Hinweise zur Catholic Encyclopedia
Rule of St. Basil
I.
Under the name of Basilians are included all the religious who follow the
Rule of St. Basil. The monasteries of such religious have never possessed the
hierarchical organization which ordinarily exists in the houses of an order
properly so called. Only a few houses were formerly grouped into congregations
or are today so combined. St. Basil drew up his Rule for the members of the
monastery he founded about 356 on the banks of the Iris in Cappadocia. Before
forming this community St. Basil visited Egypt, Palestine, Coelesyria, and
Mesopotamia in order to see for himself the manner of life led by the monks in
these countries. St. Gregory of Nazianzus, who shared the retreat, aided Basil
by his advice and experience. The Rule of Basil is divided into two parts: the
Greater Monastic Rules
(Regulae fusius tractatae, Migne, P.G., XXXI, 889-1052),
and the Lesser Rules
(Regulae brevius tractatae, ibid., 1051-1306). Rufinus
who translated them into Latin united the two into a single Rule under the name
of Regulae sancti Basilii episcopi Cappadociae ad monachos
(P.L., CIII,
483-554); this Rule was followed by some western monasteries. For a long time
the Bishop of Caesarea was wrongly held to be the author of a work on
monasticism called Contitutiones monasticae
(P.G., XXXI, 1315-1428). In his
Rule St. Basil follows a catechetical method; the disciple asks a question to
which the master replies. He limits himself to laying down indisputable
principles which will guide the superiors and monks in their conduct. He sends
his monks to the Sacred Scriptures; in his eyes the Bible is the basis of all
monastic legislation, the true Rule. The questions refer generally to the
virtues which the monks should practice and the vices they should avoid. The
greater number of the replies contain a verse or several verses of the Bible
accompanied by a comment which defines the meaning. The most striking qualities
of the Basilian Rule are its prudence and its wisdom. It leaves to the superiors
the care of settling the many details of local, individual, and daily life; it
does not determine the material exercise of the observance or the administrative
regulations of the monastery. Poverty, obedience, renunciation, and
self-abnegation are the virtues which St. Basil makes the foundation of the
monastic life.
As he gave it, the Rule could not suffice for anyone who wished to organize a monastery, for it takes this work as an accomplished fact. The life of the Cappadocian monks could not be reconstructed from his references to the nature and number of the meals and to the garb of the inmates. The superiors had for guide a tradition accepted by all the monks. This tradition was enriched as time went on by the decisions of councils, by the ordinances of the Emperors of Constantinople, and by the regulations of a number of revered abbots. Thus there arose a body of law by which the monasteries were regulated. Some of these laws were accepted by all, others were observed only by the houses of some one country, while there were regulations which applied only to certain communities. In this regard Oriental monasticism bears much resemblance to that of the West; a great variety of observances is noticeable. The existence of the Rule of St. Basil formed a principle of unity.
II. THE MONASTERIES OF THE EAST
The monasteries of Cappadocia were the first to accept the Rule of St. Basil; it afterwards spread gradually to all the monasteries of the East. Those of Armenia, Chaldea, and of the Syrian countries in general preferred instead of the Rule of St. Basil those observances which were known among them as the Rule of St. Anthony. Neither the ecclesiastical nor the imperial authority was exerted to make conformity to the Basilian Rule universal. It is therefore impossible to tell the epoch at which it acquired the supremacy in the religious communities of the Greek world; but the date is probably an early one. The development of monasticism was, in short, the cause of its diffusion. Protected by the emperors and patriarchs the monasteries increased rapidly in number. In 536 the Diocese of Constantinople contained no less than sixty-eight, that of Chalcedon forty, and these numbers continually increased. Although monasticism was not able to spread in all parts of the empire with equal rapidity, yet what it probably must have been may be inferred from these figures. These monks took an active part in the ecclesiastical life of their time; they had a share in all the quarrels, both theological and other, and were associated with all the works of charity. Their monasteries were places of refuge for studious men. Many of the bishops and patriarchs were chosen from their ranks. Their history is interwoven, therefore, with that of the Oriental Churches. They gave to the preaching of the Gospel its greatest apostles. As a result monastic life gained a footing at the same time as Christianity among all the races won to the Faith. The position of the monks in the empire was one of great power, and their wealth helped to increase their influence. Thus their development ran a course parallel to that of their Western brethren. The monks, as a rule, followed the theological vicissitudes of the emperors and patriarchs, and they showed no notable independence except during the iconoclastic persecution; the stand they took in this aroused the anger of the imperial controversialists. The Faith had its martyrs among them; many of them were condemned to exile, and some took advantage of this condemnation to reorganize their religious life in Italy.
