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Hieronymite and nuns
She chose not to enter that Order, and later, in 1669, she entered the monastery of the Hieronymite nuns.
Category: Hieronymite nuns
In 1925, the Hieronymite nuns ( who were not affected by the suppression ), petitioned the Holy See for a restoration of the men's branch.
Alongside the Hieronymite monks, there are the Hieronymite nuns.

Hieronymite and founded
The monastery was founded by the strict Hieronymite order of monks in 1402.

Hieronymite and also
He received his first instructions in art from Fray Vicente de Santo Domingo, a Hieronymite monk at Estella, and also with Becerra.

Hieronymite and Iberian
On 16 July 1604, Philip of Spain ( who ruled after the Iberian Union ) made the monastery as a royal funerary monument, prohibiting everyone but the Royal family and the Hieronymite monks from entering the building.

Hieronymite and .
In 1507, Diogo Boitac built the Hieronymite monastery of Nossa Senhora da Pena in a nearby hilltop.
Originally a property of the Hieronymite monks, it is now a monastery of the Order of Saint Augustine.
* St. Jerome, 4th cent., Mediterranean region, Doctor of the Church, considered the spiritual father of the Hieronymite eremitic order
It appeared anonymously ; and no author's name was accredited to it until 1605, when the Hieronymite monk José de Sigüenza named as its author Fray Juan de Ortega.
As many elements as possible were preserved of the remains of the Hieronymite convent including the cloister, the dining room, the sacristy, and the Manueline-Renaissance chapel.
Soler took Holy Orders at the age of 23 and his routine as a Hieronymite in El Escorial, Madrid was extremely busy.
Originally a property of the Hieronymite monks, it is now a monastery of the Order of Saint Augustine.
Originally, the home for the Hieronymite religious order, was built by the Infante Henry the Navigator around 1459.
Manuel I selected the religious order of Hieronymite monks to occupy the monastery, whose role it was to pray for the King's eternal soul and to provide spiritual assistance to navigators and sailors who departed from the beach of Restelo to discover the world.
Initially, these statutes were condemned by the monarchy and the Church ; however, in 1496, Pope Alexander VI approved a purity statute for the Hieronymite Order.
The Hieronymite Order is a monastic one, now purely contemplative.
The Hieronymite is conscious that the more intensely he dedicates himself to the monastic life, the more fruitful becomes the life of the Church as a whole.
This is the environment in which the life of the Hieronymite monk is developed, with the morning usually spent in manual work -- the normal means of support for monks, while afternoons are dedicated to contemplation, prayer and study.
The Hieronymite strives to allow these moments of prayer to flow through his way of life, so that his goal is to express his life in complete charity towards all people.
For this reason, Hieronymite monasteries readily welcome visitors who are guaranteed silence and prayerful support.
* Jerónimos Monastery, Hieronymite Monastery World Heritage site, Lisbon, Portugal.
* Saint Paula, co-patron of the Hieronymite Order with St. Jerome.

nuns and founded
Some of these were founded by Jewish converts themselves, like the Community of Our Lady of Zion, which was composed of nuns and ordained priests.
The Dominican nuns were founded by St. Dominic even before he had established the friars.
Also, the nuns shared a unique identity with Poissy as a religious house founded by a royal house.
Elected a magistra by her fellow nuns in 1136, she founded the monasteries of Rupertsberg in 1150 and Eibingen in 1165.
In 1165 Hildegard founded a second monastery for her nuns at Eibingen.
In 1277 St. Benedict's monastery for nuns was founded, which in the framework of the Pomeranian Reformation in 1545 was then changed into an educational institution for noble protestantic ladies.
Numerous systems are reputed to have been founded, disseminated, or practiced by monks or nuns.
The Sangha or community of ordained Buddhist bhikkhus ( similar to monks ) and original bhikkhunis ( similar to nuns ) was founded by Gautama Buddha during his lifetime over 2500 years ago.
The order was founded by Saint Bruno of Cologne in 1084 and includes both monks and nuns.
Buddhist clergy are often referred to as the Sangha and consists of the order of monks ( bhikshus ) and nuns ( bhikshunis ) founded by Gautama Buddha during the 5th century BC, as well as lay priests in the modern era and ngagpas of the Tibetan tradition.
The abbey was founded in 1100 and became a double monastery, with both monks and nuns on the same site.
In 1623, the community of nuns of the English Benedictine Congregation was founded at Cambrai, which was expelled during the French Revolution and its successor community has since 1838 been established at Stanbrook Abbey, near Malvern.
There are about 50 nuns in these communities, which are located in: Denver and Pueblo in Colorado, Alamo and Amarillo ( the first, founded 1981 ) in Texas and Wilmington, Delaware.
The monasteries were almost all founded from Mexico, where there are some 1, 350 Capuchin nuns in 73 monasteries.
Belgian priest Charles Nerinckx ( 2 October 1761, Herfelingen – 12 August 1824 ) and three Kentucky frontier women founded the Sisters of Loretto, the first native American order of Roman Catholic nuns, in 1812.
The two nuns of the Religious of the Sacred Heart founded a convent and a school that became the Academy of the Sacred Heart.
It was founded by German knights who lived in the castle for several hundred years, however these days it is occupied by monks and nuns.
The area is named for Linton Hall School, a school founded by Benedictine nuns on the site of the former Lintons Ford Plantation.
In 1482, a convent of nuns was founded here, traces of which can still be seen today.
Bigardis was originally a dependency of the Abbey of Saint Bavo in Ghent, but by 1125, nuns under the leadership of Saint Wivina had founded a religious community there.
The Carmen Temple is all that remains of the former La Encarnación convent which was founded at in 1597 with the first nuns arriving between 1609 and 1610.
An ancient abbey church founded at ' Eaton ' in the 1150s was home to Benedictine nuns and gave the present town the name ' Nuneaton '.
* 1962: The Dharma Realm Buddhist Association is founded by Tripitaka Master Shramana Hsuan Hua, who later founds the City of Ten Thousand Buddhas and ordains the first five fully ordained American Buddhist monks and nuns.
The settlement was first mentioned about 1158, when Judith of Thuringia, queen consort of King Vladislaus II of Bohemia, founded a convent for Benedictine nuns, which was destroyed in the course of the Hussite Wars.
By that time, she had founded 67 missionary institutions to serve the sick and poor and train additional nuns to carry on the work.

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