You can help expand this article with text translated from
the corresponding article in Spanish. (November 2016) Click [show] for important translation instructions.
|
A charterhouse ( French: chartreuse; German: Kartause; Italian: certosa; Portuguese: cartuxa; Spanish: cartuja) is a monastery of Carthusian monks. The English word is derived by phono-semantic matching from the French word chartreuse [1] and it is therefore sometimes misunderstood to indicate that the houses were created by charter, a grant of legal rights by a high authority.
The actual namesake is instead the first monastery of the order, the Grande Chartreuse, which St Bruno of Cologne established in a valley of the Chartreuse Mountains in 1084. [2]
The London Charterhouse was the first English site to which this English version of the word was applied.
You can help expand this article with text translated from
the corresponding article in Spanish. (November 2016) Click [show] for important translation instructions.
|
A charterhouse ( French: chartreuse; German: Kartause; Italian: certosa; Portuguese: cartuxa; Spanish: cartuja) is a monastery of Carthusian monks. The English word is derived by phono-semantic matching from the French word chartreuse [1] and it is therefore sometimes misunderstood to indicate that the houses were created by charter, a grant of legal rights by a high authority.
The actual namesake is instead the first monastery of the order, the Grande Chartreuse, which St Bruno of Cologne established in a valley of the Chartreuse Mountains in 1084. [2]
The London Charterhouse was the first English site to which this English version of the word was applied.