Barefooted Monks and Nuns
BAREFOOTED MONKS AND NUNS: The
popular name for members of various religious orders
who go without any foot-covering whatever or with
sandals in place of shoes. They are also called
“discalced" (Lat. discalceati, “unshod"), but
this name is more properly restricted to those who
wear sandals and is used especially of the “discalced
Carmelites.” It is said that the custom was introduced
in the West by St. Francis of Assisi,
who, with his companions, in 1209 discarded
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shoes in supposed obedience to Matt. x, 10,
and thenceforth went wholly barefoot. There have
been barefooted or discalced members of many
orders, the Clarenines, Recollects, Capuchins,
Poor Clares, Minimites, Augustinians, Camaldolites,
Servites, Carmelites, Cistercians (Feuillants),
Trinitarians, Passionists, and others. It is usually the
stricter divisions of the order who adopt the practise.