Cloister
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
- For Cloister the horse, see Cloister (horse).
A cloister (from latin claustrum) is a part of cathedral, monastic and abbey architecture. A cloister consists usually of four corridors, with a courtyard or garth in the middle. It is intended to be both covered from the rain, but open to the air. The attachment of a cloister to a Cathedral church usually indicates that it is (or was once) a monastic foundation.
Cloistered (or "Claustral") life is also another name for the life of an enclosed monk or nun. Thus, cloister is sometimes used as a synonym for monastery. The modern English term enclosure is used in contemporary Catholic church law[1] to mean cloistered.
The worldwide biggest cloister (12000 m²) is in the Certosa di Padula in Southern Italy.
[edit] See also
- The Code of Canon Law, cf canons 667 ff.
- New Advent Encyclopaedia III ff. on "Nuns, properly so called
- "Cloister" in the New Advent encyclopaedia
- New Advent Encyclopaedia on "Religious Life
- The Cloisters, one of the museums of the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City.