ยง 11.
The Carthusian order was founded by
St Bruno at the Grande-Chartreuse near Grenoble in
1086. Its members were vowed to fasting and the
solitary life. Each had his separate cell, the monastery
being composed of one or more courts, round which
these dwellings were arranged. The brethren met in
church for the night-office, mass, and vespers: the
lesser hours were said, and meals, save on certain
days, were taken by each monk separately. The order
thus was a revolt against the common life, and a
return to the anchoritic ideal. In England only two
houses, Witham (
c. 1179-81) and Hinton (
c. 1227),
both in Somerset, were founded before the middle of
the fourteenth century. The remaining seven were
all founded after 1340. The royal foundation of
Shene priory in Surrey (1414) was the latest and
wealthiest of all. In England the word Chartreuse
(
Certosa in Italian) took the form Charterhouse.
Considerable remains of charterhouses exist at
Beauvale in Nottinghamshire (founded 1343), in
London (founded 1371) and at Hinton; but the
most complete idea of a Carthusian priory may be
gained from the ruins of Mount Grace in Yorkshire
(founded 1396).