In the early decades of the 12th century the Cistercians created a sort of horizontal “confederation” (a societas et fraterna confederatio wrote Bernard of Clairvaux in the letter n. 142 adressed to the abbey of Aulps), composed basically almost entirely of abbeys which maintained strong ties with the episcopate and were materially rather independent of each other. This was a real turning point which was embodied in the Charta caritatis. Within the Cistercians occurred a shift from a relationship between abbot and priors, or between archabbot and abbot, to a relation between father – abbot and son – abbot. The rise of the relation father – abbot and son – abbot allowed also the gradual dawning of innovative institutions such as the annual visitation and the general chapter. This process however was difficult and required some decades to establish itself. The weakness of this relationship was caused by an initial lack of legitimation, validity and juridical ground. In order to solve this problem, the practice to correct and judge the abbots was extremely important. According to the Charta caritatis prior and the Summa carte caritatis an abbot had to be corrected both by his bishop and his father-abbot. Therefore, the disciplinary actions of the latter gained some validity and effectiveness also thank to his role as a substitute of the bishop.

Cariboni, G., The Relationship between Abbots and Bishops and the Origins of the cistercian Carta Caritatis, in Pansters, K., Plunkett-Latimer, A. (ed.), Shaping Stability. The Normation and Formation of Religious Life in the Middle Ages, Brepols, Turnhout 2016: <<Disciplina Monastica>>, 219- 227 [http://hdl.handle.net/10807/81138]

The Relationship between Abbots and Bishops and the Origins of the cistercian Carta Caritatis

Cariboni, Guido
Primo
2016

Abstract

In the early decades of the 12th century the Cistercians created a sort of horizontal “confederation” (a societas et fraterna confederatio wrote Bernard of Clairvaux in the letter n. 142 adressed to the abbey of Aulps), composed basically almost entirely of abbeys which maintained strong ties with the episcopate and were materially rather independent of each other. This was a real turning point which was embodied in the Charta caritatis. Within the Cistercians occurred a shift from a relationship between abbot and priors, or between archabbot and abbot, to a relation between father – abbot and son – abbot. The rise of the relation father – abbot and son – abbot allowed also the gradual dawning of innovative institutions such as the annual visitation and the general chapter. This process however was difficult and required some decades to establish itself. The weakness of this relationship was caused by an initial lack of legitimation, validity and juridical ground. In order to solve this problem, the practice to correct and judge the abbots was extremely important. According to the Charta caritatis prior and the Summa carte caritatis an abbot had to be corrected both by his bishop and his father-abbot. Therefore, the disciplinary actions of the latter gained some validity and effectiveness also thank to his role as a substitute of the bishop.
2016
Inglese
Shaping Stability. The Normation and Formation of Religious Life in the Middle Ages
9782503566955
Brepols
Cariboni, G., The Relationship between Abbots and Bishops and the Origins of the cistercian Carta Caritatis, in Pansters, K., Plunkett-Latimer, A. (ed.), Shaping Stability. The Normation and Formation of Religious Life in the Middle Ages, Brepols, Turnhout 2016: <<Disciplina Monastica>>, 219- 227 [http://hdl.handle.net/10807/81138]
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10807/81138
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