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Camaldolese

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Camaldolese Hermits of Mount Corona[1]
Congregatio Eremitarum Camaldulensium Montis Coronae (Latin)[2]
AbbreviationPost-nominal letters: E.C.M.C.
Formation1025; 999 years ago (1025)[1]
FounderSaint Romuald
Founded atCamaldoli, Italy
TypeMonastic Order of Pontifical Right (for Men)[1]
HeadquartersSacro Eremo Tuscolano, 00040 Monteporzio Catone, Italy[1]
Membership
67 members (35 priests) as of 2018[1]
Father Major
Fr. Emir José Castillo Zárate, ECMC[3]
Nickname
Camaldolese
AffiliationsCatholic Church
Websitewww.catholic-hierarchy.org/diocese/dqecm.html[4]

The Camaldolese Hermits of Mount Corona (Latin: Congregatio Eremitarum Camaldulensium Montis Coronae), commonly called Camaldolese, is a monastic order of Pontifical Right for men founded by Saint Romuald. Its name is derived from the Holy Hermitage (Italian: Sacro Eremo) of Camaldoli, high in the mountains of central Italy, near the city of Arezzo. Its members add the nominal letters E.C.M.C. after their names to indicate their membership in the congregation. Apart from the Roman Catholic monasteries, in recent times ecumenical Christian hermitages with a Camaldolese spirituality have arisen as well.

History

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St. Romuald

The Camaldolese were established through the efforts of the Italian monk Saint Romuald[5] (c. 950-1025/27). His reform sought to renew and integrate the eremitical tradition of monastic life with that of the cenobium.

In his youth, Romuald became acquainted with the three major schools of Western monastic tradition. The monastery where he first entered monastic life, Sant' Apollinare in Classe, was a traditional Benedictine community under the influence of the Cluniac reforms. Romuald chose to be under a spiritual master, Marinus, who followed a much harsher ascetic and solitary lifestyle that was originally of Irish eremitical origins. Some years later, Marinus and Romuald settled near the Abbey of Saint Michael de Cuxa, where Abbot Guarinus was also beginning reforms but was building mainly upon the Iberian Christian tradition. Later, drawing on his various early experiences, Romuald was able to establish his own monastic pattern, though he himself never thought of it as a separate entity, seeing it as an integral part of the Benedictine tradition.

Romuald moved around central Italy, founding several colonies of hermits (or "deserts").[5] Around the year 1012, he made his chief foundation, the Sacred Hermitage of Camaldoli in the Tuscan hills. There the monks lived in individual cells, but also observed the common life, with liturgical celebrations daily in the community church and common meals in the refectory.[6] The monks at Camaldoli adopted the distinctive white habit, later characteristic of their tradition, and there emerged in these early years the combination of the two cenobite and hermit branches that afterwards became so marked a feature of the order.

Romuald and the early Camaldolese exercised considerable influence on the religious movements of their time. The emperors Otto III and Henry II esteemed Romuald highly and sought his advice on religious questions.[5]

In his old age Romuald started on a missionary expedition to Hungary with twenty-five of his monks, but he was unable to accomplish the journey, and he died in 1027.[5] The order was approved by Pope Alexander II in 1072.[7]

There have been Camaldolese hermitages and monasteries at sites throughout Italy.

Organization

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Current congregations

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Former Camaldolese monastery in Červený Kláštor in Slovakia

Currently two separate Camaldolese congregations exist: the Benedictine Camaldolese and the Camaldolese Hermits. Various unsuccessful attempts at reunion between them occurred over the centuries - the longest-lasting that of 1634–1667. In 1667, Pope Clement IX, recognizing the failure, issued a Bull establishing a definitive separation between the congregations.[7]

Benedictine Camaldolese

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The Benedictine Camaldolese (OSB Cam.) are headquartered in the hamlet of Camaldoli in Tuscany. On the mountainside stands the 11th-century Holy Hermitage founded by St. Romuald. Its 16th-century monastery stands a few kilometers below.

The next community founded by the Camaldolese congregation was the Monastery of St. Mary of the Angels in Florence.[6] By the 13th century, its scriptorium had become known throughout Europe as a major source of high-quality parchments, then much in demand. In this monastery the artist Lorenzo Monaco tentatively explored a vocation as a monk from 1390 onwards. Only the church of the monastery now remains in service.

