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The Plan of St. Gall

a study of the architecture & economy of & life in a paradigmatic Carolingian monastery
  
  
  
  
 II. 
  
  
  

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RELIEF FROM DREARINESS OF DAILY ROUTINE

Dom D. Knowles attributes the phenomenal spread of
the practice of bloodletting in monastic life to the "general
feeling of physical malaise" brought about by an unbalanced
diet and the sedentary life of the monks, calling for
some violent form of relief.[409] One of the attractive features
of its practice was that it gave relief from the dreariness of
the daily routine and was associated with a fortifying regime
of food, allowed in compensation for the loss of blood. This
gave to the occasion a touch of recreative pleasure, which
monastic discipline found it difficult to repress.

 
[409]

Monastic Constitutions of Lanfranc, ed. Knowles, 1951, 152.