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Cluny and Abbey
* Abbey of Cluny, an abbey, reformed during the Middle Ages, strictly adhering to the Rule.
The town grew up around the Benedictine Cluny Abbey, founded by Duke William I of Aquitaine in 910.
A view of the remains of the Cluny Abbey | Abbey of Cluny, a Rule of St. Benedict | Benedictine monastery, was the centre of monastic life revival in the Middle Ages and marked an important step in the cultural rebirth following the Early Middle Ages | Dark Ages.
To combat this and other practices that had corrupted the Church between the years 900 and 1050, centres emerged promoting ecclesiastical reform, the most important being the Abbey of Cluny, which spread its ideals throughout Europe.
Distrustful of the traditional Benedictine order, he favoured new monastic orders, such as the Augustinians and the Cistercians, and sought to exercise more control over the larger monastic centres of Monte Cassino and Cluny Abbey.
Aside from the Benedictines at Monte Cassino, Honorius was also determined to deal with the monks at Cluny Abbey under their ambitious and worldly abbot, Pons of Melgueil.
In 1125, accompanied by an armed following, Pons took possession of Cluny Abbey, melted down the treasures stored in the monastery, and paid his followers, who continued to terrorise the monks and the villages dependent upon the abbey.
The reformation sponsored by Cluny Abbey was supported by him, and he was a friend of its abbot, St. Odilo.
During the violent confrontations between Henry V and Paschal II's successor, Pope Gelasius II, the Pope was forced to flee from Rome, first to Gaeta, where he was crowned, then to the Abbey of Cluny, where he died on 29 January 1119.
The papacy and the influential Abbey of Cluny in Burgundy not only justified the acts of war but actively encouraged Christian knights to seek armed confrontation with Moorish " infidels " instead of with each other.
* Completion of the third and largest church at Cluny Abbey.
Most of his bulls were grants of privilege to monasteries, especially including the Abbey of Cluny.
Category: Burials at Cluny Abbey
Probably sometime after this and before 1030, Amadeus, Burchard, and a third brother, Otto, joined their father in witnessing a donation made by one Aymon de Pierrefort to the Abbey of Cluny.
In a further two undated charters of probably about the same period, Amadeus together with his brothers Otto and Aymon and his father made donations to the Abbey of Cluny and the church of Saint-Maurice at Matassine.
The Cluniac order is notable for being organised entirely on this obedientiary principle, with a single abbot at the Abbey of Cluny, and all other houses dependent priories.
The Abbey of Cluny, where Thurstan visited and vowed to become a monk at some point in his life.
With the Cluniac reforms of the 11th century there was a new emphasis on liturgy and the canonical hours in the reformed Benedictine priories with the Abbey of Cluny at their head.
With the Abbey of Cluny in ruins, the Speyer Cathedral remains the largest Romanesque church to this very day.
The site became the Benedictine Abbey of Saint-Martial, a great library ( second only to the library at Cluny ) and scriptorium.
Few in Europe would have known of this immense new wealth in a kingdom so isolated that its bishops had virtually no contact with Rome, except that Ferdinand and his heirs ( the kings of León and Castile ) became the greatest benefactors of the Abbey of Cluny, where Abbot Hugh ( died 1109 ) undertook construction of the huge third abbey church, the cynosure of every eye.
Abelard died at Cluny Abbey in Burgundy, a monastery supported by the Thebaudians for many centuries.

Cluny and Clugny
Cluny or Clugny is a commune in the Saône-et-Loire department in the region of Bourgogne in eastern France.

Cluny and is
Julian the Apostate | Julian is proclaimed Roman Emperor | Emperor in Lutetia | Paris at the Thermes de Cluny
* February – Julian, Roman Caesar, is proclaimed emperor by the Gallic legions in Lutetia ( modern Paris ) at the Thermes de Cluny.
* The Benedictine monastery of Cluny is founded.
The plan has very limited Anglo-Saxon elements and is clearly influenced by the French work at Cluny, Bernay, and Caen and shares a similar floor plan to St Etienne and Lanfranc's Canterbury — although the poorer quality building material was a new challenge for Robert and he clearly borrowed some Roman techniques, learned while gathering material in Verulamium.
It is decorated with a magnificent group of polychrome statuary carved by artists from the Burgundian workshops of Cluny and comprising over 200 statues, which have retained their original colours.
The abbot Odo of Cluny ( died 942 ) is supposed to have written a short description of the construction of the organistrum entitled Quomodo organistrum construatur ( How the Organistrum Is Made ), known through a much-later copy, but its authenticity is very doubtful.
The tombstone is preserved at the Musée de Cluny in Paris.
The garden is bordered by Holland Road and Napier Road to the south, Cluny Road to the east, Tyersall Avenue and Cluny Park Road to the west and Bukit Timah Road to the North.
The cycle is currently held in the Musée de Cluny ( Musée du Moyen-Âge ), Paris ( France ), where it has resided since 1882.
The Musée de Cluny (), officially known as Musée National du Moyen Âge ( National Museum of the Middle Ages ), is a museum in Paris, France.
The Hôtel de Cluny is partially constructed on the remains of Gallo-Roman baths dating from the third century ( known as the Thermes de Cluny ), which are famous in their own right and which may still be visited.
Sitting between the floodplain of the River Findhorn and the wooded slopes of Cluny and Sanquhar Hills, Forres is well known for its award-winning floral sculptures and is steeped in local history and traditions.
The Findhorn Foundation and surrounding Findhorn Ecovillage community at The Park, Findhorn, a village in Moray, Scotland, and at Cluny Hill in Forres, is now home to more than 400 people.
Another popular beach is Karehana Bay, at the foot of the Airlie Road / Cluny Road valley about 1. 5 kilometres north-west of the shops.
Another version of the story however is that Munro of Novar actually knew Cluny quite well and winked at him as he threw him the grooms fee.
Fundamentally Buckie itself is the central part of the community lying between the Victoria Bridge under which flows the Buckie Burn at the western end of West Church Street, the eastern end of Cluny Harbour and above the shore area.
To the west of Victoria Bridge and the Buckie Burn is Buckpool which was formerly known as Nether Buckie and on the shoreline, west of Cluny Harbour, between Baron Street and the Buckie Burn mouth, there is The Yardie.
Her first published novel was " Count St Blanchard " in 1795: others include, The Abbey of Cluny, The Mysterious Wife, Anecdotes of the Altamont Family, and Which is the Man ?.

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