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{{short description|Catholic Church religious order founded in 1084}} |
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[[Image:Carthusian coat of arms-2006 04 22.png|thumb|Coat of arms of the Carthusian order]] |
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{{Use dmy dates|date=April 2023}} |
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[[Image:Monasterio de la Cartuja, Sevilla.jpg|thumb|200px|''Monasterio de la Cartuja'', a former Carthusian monastery in [[Seville]]]] |
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{{Infobox organization |
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The '''Carthusian Order''', also called the '''Order of St. Bruno''', is a [[Roman Catholic religious order]] of [[Enclosed religious orders|enclosed]] [[Monasticism|monastics]]. The order was founded by [[Bruno of Cologne|Saint Bruno of Cologne]] in [[1084]] and includes both [[monk]]s and [[nun]]s. The order has its own Rule, called the ''Statutes'', rather than the [[Rule of St Benedict]] (as is often erroneously reported) and combines [[Hermit|eremitical]] and [[cenobitic]] life. |
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| name = Order of Carthusians |
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| native_name = {{lang|la|Ordo Cartusiensis}} |
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| image = Carthusian coat of arms-2006 11 30 murraybuckley.svg |
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| size = 100px |
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| formation = {{Start date and age|df=yes|1084|8|15}} |
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| founder = [[Bruno of Cologne]] |
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| headquarters = [[Grande Chartreuse]] (Mother House) |
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| founding_location = France |
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| coords = |
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| type = Monastic Order of Pontifical Right (for Men)<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.gcatholic.org/orders/156.htm|title=Carthusian Order (O. Cart.)}}</ref> |
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| membership = About 380<ref name=renault/> |
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| leader_title2 = |
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| leader_name2 = |
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| leader_title3 = [[Post-nominal letters]] |
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| leader_name3 = O.Cart. |
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| main_organ = |
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| website = {{ubl|{{URL|http://www.chartreux.org/}}|{{URL|http://www.vocatiochartreux.org}}}} |
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}} |
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[[File:Sebastiano Ricci 024.jpg|thumb|right|upright=0.9|Painting by [[Sebastiano Ricci]] (1659–1734) depicting the founder of the Carthusians, [[Bruno of Cologne]] ({{circa|1030-1101}}), revering [[Mary, mother of Jesus]] and adoring the [[Christ Child]], with [[Hugh of Lincoln]] (1135–1200) looking on in the background.]] |
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The '''Carthusians''', also known as the '''Order of Carthusians''' ({{langx|la|Ordo Cartusiensis}}), are a [[Latin Church|Latin]] [[enclosed religious order]] of the [[Catholic Church]]. The order was founded by [[Bruno of Cologne]] in 1084 and includes both [[monk]]s and [[nun]]s. The order has its own rule, called the ''Statutes'', and their life combines both [[hermit|eremitical]] and [[cenobitic monasticism]]. The motto of the Carthusians is {{lang|la|Stat crux dum volvitur orbis}}, Latin for 'The [[Christian cross|Cross]] is steady while the world turns'.<ref name=renault>{{Cite news|last=Renault|first=Marion|date=2020-12-17|title=An Elixir From the French Alps, Frozen in Time|language=en-US|work=The New York Times|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2020/12/17/business/chartreuse-monks-coronavirus.html|access-date=2021-01-07|issn=0362-4331}}</ref> The Carthusians retain a unique form of liturgy known as the [[Carthusian Rite]]. |
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The name ''Carthusian'' is derived from [[Chartreuse Mountains]]; Bruno built his first hermitage in the valley of these mountains in the [[French Alps]]. The word [[charterhouse]], which is the English name for a Carthusian [[monastery]], is derived from the same source. The motto of the Carthusians is ''Stat crux dum volvitur orbis'', Latin for "The [[Christian cross|Cross]] is steady while the world is turning." |
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The name ''Carthusian'' is derived from the [[Chartreuse Mountains]] in the [[French Prealps]]: Bruno built his first hermitage in a valley of these mountains. These names were adapted to the English ''[[Charterhouse (monastery)|charterhouse]]'', meaning a Carthusian [[monastery]].{{efn|In other languages: {{langx|nl|Kartuize}}; {{langx|fr|Chartreuse}}; {{langx|de|Kartause}}; {{langx|it|Certosa}}; {{langx|pl|Kartuzja}}; {{langx|es|Cartuja}}}} Today, there are 23 charterhouses, 18 for monks and 5 for nuns. The alcoholic [[cordial (medicine)|cordial]] [[Chartreuse (liqueur)|Chartreuse]] has been produced by the monks of [[Grande Chartreuse]] since 1737, which gave rise to the name of the [[chartreuse (color)|color]], though the liqueur is in fact produced not only as green chartreuse, but also as yellow chartreuse. |
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==Carthusian character== |
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A Carthusian monastery might best be described as a community of hermits, as paradoxical as that might seem. The monastery is headed by a [[prior]] (there are no Carthusian "abbeys"), and is populated by choir monks and laybrothers. |
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In Italy, the Carthusians are known as Certosini and their [[monastery]] as a Certosa.<ref>Birt, Henry. "Charterhouse." The Catholic Encyclopedia. Vol. 3. New York: Robert Appleton Company, 1908. Accessed 6 March 2021 http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/03634a.htm</ref> |
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Each [[choir monk]] (that is, a monk who is or who will be a priest) has his own hermitage, usually consisting of a small dwelling (traditionally a one-room lower floor for storage of wood for a heating stove, and for a workshop as all monks engage in some manual labor; and a second floor consisting of a small entryway with a picture or statue dedicated to Mary, mother of [[Jesus]] as a prayer spot, and a larger room with bed, table for eating meals, desk for study as all monks engage in study, and choir stall/seat and kneeler for prayer), set in a corner of a highly walled garden, wherein the monk may meditate and grow flowers or vegetables. |
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==History== |
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The individual hermitages are lined up so that the door into the garden of each may be reached by a corridor. Near the door is a [[turnstile]], so that meals and other items may be passed in and out of the hermitage without the monk having to meet the bearer. |
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In 1084 Bishop [[Hugh of Châteauneuf|Hugh of Grenoble]] offered Bruno, the former Chancellor of the Diocese of Reims, a solitary site in the mountains of his diocese, in the valley of Chartreuse. There Bruno and six companions built a hermitage, consisting of a few wooden cabins opening towards a gallery that allowed them access to the communal areas, the church, the refectory, and the chapter room without having to suffer too much from inclement conditions.<ref name=tco>{{cite web|url=http://www.chartreux.org/en/|title=Welcome|first=L'Ordre des|last=Chartreux|access-date=13 June 2016}}</ref> |
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Six years later, Bruno's former pupil, [[Pope Urban II]], requested his services. Bruno would only live in Rome for a few short months however, before leaving to establish a new hermitage in [[Serra San Bruno]], in [[Calabria]], a region of southern Italy. He died there on 6 October 1101.<ref name=tco/> |
