Archimandrite
ARCHIMANDRITE, ɑ̄r´´ki-man´drɑit (Gk.
archimandritēs, “ruler of the fold,” mandra, “fold,” being applied to a monastic association as consisting of the sheep of Christ): A name given to
the head of a larger monastic community, either
the abbot of a single monastery or, more in accord
with the meaning of the word, the general abbot
of several monasteries belonging to one congregation. The title was in general use in the East
as early as the fifth century. In the West it is
found in the rules of Isidore of Seville (vi.) and
Columban (vii.), of the latter part of the same
century. From the tenth century it served as a
general designation of prelates, even of archbishops.
In 1094 Roger of Sicily put all Basilian monks of
Sicily and Calabria under an archimandrite, who
was later superseded by a secular prelate. By
a brief of Urban VIII., Feb. 23, 1635, the archimandrite of Messina was granted quasiepiscopal
jurisdiction, the use of the pontificals, and other
privileges. The abbots of the Greek Uniate
Churches in Poland, Galicia, Transylvania, Hungary, Slavonia, and Venice also have the title
“archimandrite.” In the Russian Church the
archimandrites enjoy high honor and wear marks
of respect which elsewhere belong only to bishops—infulœ, staves, crosses, and the like. They are
generally under the diocesan bishop, though many
had become immediately subject to the patriarch
of Constantinople or the Russian metropolitan
previous to the formation of the Holy Synod.
Consult Du Cange and, for a most exhaustive
treatment, ACL, s.v.
264