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St. Benedict   Listen
St. Benedict

noun
1.
Italian monk who founded the Benedictine order about 540 (480-547).  Synonyms: Benedict, Saint Benedict.






WordNet 3.0 © 2010 Princeton University








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"St. benedict" Quotes from Famous Books



... 16. St. Benedict was the first founder of a spiritual order in the Roman church. Maurus, abbot of Fulda from 822 to 842, did much to re-establish the discipline of the Benedictines on a true ...
— The Canterbury Tales and Other Poems • Geoffrey Chaucer

... were held to be capable of curing disease. The Latin Church had either a saint or a relic of a saint to cure nearly every ill that flesh is heir to. St. Apollonia was invoked against toothache; St. Avertin against lunacy; St. Benedict against stone; St. Clara against sore eyes; St. Herbert in hydrophobia; St. John in epilepsy; St. Maur in gout; St. Pernel in ague; St. Genevieve in fever; St. Sebastian in plague; St. Ottila for diseases of the head; ...
— Outlines of Greek and Roman Medicine • James Sands Elliott

... Mary of Josaphat, because they placed in it a relic of the sepulchre of the Blessed Virgin, and because the altar was consecrated by the title of her glorious Assumption. In the sixth century it was given to the Religious of the Order of St. Benedict, who enlarged and strengthened it; and it was afterwards called St. Mary of the Angels." We shall soon explain the reason of this. It was also called Portiuncula, because of some portions of ground which ...
— The Life and Legends of Saint Francis of Assisi • Father Candide Chalippe

... is, nevertheless, a fact that high dignitaries of the Church—e.g., Cardinal Pole—are represented with beards; and St. Benedict himself is ...
— The Customs of Old England • F. J. Snell

... build our small communities of the right shape and scale in the very midst of the imperial states themselves, so becoming perhaps the leavening of the lump. This of course is what the monasteries of St. Benedict did in the sixth century and those of the Cluniacs and the Cistercians in the eleventh, and it is what the Franciscans and Dominicans tried to do in the fourteenth century, and failed because the fall of the cultural and historic wave ...
— Towards the Great Peace • Ralph Adams Cram


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