Basilians
BASILIANS: Monks or nuns following the rule
of St. Basil, who introduced the cenobitic life into
Asia Minor, and is said to have founded the first
monastery there. The rules which he gave this
community connected active industry and
devotional exercises in regular succession, day and night,—one meal a day, consisting of bread and water;
very little sleep during the hours before midnight;
prayers and singing, morning, noon, and evening;
work in the fields during forenoon and afternoon;
etc. These rules were further developed and
completed by Basil’s ascetic writings. After the
separation between the Eastern and Western churches,
Basil’s rule became almost the exclusive regulation of
monastic life in the Eastern Church; so that a
“Basilian" simply means a monk of the Greek
Church. In the Western Church the rule of Basil
was afterward completely superseded by that of
Benedict of Nursia. Nevertheless, Basilian
monasteries, acknowledging the supremacy of the Pope,
are still lingering in Sicily and in the Slavonian
countries. See Basil, Saint, the Great;
Monasticism.
END OF VOL. I.