypt and elsewhere, 
and from the life of St. Pachomius we learn many details as to the nuns under his rule 
and their relation to the male communities founded by him.  Double monasteries, of 
which those of St. Basil and his sister, Macrina, may be cited as examples, were 
apparently numerous throughout the East during the early centuries of monasticism.  It 
cannot be stated with any certainty when the system found its way into the West, but it 
seems probable that its introduction into Gaul may be roughly ascribed to the influence 
of Cassian, who did so much towards reconciling Eastern monasticism with Western 
ideas.  St. Caesarius of Arles, St. Aurelian, his successor, and St. Radegundis, of 
Poitiers, founded double monasteries in the sixth century, and later on the system was 
propagated widely by St. Columbanus and his followers.  Remiremont, Jouarre, Brie, 
Chelles, Andelys, and Soissons were other well-known examples of the seventh and 
eighth centuries.  From Gaul the idea spread to Belgium and Germany, and also to 
Spain, where it is said to have been introduced by St. Fructuosus in the middle of the 
seventh century.  According to Yepes there were in Spain altogether over two hundred 
double monasteries. 

 Ireland presents only one known example -- Kildare -- but probably there were others 
besides, of which all traces have since been lost.  In England most of the early 
foundations were double;  this has been wrongly attributed by some writers to the fact 
that mnay of the Anglo-Saxon nuns were eduacted in Gaul, where the system was then 
in vogue, but it seems more correct to ascribe it to the religious influence of the 
missionaries from Iona, since the first double monastery in England was that of St. 
Hilda at Whitby, established under the guidance of St. Aidan, and there is no evidence 
to show that either St. Aidan or St. Hilda was acquainted with the double organization 
in use elsewhere.Whitby was founded in the seventh century and in a short time 
England became covered with similar dual establishments, of which Coldingham, Ely, 
Sheppey, Minster, Wimborne, and Barking are prominent examples. In Italy, the only 
other country besides those already mentioned where double monasteries are known to 
have existed, they were not numerous, but St. Gregory speaks of them as being found 
in Sardinia (Ep.xi), and St. Bede mentions one at Rome (Hist. Eccl., IV, i).  The Danish 
invasions of the ninth and tenth centuries destroyed the double monasteries of 
England, and, when they were restored, it was for one sex only, instead of for a dual 
community.  The system seems to have died out also in other countries at about the 
same time, and it was not revived until the end of the eleventh century when Robert of 
Arbrissel inaugurated his reform at Fontevrault and gave the idea a fresh lease of life.  
It is not surprising to find that such a system was sometimes abused, and hence it was 
always an object of solicitude and strict legislation at the hands of ecclesiastical 
authority. Many synodal and conciliar decrees recognized its dangers, and ordered the 
strictest surveillance of all communications passing between monks and nuns. Too 
close proximity of buildings was frequently forbidden, and every precaution was taken 
to prevent any occasion of scandal.  Very probably it was this scant favour shown by 
the Church towards it that caused the gradual decline of the system about the tenth 
century.

 In many double monasteries the supreme rule was in the hands of the abbess, and 
monks as well as nuns were subject to her authority.  This was especially the case in 
England, e.g. in St. Hilda's at Whitby and St. Etheldreda's at Ely, though elsewhere, but 
more rarely, it was the abbot who ruled both men and women, and sometimes, more 
rarely still, each community had its own superior independent of the other. The 
justification for the anomalous position of a woman acting as the superior of a 
community of men is usually held to originate from Christ's words from the Cross, 
"Woman, behold thy son;  Son, behold thy mother";  and it is still further urged that 
maternity is a form of authority dereved from nature, whilst that which is paternal is 
merely legal.  But, whatever may be its origin, the supreme rule of an abbess over both 
men and women was deliberately revived, and sanctioned by the Church, in two of the 
three medieval orders that consisted of double monasteries.  At Fontevrault (founded 
1099) and with the Bridgettines (1346), the abbess was the superior of monks as well as 
nuns, though with the Gilbertines (1146) it was the prior who ruled over both.  In the 
earlier double monasteries both monks and nuns observed the same rule <mutatis 
mutandis>;  this example was followed by Fontevrault and the Bridgettines, the rule of 
the former being Benedictine, while the latter observed the rule of St. Bridget. But with 
the Gilbertines, whilst the rule of the nuns was substantially Benedictine, the monks 
adopted that of the Augustinian Canons. (See BRIGITTINES;  FONTEVRAULT; 
GILBERTINES.)  Little is known as to the buildings of the earlier double monasteries 
except that the church usually stood between the two conventual establishments, so as 
to be accessible from both.  From excavations made on the site of Watton Priory, a 
Gilbertine house in Yorkshire, it appears that the separation of nuns from canons was 
effected by means of a substantial wall, several feet high, which traversed the church 
lengthways, and it is probable that some similar arrangement was adopted in other 
double monasteries.  No such communities exist at the present time in the Western 
Church.

 G. CYPRIAN ALSTON

Transcribed by Marie Jutras

Taken from the New Advent Web Page (www.knight.org/advent).

This article is part of the Catholic Encyclopedia Project, an effort aimed at placing the  
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