ABBO OF FLEURY, flu"ri': French abbot
of the tenth century, one of the few men of that
time who strove to cultivate learning and led the
way for the later scholasticism; b. near Orleans;
d. Nov. 13, 1004. He was brought up in the Benedictine abbey of Fleury (25 m. e.s.e. of Orleans);
studied at Paris and Reims; in 985-987 was in England, on invitation of Archbishop Oswald of York,
and taught in the school of the abbey of Ramsey;
was chosen abbot of Fleury in 988, and brought
the school there to a flourishing condition. He
upheld the rights of his abbey against the Bishop
of Orleans, and at the synod of St. Denis (995)
took the part of the monks against the bishops.
He twice represented King Robert the Pious as
ambassador at Rome, and gained the favor of Pope
Gregory V. He upheld strict monastic discipline;
and an attempt to introduce reforms in the monastery of La Reole (in Gascony, 30 m. s.e.of Bordeaux),
a dependency of Fleury, led to a mutiny by the
monks in which he was fatally wounded. He
wrote upon such diverse subjects as dialectics,
astronomy, and canon law; and his extant letters
are of much value for the history of the time.
BIBLIOGRAPHY: For his works, and his life by his pupil
Aimoin, consult
MPL, cxxxix.;
for his Epistolae, Bouquet, Recueil; for his life,
J. B. Pardiae,
Histoire de St. Abbon,
Paris, 1872.
ABBOT:
The head of one of the larger houses
in the Benedictine and other older Western monastic
orders. The term originated in the East, where
it was frequently used as a title of respect for any
monk (being derived from the Aramaic
abba,
" father "); but there it was replaced, as the title
of the superior of a monastery, by archimandrite
and other titles. In the Western orders founded
before the end of the eleventh century the title is
still in use. According to the present system,
abbots are divided into secular and regular; the
former are secular clerics who are incumbents of
benefices originally bearing 'the title of abbey but
since secularized; the latter are classified according as they have authority only over the members of their house, or over certain of the
faithful, or enjoy a quasi-episcopal jurisdiction
over a definite territory, or are merely titular
abbots, their houses having fallen into decay.
They are further divided according to the term of
their office, which may be either for life or for three
years. A special class known as mitered abbots
have permission to wear episcopal insignia. The
election of an abbot is commonly by vote of the
professed brothers, in most cases only those in holy
orders. The candidate must be twenty-five years
of age, a professed brother of the order, and a priest.
Actual jurisdiction is not conferred until his confirmation either by the bishop or, in the case of
exempt abbeys, by the superior in the case, frequently the pope. His benediction is the next
step, which takes place according to the office in
the
Pontificale Romanum,
usually at the hands of
the bishop of the diocese. He has the power to
regulate the entire inner life of the abbey in accordance with the rule, and to require obedience from
his subordinates; according to the rule of St.
Benedict, however, abbots are required not to
exercise their authority in an arbitrary manner,
but to seek the counsel of their brethren. In many
particulars a quasi-episcopal jurisdiction has in
course of time been conceded to them. Since the
eighth century they have been allowed to confer
the tonsure and minor orders on their subjects, to
bless their churches, cemeteries, sacred vessels.
etc., to take rank as prelates, and, if generals exercising quasi-episcopal jurisdiction, to sit and vote
in general councils.
The practise of granting abbeys in
commendam
to deserving clerics, or even to laymen, led to the
creation of a class of merely titular abbots, who had
nothing of this character but the name and the
revenues. This practise, which was the source of
many abuses, was regulated by the Council of Trent:
From it sprang the custom in France of Applying
the title
abbe
to any prominent clergyman who
might, according to the custom of the time, lay
claim to such an appointment, and then to the
secular clergy in general. A somewhat analogous
custom existed in Italy, where many professional
men, lawyers, doctors, etc., though laymen and
even married men, retained some marks of the
clerical character which had earlier distinguished
the majority of acholarg in their dress and in the
title of
abbate.
In some Protestant countries the
title of abbot still clung to the heads of institutions
that had grown out of monasteries suppressed at
the Reformation. See
MONASTICISM.