§ 12.
One of the many off-shoots of the Benedictine
order was a congregation of monks and lay brothers
founded in 1114 in the diocese of Chartres. The name
of Thiron (
Tiro) was given to the abbey from the
tirones or apprentices whom the founder united there,
to pursue their trades in the service of God. Closely
akin to this was the abbey of Savigny in the diocese of
Avranches, founded in 1112, which between that date
and 1147 planted some thirteen houses in England
and Wales. When the order of Savigny was merged
about 1147 in that of Cîteaux, its monasteries were
said to belong to the Tironensian order. This, however,
was not because of any definite affiliation to
Thiron, but on account of similarity of observances
between the two congregations. English Tironensian
houses, such as Humberston abbey in Lincolnshire,
became identical with the ordinary Benedictine
monasteries, although a nominal distinction was
recognised. Important remains of a Tironensian
house exist at Caldey, a priory of St Dogmaels, on
an island near Tenby. Such Savigniac houses as
Buildwas and Furness became famous as Cistercian
monasteries. Neither of these congregations possessed
the organising capacity which the founders of
the Cistercian order brought to their work. The
same may be said of the Grandimontine order,
founded in 1046 at Grandmont in the diocese of
Limoges, which during the twelfth century founded
three small priories in England.