NETSCAPE NETCENTER spacer   Search  -  WebMail  -  My Netscape  -  Buddy Chat  -  Help  -  Download
Encyclopedia

friar

friar [Lat. frater=brother], member of certain Roman Catholic religious orders, notably, the Dominicans, Franciscans, Carmelites, and Augustinians. Although a general form of address in the New Testament, since the 13th cent. it has been used to describe members of orders forbidden to hold property. They are called mendicants because they were expected to work or, as later developed, beg for a living and were not bound to a particular monastery. The Council of Trent loosened the restriction on property ownership. Friars differ from cloistered, contempletive monks by their widespread outside activity and by their highly centralized organization. See monasticism.

The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, 6th ed. Copyright © 2007, Columbia University Press. All rights reserved.

More on friar from Fact Monster:

  • Friars - Friars [brothers ]. Applied to the four great religious orders —Dominicans, Franciscans, ...
  • Friar - Friar A curtal Friar. (See Curtal.) Friar in printing. A part of the sheet which has failed to ...
  • Grey Friars - Grey Friars Franciscan friars, so called from their grey habit. Black friars are Dominicans, and ...
  • Curtal Friar - Curtal Friar A friar who served as an attendant at the gate of a monastery court. As a curtal dog ...
  • Friar's Lanthorn - Friar's Lanthorn Sir W. Scott calls Jack o'Lantern Friar Rush. This is an error, as Rush ...

See more Encyclopedia articles on: Roman Catholic Orders and Missions

© 2000–2008 Pearson Education, publishing as Fact Monster