Around the year 435–just before the
time of Saint Benedict–a middle-aged man named Romanus felt drawn to the
solitary life. Leaving his family, he entered the dense forests of the rugged
Jura Mountains in eastern France. There he was soon joined by his brother
Lupicinus and, many years later, by a disciple Eugendus, all three of whom are
still revered in the local area.
This first English translation of the
Life of these Jura Fathers supplies a chapter long missing in anglophone
monastic history and conveys significant information on early Christian Gaul,
its Church, and the implantation of monasticism.
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