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Quartum vero genus est monachorum quod nominatur girovagum, qui tota vita sua per diversas provincias ternis aut quaternis diebus per diversorum cellas hospitantur, semper vagi et numquam stabiles, et propriis voluntatibus et guilæ inlecebris servientes, et per omnia deteriores sarabaitis. De quorum
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Well, my brethren, you need not be ashamed to be called or to be gyrovagues. You are in the company of St. Paul, the teacher of the nations...While they sit in their monasteries...you go touring round with Paul, doing the job you have been given to
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In the early 13th century, some of the first Friars
Preachers of the Dominican order were dismissed as gyrovagues, and their active preaching dismissed as beneath the dignity of the serious religious who lived in monasteries.
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80:, "wandering"), refers to a type of monk, rather than to a specific order, and may be pejorative as gyrovagues are almost universally denounced by
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435) also mentions a class of monk, which may have been identical, who were reputed to be gluttons who refused to fast at the proper times.
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St. Benedict severely criticized 'gyratory monks' who wandered from place to place without a regular home or a fixed order of life.
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Murray, Paul. The New Wine of
Dominican Spirituality: A Drink Called Happiness. London: Burns & Oates, 2006. Page 15.
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Up until the time of
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omnium horum miserrima conversatione melius est silere quam loqui.
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221:Sarabaites
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134:Background
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67:Late Latin
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31:Gyrovagues
175:monastery
158:forms of
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102:Augustine
82:Christian
70:gyrovagus
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205:See also
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