Mendicant orders

E188835

Mendicant orders are religious communities, especially within the Catholic Church, whose members live by begging, itinerant preaching, and voluntary poverty rather than monastic enclosure or stable income.

All labels observed (1)

Label Occurrences
Mendicant orders canonical 1

How this entity was disambiguated

Statements (48)

Predicate Object
instanceOf form of consecrated life
religious order
canonicalStatus recognized in canon law
contrastsWith cloistered religious life
monastic orders
definingCharacteristic dependence on alms
itinerant preaching
rejection of monastic enclosure
rejection of stable income
voluntary poverty
floruitCentury 13th century
fundingModel alms
begging
donations
geographicScope Europe
Latin America
Western Christianity
global
hasMemberType friar
nun
tertiary
hasNotableOrder Augustinians
surface form: Augustinian Hermits

Capuchin
surface form: Capuchins

Carmelite Order
surface form: Carmelites

Order of Friars Minor Conventual
surface form: Conventual Franciscans

Mercedarians
Order of Minims
surface form: Minims

Order of Friars Minor
Order of Preachers
Servite Order
Trinitarians
historicalPeriodOfOrigin High Middle Ages
influencedBy evangelical poverty movements
urbanization of medieval Europe
lifestyle community life
mobility
purpose evangelization of urban populations
preaching
service to the poor
recognizedBy Fourth Lateran Council
religiousTradition Catholic Church worldwide
surface form: Catholic Church
typicalApostolate care of the poor and sick
confession and spiritual direction
preaching missions
teaching
vowOrPromise chastity
obedience
poverty

How these facts were elicited

Referenced by (1)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

Louis IX of France patronage Mendicant orders