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St. Gilbert of Sempringham
Founder of the Order of Gilbertines, b. at Sempringham, on the border of the
Lincolnshire fens, between Bourn and Heckington. The exact date of his birth is
unknown, but it lies between 1083 and 1089; d. at Sempringham, 1189. His father,
Jocelin, was a wealthy Norman knight holding lands in Lincolnshire; his mother,
name unknown, was an Englishwoman of humble rank. Being ill-favoured and
deformed, he was not destined for a military or knightly career, but was sent to
France to study. After spending some time abroad, where he became a teacher, he
returned as a young man to his Lincolnshire home, and was presented to the
livings of Sempringham and Tirington, which were churches in his father's gift.
Shortly afterwards he betook himself to the court of Robert Bloet, Bishop of
Lincoln, where he became a clerk in the episcopal household. Robert was
succeeded in 1123 by Alexander, who retained Gilbert in his service ordaining
him deacon and priest much against his will. The revenues of Sempringham had to
suffice for his maintenance in the court of the bishop; those of Tirington he
devoted to the poor. Offered the archdeaconry of Lincoln, he refused, saying
that he knew no surer way to perdition. In 1131 he returned to Sempringham and,
is father being dead, became lord of the manor and lands. lt was in this year
that he founded the Gilbertine Order, which he was the first is Master
, and
constructed at Sempringham, with the help of Alexander, a dwelling and cloister
for his nuns, at the north of the church of St. Andrew.
His life henceforth became one of extraordinary austerity, its strictness not
diminishing as he grew older, though the activity and fatigue caused by the
government of the order were considerable. In 1147 he travelled to Citeaux, in
Burgundy, where he met Eugene III, St Bernard, and St. Malachy, Archbishop of
Armagh. The pope expressed regret at not having known of him some years
previously when choosing a successor to the deposed Archbishop of York. In 1165
he was summoned before Henry II's justices at Westminster and was charged with
having sent help to the exiled St. Thomas a Becket. To clear himself he was
invited to take an oath that he had not done so. He refused, for, though as a
matter of fact he had not sent help, an oath to that effect might make him
appear an enemy to the archbishop. He was prepared for a sentence of exile, when
letters came from the king in Normandy, ordering the judges to await his return.
In 1170, when Gilbert was already a very old man, some of his lay-brothers
revolted and spread serious calumnies against him. After some years of fierce
controversy on the subject, in which Henry II took his part, Alexander III freed
him from suspicion, and confirmed the privileges granted to the order. Advancing
age induced Gilbert to give up the government of his order. He appointed as his
successor Roger, prior of Malton. Very infirm and almost blind, he now made his
religious profession, for though he had founded an order and ruled it for many
years he had never become a religious in the strict sense. Twelve years after
his death, at the earnest request of Hubert Walter, Archbishop of Canterbury, he
was canonized by Innocent III, and his relics were solemnly translated to an
honourable place in the church at Sempringham, his shrine becoming a centre of
pilgrimage. Besides the compiIation ot his rule, he has left in little treatise
entitled De constructione monasteriorum
. His feast is kept in the Roman
calendar on 11 February.
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