Online Encyclopedia

SERVITES

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V24, Page 698 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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SERVITES  , or "SERVANTS OF

MARY," an order under the
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Rule of St Augustine, founded in 1233 . In this
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year seven merchants of Florence, recently canonized as " the seven
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holy Founders," gave up their
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wealth and position, and with the bishop's sanction established themselves as a religious community on
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Monte Senario near Florence . They lived an austere
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life of penance and prayer, and being joined by others, they were in 1240 formed into an order following the Augustinian rule supplemented by constitutions borrowed from the
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Dominicans . Soon they were able to establish houses in various parts of Italy, where within twenty-five years four provinces were formed; they also at an early date founded many houses in France, Germany and Spain, but they never came to England before the Reformation . The most illustrious member of the order and its chief propagator and organizer was St Filippo Benizi, the fifth general, who died in 1285 . The order received papal approbation in 1255; in 1424 it was recognized as a Mendicant order, and in 1567 it was ranked with the four
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great orders of Mendicant friars . The Servites undertook missions in Tartary, India and
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Japan . As in the other orders there were various mitigations and relaxations of the rule, producing a variety of reforms, the chief being that of the eremitical Servites . There are at the
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present day 64 Servites houses, mostly in Italy; there are two or three in England and in
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America . There are Servite nuns and also tertiaries, founded by St Juliana Falconieri, 1305, who are widespread and devote them-selves chiefly to
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primary
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education . They have several convents in England . The habit of the Servites is black .

The chief

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work on the Servites is the Monumenta by Morini and Soulier, 1897, &c . See Helyot, Histoire
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des ordres religieux (1715), iii. cc . 39-41; Max Heimbucher Orden u . Kongregationen (1907), ii . ยง 73; Wetzer u . Welte, Kirchenlexicon (2nd ed.); Herzog-Hauck Realencyklopddie (3rd ed.) . The most interesting
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part of Servite
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history is told by P . Soulier,
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Vie de S . Philippe Benizi (1886) . (E . C .

End of Article: SERVITES
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SERVITUDE (Lat. servitus, from service, to serve)

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