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General Information
The Order of Preachers (OP), or Dominicans, was founded (1215) by Saint Dominic during his preaching tours against the Albigenses in southern France. The Dominicans were friars, receiving rigorous theological training in order to preach and answer objections against the Christian faith. They were to be poor and to travel on foot. The first house of friars was established at Toulouse; approval was given by Pope Honorius III. Earlier, Dominic had founded (1206) a community of nuns at Prouille, composed partly of former Albigenses. Later in the century, the Dominican third order began among the laity; it eventually included many communities of nuns who followed the Dominican third order rule.
Cyprian Davis, O.S.B.
Bibliography
Bennet, R., Early Dominicans (1937; repr.
1971); Hinnebusch, W., The History of the Dominican Order,
2 vols. (1966-1973); Tugwell, Simon, ed., Early
Dominicans: Selected Writings (1982).
In accordance with the declared purpose of their foundation, the Dominicans have always been known as dedicated preachers and as combatants against any departure from the teaching of the Roman Catholic church. In the latter capacity they were entrusted with the supervision of the Inquisition as an ecclesiastical enterprise, and even in Spain, after the Inquisition became virtually a department of civil government, a Dominican was usually at its head. The office of master of the sacred palace, the pope's personal theologian, created for St. Dominic in 1218 and subsequently endowed with great privileges by Pope Leo X, has always been held by a member of the order. After 1620, one of the duties of the position was to allow or forbid the printing of all religious books.
Today the head of the entire order is the master general, whose term of office is 12 years; his residence is at Santa Sabina, in Rome. The order is organized into geographic provinces, each with a provincial at its head. The chief apostolate of the order is educational. The Dominicans therefore retain their original characteristics as teachers and upholders of orthodoxy.
Saint Dominic, b. c.1171, d. Aug. 6, 1221, was the founder of the Dominicans. A Castilian from a family of minor nobility, he received a clerical education and in his early 20s became a canon at the cathedral of Osma. Here he was ordained a priest at about the age of 28 and was named assistant prior of the chapter of canons. Dominic accompanied his bishop to Denmark on a diplomatic mission in 1203 and again in 1205. Traveling through southern France, they saw the problems caused by the Albigenses and the military and religious efforts made to suppress their heresy. With his bishop, Dominic began (c.1206) to preach to both the Albigenses and another dissident group, the Waldenses. He adopted the life-style of simplicity and poverty that these groups practiced.
After ten years of preaching, Dominic gathered around him a community of preachers, who would be both poor and learned in theology. This was the beginning (1215) of the religious order that bears his name. Earlier he had organized (1206) women converts from the Albigensian movement into a religious community, the beginning of the Dominican nuns. In an inaccurate tradition, Dominic is also credited with instituting the popular devotion of the Rosary. In art, he is often pictured receiving a rosary from the Virgin Mary. Feast day: Aug. 8 (formerly Aug. 4).
Cyprian Davis, O.S.B.
Bibliography
Vicaire, Marie-Humbert, Saint Dominic and His Times, trans. by Kathleen Pond (1964).
Monasticism
Nuns
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Major Orders
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