The Plan of St. Gall a study of the architecture & economy of & life in a paradigmatic Carolingian monastery |
I. |
![]() |
![]() | I. |
![]() | II. |
![]() | III. |
![]() | IV. |
![]() | The Plan of St. Gall | ![]() |
ADMISSION TO INFIRMARY
Admission to the Infirmary was neither a trifling nor a
315
![Click to Enlarge Page 315](https://iiif.lib.virginia.edu/iiif/uva-lib:451822/full/!200,200/0/default.jpg)
abbot and the entire body of the assembled community for
entrance to the Infirmary. The Concordus regularis, a monastic
consuetudinary of the end of the tenth century, based
partly on ancient English and partly on continental traditions,
defines the process as follows: When one of the brethren
is called upon to pay the debt of the common fragility
. . . he must declare to the abbot and the entire assembled
community the reasons of his distress, and then, after
having received their benediction, will be admitted to the
infirmary.[288]
The Infirmary does not include space for physicians.
The quarters of these professionals are in an adjacent house,
to the north; it will be discussed in a later chapter.[289]
![]() | The Plan of St. Gall | ![]() |