Saint Dominic
Dominic, Saint, b. c. 1170,, Caleruega, Castile d. Aug. 6, 1221, Bologna, Romagna; canonized July 3, 1234; feast day August 8 the Order of Friars Preachers (Dominicans), a religious order of mendicant friars with a universal mission of preaching, a centralized organization and government, and a great emphasis on scholarship. Early life and career
Later than 1170, the traditional date. His father was lord of the manor in
the
village, and his mother was also from the local nobility. He studied at
Palencia and then joined the canons regular (a religious community
attached to the cathedral of a assistant to the superior, a few years later.
In 1203, Diego, bishop of Osma, was sent on a royal mission abroad and took
Dominic with him.
This journey first made Dominic aware of the threat posed to the church
in the south of France by the Albigensian heretics, or Cathari, who were
reviving and developing the Manichaean teaching that two supreme beings,
Good and Evil, dominate spirit and matter respectively, so that whatever
concerns the body--such as eating, drinking, procreation, and the
possession of worldly goods--is essentially evil, and the ideal is the
renunciation of these things and even of life itself. Thus, there arose
among them a caste of the "perfect," who led a life of great
austerity, while ordinary people were regarded as reprobates. A
regularized Albigensian hierarchy had come into existence, and local
feudal lords, especially the count of Toulouse, supported the Albigenses.
Pope Innocent III had launched a mission to preach against the heresy.
On a second journey Dominic and the bishop visited the pope, who
refused their request to preach to the pagans, so they returned to France.
In 1206 the papal legates and preachers, depressed at the failure of their
mission, consulted the bishop and Dominic, who reasoned that the heretics
would be regained only by an austerity equal to their own; the preachers
must tramp the roads barefoot and in poverty. This was the birth of
Dominic's "evangelical preaching." An important part of his
campaign was the establishment of a convent of nuns at Prouille, formed in
1206 from a group of women converted from the heresy.
In 1208 the papal legate, Peter de Castelnau, was murdered by an
emissary of the Count of Toulouse. The pope called upon the Christian
princes to take up arms. The leader on the papal side was Simon de
Montfort, a subject of the king of France. The Albigensian leader was
Raymond VI, count of Toulouse, an opponent of the king of France and
brother-in-law of King John of England, lord of neighbouring Aquitaine.
Dominic's work, though confined to the Prouille area, continued, and six
others eventually joined him. Meanwhile, the civil war dragged on until
Simon's victory at Muret in 1213. The Catholic party entered Toulouse, and
Dominic and his friends were welcomed by the bishop, Foulques, and
established as "diocesan preachers" in 1215. Foundation of the Dominicans
From Foulques's charter in that year, Dominic's design for an order
devoted to preaching developed rapidly. A characteristic concern was for
the theological formation of his men, whom he therefore took to lectures
given at Toulouse by an Englishman, Alexander Stavensby. Still in 1215, he
went to Rome with Foulques (bound for the Fourth Lateran Council) to lay
his plans before the pope, who, however, recommended adoption of the rule
of one of the existing orders. It was, perhaps, at this time that Dominic
met Francis of Assisi (though the meeting may not have taken place until
1221), and the friendship of the two saints is a strong tradition in both
the Franciscan and the Dominican orders. In the summer of 1216 Dominic was
back at Toulouse conferring with his companions, now 16 in number. This
meeting has been called the capitulum fundationis ("chapter, or
meeting, of foundation"). The rule of St. Augustine was adopted, as
well as a set of consuetudines ("customs"), partly based on
those of the canons regular, concerning the divine office, monastic life,
and religious poverty; these are still the core of Dominican legislation.
In July, Innocent III died, and it was from his successor, Honorius III,
that Dominic, once more in Rome, finally received on Dec. 22, 1216, formal
sanction of his order.
The order was now an established body within the church, and Dominic
returned to Toulouse. On Aug. 15, 1217, he sent his men to Paris and to
Spain, leaving two each at Toulouse and Prouille, while he and another
went to Bologna and Rome. He placed his two principal houses near the
universities of Paris and Bologna and decided that each of his houses
should form a school of theology. This at once determined the capital role
that the Dominicans would play in university studies. In setting up his
houses in the larger cities, especially in those that were teaching
centres, he involved his order in the destiny of the medieval urban
movement.
Dominic was gifted in being able to conceive his ideal, to form his men
to that ideal, and then to trust them completely. His leadership had great
clarity of vision (even to the geographical distribution of his forces and
precise details of legislation), firmness of command, and certainty of
execution. At the same time it was said of him that his gentleness was
such that anyone who came to speak to him, even for reproof, went away
happier.
The rest of Dominic's life was spent either in Rome, where he was given
the Church of San Sisto, or traveling. In 1218-19 he made a great tour
(3,380 miles entirely on foot) from Rome to Toulouse and Spain and back,
via Paris and Milan, and in 1220 a tour of Lombardy. Everywhere his
communities were growing, and he planned many new foundations covering the
key points of France and northern Italy. In Rome the pope gave him the
delicate task of reforming various groups of nuns, whom he finally
gathered at San Sisto in 1221, when the men moved to Santa Sabina, which
is still the residence of the master general of the order.
At Pentecost in 1220 the first general chapter of the order was held at
Bologna, and a system of democratic representative government was devised.
At the second general chapter, held on Pentecost in 1221, also at Bologna,
the order was divided geographically into provinces. After a visit to
Venice in 1221, Dominic died at Bologna. (S.Bh./Ed.) | ||
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