[Home]Pachomius

HomePage | Recent Changes | Preferences

Pachomius, died around A.D. 345, Tabennisi, Egypt, one of the founders of Christian monasticism.

Pachomius was a young Egyptian who according to tradition was raised a pagan and became a Christian after service in the Roman army.

Pachomius set out to lead the life of a hermit near St. Anthony of Egypt, whose practices he imitated. Like many later monastic founders, he was quickly swamped with young men seeking his guidance in imitating his life, and became the founder of a monastery by default.

Earlier monasticism had been solitary or eremitic. Male or female monastics lived in individual huts or caves and met only for occasional worship services. Pachomius seems to have invented the community or cenobitic organization, in which male or female monastics lived together and had their possessions in common under the leadership of an abbot or abbess.

There were several written documents available in the 5th Century that purported to be monastic rules or organizational regulations written by Pachomius. These were translated into Latin by Jerome.

See [Basil of Caesarea]?, Benedict.


HomePage | Recent Changes | Preferences
This page is read-only | View other revisions
Last edited September 18, 2001 1:29 am by Zundark (diff)
Search: