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CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: Hermits
<!DOCTYPE html> <html lang="en"> <head> <title>CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: Hermits</title><script src="https://dtyry4ejybx0.cloudfront.net/js/cmp/cleanmediacmp.js?ver=0104" async="true"></script><script defer data-domain="newadvent.org" src="https://plausible.io/js/script.js"></script><link rel="canonical" href="https://www.newadvent.org/cathen/07280a.htm"> <meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1"> <meta name="description" content="Also called anchorites, men who fled the society of their fellow-men to dwell alone in retirement"> <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=utf-8"><link rel="alternate" type="application/rss+xml" title="RSS" href="http://feeds.newadvent.org/bestoftheweb?format=xml"><link rel="icon" href="../images/icon1.ico" type="image/x-icon"><link rel="shortcut icon" href="../images/icon1.ico" type="image/x-icon"><meta name="robots" content="noodp"><link type="text/css" rel="stylesheet" href="../utility/screen6.css" media="screen"></head> <body class="cathen" id="07280a.htm"> <!-- spacer--> <br/> <div id="capitalcity"><table summary="Logo" cellpadding=0 cellspacing=0 width="100%"><tr valign="bottom"><td align="left"><a href="../"><img height=36 width=153 border="0" alt="New Advent" src="../images/logo.gif"></a></td><td align="right"> <form id="searchbox_000299817191393086628:ifmbhlr-8x0" action="../utility/search.htm"> <!-- Hidden Inputs --> <input type="hidden" name="safe" value="active"> <input type="hidden" name="cx" value="000299817191393086628:ifmbhlr-8x0"/> <input type="hidden" name="cof" value="FORID:9"/> <!-- Search Box --> <label for="searchQuery" id="searchQueryLabel">Search:</label> <input id="searchQuery" name="q" type="text" size="25" aria-labelledby="searchQueryLabel"/> <!-- Submit Button --> <label for="submitButton" id="submitButtonLabel" class="visually-hidden">Submit Search</label> <input id="submitButton" type="submit" name="sa" value="Search" aria-labelledby="submitButtonLabel"/> </form> <table summary="Spacer" cellpadding=0 cellspacing=0><tr><td height="2"></td></tr></table> <table summary="Tabs" cellpadding=0 cellspacing=0><tr> <td bgcolor="#ffffff"></td> <td class="tab"><a class="tab_color_on_beige" href="../"> Home </a></td> <td class="tab"><a class="tab_white_on_color" href="../cathen/index.html"> Encyclopedia </a></td> <td class="tab"><a class="tab_color_on_beige" href="../summa/index.html"> Summa </a></td> <td class="tab"><a class="tab_color_on_beige" href="../fathers/index.html"> Fathers </a></td> <td class="tab"><a class="tab_color_on_beige" href="../bible/gen001.htm"> Bible </a></td> <td class="tab"><a class="tab_color_on_beige" href="../library/index.html"> Library </a></td> </tr></table> </td> </tr></table><table summary="Alphabetical index" width="100%" cellpadding=0 cellspacing=0><tr><td class="bar_white_on_color"> <a href="../cathen/a.htm"> A </a><a href="../cathen/b.htm"> B </a><a href="../cathen/c.htm"> C </a><a href="../cathen/d.htm"> D </a><a href="../cathen/e.htm"> E </a><a href="../cathen/f.htm"> F </a><a href="../cathen/g.htm"> G </a><a href="../cathen/h.htm"> H </a><a href="../cathen/i.htm"> I </a><a href="../cathen/j.htm"> J </a><a href="../cathen/k.htm"> K </a><a href="../cathen/l.htm"> L </a><a href="../cathen/m.htm"> M </a><a href="../cathen/n.htm"> N </a><a href="../cathen/o.htm"> O </a><a href="../cathen/p.htm"> P </a><a href="../cathen/q.htm"> Q </a><a href="../cathen/r.htm"> R </a><a href="../cathen/s.htm"> S </a><a href="../cathen/t.htm"> T </a><a href="../cathen/u.htm"> U </a><a href="../cathen/v.htm"> V </a><a href="../cathen/w.htm"> W </a><a href="../cathen/x.htm"> X </a><a href="../cathen/y.htm"> Y </a><a href="../cathen/z.htm"> Z </a> </td></tr></table></div> <div id="mobilecity" style="text-align: center; "><a href="../"><img height=24 width=102 border="0" alt="New Advent" src="../images/logo.gif"></a></div> <!--<div class="scrollmenu"> <a href="../utility/search.htm">SEARCH</a> <a href="../cathen/">Encyclopedia</a> <a href="../summa/">Summa</a> <a href="../fathers/">Fathers</a> <a href="../bible/">Bible</a> <a href="../library/">Library</a> </div> <br />--> <div id="mi5"><span class="breadcrumbs"><a href="../">Home</a> > <a href="../cathen">Catholic Encyclopedia</a> > <a href="../cathen/h.htm">H</a> > Hermits</span></div> <div id="springfield2"> <div class='catholicadnet-728x90' id='cathen-728x90-top' style='display: flex; height: 100px; align-items: center; justify-content: center; '></div> <h1>Hermits</h1> <p><em><a href="https://gumroad.com/l/na2"><strong>Please help support the mission of New Advent</strong> and get the full contents of this website as an instant download. Includes the Catholic Encyclopedia, Church Fathers, Summa, Bible and more — all for only $19.99...</a></em></p> <p>(<em>Eremites</em>, "inhabitants of a <a href="../cathen/04749a.htm">desert</a>", from the Greek <em>eremos</em>), also called <a href="../cathen/01462b.htm">anchorites</a>, were <a href="../cathen/09580c.htm">men</a> who fled the <a href="../cathen/14074a.htm">society</a> of their fellow-men to dwell alone in retirement. Not all of them, however, sought so complete a solitude as to avoid absolutely any intercourse with their fellow-men. Some took a companion with them, generally a disciple; others remained close to inhabited places, from which they procured their food. This kind of <a href="../cathen/12748b.htm">religious life</a> preceded the community life of the cenobites. <a href="../cathen/05381b.htm">Elias</a> is considered the precursor of the hermits in the <a href="../cathen/14526a.htm">Old Testament</a>. <a href="../cathen/08486b.htm">St. John the Baptist</a> lived like them in the <a href="../cathen/04749a.htm">desert</a>. <a href="../cathen/08374c.htm">Christ</a>, too, led this kind of life when he retired into the mountains. But the eremitic life proper really begins only in the time of the <a href="../cathen/11703a.htm">persecutions</a>. The first known example is that of <a href="../cathen/11567b.htm">St. Paul</a>, whose biography was written by <a href="../cathen/08341a.htm">St. Jerome</a>. He began about the year 250. There were others in <a href="../cathen/05329b.htm">Egypt</a>; <a href="../cathen/02035a.htm">St. Athanasius</a>, who speaks of them in his life of St. Anthony, does not mention their names. Nor were they the only ones. These first solitaries, few in number, selected this mode of living on their own initiative. It was St. Anthony who brought this kind of life into vogue at the beginning of the fourth century. After the persecutions the number of hermits increased greatly in <a href="../cathen/05329b.htm">Egypt</a>, then in Palestine, then in the Sinaitic peninsula, Mesopotamia, <a href="../cathen/14399a.htm">Syria</a>, and <a href="../cathen/01782a.htm">Asia Minor</a>. Cenobitic communities sprang up among them, but did not become so important as to extinguish the eremitic life. They continued to flourish in the <a href="../cathen/05329b.htm">Egyptian</a> <a href="../cathen/04749a.htm">deserts</a>, not to speak of other localities. Discussions arose in <a href="../cathen/05329b.htm">Egypt</a> as to the respective merits of the cenobitic and the eremitic style of life. Which was the better? Cassian, who voices the common opinion, believed that the cenobitic life offered more advantages and less inconveniences than the eremitic life. The Syrian hermits, in addition to their solitude, were accustomed to subject themselves to great bodily austerities. Some passed years on the top of a pillar (<a href="../cathen/14317b.htm">stylites</a>); others condemned themselves to remain standing, in open air (stationaries); others shut themselves up in a cell so that they could not come out (recluses).</p> <div class="CMtag_300x250" style="display: flex; height: 300px; align-items: center; justify-content: center; "></div> <p>Not all these hermits were models of <a href="../cathen/12748a.htm">piety</a>. History points out many abuses among them; but, considering everything, they remain one of the noblest examples of heroic <a href="../cathen/01767c.htm">asceticism</a> the world has ever seen. Very many of them were <a href="../cathen/04171a.htm">saints</a>. <a href="../cathen/05075a.htm">Doctors of the Church</a>, like <a href="../cathen/02330b.htm">St. Basil</a>, <a href="../cathen/07010b.htm">St. Gregory of Nazianzus</a>, <a href="../cathen/08452b.htm">St. John Chrysostom</a>, <a href="../cathen/08341a.htm">St. Jerome</a>, belonged to their number; and we might also mention Sts. Epiphanius, <a href="../cathen/05498a.htm">Ephraem</a>, <a href="../cathen/07347a.htm">Hilarion</a>, <a href="../cathen/11079b.htm">Nilus</a>, <a href="../cathen/08185c.htm">Isidore of Pelusium</a>. We have no rule giving an account of their mode of life, though we may form an <a href="../cathen/07630a.htm">idea</a> of it from their biographies, which are to be found in <a href="../cathen/11425a.htm">Palladius</a>, "Historia Lausiaca", P.L., XXXIV, 901-1262; Rufinus, "Historia Monachorum", P.L., XXI, 387-461; Cassian, "Collationes Patrum; De Institutis coenobitarum", P.L., IV; Theodoret, "Historia religiosa", P.G., LXXXII, 1279-1497; and also in the "Verba Seniorum", P.L., LXXIV, 381-843, and the "Apophthegmata Patrum", P.G., LXV, 71-442.