Circa 1603 the Camaldolese Hermit Monastery in Kraków in Poland was established in the village of Bielany (now surrounded by Kraków). The priory consists of hermitages and the Church of Our Lady of the Assumption. Visitors are welcome for scheduled masses.[8]

The New Camaldoli Hermitage on the coast road south of Big Sur, California, was founded in 1958 by the Holy Hermitage of Camaldoli, Italy. Officially named the "Immaculate Heart Hermitage", it stands on a mountainside overlooking the Pacific Ocean. New Camaldoli has founded two daughter communities, Incarnation Monastery in Berkeley, California, near the GTU, north of U.C. Berkeley in 1979; and the Monastery of the Risen Christ in San Luis Obispo, California in 2014.[9][10][11]

The order maintains a mix of monasteries and hermitages for men in countries on five continents. Perhaps most prominent is Saccidananda Ashram, founded in 1950 in the village of Tannirpalli in the Tiruchirapalli District of Tamil Nadu, India, on the bank of the River Kavery. Monasteries for women began in 1086; they are located now mostly in Italy and Poland, also in Tanzania and America.[12] An oblate community started in Australia, which since the mid-1990s continues under the guidance of the Prior New Camaldoli, Big Sur.[13]

Camaldolese hermits

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The other congregation, known as the Camaldolese Hermits of Monte Corona (Er. Cam.), was established by the Renaissance reformer Paolo Giustiniani (1476-1528). This group lives solely in hermitages, usually with a very small number of monks comprising the community. There are three houses in Italy, two in Poland, and one each in Spain, the United States, and Colombia, as well as a newer foundation in Venezuela. Unlike the other congregation, it is not a member of the larger Benedictine Confederation.

  • Eremo Di San Girolamo (Monte Cucco), founded in 1521, does not have the separate, solitary cells typical of the other Coronese Hermitages.
  • Eremo SS. Annunziata Di Monte Rua, founded in 1537, served as the center of various Coronese Hermitages in the former Republic of Venice.
  • Sacro Eremo Tuscolano, founded in 1607 at Frascati in the Alban Hills, ordinarily functions as the residence of the father major (superior general) and as the novitiate house for Italy.
  • Eremo Di Monte Argentino, the "Silver Mountain", was founded in 1609 in the outskirts of Cracow, Poland. Pope John Paul II visited it in August 2002.
  • Eremo Cinque Martiri in Bieniszew in Poland was founded in 1663. In 1941 the hermitage was suppressed by the Nazis; three hermits died in concentration camps. It is presently the novitiate house for Poland.
  • Yermo Camaldulense N.S. De Herrera, Burgos, Spain, was founded in 1925 on the site of an ancient Cistercian abbey. It is a novitiate house.
  • Holy Family Hermitage in Bloomingdale, Ohio, was founded in the Diocese of Steubenville in 1959. Nine solitary cells stand, according to historical models, in a semicircle about the church. It is a novitiate house.[14]
  • Yermo Camaldulense de la Santa Cruz in Antioquia, Colombia, was founded in 1969. It is a novitiate house.
  • Yermo Camaldulense Santa Maria de Los Angeles, Venezuela

The Camaldolese Crown (Italian: Corona), designed by Bl. Michele Pina (1450–1522), is sometimes called the Crown of Our Lord (Italian: Corona Del Signore). It was officially approved by papal brief on 18 February 1516.

Extinct congregations

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An early Benedictine Camaldolese site was founded in Florence, St. Mary of the Angels.[15]

Fra Mauro of the Camaldolese Monastery of St. Michael in Murano, Venice (c. 1459)

Previously there were three autonomous congregations, based in Turin (founded 1596), Venice (1474–1569) and France (founded 1526). The monasteries attached to Hermitage of Turin seem to have been absorbed by the Monte Corona congregation in the 18th century. The Venetian congregation, which was headed by an abbot, and the French one were eventually suppressed by the Holy See. The French monks became associated with Jansenism, due to which their congregation was suppressed in 1770 and the monks dispersed.[7]

By the early 20th century, the Venetian congregation, which was entirely coenobitic, was felt by Rome to be too few in numbers for continued existence, and its members were offered the opportunity to seek admission with the Congregation of Camaldoli. It had contributed many of its members to the service of the Church, most notably Pope Gregory XVI. The noted cartographer Fra Mauro had been a member of the mother monastery of St. Michael of Murano. It was in this community that the German merchant Daniel became a monk. Eventually, he established a solitary hermitage in the woods, where he spent long periods in prayer. He was murdered in his cell by robbers in 1413 and is today venerated as Saint Daniel of Murano.[16]

In the Kingdom of Hungary, four Camaldolese monasteries were established: Zobor Hill (1695), Lánzsér (German: Landsee) (1701), Vöröskolostor (1710) and Majk (1733). In 1782 the Emperor Joseph II ordered the dissolution of every monastic order that, in his view, did not pursue useful activities. Thus the Camaldolese monasteries in that realm were secularized.

