Molesme Abbey was a well-known Benedictine monastery in Molesme, in Laignes, Côte-d'Or, Duchy of Burgundy, on the border of the Dioceses of Langres and Troyes.
News of the rigour of the new foundation and of the holiness of its members soon spread and attracted many members of noble families, who in many cases brought with them their worldly possessions. These gifts, together with the many benefactions the new abbey received, enabled the community to build a magnificent church and suitable monastic buildings.
Among the many who were inspired to join Robert at Molesme were Stephen Harding, future leader of the Cistercians, and Bruno of Cologne, future founder of the Carthusian Order. Staley, Tony. "Robert of Molesme wanted a rigorous monastic life", The Compass News, Diocese of Green Bay, Wisconsin, April 24, 2010
The increase in numbers and wealth however caused a temporary loss of rigour, in that many of the new monks were not keen to work in the fields, preferring to live on the alms given to them. This dissatisfaction reached the point of open rebellion and Robert, therefore, left Molesme in 1098, accompanied by only the most fervent religious, and this time founded Cîteaux Abbey, which although it was initially intended as a Benedictine monastery, became the first and mother-house of the Cistercian Order.
The monks of Molesme meanwhile repented of their faults. They begged Pope Urban II to oblige Robert to return to them, which he did in 1099, and continued to govern them and to make Molesme a centre of strict Benedictine observance until his death in 1111.
Besides Cîteaux, Molesme founded seven or eight other monasteries and had about the same number of Benedictine nunneries under its jurisdiction. The monastery with its church was destroyed and its possessions were confiscated in 1472 during the war between France and Burgundy. The buildings were again burned by the Huguenots towards the close of the sixteenth century in the French Wars of Religion. As a result of the reforms of St. Maur introduced by the Congregation of St. Maur in 1648, the spiritual life of the monastery was revived in the seventeenth century. The buildings were comprehensively restored during the 18th century, but the abbey was suppressed during the French Revolution and most of the buildings, including the abbey church, were destroyed.
There are also some remains of service and ancillary buildings.
The abbey site has been a listed monument historique since 1985. It is accessible by prior arrangement only.
Present day
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