Crusaders were not the only Europeans drawn to the Holy Land
during the twelfth century. Many lay people and followers of
religious orders made pilgrimages to the East to visit the holy
sites, and many felt compelled to stay there, settling as monks or
hermits in established monasteries or founding hermitages of their
own. So widespread was the exodus that Bernard of Clairvaux spoke
out against Cistercian monks who were "deserting the flock." The
Perfection of Solitude is the first comprehensive study of the
Latin monastic presence in the Holy Land at this time.
Andrew Jotischky looks at the reasons why Latin monks were drawn
to the Holy Land (building upon the work of historical geographer
J. K. Wright) and what happened after they arrived there. Since
very little is known about the history of western monastic
settlement in the Holy Land, this book navigates mostly uncharted
territory. Jotischky makes use of the recently discovered, but
little exploited, writings of Gerard of Nazareth, whose collection
of brief lives of twelfth-century Frankish hermits sheds new light
on the nature of the Latin Church in the Crusader States.
Jotischky's most important conclusions are that solitary and
communal monastic practices overlapped each other in the East and
that this was due in part to the influence of Eastern practice
which was less structured than its counterpart in Europe.
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