Crean, John E. Jr. Vox Benedictina, Comparative Study of Three Scripts on the Law of St. Benedict of Women: Abbey Source Journal of Translation 10.1 (1993): 157-178
Study feminization of three versions of the St Benedict's rule (Oxford Rule C 14, Berlin Rule C 15, Altenburg Rule 1505)
St. Benedict XVI wrote his rule, the so-called Benedict rule, c. Consider his own Monte Cassino abbey 535-540. The rules spread slowly in Italy and Gaul and provide a complete catalog of spiritual and material well-being of governments and monasteries by carefully integrating prayers, physical labor and learning into a comprehensive daily life. In the 7th century, this rule was applied to women, as a nun, her mistress is considered a Scholastic sister, Scholastica. By the time of the early 9th century Charlemagne, the rules of the Benedictine party superseded most other memorials in Northern Europe and Western Europe. In the fifth century after the death of Benedict XVI, the size and wealth of the monastery doubled. They are a major database of Western European learning and literature, and are major educators.
St. Benedict was widely regarded as the father of Western monastic life, whose scripture was written in Montecassino in the middle of the sixth century. St. Benedict often practiced himself well in the early form of the eastern monastery and shaped this sacred way of life in today's western world. Domination of St. Benedict became an important guide to his vision of monastic life and a religious life. The "rule" and the creation of a large number of faithful followers ensured the geographic spread of St. Benedict's idea and words and survived for centuries since then.
In Roman Catholicism, the monks are members of religious groups who live together in public life under the rules of monasteries, monasteries or monastery lives (such as St. Benedict's rules). The Church of St. Benedict (AD 480 - 543 AD or 547 AD) is considered the founder of the Western Abbey. He wrote the St. Benedict Principal Law which is the basis of the Order of St. Benedict, and all its reform organizations like Sister Cyan and Trapist. He founded the Benedictine monastery in 529, Monte Cassino
It is hard labor. The focus is also on the reform of the monastery. In order to enforce the rules of St. Benedict, Charlemagne ordered an error-free manuscript from Italy's Montecassino and distributed a copy of it to all his monasteries. The school curriculum inspired by Cava Augustine focuses on in-depth research on Christian doctrines and classical writers as an example of a good style. Students learned the psalms, studied, and started with seven liberal arts like Mars and Capella's Mercury and Linguistics (Florida 430) and Seville's Essex (approximately 615-630). Please pay particular attention to Bohius Trio's three arts, grammar, rhetoric, dialectic. More advanced students will also be presented with the quartet science: mathematics, geometry, astronomy and harmony (or music)