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The Cluniac Order

The Cluniac Order was founded by a Benedictine called Odo who believed that the strict rule of St. Benedict was not being followed. He founded the abbey of Cluny in 910. In this order the daughter houses were all dependant on Cluny itself for their funds and any money the daughter house received had to be sent back to Cluny. When Cluny started using its funds to increase its own grandeur its daughter houses suffered and popularity of the order began to wane. Monks in this Order dedicated so much time to prayer that they had to employ workers to tend the fields and gardens.

The Carthusian Order

The Carthusians were founded in 1084 by Saint Bruno a La Chartreuse and were descended from the Benedictines. In England their houses were known as Charter-houses. The Rule that these monks followed was possibly the most strict of all the orders. Being a Carthusian monk meant that the ideal of leaving the world behind when entering a monastery was taken literally. Each monk lived in solitude in a small cell where he did his own cooking and slept. He had a small area of garden in which to grow food and only meet his fellow monks once a week. As the life was so strict and the order did not communicate with the outside world the number of abbeys remained less than ten in number.

Augustinian Canons

The Augustinians were not monks like the Benedictines or Cistercians but were canons. Canons were
Selected Augustinian
abbeys in Britain

Bolton Priory
Bourn Priory
Bridlington Priory
Brinkburn Priory
Cartmel Priory
Christchurch Priory
Colchester Priory
Dorchester Priory
Dunstable Priory
Haughmond Priory
Hexham Priory
Kirkham Priory
Lanetcost Priory
Lilleshall Abbey
Llanthony Priory
Maxstike Priory
Newstead Priory
Norton Priory
Porchester Priory
Portsmouth Priory
St. Botolph's Priory
St. Osyths Priory
Thornton Priory
Walsingham Priory
Waltham Priory (Abbey ??)
Wigmore Prioty
Woodspring Priory
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