A group of person living under a religious rule.
1France's King Philip IV was deeply indebted to the monastic order.
2Capuchins, a branch of the monastic order of the Franciscans
3They were a sect, or monastic order, rather than a political or religious party.
4In the requirements of austerity and dedication imposed on members, it resembled a monastic order.
5A new monastic order, the Augustinian Recollects, is permitted to send missionaries to the islands.
6When she dies, he enters the monastic order.
7The monastic order had been apparently annihilated.
8For this reason he returned to Ephesus, and after having submitted to the tonsure, joined the monastic order.
9The variations in the monastic order among the men were accompanied by similar changes in the associations of women.
10On a previous occasion, before I had joined the monastic order, Sri Yukteswar had made a most unexpected remark.
11The Augustinian monks, whose society he announced his intention to join, belonged at that time to the most important monastic order in Germany.
12Then spoke the bishops among themselves, and said that they never more would have a man of the monastic order as archbishop over them.
13Sir Charles is evidently an ecclesiastically-minded person and, I should imagine, rather pleased to be able to be the patron of a monastic order.
14The expenses of the Roman Curia increased; the monastic Orders were wealthy.
15Many monastic orders, especially the Bernardins paid great attention to good cheer.
16They are all devout Roman Catholics, although they hate the monastic orders.
Aquesta col·locació està formada per:
Monastic order a través del temps
Monastic order per variant geogràfica