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Definition of Cluniac in English: Cluniacadjective ˈkluːnɪakˈklo͞onēˌak Relating to a reformed Benedictine monastic order founded at Cluny in eastern France in 910. Example sentencesExamples - With these and other men, all deeply influenced by the Cluniac movement, Leo set about trying to reform the Church.
- Yet others founded Cluniac priories, the first English community being established at Lewes by William de Warenne.
- The king's tremendous support of the abbey of Cluny is discussed thoroughly, as is his foundation and endowment of the Cluniac abbey at Reading.
- The Council passed reforming decrees in keeping with the Cluniac reform movement, including ones concerning simony and clerical marriage.
- After living a dissolute, ungodly life, the priest, who was nearing death, came to seek solace at a Cluniac priory.
- In certain Cluniac establishments, the cloister had even been invaded by the laity to the extent that Peter the Venerable felt the need to impose severe restrictions on lay access.
noun ˈkluːnɪakˈklo͞onēˌak A monk of the Cluniac order. Example sentencesExamples - With these purposes in mind, Bernard deploys the rhetoric of satire to paint a vivid, exaggerated, ofttimes humorous picture of the Cluniacs ' overindulgence in food, luxurious personal attire, and ostentatious art and architecture.
- The new monastic orders amassed considerable power in Christendom, particularly the Cluniacs, the first order to centralize monastic authority.
- They made an alliance with certain forces controlling the Papacy, which were ultimately allied with them, including the Cluniacs, from the Benedictine area of Cluny.
- The Cluniacs or ‘black monks,’ whom Weber regarded as ‘the first professionals,’ restored the Rule of Saint Benedict in the tenth century.
- One of the earliest orders was that of the Benedictines, established by St Benedict towards the end of the 5th century ad, followed later by the Cluniacs in the 10th century, and the Carthusians and the Cistercians in the 11th century.
Definition of Cluniac in US English: Cluniacadjectiveˈklo͞onēˌak Relating to a reformed Benedictine monastic order founded at Cluny in eastern France in 910. Example sentencesExamples - In certain Cluniac establishments, the cloister had even been invaded by the laity to the extent that Peter the Venerable felt the need to impose severe restrictions on lay access.
- With these and other men, all deeply influenced by the Cluniac movement, Leo set about trying to reform the Church.
- Yet others founded Cluniac priories, the first English community being established at Lewes by William de Warenne.
- The king's tremendous support of the abbey of Cluny is discussed thoroughly, as is his foundation and endowment of the Cluniac abbey at Reading.
- The Council passed reforming decrees in keeping with the Cluniac reform movement, including ones concerning simony and clerical marriage.
- After living a dissolute, ungodly life, the priest, who was nearing death, came to seek solace at a Cluniac priory.
nounˈklo͞onēˌak A monk of the Cluniac order. Example sentencesExamples - They made an alliance with certain forces controlling the Papacy, which were ultimately allied with them, including the Cluniacs, from the Benedictine area of Cluny.
- The Cluniacs or ‘black monks,’ whom Weber regarded as ‘the first professionals,’ restored the Rule of Saint Benedict in the tenth century.
- With these purposes in mind, Bernard deploys the rhetoric of satire to paint a vivid, exaggerated, ofttimes humorous picture of the Cluniacs ' overindulgence in food, luxurious personal attire, and ostentatious art and architecture.
- One of the earliest orders was that of the Benedictines, established by St Benedict towards the end of the 5th century ad, followed later by the Cluniacs in the 10th century, and the Carthusians and the Cistercians in the 11th century.
- The new monastic orders amassed considerable power in Christendom, particularly the Cluniacs, the first order to centralize monastic authority.
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