</p> <p>The eremitic life spread to the West in the fourth century, and flourished especially in the next two centuries, that is to say, till experience had shown by its results the advantages of the cenobitic organization. <a href="../cathen/06780a.htm">St. Gregory the Great</a>, in his "Dialogues", gives an account of the best-known solitaries of central <a href="../cathen/08208a.htm">Italy</a> (P.L., LXXVII, 149-430). <a href="../cathen/07018b.htm">St. Gregory of Tours</a> does the same for a part of <a href="../cathen/06166a.htm">France</a> (Vitae Patrum), P.L. LXXI, 1009-97). Oftentimes those who helped most to spread the cenobitic ideal were originally solitaries themselves, for instance, St. Severinus of Norica and <a href="../cathen/02467b.htm">St. Benedict of Nursia</a>. Monasteries frequently, though by no means always, sprang from the cell of a hermit, who drew a band of disciples around him. From the beginning of the seventh century, we meet with instances of <a href="../cathen/10487b.htm">monks</a> who at intervals led an eremitic life. As an example we may cite St. Columbanus, St. Riquier, and St. Germer. Some <a href="../cathen/04340c.htm">monasteries</a> had isolated cells close by, where those religious who were judged capable of living in solitude might retire. Such was especially the case at the <a href="../cathen/04340c.htm">monastery</a> of <a href="../cathen/03405c.htm">Cassiodorus</a>, at <a href="../cathen/15493a.htm">Viviers</a> in Calabria, and the Abbey of Fontenelles, in the <a href="../cathen/13208b.htm">Diocese of Rouen</a>. Those who felt the want of solitude were advised to reside near an oratory or a monastic church. The councils and the monastic rules did not encourage those who were desirous of leading an eremitic life.</p> <p>The widespread relaxation of monastic discipline drove St. Odo, the great apostle of reform in the sixth century, into the solitude of the forest. The <a href="../cathen/15753a.htm">religious fervour</a> of the succeeding age produced many hermits. But to guard against the serious dangers of this kind of life, monastic institutes were founded that combined the advantages of solitude with the guidance of a superior and the protection of a rule. Thus, for example, we had the <a href="../cathen/03388a.htm">Carthusians</a> and the <a href="../cathen/03204d.htm">Camaldolese</a> at Vallombrosa and <a href="../cathen/10538b.htm">Monte Vergine</a>. Nevertheless there still continued to be a large number of isolated hermits, and an attempt was made to form them into congregations having a fixed rule and a responsible superior. <a href="../cathen/08208a.htm">Italy</a> especially was the home of these congregations at the beginning of the thirteenth century. Some drew up an entirely new rule for themselves; others adapted the <a href="../cathen/02436a.htm">Rule of St. Benedict</a> to meet their wants; while others again preferred to base their rule on <a href="../cathen/02079b.htm">that of St. Augustine</a>. <a href="../cathen/01287b.htm">Pope Alexander IV</a> united the last into one order, under the name of the <a href="../cathen/07281a.htm">Hermits of St. Augustine</a> (1256). Three congregations of hermits were called after <a href="../cathen/11567b.htm">St. Paul</a>, one formed in 1250 in <a href="../cathen/07547a.htm">Hungary</a>, another in <a href="../cathen/12297a.htm">Portugal</a>, founded by Mendo Gomez de Simbria, who died in 1481, and the third in <a href="../cathen/06166a.htm">France</a>, established by Guillaume Callier (1620); these last hermits were known also by the name of the Brothers of Death. <a href="../cathen/05601a.htm">Eugene IV</a> formed into a congregation, to be called after <a href="../cathen/01383c.htm">St. Ambrose</a>, the hermits who dwelt in a forest near <a href="../cathen/10298a.htm">Milan</a> (1441). We may mention also the Brothers of the Apostle (1484), the Colorites (1530), the Hermits of Monte Senario (1593), and those of Monte Luco, who were in <a href="../cathen/08208a.htm">Italy</a>; those of Mont-Voiron, whose constitutions were drawn up by <a href="../cathen/06220a.htm">St. Francis de Sales</a>; those