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The monk lives most of his day here: he meditates, prays most of the hours of the [[Liturgy of the Hours]] on his own (yet still following the full ceremonial as if praying publicly), eats his meals, studies and/or writes (Carthusian monks have published scholarly and spiritual works), works in his garden, works at some manual trade, etc. He leaves the cell daily only for three prayer services in the monastery chapel (including the community and his own individual Mass), and occasionally for conferences with his superior. Additionally, once a week, the monks take a 4-hour walk together in the countryside during which they may speak (they go two by two, changing partners every half hour), and on Sundays and feastdays a community meal is taken silently. Twice a year there is a day-long community recreation, and he may receive an annual visit from immediate family. |
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In 1132, an avalanche destroyed the first hermitage, killing 7 monks under the snow. The fifth prior of Chartreuse, [[Guigo I|Guiges]], rebuilt the hermitage.<ref name=tco/> |
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They have no "active" ministry: they do no pastoral work, charitable work, or missionary work; they admit no retreatants (other than select persons who are contemplating actually entering the monastery as monks); they have no contact with the outside world. Their contribution is their life of prayer, which they undertake on behalf of the whole church and the whole world. |
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===Carthusians in Britain=== |
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In addition to these choir monks there are [[lay brothers]], monks under slightly different types of vows who spend less time in prayer and more time in manual labor and who live slightly more communal lives with one another. The laybrothers provide the material assistance to the choir monks: cooking the meals, undertaking physical repairs, providing the choir monks with books from the library, managing supplies and so on. |
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There were ten Carthusian monasteries in Britain before the Reformation, with one in Scotland and nine in England. The first was founded by [[Henry II of England]] in 1181 at [[Witham Friary]], [[Somerset]] as penance for the murder of [[Thomas Becket]]. [[Hugh of Lincoln]] was its first prior.<ref name=hugh>{{cite web|url=http://www.parkminster.org.uk/site.php?use=default|title=The Carthusian Order|publisher=St. Hugh's Charterhouse|access-date=13 June 2016}}</ref> The third Charterhouse built in Britain was [[Beauvale Priory]], remains of which can still be seen in [[Beauvale]], [[Greasley]], [[Nottinghamshire]]. |
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The Carthusians, as with all Catholic religious orders, were variously persecuted and banned during the [[Reformation]]. The abolition of their priories, which were sources of charity in England, particularly reduced their numbers.<ref>[http://www.british-history.ac.uk/vch/surrey/vol2/pp89-94 'House of Carthusian monks: Priory of Sheen'] A History of the County of Surrey: Volume 2, ed. H E Malden (London, 1967), pp. 89–94 Accessed 15 April 2015.</ref> This was followed by the [[French Revolution]] which had a similar effect in France.<ref name=Raymond/> |
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All of the monks live lives of silence: there is no "vow of silence," as is sometimes parodied, but as with many monastic groups, the monks cultivate a spirit of exterior silence (speaking only when truly necessary) to help achieve an interior serenity. |
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[[The Charterhouse, Coventry]] has been conserved and was opened to the public in April 2023. The area, about a mile from the centre of the city, is a conservation area, and the buildings had been in use as part of a local college. Inside the building is a medieval wall painting, alongside many carvings and wooden beams. Nearby is the river Sherbourne which runs underneath the centre of the city. |
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Carthusian nuns live similarly to the monks, but with some differences. Choir nuns tend to lead somewhat less eremitical (hermit-like) lives, while still maintaining a strong commitment to solitude and silence. |
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The best preserved remains of a [[Middle Ages|medieval]] Charterhouse in the UK are at [[Mount Grace Priory]] near [[Osmotherley, North Yorkshire]]. One of the cells has been reconstructed to illustrate how different the layout is from monasteries of most other Christian orders, which are normally designed with communal living in mind. |
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Today Carthusians live very much as they originally did, without any relaxing of their rule. Thus, there has been no "reform" movement as with other orders: there are no Carthusians "of the strict observance" or the like. Thus Pope [[Innocent XI]] coined the phrase ''Cartusia numquam reformata, quia numquam deformata''. Literally this translates to ''"The charterhouse has never been reformed, for it has never been deformed"''. |
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The [[London Charterhouse]] gave its name to [[Charterhouse Square]] and several streets in the [[City of London]], as well as to the [[Charterhouse School]] which used part of its site before moving out to [[Godalming]], [[Surrey]]. |
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[[Image:Francisco de Zurbarán 024.jpg|thumb|250px|Painting from the Carthusian cloister of Nuestra Señora de las Cuevas a Triana by [[Francisco de Zurbarán]]. The scene depicts [[Hugh of Grenoble]] in a Carthusian monastery.]] |
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Nothing remains at Hull or Sheen, although Hull Charterhouse is an almshouse that shared the site of the monastery. Axholme, Hinton, and Witham have slight remains. |
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== Carthusians in England == |
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The first Carthusian monastery or 'Charterhouse' in England was founded by [[Henry II of England|Henry II]] in [[Witham Friary]], [[Somerset]] as penance for the murder of [[St Thomas Becket]]. |
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The best preserved remains of a [[Middle Ages|medieval]] [[Charterhouse]] in the UK are at [[Mount Grace Priory]] near [[Osmotherley, North Yorkshire|Osmotherley]], [[North Yorkshire]]. One of the cells has been reconstructed to illustrate how different the lay-out is to monasteries of most other Christian orders, which are normally designed with communal living in mind. The Carthusian monk (or nun) lives a solitary life in a 'cell' (actually more like a small house), which typically consists of three small rooms on the ground floor - bedroom, study, and shrine - and a work area in the upstairs loft. Each cell has its own water supply and lavatory, and a tiny private garden planted with herbs and flowers. The garden would normally be cultivated by the monk as part of his daily duties. |
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[[Perth Charterhouse]], the single Carthusian Priory founded in [[Scotland]] during the [[Middle Ages]], was located in [[Perth, Scotland|Perth]]. It stood just west of the medieval town and was founded by [[James VI and I|James I]] (1406–1437) in the early 15th century. James I and [[Joan Beaufort, Queen of Scots]] (died 1445) were both buried in the priory church, as was Queen [[Margaret Tudor]] (died 1541), widow of [[James IV of Scotland]]. The Priory, said to have been a building of "wondrous cost and greatness", was sacked during the [[Scottish Reformation]] in 1559, and swiftly fell into decay. No remains survive above ground, though a Victorian monument marks the site. The Perth names Charterhouse Lane and Pomarium Flats (built on the site of the Priory's orchard) recall its existence. |
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The [[London Charterhouse]] gave its name to a square and several streets in the [[City of London]], as well as to the [[Charterhouse School|Charterhouse ]] [[public school]] ''(UK sense)'' which used part of its site before moving out to [[Surrey]]. |