Of all the monasteries of this period the most celebrated was that of St.
John the Baptist of Studium, founded at Constantinople in the fifth century. It
acquired its fame in the time of the iconoclastic persecution while it was under
the government of the saintly HegumenosEin Hegumenos (griech.„ἡγούμενος, Führer / Leiter”) ist in den orthodoxen Kirchen der Vorsteher eines Klosters, entsprechend etwa dem westlichen Probst. Er steht hierarchisch unter dem Archimandriten.
(abbot) Theodore, called the Studite.
Nowhere did the heretical emperors meet with more courageous resistance. At the
same time the monastery was an active center of intellectual and artistic life
and a model which exercised considerable influence on monastic observances in
the East. Further details may be found in Prescriptio constitutionis monasterii
Studii
(Migne, P.G., XCIX, 1703-20), and the monastery's Canones de
confessione et pro peccatis satisfactione
(ibid., 1721-30). Theodore
attributed the observances followed by his monks to his uncle, the saintly Abbot
Plato, who first introduced them in his monastery of Saccudium. The other
monasteries, one after another adopted them, and they are still followed by the
monks of Mount Athos. The monastery of Mount Athos was founded towards the close
of the tenth century through the aid of the Emperor Basil the Macedonian and
became the largest and most celebrated of all the monasteries of the Orient; it
is in reality a monastic province. The monastery of Mount Olympus in Bithynia
should also be mentioned, although it was never as important as the other. The
monastery of St. Catherine on Mount Sinai, which goes back to the early days of
monasticism, had a great fame and is still occupied by monks. Reference to
Oriental monks must here be limited to those who have left a mark upon
ecclesiastical literature: Leontius of Byzantium (d. 543), author of a treatise
against the Nestorians and Eutychians; St. Sophronius, Patriarch of Jerusalem,
one of the most vigorous adversaries of the Monothelite heresy (P.G., LXXXVII,
3147-4014); St. Maximus the Confessor, Abbot of Chrysopolis (d. 662), the most
brilliant representative of Byzantine monasticism in the seventh century; in his
writings and letters St. Maximus steadily combated the partisans of the
erroneous doctrines of Monothelitism (ibid., XC and XCI); St. John Damascene,
who may perhaps be included among the Basilians; St Theodore the Studite (d.
829), the defender of the veneration of sacred images; his works include
theological, ascetic, hagiographical, liturgical, and historical writings (P.G.,
XCIX). The Byzantine monasteries furnish a long line of historians who were also
monks: John Malalas, whose hronographia
(P.G., XCVII, 9-190) served as a
model for Eastern chroniclers Georgius Syncellus, who wrote a Selected
Chronographia
; his friend and disciple Theophanes (d. 817), Abbot of the Great
Field
near Cyzicus, the author of another Chronographia
(P.G., CVIII); the
Patriarch Nicephorus, who wrote (815-829) an historical Breviarium
(a
Byzantine history), and an Abridged Chronographia
(P.G., C, 879-991); George
the Monk, whose Chronicle stops at A. D. 842 (P.G. CX). There were, besides, a
large number of monks, hagiographers, hymnologists, and poets who had a large
share in the development of the Greek Liturgy. Among the authors of hymns may be
mentioned: St. Maximus the Confessor; St. Theodore the Studite; St. Romanus the
Melodist; St. Andrew of Crete; St. John Damascene; Cosmas of Jerusalem, and St.
Joseph the Hymnographer. Fine penmanship and the copying of manuscripts were
held in honor among the Basilians. Among the monasteries which excelled in the
art of copying were the Studium, Mount Athos, the monastery of the Isle of
Patmos and that of Rossano in Sicily; the tradition was continued later by the
monastery of Grottaferrata near Rome. These monasteries, and others as well,
were studios of religious art where the monks toiled to produce miniatures in
the manuscripts, paintings, and goldsmith work. The triumph of orthodoxy over
the iconoclastic heresy infused an extraordinary enthusiasm into this branch of
their labors.
