Hieronymites
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Hieronymites, a common name for several congregations of hermits living according to the rule of St Augustine with supplementary regulations taken from St Jerome's writings. Their traditional habit is white, with a black cloak.
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[edit] The Iberian Hieronymites
Established near Toledo in 1374, the order soon became popular in Spain and Portugal, and in 1415 it numbered 25 houses. It possessed some of the most famous monasteries in the Peninsula, including the royal monastery of Santa Maria de Guadalupe in Extremadura, the royal monastery of Belem near Lisbon, and the magnificent monastery built by Philip II of Spain at the Escorial.
Though the manner of life was very austere the Hieronymites devoted themselves to studies and to the active work of the ministry, and they possessed great influence both at the Spanish and the Portuguese courts. They went to Spanish and Portuguese America and played a considerable part in Christianizing the native Americans.
There were Hieronymite nuns founded in 1375, who became very numerous. The order decayed during the 18th century and was completely suppressed in 1835.
[edit] Hieronymites of the Observance, or of Lombardy
A reform of the above, effected by the third general in 1424; it embraced seven houses in Spain and seventeen in Italy, mostly in Lombardy. It is now extinct.
[edit] Poor Hermits of St Jerome (Pisa)
Established near Pisa in 1377, this congregation came to embrace nearly fifty houses, of which only one in Rome and one in Viterbo survive.
[edit] Hermits of St Jerome (Fiesole)
The congregation of Fiesole was established in 1406: they had forty houses but in 1668 they were united to those of Pisa.
[edit] Reference
- Helyot, Histoire des ordres religieux (1714), iii. cc. 57-6o, iv. cc. 1-3; Max Heimbucher, Orden and Kongregationen (1896), i. 70; and art. " Hieronymiten " in Herzog-Hauck, Realencyklopädie (ed. 3), and in Welte and Wetzer, Kirchenlexicon (ed. 2).
- Hieronymites. Catholic Encyclopedia. Retrieved on February 18, 2007.
This article incorporates text from the Encyclopædia Britannica Eleventh Edition, a publication now in the public domain.