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There is an active Carthusian house in England, [[St Hugh's Charterhouse, Parkminster]], West Sussex. This has cells around a square cloister approximately {{convert|400|m|mi}} on a side, making it the largest cloister in Europe. It was built in the 19th century to accommodate two communities which were expelled from the continent.<ref>''The Monastery'', [[BBC]], broadcast May 2005, about 20 minutes into the third episode.</ref> |
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A few fragments remain of the Charterhouse in [[Coventry]], mostly dating from the 15th century. This consists of a sandstone building that was probably the prior's house. The area, about a mile from the centre of the city, is a conservation area, but the buildings are in use as part of a local college. Inside the building is a medieval wall painting, alongside many carvings and wooden beams. Nearby is the river Sherbourne that runs underneath the centre of the city. |
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== Charterhouse == |
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The monastery is generally a small community of hermits based on the model of the 4th-century Lauras of Palestine. A Carthusian monastery consists of a number of individual cells built around a cloister. The individual cells are organised so that the door of each cell comes off a large corridor. |
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The Carthusians suffered greatly during the Reformation (particularly in England) and during the French Revolution and after in France. A large number of their monasteries were closed during both periods. |
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The focus of Carthusian life is contemplation. To this end, there is an emphasis on solitude and silence.<ref name=trans>{{cite web|url=http://transfiguration.chartreux.org/index.htm|title=Charterhouse of the Transfiguration|access-date=13 June 2016|archive-date=6 December 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20211206212421/http://transfiguration.chartreux.org/index.htm|url-status=dead}}</ref> Carthusians do not have [[abbot]]s—instead, each charterhouse is headed by a [[Prior (ecclesiastical)|prior]] and is populated by two types of monks: the [[choir monk]]s, referred to as [[hermit]]s, and the lay brothers. This reflects a division of labor in providing for the material needs of the monastery and the monks. For the most part, the number of brothers in the Order has remained the same for centuries, as it is now: seven or eight brothers for every ten fathers.<ref name=voc/> Humility is a characteristic of Carthusian spirituality. The Carthusian identity is one of shared solitude.<ref name="Zak" /> |
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Today, the monastery of the [[Grande Chartreuse]] is still the motherhouse of the order. There is a museum on the Carthusian order next to the monastery of the [[Grande Chartreuse]]; the monks of that monastery are also involved in the production of the [[Chartreuse liquor]]. Although visits are not possible within the Grande Chartreuse, the recent documentary ''[[Into Great Silence]]'' gave unprecedented views of life within the hermitage. |
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===Musical practice=== |
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There are 24 Charterhouses around the world, five of which are for nuns; altogether, there are around 370 monks and 75 nuns. Most of these Charterhouses are in Europe - including one in [[Sussex]], [[England]] - but there are also two in [[South America]], one in the United States and one in [[South Korea]]. |
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Similar to the tradition of the [[Byzantine Rite]], Carthusians eschew the use of musical instruments in worship.<ref>{{cite web |last=Op de Coul |first= Thomas |url=http://www.cartusiana.org/sites/default/files/Op%20de%20Coul_Carthusians-in-Oxford-Music-Online.pdf |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20211109211321/http://www.cartusiana.org/sites/default/files/Op%20de%20Coul_Carthusians-in-Oxford-Music-Online.pdf |archive-date=2021-11-09 |url-status=live|title=Carthusians in Oxford Music Online |publisher=Open Publishing |date=12 March 2015|website=cartusiana.org |access-date=22 December 2020}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |title=Musical Instruments – Questions & Answers |url=https://www.oca.org/questions/parishlife/musical-instruments |access-date=2022-12-13 |website=oca.org}}</ref> |
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===Choirmonks=== |
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The [[Charterhouse of the Transfiguration]] on Mount Equinox near [[Arlington, Vermont]] is the only Carthusian monastery in the U.S., and for a time was the only Carthusian monastery outside of Europe. Founded in the 1950s, the monastery remains active enough that it is attempting a daughter monastery in Brazil. |
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[[File:Christus carthusian.jpg|thumb|Carthusian monk depicted in [[Petrus Christus]]'s painting ''[[Portrait of a Carthusian]]''.]] |
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Each hermit, a monk who is or who will be a priest, has his own living space, called a cell, usually consisting of a small dwelling. Traditionally there is a one-room lower floor for the storage of wood for a stove and a workshop as all monks engage in some manual labour. A second floor consists of a small entryway with an image of the [[Blessed Virgin Mary (Catholic)|Virgin Mary]] as a place of prayer and a larger room containing a bed, a table for eating meals, a desk for study, a choir stall, and a kneeler for prayer. Each cell has a high-walled garden wherein the monk may meditate as well as grow flowers for himself and/or vegetables for the common good of the community, as a form of physical exercise.<ref name=Zak/> |
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[[File:Plan.chartreuse.Clermont.png|thumb|right|A typical Carthusian plan: Clermont, drawn by [[Eugène Viollet-le-Duc]], 1856.]] |
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Next to the door is a small revolving compartment, called a "turn", so that meals and other items may be passed in and out of the cell without the hermit having to meet the bearer. Most meals are provided in this manner, which the hermit then eats in the solitude of his cell. There are two meals provided for much of the year: lunch and supper. During seasons or days of [[fasting]], just one meal is provided. The hermit makes his needs known to the lay brother by means of a note, requesting items such as a fresh loaf of bread, which will be kept in the cell for eating with several meals. Carthusians observe a perpetual abstinence from meat.<ref name=trans/> |
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The hermit spends most of his day in the cell: he meditates, prays the minor hours of the [[Liturgy of the Hours]] on his own, eats, studies and writes, and works in his garden or at some manual trade. Unless required by other duties, the Carthusian hermit leaves his cell daily only for three prayer services in the monastery chapel, including the community Mass, and occasionally for conferences with his superior. Additionally, once a week, the community members take a long walk in the countryside during which they may speak. On Sundays and solemn feast days a community meal is taken in silence.<ref name=hugh/> Twice a year there is a day-long community recreation, and the monk may receive an annual visit from immediate family members.<ref>{{Cite web|title=The Carthusian way|url=https://chartreux.org/moines/en/the-carthusian-way/|access-date=2024-03-10|website=chartreux.org}}</ref> |
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===Lay brothers=== |
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There have always been lay brothers in the charterhouse. When Bruno retired to the Chartreuse, two of his companions were secular ones: Andrew and Guerin. They also live a life of solitary prayer and join in the communal prayer and Mass in the chapel. However, the [[lay brothers]] are monks under a slightly different type of vows and spend less time in contemplative prayer and more time in manual labour. The lay brothers provide material assistance to the choir monks: cooking meals, doing laundry, undertaking physical repairs, providing the choir monks with books from the library and managing supplies. The life of the brothers complements that of the choir monks and makes the fathers' lives of seclusion possible.<ref name=Zak>[https://books.google.com/books?id=wwSQBAAAQBAJ&dq=Carthusian+choir+monks&pg=PA48 McNary-Zak, Bernadette. ''Seeking in Solitude'', Wipf and Stock Publishers, 2014] {{ISBN|9781606089699}}</ref> |