From the beginning the Oriental Churches often took their patriarchs and bishops from the monasteries. Later, when the secular clergy was recruited largely from among married men, this custom became almost universal, for, as the episcopal office could not be conferred upon men who were married, it developed, in a way, into a privilege of the religious who had taken the vow of celibacy. Owing to this the monks formed a class apart, corresponding to the upper clergy of the Western Churches; this gave and still gives a preponderating influence to the monasteries themselves. In some of them theological instruction is given both to clerics and to laymen. As long as the spirit of proselytism existed in the East the monasteries furnished the Church with all its missionaries. The names of two have been inscribed by Rome in its calendar of annual feasts, namely, St. Cyril and St. Methodius, the Apostles of the Slavs. The Byzantine schism did not change sensibly the position of the Basilian monks and monasteries. Their sufferings arose through the Mohammedan conquest. To a large number of them this conquest brought complete ruin, especially to those monasteries in what is now Turkey in Asia and the region around Constantinople. In the East the convents for women adopted the Rule of St. Basil and had constitutions copied from those of the Basilian monks.
III. SCHISMATIC BASILIANS
The two best known monasteries of the schismatic Basilians are those of Mount Athos and of Mount Sinai. Besides these there are still many monasteries in Turkey in Asia, of which 10 are in Jerusalem alone, 1 at Bethlehem, and 4 at Jericho. They are also numerous on the islands of the Aegean Sea: Chios 3, Samos 6, Crete about 50, Cyprus 11. In Old Cairo is the monastery of St. George. In Greece where there were formerly 400 monasteries, there were, in 1832, only 82, which by 1904 had increased to 169; 9 Basilian convents for women are now in existence in Greece. In Rumania there are 22 monasteries; in Servia 44, with only about 118 monks; in Bulgaria 78, with 193 inmates. Montenegro has 11 monasteries and about 15 monks; Bosnia 3 and Herzegovina 11. In Dalmatia are 11 monasteries and in Bukowina 3. Hungary has 25 monasteries and 5 branch houses. The schismatic monks are much more numerous in Russia; in this country, besides, they have the most influence and possess the richest monasteries. Nowhere else has the monastic life been so closely interwoven with the national existence. The most celebrated monasteries are Pescherskoi at Kieff and Troïtsa at Moscow; mention may also be made of the monasteries of Solovesk, Novgorod, Pskof, Tver, and Vladmir. Russia has about 9,000 monks and 429 monasteries. There is no diocese which has not at least one religious house. The monasteries are divided into those having state subventions and monasteries which do not receive such aid.
IV. CATHOLIC BASILIANS
A certain number of Basilian monasteries were always in communion with the Holy See. Among these were the houses founded in Sicily and Italy. The monastery of Rossano, founded by St. Nilus the Younger, remained for a long time faithful to the best literary traditions of Constantinople. The monasteries of San Salvatore of Messina and San Salvatore of Otranto may be mentioned; the monastery of Grottaferrata was also celebrated. The emigration of the Greeks to the West after the fall of Constantinople and the union with Rome, concluded at the Council of Florence, gave a certain prestige to these communities. Cardinal Bessarion, who was Abbot of Grottaferrata, sought to stimulate the intellectual life of the Basilians by means of the literary treasures which their libraries contained.
A number of Catholic communities continued to exist in the East. The Holy See
caused them to be united into congregations, namely: St. Savior founded in 1715,
which includes 8 monasteries and 21 hospices with about 250 monks; the
congregation of Aleppo with 4 monasteries and 2 hospices; that of the Baladites
(Valadites) with 4 monasteries and 3 hospices. These last two congregations have
their houses in the district of Mount Lebanon. St. Josaphat and Father Rutski,
who labored to bring back the Ruthenian Churches into Catholic unity, reformed
the Basilians of Lithuania. They began with the monastery of the Holy Trinity at
Vilna (1607). The monastery of Byten, founded in 1613, was the citadel of the
union in Lithuania. Other houses adopted the reform or were founded by the
reformed monks. On 19 July, 1617, the reformed monasteries were organized into a
congregation under a proto-archimandrite, and known as the congregation of the
Holy Trinity, or of Lithuania. The congregation increased with the growth of the
union itself. The number of houses had risen to thirty at the time of the
general chapter of 1636. After the Council of Zamosc the monasteries outside of
Lithuania which had not joined the congregation of the Holy Trinity formed
themselves into a congregation bearing the title of Patrocinium [Protection]
B.M.V.
(1739). Benedict XIV desired (1744) to form one congregation out of
these two, giving the new organization the name of the Ruthenian Order of St.
Basil and dividing it into the two provinces of Lithuania and Courland. After
the suppression of the Society of Jesus these religious took charge of the
Jesuit colleges. The overthrow of Poland and the persecution instituted by the
Russians against the Uniat Greeks was very unfavorable to the growth of the
congregation, and the number of these Basilian monasteries greatly diminished.