of St-Sever, in <a href="../cathen/11104a.htm">Normandy</a>, founded by Guillaume, who had previously been a <a href="../cathen/03204d.htm">Camaldolese</a>; those of St. John the Baptist, in <a href="../cathen/10721a.htm">Navarre</a>, approved by <a href="../cathen/07001b.htm">Gregory XIII</a>; the hermits of the same name, founded in <a href="../cathen/06166a.htm">France</a> by Michel by Michel de Sainte-Sabine (1630); those of Mont-Valérien, near <a href="../cathen/11480c.htm">Paris</a> (seventeenth century); those of <a href="../cathen/02353c.htm">Bavaria</a>, established in the <a href="../cathen/12657a.htm">Diocese of Ratisbon</a> (1769). The Venerable Joseph Cottolengo founded a congregation of hermits in <a href="../cathen/09336b.htm">Lombardy</a> in the middle of the nineteenth century. Some <a href="../cathen/02443a.htm">Benedictine</a> <a href="../cathen/04340c.htm">monasteries</a> had hermitages depending on them. Thus we have the case of St. William of the Desert (1330) and the hermits of Our Lady of Montserrat, in <a href="../cathen/14169b.htm">Spain</a>. The latter were well known from the sixteenth century, from their connexion with García de Cisneris. They disappeared in the eighteenth century. At the present time there exists a body of hermits on a mountain near Cordova.</p> <div class="CMtag_300x250" style="display: flex; height: 300px; align-items: center; justify-content: center; "></div> <p>We see, therefore, that the <a href="../cathen/03744a.htm">Church</a> has always been anxious to form the hermits into communities. Nevertheless, many preferred their independence and their solitude. They were numerous in <a href="../cathen/08208a.htm">Italy</a>, <a href="../cathen/14169b.htm">Spain</a>, <a href="../cathen/06166a.htm">France</a>, and <a href="../cathen/06094b.htm">Flanders</a> in the seventeenth century. <a href="../cathen/02431a.htm">Benedict XIII</a> and <a href="../cathen/15218b.htm">Urban VIII</a> took measures to prevent the abuses likely to arise from too great independence. Since then the eremitic life has been gradually abandoned, and the attempts made to revive it in the last century have had no success. (See <a href="../cathen/02079b.htm">RULE OF SAINT AUGUSTINE</a>; <a href="../cathen/03204d.htm">CAMALDOLESE</a>; <a href="../cathen/03354a.htm">CARMELITE ORDER</a>; <a href="../cathen/03388a.htm">CARTHUSIAN ORDER</a>; <a href="../cathen/07345a.htm">HIERONYMITES</a>; also under <a href="../cathen/06752a.htm">GREEK CHURCH</a>, Vol. VI, p. 761.)</p> <div class='catholicadnet-728x90' id='cathen-728x90-bottom' style='display: flex; height: 100px; align-items: center; justify-content: center; '></div> <div class="pub"><h2>About this page</h2><p id="apa"><strong>APA citation.</strong> <span id="apaauthor">Besse, J.</span> <span id="apayear">(1910).</span> <span id="apaarticle">Hermits.</span> In <span id="apawork">The Catholic Encyclopedia.</span> <span id="apapublisher">New York: Robert Appleton Company.</span> <span id="apaurl">http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/07280a.htm</span></p><p id="mla"><strong>MLA citation.</strong> <span id="mlaauthor">Besse, Jean.</span> <span id="mlaarticle">"Hermits."</span> <span id="mlawork">The Catholic Encyclopedia.</span> <span id="mlavolume">Vol. 7.</span> <span id="mlapublisher">New York: Robert Appleton Company,</span> <span id="mlayear">1910.</span> <span id="mlaurl"><http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/07280a.htm>.</span></p><p id="transcription"><strong>Transcription.</strong> <span id="transcriber">This article was transcribed for New Advent by Janet Grayson.</span> <span id="dedication"></span></p><p id="approbation"><strong>Ecclesiastical approbation.</strong> <span id="nihil"><em>Nihil Obstat.</em> June 1, 1910. Remy Lafort, S.T.D., Censor.</span> <span id="imprimatur"><em>Imprimatur.</em> +John Cardinal Farley, Archbishop of New York.</span></p><p id="contactus"><strong>Contact information.</strong> The editor of New Advent is Kevin Knight. My email address is webmaster <em>at</em> newadvent.org. Regrettably, I can't reply to every letter, but I greatly appreciate your feedback — especially notifications about typographical errors and inappropriate ads.</p></div> </div> <div id="ogdenville"><table summary="Bottom bar" width="100%" cellpadding=0 cellspacing=0><tr><td class="bar_white_on_color"><center><strong>Copyright © 2023 by <a href="../utility/contactus.htm">New Advent LLC</a>. 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