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During the brothers' seven-year formation period, some time is given each day to the study of the Bible, theology, liturgy, and spirituality. They can continue their studies throughout their lives. All of the monks live lives of silence. |
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The Carthusians do not engage in work of a pastoral or missionary nature. Unlike most monasteries, they do not have retreatants, and those who visit for a prolonged period are people who are contemplating entering the monastery.<ref name=trans/> As far as possible, the monks have no contact with the outside world. |
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Carthusian nuns live a life similar to the monks but with some differences. Choir nuns tend to lead somewhat less [[eremitical]] lives, while still maintaining a strong commitment to solitude and silence. |
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== Modern Carthusians == |
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[[File:La Grande Chartreuse.JPG|thumb|The ''[[Grande Chartreuse]]'' is the head [[monastery]] of the Carthusian order.]] |
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Today, the monastery of the [[Grande Chartreuse]] is still the Motherhouse of the order. There is a museum illustrating the history of the Carthusian order next to Grande Chartreuse; the monks of that monastery are also involved in producing [[Chartreuse liqueur]]. Visits are not possible into the Grande Chartreuse itself, but the 2005 documentary ''[[Into Great Silence]]'' gave unprecedented views of life within the hermitage. |
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Today, Carthusians live very much as they originally did, without any relaxing of their rules. Generally, those wishing to enter must be between the ages of twenty-one and forty-five. Nowadays, medical examinations are considered necessary before the Novitiate and Profession.<ref name=voc>{{cite web|url=http://www.vocatiochartreux.org/THE%20JOY%20OF%20BEING%20A%20CARTHUSIAN%20MONK.html|title=The joy of being a carthusian|last=vocatiochartreux|date=4 August 2011|access-date=13 June 2016}}</ref> The Carthusian novice is introduced to ''[[Lectio divina]]'' (spiritual reading). |
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In the 21st century, the Sélignac Charterhouse<ref>{{cite web |last1=Selignac |first1=Charterhouse of |url=https://selignac.chartreux.org/|title=Sélignac Charterhouse |access-date=9 March 2024}}</ref> was converted into a house in which lay people could come and experience Carthusian retreats, living the Carthusian life for shorter periods (an eight-day retreat being fixed as the minimum, to enter at least somewhat into the silent rhythm of the charterhouse).<ref name="retreat">{{cite web |title=Retreats - The Carthusian monks |url=https://chartreux.org/moines/en/resources/retreats/ |website=Chartreux.org |publisher=Les moines Chartreux |access-date=1 March 2024}}</ref> |
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== Liturgy == |
== Liturgy == |
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[[File:San Hugo en el Refectorio.jpg|thumb|Painting in the Charterhouse of [[Monastery of Santa Maria de las Cuevas|Nuestra Señora de las Cuevas]] in [[Seville]] by [[Francisco de Zurbarán]]. The scene depicts [[Hugh of Grenoble]] with his brothers in the [[refectory]].]] |
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Before the [[Council of Trent]] in the 1500s, the Roman Catholic Church in Western Europe had a wide variety of rituals for the celebration of Mass. Although the essentials were the same, there were variations in prayers and practices from region to region or among the various [[religious order]]s. |
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Before the [[Council of Trent]] in the 16th century, the Catholic Church in Western Europe had a wide variety of rituals for the celebration of Mass. Although the essentials were the same, there were variations in prayers and practices from region to region or among the various [[religious order]]s. |
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When [[Pope Pius V]] made the Roman Missal mandatory, in general, for all Catholics of the Latin Rite, it permitted the continuance of other forms of celebrating Mass that had an antiquity of at least two centuries. The rite used by the Carthusians was one of these and still continues in use in a version revised in 1981.<ref>The text of the Carthusian Missal and the Order's other liturgical books is available at [http://www.chartreux.org/en/frame.html Carthusian Monks and Carthusian nuns]</ref> Apart from the new elements in this revision, it is substantially the rite of Grenoble in the twelfth century, with some admixture from other sources.<ref>[http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/03388a.htm The Carthusian Order] in [[Catholic Encyclopedia]]. The text of the former ''Ordo Missae'' of the Carthusian Missal is available at [http://ffyl.uncu.edu.ar/departamentos/filosofia/centros/cefim/Missale%20Carthussiense.pdf this site].</ref> It is now the only extant rite of a religious order; but by virtue of the ''[[Ecclesia Dei]]'' [[indult]] (or "permitted exception") some individuals or small groups are authorized to use some other now defunct rites. |
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When [[Pope Pius V]] made the [[Roman Missal]] mandatory for all Catholics of the Latin Church, he permitted the continuance of other forms of celebrating Mass that had an antiquity of at least two centuries. The rite used by the Carthusians was one of these and continues in use in a version revised in 1981. Apart from the new elements in this revision, it is substantially the rite of Grenoble in the 12th century, with some admixture from other sources.<ref name=Raymond>{{Cite CE1913 | id = 03388a | title = The Carthusian Order | author =Douglas Raymund | access-date = 2015-01-01}}</ref> According to current Catholic legislation, priests can celebrate the traditional rites of their order without further authorization. |
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A feature unique to Carthusian liturgical practice is that whereby the bishop bestows on Carthusian nuns, in the ceremony of their profession, a stole and a maniple. This is interpreted as a relic of the former rite of ordination of deaconesses.<ref>[http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/04651a.htm ''Deaconesses''] in [[Catholic Encyclopedia]]; [http://www.ewtn.com/library/LITURGY/AROSEBY.TXT A Rose By Any Other Name. The Ordination of Women to the Diaconate] by David L. Alexander</ref> The nun is also invested with a crown and a ring. The nun wears these ornaments again only on the day of her monastic jubilee, and after her death on her bier. At Matins, if no priest is present, a nun assumes the stole and reads the Gospel, and although the chanting of the Epistle was, in the time of the [[Tridentine Mass]], reserved to an ordained subdeacon, a consecrated nun sang the Epistle at their conventual Mass, though without wearing the maniple. Even before the rite of the consecration of virgins was made more widely available as part of the liturgical reforms undertaken after the [[Second Vatican Council]], Carthusian nuns retained this rite, administered by the diocesan bishop four years after the nun took her vows.<ref>[http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/03388a.htm ''The Carthusian Order''] in [[Catholic Encyclopedia]]</ref> |
