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claustration
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claustration
claustration (klɔːˈstreɪʃən) [mod. f. on claustrum; also in Fr.: see -ation.] a. The action of enclosing or confining in a cloister.1863 J. M. Ludlow Sisterhood in Gd. Words 498 At Nancy in 1696, the Bishop of Toul tried to compel the claustration of the Grey Sisters of the city. b. transf. and fig....
Oxford English Dictionary
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San José y San Maximiliano Kolbe, Montevideo
The Church of Saint Joseph and Saint Maximilian Kolbe (), popularly known as Iglesia de los Conventuales (due to its history as a former claustration convent temple and its convent were built by French architect Víctor Rabú between 1860 and 1867 for the Order of the Visitation of Holy Mary, whose nuns lived in claustration
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exclaustration
exclaustration, n. Eccl. (ɛksklɔːˈstreɪʃən) [ad. mod.L. exclaustration-em: see ex-, claustration n.] Permission granted to a member of a religious community to live for a specified time outside the religious institute or beyond its jurisdiction.1945 F. P. Sweeney Reduction of Clerics to Lay State (C...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Periculoso
Periculoso (named for its Latin incipit, meaning dangerous) was a papal decretal of Pope Boniface VIII issued in 1298, that required the claustration of However, the delay of the implementation of claustration in some areas was dramatic; for example, in Lower Saxony, the enclosure of female monastic communities
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Scribe
Since the Wessobrunn monastery enforced its strict claustration it is presumed that these other scribes were also women.
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Erentrude
Kulzer reported that the wealth of convents during this era was distributed to the poor people who came to their doors daily, so the rules of claustration
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Katerina Lemmel
For Katerina Lemmel the correspondence became a window to the world, since the strict claustration of the nuns severely restricted oral communication with
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Sonnefeld Abbey
In 1504, most of the nuns turned against the next abbess, because she wanted to reintroduce claustration, supported by the abbot of Georgenthal Abbey,
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William of Æbelholt
These included a stricter insistence on claustration.
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Caesarius of Arles
In this text, Caesarius argues for the practice of claustration, the complete containment of women in the monastery from their entry until death.
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Johann Rode von Wale
Rode promoted a stronger adherence to the Benedictine rule and stricter claustration.
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Neuenwalde Convent
John III promoted a stronger adherence to the Benedictine rule and stricter claustration.
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