A Roman Catholic monastic order founded in the 6th century; noted for liturgical worship and for scholarly activities.
1The work of S. Romuald was a reform of the Benedictine Order.
2We have no existing examples of the earlier monasteries of the Benedictine order.
3That economic phenomenon has at its roots the action of the Benedictine Order.
4My granddaughter has taken that of Sister Bathilde; she is of the Benedictine order.
5The regular clergy, or monks, during the early Middle Ages belonged to the Benedictine order.
6Benedict founded the Benedictine order in Subiaco, near Rome.
7The Benedictine order first established a community of Irish nuns in Ypres in the 17th century.
8His presence in the Benedictine Order was proof of the fact that money will not accomplish everything.
9The monastery was of the Benedictine order.
10Saint Benedict founded Monte Cassino in 529, but centuries elapsed before the Benedictine order rose to power.
11He became a monk of the Benedictine order, and was educated at the abbey of Cluny in France.
12And, of all kinds of help-bringers, we owe much to the monks, and chiefly the great Benedictine order.
13The Benedictine order had been introduced into England in 596, and forty-five monasteries had been founded before that of St. Alban's.
14On the other side of the river there was the priory of the Holy Trinity, the home of an alien Benedictine order.
15Solesmes is a great convent, the parent House of the Benedictine Order in France, and it has a flourishing school of novices.
16Benedict, at Monte Cassino, followed the example of Cassiodorus, and the Benedictine Order carried the work on for the seven succeeding centuries.
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