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A feature unique to Carthusian liturgical practice is that the bishop bestows on Carthusian nuns, in the ceremony of their profession, a [[Stole (vestment)|stole]] and a [[Maniple (vestment)|maniple]]. The nun, who may receive the [[consecration of virgins]] is then also invested with a crown and a ring. The nun wears these ornaments again only on the day of her monastic jubilee and on her [[bier]] after her death. At [[Matins]], if no priest or deacon is present, a nun assumes the stole and reads the Gospel; and although in the time of the [[Tridentine Mass]] the chanting of the Epistle was reserved to an ordained subdeacon, a consecrated virgin sang the Epistle at the conventual Mass, though without wearing the maniple. For centuries Carthusian nuns retained this rite, administered by the diocesan bishop four years after the nun took her vows.<ref name=Raymond/> |
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== Stages of the Carthusian's Life == |
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*Postulancy (3 to 12 months) the postulant lives the life of a monk but without having professed any kind of vows. |
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*Novitiate (2 years). The novice wears a black cloak over the white Carthusian habit. |
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*Simple Vows (3 years) becomes a junior professed monk and wears the full Carthusian habit. |
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*Renewal of simple vows (2 years) |
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*Solemn profession. |
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== Formation == |
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== Locations of Monasteries == |
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The formation of a Carthusian begins with 6 to 12 months of [[postulancy]]. This is followed by two years of [[novitiate]], where the novice wears a black cloak over the white Carthusian habit. Subsequently, the novice takes simple vows and becomes a junior professed for three years, during which the professed wears the full Carthusian habit. The simple vows may be renewed for another two years. Finally, the Carthusian makes the solemn profession.<ref name="voc" /> |
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== Locations of monasteries == |
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Today, there are up to 24 Charterhouses located around the Globe. They can be found in [[Spain]], [[Portugal]], [[France]], [[USA]], [[Switzerland]], [[South Korea]], and [[Great Britain]]. One of them was recently built in [[Argentina]], the construction work having started in 1997<ref>To view images of the Monasteries visit http://www.chartreux.org/en/frame.html </ref>. |
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{{main|List of Carthusian monasteries}} |
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{{As of|2024|March}}, there are 21 extant charterhouses, 16 for monks and 5 for nuns,<ref>[https://chartreux.org/moines/en/monasteries/ Chartreux.org (official website of the Carthusian Order): List of active Carthusian houses]. Retrieved 9 March 2024</ref>{{efn|Including Sélignac Charterhouse, which has been a lay house since 2001, but not including the Hermits of St. Bruno at [[Parisot, Tarn-et-Garonne|Parisot]].}} on three continents: [[Argentina]] (1), [[Brazil]] (1), [[France]] (6), [[Germany]] (1), [[Italy]] (3), [[Republic of Korea|Korea]] (2), [[Portugal]] (1), [[Slovenia]] (1), [[Spain]] (4), [[Switzerland]] (1), the [[United Kingdom]] (1) and the [[United States]] (1). |
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==References== |
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<references/> |
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==Notable Carthusians== |
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== Further reading == |
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{{for|the heads of the order|Grande Chartreuse#List of priors}} |
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*Lockhart, Robin Bruce. ''Halfway to Heaven''. London:Cistercian Publications, 1999 (Paperback,ISBN 0-87907-786-7) |
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* [[Bruno of Cologne]] ({{Circa|1030}}–1101) |
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*Kossmann, Benedict. ''Sounds of Silence''. Authorhouse, 2005 (Paperback,ISBN 1-4208-7291-5) |
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* [[Guigo I]] (1083–1136) |
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*Klein Maguire, Nancy. "An Infinity of Little Hours: Five Young Men and Their Trial of Faith in the Western World's Most Austere Monastic Order". PublicAffairs, 2006 (Hardcover,ISBN 1-58648-327-2) |
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* [[Guigo II]] |
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* [[Hugh of Balma]] |
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* [[Hugh of Lincoln]] (1135/40-1200) |
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* [[Ludolph of Saxony]] (1295–1378) |
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* [[Niccolò Albergati]] (1373–1443) |
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* [[Dominic of Prussia]] (1382–1461) |
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* [[Denis the Carthusian]] (1402–1471) |
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* [[Peter Blomevenna]] (1466–1536) |
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==See also== |
==See also== |
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* ''[[Into Great Silence]]'' |
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{{commons}} |
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* [[List of Carthusian monasteries]] |
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*[[Order (religious)]] |
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*[[ |
* [[Carthusian Martyrs]] |
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* [[Institution des Chartreux]] |
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*[[Desert Fathers]] |
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* [[Monastic Family of Bethlehem, of the Assumption of the Virgin and of Saint Bruno]] |
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*[[Monasticism]] |
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*[[ |
* [[Spatiamentum]] |
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* [[Broken Silence (1996 film)|''Broken Silence'']], a fictional 1996 movie on the potential challenges of modern [[Exclaustration|Carthusian exclaustration]] |
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*[[Nun]] |
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* [[Corroirie]] |
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*[[Community of Hermits of St. Bruno]] |
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* [[Carthusian Spanish horse]] |
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== |
==Notes== |
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{{notelist}} |
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*[http://www.chartreux.org Official website of the Carthusian order] |
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*Prologue to the [http://www.xxxxx.dircon.co.uk/Cart/1.htm Statutes of the Carthusian Order] |
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*[http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/03388a.htm Carthusian Order in the Old Catholic Encyclopedia] |
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*[http://www.parkminster.org.uk St.Hugh's Charterhouse, Parkminster, England] - The largest charterhouse in Europe |
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* [http://www.certosini.info/immaginicertosine/index.php Serra San Bruno Charterhouse in Calabria, Italy] |
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*[http://monsite.wanadoo.fr/AnalectaCartusiana Analecta Cartusiana] - Oldest continuing series published on the Carthusian Order, founded in 1970 |
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*[http://www.chartreuse.fr Website for Chartreuse Liqueur] |
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*[http://www.saintbruno.org International Fellowship of St. Bruno] |
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*[http://www.angelfire.com/planet/morimond/charterhouse/home.html The Charterhouse, A Garden Enclosed] |
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* [http://www.angelfire.com/nv2/monastic2/carthusian/home.html Carthusian Saints] |
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*[http://www.kartuzi.pl Polish site about Carthusian order] |
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*[http://www.coventry-walks.org.uk/conservation-areas/london-road.html Conservation Area in Coventry featuring remains of the city's Charterhouse.] |