Leo XIII, by his Encyclical Singulare praesidium
of 12 May, 1881, ordained a
reform of the Ruthenian Basilians of Galicia. This reform began in the monastery
of Dabromil; its members have gradually replaced the non-reformed in the
monasteries of the region. They devote themselves, in connection with the Uniat
clergy, to the various labors of the apostolate which the moral condition or the
different races in this district demands.
V. LATIN BASILIANS
In the sixteenth century the Italian monasteries of this order were in the
last stages of decay. Urged by Cardinal Sirlet, Pope Gregory XIII ordained (1573)
their union in a congregation under the control of a superior general. Use was
made of the opportunity to separate the revenues of the abbeys from those of the
monasteries. The houses of the Italian Basilians were divided into the three
provinces of Sicily, Calabria, and Rome. Although the monks remained faithful in
principle to the Greek Liturgy they showed an inclination towards the use of the
Latin Liturgy; some monasteries have adopted the latter altogether. In Spain
there was a Basilian congregation which had no traditional connection with
Oriental Basilians; the members followed the Latin Liturgy. Father Bernardo de
la Cruz and the hermits of Santa Maria de Oviedo in the Diocese of Jaen formed
the nucleus of the congregation. Pope Pius VI added them to the followers of St.
Basil and they were affiliated with the monastery of Grottaferrata (1561). The
monasteries of Turdon and of Valle de Guillos, founded by Father Mateo de la
Fuente, were for a time united with this congregation but they withdrew later in
order to form a separate congregation (1603) which increased very little, having
only four monasteries and a hospice at Seville. The other Basilians, who
followed a less rigorous observance, showed more growth; their monasteries were
formed into the two provinces of Castile and Andalusia. They were governed by a
vicar general and were under the control, at least nominally, of a superior
general of the order. Each of their provinces had its college or scholasticate
at Salamanca and Seville. They did not abstain from wine. Like their brethren in
Italy they wore a cowl similar to that of the Benedictines; this led to
recriminations and processes, but they were authorized by Rome to continue the
use of this attire. Several writers are to be found among them, as: Alfonso
Clavel, the historiographer of the order; Diego Niceno, who has left sermons and
ascetic writings; Luis de los Angelos, who issued a work on, Instructions for
Novices
(Seville, 1615), and also translated into Spanish Cardinal Bessarion's
exposition of the Rule of St. Basil; Felipe de la Cruz. who wrote a treatise on
money loaned at interest, that was published at Madrid in 1637, and one on
tithes, published at Madrid in 1634. The Spanish Basilians were suppressed with
the other orders in 1833 and have not been re-established. At Annonay in France
a religious community of men was formed (1822) under the Rule of St. Basil,
which has a branch at Toronto, Canada (See BASILIANS, PRIESTS OF THE COMMUNITY
OF ST. BASIL.)
BESSE, Les moines d'Orient (Paris, 1900); MARTIN, Les moines de Constantinople (Paris, 1897), GUÉPIN, Un apótre de l'union des églises au XVIIe siècle, St. Josaphat (Paris, 1897); LEROY-BEAULIEU La religion in L'empire des Tsars et les Rusees (Paris, 1889) III; CLAVEL, Antigüedad de la religión y regla de san Basilio (Madrid, 1645); HÉLYOT, Histoire des ordres monastiques, I; HEIMBUCHER, Die Orden and Kongregationen, I, 44-47; MINIASI, San Nilo (Naples, 1892); RODOTÀ, Origine, progresso e stato attuale del rito greco in Italia (Rome, 1755); SILBERNAGL-SCHNITZER, Verfassung, etc., in Kirchen des Orients (Munich, 1905); MILASCH-PESSIC, Kirchenrecht d. morgene. Kirche (2nd ed., Mostar, 1905).
Heiligenlexikon als USB-Stick oder als DVD
Unterstützung für das Ökumenische Heiligenlexikon
Artikel kommentieren / Fehler melden
Suchen bei amazon: Bücher über Catholic Encyclopedia - Rule of St. Basil
Wikipedia: Artikel über Catholic Encyclopedia - Rule of St. Basil
Fragen? - unsere FAQs antworten!
Impressum - Datenschutzerklärung
korrekt zitieren: Artikel
Die Deutsche Nationalbibliothek verzeichnet das Ökumenische Heiligenlexikon in der Deutschen Nationalbibliografie; detaillierte bibliografische Daten sind im Internet über https://d-nb.info/1175439177 und https://d-nb.info/969828497 abrufbar.