Communities of nuns

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Former Camaldolese hermitage in Wigry, Poland

Soon after the various communities established by St. Romuald began to develop, communities of nuns desired to share in this reform. Beginning under the guidance of Blessed Rudolph II, third Prior General of Camaldoli, they were accepted into the life of the Congregation. He founded the Monastery of San Pietro di Luco in Mugello near Florence to establish the model of their "Little Rule" in 1086.

At their zenith, only ten monasteries of nuns were a part of the Order. There were many small monasteries, however, which followed the Camaldolese Rule but were subject to local bishops. Of those who form a part of the Congregation of the Holy Hermitage, their Motherhouse is the Abbey of St. Anthony the Abbot in Rome, where the abbess lives.[17]

Over time the Camaldolese nuns came to be concentrated mostly in Italy and in Poland, in Złoczew. A few foundations, though, have been made in other countries. In France, a monastery of nuns was established by Polish nuns of the Order but it is on the verge of closure, with just one nun in residence. A monastery has been founded in Tanzania, which is currently flourishing.

Founded in 1979 by three Sisters, in Windsor, New York, Transfiguration Monastery became formally affiliated with the Camaldolese Benedictine Congregation in 1986. Sister Mary Donald Corcoran, O.S.B. Cam., has served as prioress since its foundation, which she made with two companions, Sisters Placid (a former recluse from France) and Jean Marie Pearse, a native of the region. For practical reasons, they have begun the process of changing their affiliation to an American Benedictine congregation, while still retaining Camaldolese traditions.[18]

Modern era

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The Benedictine Camaldolese order extended its presence to the United States in 1958 with the founding of Immaculate Heart Hermitage, more commonly called New Camaldoli Hermitage, in the Santa Lucia Mountains of Big Sur, California.[9] New Camaldoli Hermitage later established a daughter house, Incarnation Monastery in Berkeley, California.[10] Fr. Cyprian Consiglio is the current Prior at New Camadoli Hermitage of Big Sur.[19][15]

The Camaldolese Hermits of Monte Corona established the Holy Family Hermitage in Bloomingdale, Ohio.[20] For several years, there was also a small community, Epiphany Monastery, in New Boston, New Hampshire, which was closed in 1998.

There are Camaldolese communities in India, Brazil, and Tanzania, among others.[21]

An ecumenical Christian community of Camaldolese hermits is present in various countries throughout the world and is known as the Community of Solitude (CoS).[22] The Camaldolese Oblate Community of Australasia is another ecumenical community.[23]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b c d e "Camaldolese Hermits of Mount Corona (Institute of Consecrated Life - Men) [Catholic-Hierarchy]".
  2. ^ http://www. gcatholic.org/orders/188.htm
  3. ^ "Camaldolese Hermits of Mount Corona (E.C.M.C.)".
  4. ^ catholic-hierarchy.org
  5. ^ a b c d  One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainButler, Edward Cuthbert (1911). "Camaldulians". In Chisholm, Hugh (ed.). Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 5 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 79–80.
  6. ^ a b "Who We Are – New Camaldoli Hermitage". Retrieved 3 September 2016.
  7. ^ a b c "CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: Camaldolese". Retrieved 3 September 2016.
  8. ^ 415 lat Kamedułów na krakowskich Bielanach. Retrieved 2019-3-20.
  9. ^ a b New Camaldoli Hermitage. Retrieved 2019-3-21.
  10. ^ a b Incarnation Monastery. Accessed 2019-3-28.
  11. ^ Monastery of the Risen Christ. Accessed 2021-11-19.
  12. ^ See section below: #Communities of nuns.
  13. ^ Camaldolese Downunder. Retrieved 2019-3-21.
  14. ^ "Camaldolese | Holy Family Hermitage". Retrieved 2019-02-19.
  15. ^ a b See above section "Benedictine Camaldolese".
  16. ^ Saint of the Day, March 31 Archived 2011-04-08 at the Wayback Machine at SaintPatrickDC.org. Retrieved 2012-03-03.
  17. ^ "Pope Francis visits Camaldolese Monastery of Sant'Antonio Abate". Retrieved 3 September 2016.
  18. ^ Transfiguration Monastery Archived 2015-02-27 at the Wayback Machine
  19. ^ "For the monks of Big Sur... ", in the Los Angeles Times, Aug. 11, 2017. Accessed 2019-3-28.
  20. ^ This Hermitage is described above in the section "Camaldolese Hermits".
  21. ^ Servants of God: Cherubim Kozik, Er. Cam.; Aloysius Poprawa, Er. Cam.
  22. ^ "The Rule of the Community of Solitude" (PDF). Community of Solitude. 6 July 2013. Retrieved 11 March 2022.
  23. ^ "About". Camaldolese Downunder. 11 November 2012. Retrieved 11 March 2022.
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