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*[http://www.geocities.com/hashanayobel/homilies/pensieri/Rosary1.htm The Rosary Prayer and the Carthusians] |
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*[http://www.christianitytoday.com/movies/commentaries/quiettime.html "Into Great Silence" Documentary Film] |
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*[http://www.publicaffairsbooks.com/publicaffairsbooks-cgi-bin/display?book=158648432X "An Infinity of Little Hours" by Nancy Klein Maguire] |
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==References== |
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==Documentary Film== |
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{{reflist}} |
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*[http://www.diegrossestille.de/english/ "Into Great Silence", documentary film on the life in a carthusian monastery] |
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==Further reading== |
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*[http://stores.lulu.com/aquarium "Scala Dei, La Inspiración", documentary film with one interviews for the first time granted by a Carthusian Monk. In spanish. Armando Linares Teijeiro. -Aquarium Productions-] |
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* Lockhart, Robin Bruce. ''Halfway to Heaven''. London: Cistercian Publications, 1999 (paperback, {{ISBN|0-87907-786-7}}). |
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* ''The Wound of Love'', A Carthusian miscellany by priors and novice masters on various topics relating to the monastic ideal as lived in a charterhouse in our day. Gracewing Publishing, 2006, 256 p. (paperback, {{ISBN|0-85244-670-5}}) |
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* André Ravier, ''Saint Bruno the Carthusian'', translated by Bruno Becker, O.S.B., Ignatius Press, San Francisco, 1995. {{ISBN|978-0898705621}}. [http://transfiguration.chartreux.org/SaintBruno.htm#longbio Selected chapters online.] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110712064501/http://transfiguration.chartreux.org/SaintBruno.htm#longbio |date=12 July 2011 }} |
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* Klein Maguire, Nancy. ''An Infinity of Little Hours: Five Young Men and Their Trial of Faith in the Western World's Most Austere Monastic Order''. New York: PublicAffairs, 2006. (Hardcover, {{ISBN|1-58648-327-7}}). A paperback edition ({{ISBN|978-1-58648-432-3}}) later appeared containing a section "Reading Group Guide Interview with Nancy Klein Maguire" on pages 259–264, which isn't found in the original hardback edition. |
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* Harris, Judith, [https://web.archive.org/web/20180927165241/http://www.catholicherald.co.uk/news/2014/09/05/nazi-massacre-of-carthusian-monks-recalled-in-new-book/ "Nazi massacre of Carthusian monks recalled in new book"], ''Catholic Herald'', 5 September 2014. |
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==External links== |
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{{commons category|Carthusian Order}} |
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{{EB1911 poster|Carthusians}} |
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* [https://chartreux.org Official website of the Carthusian Order] |
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* [http://www.vocatiochartreux.org/ Vocational website of the Carthusian Order] |
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* [http://www.saintbruno.org International Fellowship of Saint Bruno] |
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* [http://www.quies.org Quies] |
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* [[s:Catholic Encyclopedia (1913)/The Carthusian Order|Article]] from the [[Catholic Encyclopedia]] |
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* [http://www.cartusiana.org Cartusiana – History of the Carthusians in the Low Countries] |
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* [https://web.archive.org/web/20080915173929/http://www.kartuizers.nl/ Official website Foundation The Carthusians of Roermond] |
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* [https://www.statcrux.co.uk/ocart/index.htm Writings by a former Carthusian monk] |
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* [https://www.poemhunter.com/best-poems/ernest-christopher-dowson/carthusians/ "Carthusians" (1891)]: notable poem by [[Ernest Dowson]] celebrating the Carthusian order |
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{{Seven Sacraments}} |
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{{Catholic congregation}} |
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{{catholicism}} |
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{{Authority control}} |
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Latest revision as of 16:31, 21 October 2024
Ordo Cartusiensis | |
Formation | 15 August 1084 |
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Founder | Bruno of Cologne |
Founded at | France |
Type | Monastic Order of Pontifical Right (for Men)[1] |
Headquarters | Grande Chartreuse (Mother House) |
Membership | About 380[2] |
O.Cart. | |
Website |
The Carthusians, also known as the Order of Carthusians (Latin: Ordo Cartusiensis), are a Latin enclosed religious order of the Catholic Church. The order was founded by Bruno of Cologne in 1084 and includes both monks and nuns. The order has its own rule, called the Statutes, and their life combines both eremitical and cenobitic monasticism. The motto of the Carthusians is Stat crux dum volvitur orbis, Latin for 'The Cross is steady while the world turns'.[2] The Carthusians retain a unique form of liturgy known as the Carthusian Rite.
The name Carthusian is derived from the Chartreuse Mountains in the French Prealps: Bruno built his first hermitage in a valley of these mountains. These names were adapted to the English charterhouse, meaning a Carthusian monastery.[a] Today, there are 23 charterhouses, 18 for monks and 5 for nuns. The alcoholic cordial Chartreuse has been produced by the monks of Grande Chartreuse since 1737, which gave rise to the name of the color, though the liqueur is in fact produced not only as green chartreuse, but also as yellow chartreuse.
In Italy, the Carthusians are known as Certosini and their monastery as a Certosa.[3]
History
[edit]In 1084 Bishop Hugh of Grenoble offered Bruno, the former Chancellor of the Diocese of Reims, a solitary site in the mountains of his diocese, in the valley of Chartreuse. There Bruno and six companions built a hermitage, consisting of a few wooden cabins opening towards a gallery that allowed them access to the communal areas, the church, the refectory, and the chapter room without having to suffer too much from inclement conditions.[4]
Six years later, Bruno's former pupil, Pope Urban II, requested his services. Bruno would only live in Rome for a few short months however, before leaving to establish a new hermitage in Serra San Bruno, in Calabria, a region of southern Italy. He died there on 6 October 1101.[4]
In 1132, an avalanche destroyed the first hermitage, killing 7 monks under the snow. The fifth prior of Chartreuse, Guiges, rebuilt the hermitage.[4]
Carthusians in Britain
[edit]There were ten Carthusian monasteries in Britain before the Reformation, with one in Scotland and nine in England. The first was founded by Henry II of England in 1181 at Witham Friary, Somerset as penance for the murder of Thomas Becket. Hugh of Lincoln was its first prior.[5] The third Charterhouse built in Britain was Beauvale Priory, remains of which can still be seen in Beauvale, Greasley, Nottinghamshire.
The Carthusians, as with all Catholic religious orders, were variously persecuted and banned during the Reformation. The abolition of their priories, which were sources of charity in England, particularly reduced their numbers.[6] This was followed by the French Revolution which had a similar effect in France.[7]
The Charterhouse, Coventry has been conserved and was opened to the public in April 2023. The area, about a mile from the centre of the city, is a conservation area, and the buildings had been in use as part of a local college. Inside the building is a medieval wall painting, alongside many carvings and wooden beams. Nearby is the river Sherbourne which runs underneath the centre of the city.
