St. Trudo's Abbey, Bruges

Last updated
Male Castle Male - Sint-Trudoabdij 2.jpg
Male Castle

Male Castle, Bruges (Dutch : Grafelijk Slot van Male). A community of the Canonesses Regular of the Holy Sepulchre. It originated in Bruges in the 11th century, and between 1954 and 2013 was settled in Male Castle in Male, Sint-Kruis, Bruges, West Flanders, Belgium.

Contents

History

The origins of St. Trudo's Abbey are believed to go back to about 1050, when the hermit Everelmus settled near the entrance to the city of Bruges where the road to Ghent crosses the River Reie. There he built a small oratory and dedicated it to Saint Bartholomew. Like other hermits, Everelmus attracted followers, who gradually formed a community, which was referred to as servi Dei ("servants of God") in the charter of 1130 by which Thierry, Count of Flanders, gave them the piece of ground on which they lived. As the mixed community of the servi Dei or pauperes Christi monachis of the Eekhoute, as they became known, grew bigger it required more organisation. In about 1146 therefore they joined the congregation of the Canons Regular of Arrouaise. The Eekhoute was elevated to Eekhout Abbey, with Lambertus as first abbot. [1]

The rule of Arrouaise prescribed that the female members of the community had to live separately, and from 1149 they occupied a property at Odegem (Steenbrugge) belonging to St. Martin's Abbey in Tournai. A church was attached to it which was dedicated to Saint Trudo, and for that reason the sisters adopted Saint Trudo as their patron. As St. Trudo's Priory they became a dependent priory of Eekhout Abbey. The abbey received Papal confirmation in 1180; the document contains the first reference to Canons Regular living according to the Rule of St. Augustine. [1]

Gradually difficulties arose between the abbey and its priory, which eventually led to a break between the two communities. At the joint request of both of them the separation was declared on 23 August 1248 by Walter van Marvis  [ nl ], bishop of Tournai. In the same year the sisters joined the Congregation of St. Victor, and the priory was elevated to an abbey; the prioress Ursilia was declared the new abbess. To help them make a good start the bishop allowed some sisters to transfer from Roesbrugge Abbey, which had attached itself to St. Victor's previously. [1]

In 1261 a bolt of lightning caused the abbey and its church to burn down, killing several sisters. The buildings were rebuilt, but closer to the road to Courtrai.

In 1456 the sisters accepted the reforms of and joined the Congregation of Windesheim, which had consequences for the parish, over which the abbey had rights of patronage. In 1503 the parish itself also signed up to the reforms. A period of flowering followed, which lasted until 1560 and the Protestant Reformation.

In 1566 the sisters were forced by the Geuzes to flee into Bruges, where they had just bought a house of refuge, St. Bavo's on the Garenmarkt. They were able to return in 1567, but had to flee again in 1572, and were obliged to sell all their goods. The abbey was plundered by the Gentenaars in 1579 and set on fire in 1580. Later the abbey farm was also troubled first by marauding Spanish troops and later by French ones. [1]

The sisters therefore settled permanently in Bruges, where they had bought the monastery of the Staelyzer Brothers on the New Ghent Road. They included a small school in their duties, and for that reason escaped closure under the rationalst reforms of the Emperor Joseph II. They remained until the French Revolution, when they were expelled on the suppression of the abbey by the French troops in November 1796; it was later largely demolished. In 1797 they were able to buy back the abbey farm, but sold it in 1803 to buy an annuity to provide the sisters with the means of sustenance. [1]

In 1816 the abbey in Bruges on the New Ghent Road was discreetly refounded by seven sisters who managed to buy back the former priest's house of the old abbey. In 1835 they found themselves able to fund new abbey buildings. In 1866 the community affiliated itself to the Canons Regular of the Lateran. Their financial problems grew steadily up to World War I, and after 1921 they were unable to accept new novices. The situation worsened further, but in 1952 the community joined the Order of the Holy Sepulchre, which had a priory at Lochem (later relocated to Maarssen). Five canonesses from Lochem and three from Turnhout strengthened the Bruges community. [1]

In 1954 they moved to Male Castle at Male, a village in Sint-Kruis, a sub-district of Bruges, and began its repair and restoration. The community gradually increased to 30 and in 1963 the first new novice at Male was professed. Priory was once again restored to the status of an abbey, having been downgraded some twenty year previously, with Sister Adelheid Goedertier as the first abbess. Much attention was paid to the liturgy, and from 1978 to 1995 much work was devoted to setting the Dutch-language Liturgy of the Hours to music. The duty of welcoming visitors also received much emphasis. [1] [2]

In 2011 the sisters, unable to continue the burdensome maintenance of so large and historic a property, sold the abbey at Male to a private individual, and in October 2013 settled in their new premises, a small monastery on the Oude Osteendse Steenweg in Sint-Pieters Brugge. [1]

Bibliography

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Assebroek</span> Sub-municipality of the city of Bruges, Belgium

Assebroek is a sub-municipality of the city of Bruges located in the province of West Flanders, Flemish Region, Belgium. It was a separate municipality until 1971. On 1 January 1971, it was merged into Bruges. On 31 December 2014, Assebroek had 19,737 inhabitants. Since 1999, this number has hardly changed. Assebroek is home to 16.75% of Bruges’ population.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Sint Kruis</span> Village in Zeeland, Netherlands

