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词条 Brothers of Penitence
释义

  1. History

  2. Ashridge

  3. Edington

  4. Lynn

  5. Albigensian connection

  6. Cultural references

  7. Sources

  8. References

The Brothers of Penitence or Friars of the Sack (Fratres Saccati) were an Augustinian order also known as Boni Homines, Bonshommes or Bones-homes, with houses in Spain, France and England.[1] They were also known as the "Bluefriars" on account of the colour of their robes.{{Citation needed|date=February 2007}}

History

Little is known about how or when they were founded. They had a house at Saragossa (Spain) in the time of Pope Innocent III (d. 1216) and one about the same time at Valenciennes (northern France). Their rule was founded on that of St. Augustine. They had one house in Paris, in a street called after them the rue de Sachettes, and in 1257 they were introduced into England. Matthew Paris records under this year that "a certain new and unknown order of friars appeared in London", duly furnished with credentials from pope; and he mentions later that they were called from the style of their habit Fratres Saccati. Paris' notation about a "novum ordum" has led some to suggest that the Fratres Saccati were the order quite soon afterwards established at Ashridge and Edington, though this was repudiated in an article by Richard Emory in the journal Speculum (1943), who attributes the original connection to Helyot's Dictionnaire des Ordres Religieux, which was compiled in Paris in the mid-nineteenth century. There is in fact nothing to connect the Fratres Saccati with the Boni Homines of Ashridge and Edington.

They were granted an Abbey at Ashridge in Hertfordshire. They followed the rule of St. Augustine. At the foundation Edmund gave the order a phial of the Sacred Blood Of Jesus Christ he had acquired while travelling in Germany. The order was intended to be 20 brothers, but rarely achieved this.

The Black Prince, a later lord of Berkhampstead castle, became interested in the College around the time of the Black Death around 1350. A second house of the Order was established at the prince's direction at Edington, Wiltshire in 1352 by taking over an existing secular college there. There is an effigy of a Bonhomme at the Priory in Edington today.

Another house is mentioned at Ruthin in Denbighshire but little is known of this.

In 1534 at the Dissolution of the Monasteries the house was peacefully dissolved and the brothers given pensions for life.

Ashridge

{{main article|Ashridge Priory}}

The priory was founded in 1283[1] and finished in 1285. The last rector was Thomas Waterhouse (1529), who surrendered the house to Henry VIII. The suppressed college was eventually granted to the Egertons, later created Earls and Dukes of Bridgewater. The church was destroyed under Elizabeth I.

Edington

{{main article|Edington Priory}}

Two other English houses of the Boni Homines appear to have existed, one of them at Edington in Wiltshire.[2] John de Aylesbury and another brother travelled from Ashridge to organise the new house, John becoming its first rector.[3]

Lynn

There is a solitary record of another house in Bishop's (now King's) Lynn. Walter Bette of South Clenchwarton, and Catherine his wife, made a grant to 'the brothers of penitence of Jesus Christ' of land with buildings in North Lynn.[4] No other reference survives.

Albigensian connection

There has been speculation that the order was in some way associated with the Albigensian heresy of southern France whose perfecti called themselves bonhommes. The evidence for this is circumstantial and the conclusion contested. Edmund's mother was the daughter of Raymond VI, Count of Toulouse, a protector of the heretical sect. Wall paintings in the college cloisters, now lost, were described in the eighteenth century as favouring the Albigensians. Wall paintings in a cottage at nearby Piccotts End discovered in 1953 have been similarly described.[5]

Cultural references

In the video game Drakkhen for Super NES, there are merchants called Bonhommes. They appear as friars dressed in green, accompanied with chanting voices.[6]

Sources

  • {{cite book|author=Douglas Coult|title=A Prospect of Ashridge|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=HNL2QwAACAAJ|date=1980|publisher=Phillimore|location=Chichester|isbn=978-0-85033-360-2|chapter=2-6}}

References

1. ^{{Catholic|inline=1|title=Boni Hominemes|url=http://www.catholic.org/encyclopedia/view.php?id=2022|accessdate=15 May 2016}}
2. ^Little, The Friars of the Sack, in The English Historical Review, 1894, 33, 121., cited in the referenced Catholic Encyclopedia article
3. ^{{cite web|website=British History Online|title=Victoria County History - Wiltshire - Vol 3 pp320-324 - House of Bonhommes: Edington|url=http://www.british-history.ac.uk/vch/wilts/vol3/pp320-324|publisher=University of London|date=1956|accessdate=23 November 2015}}
4. ^NRO BL/MD 10
5. ^History of England {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070928180625/http://www.historyofengland.net/religion/the-inquisition.html |date=September 28, 2007 }} - The Inquisition, Note 4; the Cathars movement did indeed come to England.
6. ^[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XUDrGypnsnY Drakkhen at youtube.com]
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5 : Augustinian orders|1276 establishments in Europe|Roman Catholic friars|History of Catholic religious orders|Christian religious orders established in the 13th century

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