Prouille,Madrid, Rome: the evolution of the earliest Dominican Instituta for nuns |
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Authors: | Julie Ann Smith |
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Affiliation: | Department of History, University of Sydney A14, Sydney, NSW 2006, Australia |
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Abstract: | The lifestyles of the three earliest Dominican women's communities were formulated according to their specific historical conditions and exigencies during the years 1206–21. Initially, the women associated with the preaching mission of Diego of Osma and Dominic Guzman were based at Prouille in the Languedoc and followed the Augustinian Rule. The development of the first instituta for Dominican nuns was the result of 15 years of overseeing the lives of the sisters. However, enclosure, and the institutional requirement for its observance, only came about in 1220 with the establishment of San Sisto, when St Dominic wrote an instituta specifically intended for a cloistered nunnery. This paper retraces and elucidates the historical development of the first Dominican instituta for women, and considers the remarkable choice of the Augustinian Rule as the basis for an enclosed women's order. |
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Keywords: | Dominican nuns Prouille San Sisto San Sisto instituta Vita apostolica |
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