, the founder of the order of the Benedictin monks, was a native of
, the founder of the order of the Benedictin monks, was a native of Norcia, formerly an episcopal see in Umbria, and was born about the year 480. He
was sent to Rome when he was very young, and there received the first part of his education. At fourteen years
of age he was removed from thence to Sublaco, about forty
miles distant. Here he lived a most retired life, and shut
himself up in a cavern, where nobody knew any thing of
him except St. Romanus, who, we are told, used to descend
to him by a rope, and supply him with provisions; but
being afterwards discovered by the monks of a neighbouring
monastery, they chose him for their abbot. Their manners,
however, not agreeing with those of Benedict, he returned to
his solitude, whither many persons followed him, and put
themselves under iiis direction, and in a short time he was
enabled to build twelve monasteries. About the year 528,
he retired to Mount Cassino, where idolatry was still prevalent, a temple of Apollo being erected there. He instructed the people in the adjacent country, and having converted
them, broke the image of Apollo, and built two chapels on
the mountain. Here he founded also a monastery, and instituted the order of his name, which in time became so
famous, and extended over all Europe. It was here too
that he composed his “Regula Monachorum,
” which Gregory the Great speaks of as the most sensible and best
written piece of that kind ever published. Authors are not
agreed as to the place where Benedict died; some say at
Mount Cassino, others affirm it to have been at Rome,
when he was sent thither by pope Boniface. Nor is the
year ascertained, some asserting it to have been in 542 or
543, and others in 547, but the calendar fixes the day on
Saturday, March 25. St. Gregory the Great has written
his life in the second book of his Dialogues, where he has
given a long detail of his pretended miracles. Du Pin
says, that the “Regula Monachorum
” is the only genuine
work of St. Benedict. There have been several editions
of these rules. Several other tracts are, however, ascribed
to him, as particularly a letter to St. Maurus; a sermon
upon the decease of St. Maurus a sermon upon the passion
of St. Placidus and his companions and a discourse “De
ordine monasterii.
”