Dâdyeshu‘ as abbot.[1] Their rules have been preserved.[2] These are merely the old Egyptian rule slightly modified to suit Persia. Monks wore a tunic, belt, cloak, hood and sandals. They carried a cross and a stick. The Nestorian monks wore a tonsure formed like a cross, to distinguish them from those of the Jacobites.[3] At first they met seven times a day for common prayer (the canonical hours). Later it was reduced to four times. They worked in the fields; those who could copied books. They abstained from fleshmeat always, ate one meal (of bread and vegetables) a day, at the sixth hour (mid-day). Then they all lay down and slept awhile. After three years of probation a monk could, with the abbot's leave, retire to absolute solitude as a hermit. After Abraham of Kashkar celibacy was, of course, enforced very strictly. Nestorian monks were always subject to the local bishop; all their property, for instance, was administered and controlled by him. Labourt counts this a characteristic note of Eastern monasticism, and notes how it strengthened the hands of the hierarchy.[4]
An interesting picture of Nestorian monasticism is given by Thomas of Margâ in his Book of Governors (Ktâbâ drīshâne), otherwise called Historia monastica. Thomas was a monk at Beth ‘Abe (a dependency of Mount Izla) in the early 9th century. He became Bishop of Marga, and eventually Metropolitan of Beth Garmai, north of Seleucia-Ctesiphon, east of the Tigris. He wrote his book about 840. It is a collection of stories of monks, from Abraham of Kashkar down to his own time, like the Historia Lausiaca of Palladius.[5]
Labourt thinks that the Nestorians, like the Jacobites, owe it to their monasteries that they were able to withstand the flood of Islam.[6] They had flourishing monasteries, with many famous
- ↑ Ib. chap. v. pp. 42–44.
- ↑ Chabot: Regulæ monasticæ ab Abraham et Dadjesu conditæ (Rome, 1898); see also Wallis Budge's edition of Thomas of Margâ, vol. i. pp. cxxxiv–clvi, and Duval: Littérature syriaque, p. 180.
- ↑ Book of Governors, ii. 40–41.
- ↑ Le Christianisme dans l'empire perse, p. 324.
- ↑ Dr. E. A. Wallis Budge has edited it, in Syriac and English, with an introduction about Persian monasticism and copious notes (The Book of Governors, 2 vols., Kegan Paul, 1893).
- ↑ Op. cit. p. 324.