Tuesday:
Music:
Gregorian chant, by the Benedictine nuns of Barroux, France (1:39 min.):
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PCyTSTBD8YY
Gregorian chant, by monks of Stift Heiligenkreuz, Germany (4:23 min.):
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZZmmEfxUuaM
Plan of abbey of St. Gall (Switzerland), 820:
- Original manuscript and reverse side of the manuscript
- Redrawn plan, with captions in English
- Models and reconstructions of St. Gall (scroll down to see a variety of reconstructions)
- (The abbey church of St. Gall today)
Typical monastic buildings:
- Church and cloister of abbey of St. Riquier, also called “Centula,” dedicated 799 (engraving, dated 1612, of an 11th-cent. sketch)
- West front of abbey church of St. Pantaleon, Cologne, Germany, 966-980
- St. Cyriakus, Gernrode, Germany, 961-973: exterior, and interior
- nave and plan and elevation of St. Michael’s, Hildesheim, c. 1001-31, with crossing, transept, choir, apse or chancel, altar)
- Cloister
- Chapter house
- Scriptorium and/or library
- Dormitory (dorter)
- Refectory
- Infirmary
Benedict of Aniane (c. 750-821), a Visigoth from S. France who had been educated at Pepin the Short’s court and served as cup-bearer to Pepin and to Charlemagne, later became a monk and founded a monastery on his own estate at Aniane. Louis the Pious put him in charge of reforming all the Carolingian monasteries with a re-edited and revised version of the Benedictine Rule (Capitulare monasticum), that emphasized liturgical and intellectual work over manual work for the monks.
Thursday:
Private confession and penitential manuals are introduced by monks from British Isles
Churches become places of legal asylum
Monasteries house pilgrims, retirees, and paupers
787 | Council of Nicaea rehabilitates cult of religious paintings (vs. Iconoclasm in Byzantine Empire, c. 730-843); religious statuary not restored until late 9th cent., with reliquary busts and figures. (Click here for a page showing scenes from Genesis from the Grandval Bible, written at Tours in 834-43 (London, Add. MS 10546, f. 5v) |
Liturgy elaborated in 9th cent., including:
- New use of incense
- Gregorian (Roman) chant (required but often not known)
- Musical notation re-invented: click here to see a German liturgical manuscript of c. 950-1050
- (Stanford University Library, Philip Bliss collection, M389.)
- New saints’ days introduced (e.g., Feast of the Assumption of the Virgin, 15 August; Feast of All Saints, 1 November)
910 foundation of abbey of Cluny in Burgundy by Count William (Guillaume) the Pious
Some common ecclesiastical abuses in the early middle ages:
- Bishoprics and abbacies granted as patronage
- Clerical marriage or concubinage
- Ill-educated parish clergy