释义 |
Cluniac, a. and n.|ˈkluːnɪæk| [ad. med.L. Cluniac-us, f. Cluny.] A. adj. Belonging to the monastery of Cluny or Clugny, near Mâcon in France. B. n. A monk of Cluny, or of the order which subsequently developed from it, and separated in the 11th c. from the Benedictines. So Cluniaˈcensian, ˈClunist.
1631Weever Anc. Fun. Mon. 281 Monkes Cluniacks. 188419th Cent. Jan. 109 The Cluniacs, who were the reformed Benedictines. 1882–3Schaff Encycl. Relig. Knowl. III. 2290 The Cluniacensians [built] a monastery [on Mt. Tabor]. 1888Sir G. F. Duckett Archives of Cluni I. 79 The Clunists and their formidable rivals, the Cistercians. |