Foundation In 910,
William I, Duke of Aquitaine "the Pious", and
Count of Auvergne, founded the Benedictine Abbey of Cluny on a modest scale, as the
motherhouse of the Congregation of Cluny. The deed of gift included
vineyards, fields, meadows, woods, waters, mills, serfs, and lands both cultivated and uncultivated. Hospitality was to be given to the poor, strangers, and pilgrims. It was stipulated that the monastery would be free from local authorities, lay or ecclesiastical, and subject only to the Pope, with the proviso that even he could not seize the property, divide or give it to someone else or appoint an abbot without the consent of the monks. William placed Cluny under the protection of Saints Peter and Paul, with a curse on anyone who should violate the charter.
Cluny and the Gregorian reforms The reforms introduced at Cluny were in some measure traceable to the influence of
Benedict of Aniane, who had put forward his new ideas at the first great meeting of the abbots of the order held at Aachen (Aix-la-Chapelle) in 817. Berno had adopted Benedict's interpretation of the Rule previously at
Baume Abbey. Cluny was not known for the severity of its discipline or its asceticism, but the abbots of Cluny supported the revival of the papacy and the
reforms of
Pope Gregory VII. The Cluniac establishment found itself closely identified with the Papacy. In the early 12th century, the order lost momentum under poor government. It was subsequently revitalized under Abbot
Peter the Venerable (died 1156), who brought lax priories back into line and returned to stricter discipline. Cluny reached its apogee of power and influence under Peter, as its monks became bishops, legates, and cardinals throughout France and the Holy Roman Empire. However, by the time Peter died, newer and more austere orders such as the
Cistercians were generating the next wave of ecclesiastical reform. Outside monastic structures, the rise of English and French
nationalism created a climate unfavourable to the existence of monasteries autocratically ruled by a head residing in Burgundy. The
Papal Schism of 1378 to 1409 further divided loyalties: France recognizing a pope at Avignon and England one at Rome, interfered with the relations between Cluny and its dependent houses. Under the strain, some English houses, such as
Lenton Priory,
Nottingham, were naturalized (
Lenton in 1392) and no longer regarded as alien priories, weakening the Cluniac structure. By the time of the
French Revolution, revolutionary hatred of the
Catholic Church led to the suppression of the order in France in 1790 and the monastery at Cluny was almost totally demolished in 1810. Later, it was sold and used as a quarry until 1823. Today, little more than one of the original eight towers remains of the whole monastery. Modern excavations of the Abbey began in 1927 under the direction of
Kenneth John Conant, American architectural historian of
Harvard University, and continued (although not continuously) until 1950. ==Organization==