The best preserved remains of a medieval Charterhouse in the UK are at Mount Grace Priory near Osmotherley, North Yorkshire. One of the cells has been reconstructed to illustrate how different the layout is from monasteries of most other Christian orders, which are normally designed with communal living in mind.
The London Charterhouse gave its name to Charterhouse Square and several streets in the City of London, as well as to the Charterhouse School which used part of its site before moving out to Godalming, Surrey.
Nothing remains at Hull or Sheen, although Hull Charterhouse is an almshouse that shared the site of the monastery. Axholme, Hinton, and Witham have slight remains.
Perth Charterhouse, the single Carthusian Priory founded in Scotland during the Middle Ages, was located in Perth. It stood just west of the medieval town and was founded by James I (1406–1437) in the early 15th century. James I and Joan Beaufort, Queen of Scots (died 1445) were both buried in the priory church, as was Queen Margaret Tudor (died 1541), widow of James IV of Scotland. The Priory, said to have been a building of "wondrous cost and greatness", was sacked during the Scottish Reformation in 1559, and swiftly fell into decay. No remains survive above ground, though a Victorian monument marks the site. The Perth names Charterhouse Lane and Pomarium Flats (built on the site of the Priory's orchard) recall its existence.
There is an active Carthusian house in England, St Hugh's Charterhouse, Parkminster, West Sussex. This has cells around a square cloister approximately 400 metres (0.25 mi) on a side, making it the largest cloister in Europe. It was built in the 19th century to accommodate two communities which were expelled from the continent.[8]
Charterhouse
[edit]The monastery is generally a small community of hermits based on the model of the 4th-century Lauras of Palestine. A Carthusian monastery consists of a number of individual cells built around a cloister. The individual cells are organised so that the door of each cell comes off a large corridor.
The focus of Carthusian life is contemplation. To this end, there is an emphasis on solitude and silence.[9] Carthusians do not have abbots—instead, each charterhouse is headed by a prior and is populated by two types of monks: the choir monks, referred to as hermits, and the lay brothers. This reflects a division of labor in providing for the material needs of the monastery and the monks. For the most part, the number of brothers in the Order has remained the same for centuries, as it is now: seven or eight brothers for every ten fathers.[10] Humility is a characteristic of Carthusian spirituality. The Carthusian identity is one of shared solitude.[11]
Musical practice
[edit]Similar to the tradition of the Byzantine Rite, Carthusians eschew the use of musical instruments in worship.[12][13]
Choirmonks
[edit]Each hermit, a monk who is or who will be a priest, has his own living space, called a cell, usually consisting of a small dwelling. Traditionally there is a one-room lower floor for the storage of wood for a stove and a workshop as all monks engage in some manual labour. A second floor consists of a small entryway with an image of the Virgin Mary as a place of prayer and a larger room containing a bed, a table for eating meals, a desk for study, a choir stall, and a kneeler for prayer. Each cell has a high-walled garden wherein the monk may meditate as well as grow flowers for himself and/or vegetables for the common good of the community, as a form of physical exercise.[11]
Next to the door is a small revolving compartment, called a "turn", so that meals and other items may be passed in and out of the cell without the hermit having to meet the bearer. Most meals are provided in this manner, which the hermit then eats in the solitude of his cell. There are two meals provided for much of the year: lunch and supper. During seasons or days of fasting, just one meal is provided. The hermit makes his needs known to the lay brother by means of a note, requesting items such as a fresh loaf of bread, which will be kept in the cell for eating with several meals. Carthusians observe a perpetual abstinence from meat.[9]
The hermit spends most of his day in the cell: he meditates, prays the minor hours of the Liturgy of the Hours on his own, eats, studies and writes, and works in his garden or at some manual trade. Unless required by other duties, the Carthusian hermit leaves his cell daily only for three prayer services in the monastery chapel, including the community Mass, and occasionally for conferences with his superior. Additionally, once a week, the community members take a long walk in the countryside during which they may speak. On Sundays and solemn feast days a community meal is taken in silence.[5] Twice a year there is a day-long community recreation, and the monk may receive an annual visit from immediate family members.[14]
Lay brothers
[edit]There have always been lay brothers in the charterhouse. When Bruno retired to the Chartreuse, two of his companions were secular ones: Andrew and Guerin. They also live a life of solitary prayer and join in the communal prayer and Mass in the chapel. However, the lay brothers are monks under a slightly different type of vows and spend less time in contemplative prayer and more time in manual labour. The lay brothers provide material assistance to the choir monks: cooking meals, doing laundry, undertaking physical repairs, providing the choir monks with books from the library and managing supplies. The life of the brothers complements that of the choir monks and makes the fathers' lives of seclusion possible.[11]
During the brothers' seven-year formation period, some time is given each day to the study of the Bible, theology, liturgy, and spirituality. They can continue their studies throughout their lives. All of the monks live lives of silence.
The Carthusians do not engage in work of a pastoral or missionary nature. Unlike most monasteries, they do not have retreatants, and those who visit for a prolonged period are people who are contemplating entering the monastery.[9] As far as possible, the monks have no contact with the outside world.
Carthusian nuns live a life similar to the monks but with some differences. Choir nuns tend to lead somewhat less eremitical lives, while still maintaining a strong commitment to solitude and silence.
Modern Carthusians
[edit]Today, the monastery of the Grande Chartreuse is still the Motherhouse of the order. There is a museum illustrating the history of the Carthusian order next to Grande Chartreuse; the monks of that monastery are also involved in producing Chartreuse liqueur. Visits are not possible into the Grande Chartreuse itself, but the 2005 documentary Into Great Silence gave unprecedented views of life within the hermitage.
Today, Carthusians live very much as they originally did, without any relaxing of their rules. Generally, those wishing to enter must be between the ages of twenty-one and forty-five. Nowadays, medical examinations are considered necessary before the Novitiate and Profession.[10] The Carthusian novice is introduced to Lectio divina (spiritual reading).
In the 21st century, the Sélignac Charterhouse[15] was converted into a house in which lay people could come and experience Carthusian retreats, living the Carthusian life for shorter periods (an eight-day retreat being fixed as the minimum, to enter at least somewhat into the silent rhythm of the charterhouse).[16]
Liturgy
[edit]Before the Council of Trent in the 16th century, the Catholic Church in Western Europe had a wide variety of rituals for the celebration of Mass. Although the essentials were the same, there were variations in prayers and practices from region to region or among the various religious orders.
