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BRIDGITTINES , an See also: order of Augustinian canonesses founded by St Bridget of Sweden (q.v.) c
.
1350, and approved by See also: Urban V. in 1370
.
It was a " See also: double order." each convent having attached to it a small community of canons to See also: act as chaplains, but under the See also: government of the abbess
.
The order spread widely in Sweden and See also: Norway, and played a remarkable See also: part in promoting culture and literature in Scandinavia; to this is to be attributed the fact that the See also: head See also: house at Vastein, by Lake See also: Vetter, was not suppressed till 1595
.
There were houses also in other lands, so that the See also: total number amounted to 80
.
In See also: England, the famous Bridgittine convent of Syon at Isleworth, Middlesex, was founded and royally endowed by See also: Henry V. in 1415, and became one of the richest and most fashionable and influential nunneries in the country
.
It was among the few religious houses restored in Mary's reign, when nearly twenty of the old cornmunity were re-established at Syon
.
On
See also: Elizabeth's accession they migrated to the Low Countries, and thence, after many vicissitudes, to
See also: Rouen, and finally in 1594 to See also: Lisbon
.
Here they remained, always recruiting their numbers from England, till 1861, when they returned to England
.
Syon House is now established at Chudleigh in See also: Devon, the only See also: English community that can boast an unbroken conventual existence since pre= See also: Reformation times
.
Some six other Bridgittine convents exist on the Continent, but the order is now composed only of See also: women
.
See See also: Helyot, Histoire See also: des ordres religieux (1715), iv
.
C . 4; Max Heimbucher, Orden tt . Kongregationen (1907), 83; Herzog-Hauck, Realencyklopadie (ed . 3),See also: art
.
" Birgitta "; A
.
See also: Hamilton in
See also: Dublin Review, 1888, " The Nuns of Syon." (E
.
C
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