Sint Kruis is a village in the Dutch province of Zeeland. It is located about 4 km east of Aardenburg, in the municipality of Sluis.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Maurits Sabbe</span>

Maurits Sabbe, born Maurice Charles Marie Guillaume Sabbe, was a Flemish man of letters and educator who became curator of the Plantin-Moretus Museum in Antwerp.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Canonesses Regular of the Holy Sepulchre</span> Catholic female religious order

The Canonesses Regular of the Holy Sepulchre (CRSS), or Sepulchrine Canonesses, are a Catholic female religious order first documented in 1300. They were originally the female branch of the ancient religious order of that name, the Canons Regular of the Holy Sepulchre. The canonesses follow the Rule of St. Augustine.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Herkenrode Abbey</span>

Herkenrode Abbey was a Catholic monastery of Cistercian nuns located in Kuringen, part of the municipality of Hasselt, which lies in the province of Limburg, Belgium.

Maele Castle, Bruges Maele Castle is a former castle in Male, once a separate village, now part of Sint-Kruis, a suburb of Bruges, West Flanders, Belgium. The buildings, almost entirely rebuilt and restored after the destruction of World War II, have housed St. Trudo's Abbey (Sint-Trudoabdij) from 1954 until 2011.

St. Andrew's Abbey, Bruges was a Benedictine abbey in Sint-Andries, Bruges, Belgium, which was destroyed in the French Revolution. Its modern successor St. Andrew's Abbey, Zevenkerken, founded in 1899–1900, is a Benedictine abbey of the Congregation of the Annunciation.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Congregation of the Annunciation</span> Belgian Benedictine Catholic congregation

The Congregation of the Annunciation, formerly known as the Belgian Congregation, is a congregation of monasteries within the Roman Catholic Benedictine Confederation. Founded in 1920, the Congregation includes fifteen independent male monasteries spread throughout ten countries. Additionally, two female monasteries are members of the Congregation, while a further ten are affiliated with the Congregation.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Bruges</span> City in the Flemish part of Belgium

Bruges is the capital and largest city of the province of West Flanders in the Flemish Region of Belgium, in the northwest of the country. It is the sixth most populous city in the country.

Everelmus was a hermit in the vicinity of Bruges. His hermitage, on an island in the river Reie, lay at the basis of the later Eekhout Abbey.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Ten Putte Abbey</span> Building in Gistel, Belgium

Ten Putte Abbey is a monastery with an abbey in Gistel, roughly 8 km to the south of Ostend, in the western part of Belgium. It was built to mark the spot where, in 1070, Saint Godelina was murdered by strangulation and then thrown into a pond. Before 2007 the abbey was home to nine Benedictine nuns, who were members of the wider Subiaco Cassinese Congregation in West Flanders. Since 2007 it has been occupied by brothers and sisters of the "Mother of Peace" community.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Eekhout Abbey</span> Medieval house in West Flanders, Belgium

Eekhout Abbey was a medieval house of Augustinian Canons in Bruges, West Flanders, Belgium.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Sint-Truiden Abbey</span> Former Benedictine monastery in Belgium

Sint-Truiden Abbey or St Trudo's Abbey is a former Benedictine monastery in Sint-Truiden in the province of Limburg, Belgium. The abbey was founded in the 7th century and was one of the oldest and most powerful in the Low Countries. The town of Sint-Truiden grew up around it. The great Romanesque abbey church, dedicated to Saint Remaclus and Saint Quintin, was demolished in 1798, four years after the suppression of the abbey.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Roosenberg Abbey</span> Building in East Flanders, Belgium

Roosenberg Abbey was established in 1238 at Waasmunster, halfway between Ghent and Antwerp. The abbey is still operating at Waasmunster, though not on its original site. Its 750-year history has not been uninterrupted.

The Abbey of Onze-Lieve-Vrouw ter Nieuwe Plant, formerly also Roesbrugge Abbey is a community of Augustinian canonesses belonging to the Congregation of Windesheim. The sisters are informally known as the Roesbrugge Dames - the Roesbrugge Ladies. Located in Roesbrugge from 1239 to the late 16th century, the community then moved into Ypres, West Flanders, Belgium, where it exists today. Its adjacent school is the Lyceum Onze Lieve Vrouw ter Nieuwe Plant.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Ten Duinen Abbey</span>

Ten Duinen Abbey or the Abbey of the Dunes was a Cistercian monastery at Koksijde in what is now Belgium. It was one of the richest and most influential religious institutions in the medieval County of Flanders. It later relocated from Koksijde to the city of Bruges.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Pieter Bladelin</span>

Pieter Bladelin was an important financial advisor and civil servant to the Burgundian State. He was lord of Middelburg and built the Hof Bladelin in Bruges.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Andreas van den Bogaerde van Terbrugge</span>

Andreas Johannes Ludovicus baron van den Bogaerde van Terbrugge was a Dutch nobleman, politician, author and art collector. He served as Governor of North Brabant between 1830 and 1842.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Jacobus van Eynde</span> Flemish organ builder

Jacobus van Eynde or van den Eynde was a Flemish organ builder.

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 "Reguliere Kanunnikessen van Sint-Augustinus, Sint-Trudoabdij, Odegem/Brugge/Male" (in Dutch). ODIS. Retrieved 23 June 2015.
  2. "Castles.nl – Male Castle". www.castles.nl. Retrieved 26 July 2018.

51°12′33″N3°17′19″E / 51.20917°N 3.28861°E / 51.20917; 3.28861