When Pope Pius V made the Roman Missal mandatory for all Catholics of the Latin Church, he permitted the continuance of other forms of celebrating Mass that had an antiquity of at least two centuries. The rite used by the Carthusians was one of these and continues in use in a version revised in 1981. Apart from the new elements in this revision, it is substantially the rite of Grenoble in the 12th century, with some admixture from other sources.[7] According to current Catholic legislation, priests can celebrate the traditional rites of their order without further authorization.
A feature unique to Carthusian liturgical practice is that the bishop bestows on Carthusian nuns, in the ceremony of their profession, a stole and a maniple. The nun, who may receive the consecration of virgins is then also invested with a crown and a ring. The nun wears these ornaments again only on the day of her monastic jubilee and on her bier after her death. At Matins, if no priest or deacon is present, a nun assumes the stole and reads the Gospel; and although in the time of the Tridentine Mass the chanting of the Epistle was reserved to an ordained subdeacon, a consecrated virgin sang the Epistle at the conventual Mass, though without wearing the maniple. For centuries Carthusian nuns retained this rite, administered by the diocesan bishop four years after the nun took her vows.[7]
Formation
[edit]The formation of a Carthusian begins with 6 to 12 months of postulancy. This is followed by two years of novitiate, where the novice wears a black cloak over the white Carthusian habit. Subsequently, the novice takes simple vows and becomes a junior professed for three years, during which the professed wears the full Carthusian habit. The simple vows may be renewed for another two years. Finally, the Carthusian makes the solemn profession.[10]
Locations of monasteries
[edit]As of March 2024[update], there are 21 extant charterhouses, 16 for monks and 5 for nuns,[17][b] on three continents: Argentina (1), Brazil (1), France (6), Germany (1), Italy (3), Korea (2), Portugal (1), Slovenia (1), Spain (4), Switzerland (1), the United Kingdom (1) and the United States (1).
Notable Carthusians
[edit]- Bruno of Cologne (c. 1030–1101)
- Guigo I (1083–1136)
- Guigo II
- Hugh of Balma
- Hugh of Lincoln (1135/40-1200)
- Ludolph of Saxony (1295–1378)
- Niccolò Albergati (1373–1443)
- Dominic of Prussia (1382–1461)
- Denis the Carthusian (1402–1471)
- Peter Blomevenna (1466–1536)
See also
[edit]- Into Great Silence
- List of Carthusian monasteries
- Carthusian Martyrs
- Institution des Chartreux
- Monastic Family of Bethlehem, of the Assumption of the Virgin and of Saint Bruno
- Spatiamentum
- Broken Silence, a fictional 1996 movie on the potential challenges of modern Carthusian exclaustration
- Corroirie
- Carthusian Spanish horse
Notes
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ "Carthusian Order (O. Cart.)".
- ^ a b Renault, Marion (17 December 2020). "An Elixir From the French Alps, Frozen in Time". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 7 January 2021.
- ^ Birt, Henry. "Charterhouse." The Catholic Encyclopedia. Vol. 3. New York: Robert Appleton Company, 1908. Accessed 6 March 2021 http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/03634a.htm
- ^ a b c Chartreux, L'Ordre des. "Welcome". Retrieved 13 June 2016.
- ^ a b "The Carthusian Order". St. Hugh's Charterhouse. Retrieved 13 June 2016.
- ^ 'House of Carthusian monks: Priory of Sheen' A History of the County of Surrey: Volume 2, ed. H E Malden (London, 1967), pp. 89–94 Accessed 15 April 2015.
- ^ a b c Douglas Raymund (1913). "The Carthusian Order". In Herbermann, Charles (ed.). Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company. Retrieved 1 January 2015.
- ^ The Monastery, BBC, broadcast May 2005, about 20 minutes into the third episode.
- ^ a b c "Charterhouse of the Transfiguration". Archived from the original on 6 December 2021. Retrieved 13 June 2016.
- ^ a b c vocatiochartreux (4 August 2011). "The joy of being a carthusian". Retrieved 13 June 2016.
- ^ a b c McNary-Zak, Bernadette. Seeking in Solitude, Wipf and Stock Publishers, 2014 ISBN 9781606089699
- ^ Op de Coul, Thomas (12 March 2015). "Carthusians in Oxford Music Online" (PDF). cartusiana.org. Open Publishing. Archived (PDF) from the original on 9 November 2021. Retrieved 22 December 2020.
- ^ "Musical Instruments – Questions & Answers". oca.org. Retrieved 13 December 2022.
- ^ "The Carthusian way". chartreux.org. Retrieved 10 March 2024.
- ^ Selignac, Charterhouse of. "Sélignac Charterhouse". Retrieved 9 March 2024.
- ^ "Retreats - The Carthusian monks". Chartreux.org. Les moines Chartreux. Retrieved 1 March 2024.
- ^ Chartreux.org (official website of the Carthusian Order): List of active Carthusian houses. Retrieved 9 March 2024
Further reading
[edit]- Lockhart, Robin Bruce. Halfway to Heaven. London: Cistercian Publications, 1999 (paperback, ISBN 0-87907-786-7).
- The Wound of Love, A Carthusian miscellany by priors and novice masters on various topics relating to the monastic ideal as lived in a charterhouse in our day. Gracewing Publishing, 2006, 256 p. (paperback, ISBN 0-85244-670-5)
- André Ravier, Saint Bruno the Carthusian, translated by Bruno Becker, O.S.B., Ignatius Press, San Francisco, 1995. ISBN 978-0898705621. Selected chapters online. Archived 12 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine
- Klein Maguire, Nancy. An Infinity of Little Hours: Five Young Men and Their Trial of Faith in the Western World's Most Austere Monastic Order. New York: PublicAffairs, 2006. (Hardcover, ISBN 1-58648-327-7). A paperback edition (ISBN 978-1-58648-432-3) later appeared containing a section "Reading Group Guide Interview with Nancy Klein Maguire" on pages 259–264, which isn't found in the original hardback edition.
- Harris, Judith, "Nazi massacre of Carthusian monks recalled in new book", Catholic Herald, 5 September 2014.
External links
[edit]- Official website of the Carthusian Order
- Vocational website of the Carthusian Order
- International Fellowship of Saint Bruno
- Quies
- Article from the Catholic Encyclopedia
- Cartusiana – History of the Carthusians in the Low Countries
- Official website Foundation The Carthusians of Roermond
- Writings by a former Carthusian monk
- "Carthusians" (1891): notable poem by Ernest Dowson celebrating the Carthusian order
- Carthusians
- Carthusian Order
- 1084 establishments in Europe
- Christian organizations based in France
- Organizations established in the 1080s
- Catholic female orders and societies
- Catholic hermit orders
- Catholic monastic orders
- Catholic religious orders established in the 11th century
- 11th-century establishments in France
- 1540s disestablishments in England