In the 1130s and 1140s, the Cistercians expanded into "an order of immense size" by incorporating independent religious communities.
France In 1113,
Bernard joined the Cîteaux monastery along with 35 relatives and friends. Bernard's charisma greatly expanded the size of the order. In 1115,
Count Hugh of Champagne gifted the order a tract of forested land located forty miles east of
Troyes. At the age of 25, Bernard founded the
Abbey of Clairvaux with twelve other monks. At this time, Cîteaux had four daughter houses:
Pontigny,
Morimond, La Ferté and Clairvaux. The most foundations made by any Cistercian monastery came from Clairvaux. In 1129 Margrave
Leopold the Strong of
Styria granted the Bavarian monks an area of land just north of what is today the provincial capital
Graz, where they founded Rein Abbey. At the time, it was the 38th Cistercian monastery founded; as of 2024, it is the oldest surviving Cistercian house in the world. In 1133,
Heiligenkreuz Abbey was founded near Vienna by Morimond monks; it is (as of 2024) the largest men's abbey in Europe.
Britain The order entrusted the oversight of the English, Welsh and (intermittently) Irish abbeys to two or more abbots-commissary, thereby abrogating the famous Cistercian system of filiation: not the mother abbeys, but the abbots-commisary had full powers of visitation. This variation on the original vertical descent of authority produced "a system of centralized national control" much closer to that of the
Premonstratensians or
mendicants. The first Cistercian house to be established in Britain, a monastery at
Waverley Abbey, Surrey, was founded by William Gifford, Bishop of
Winchester in 1128. It was founded with 12 monks and an abbot from
L'Aumône Abbey, in the South of France. By 1187 there were 70 monks and 120 lay brothers in residence. Thirteen Cistercian monasteries, all in remote locations, were founded in Wales between 1131 and 1226. The first of these was
Tintern Abbey, which was sited in a remote river valley, and depended largely on its agricultural and pastoral activities for survival. Other abbeys, such as at
Neath,
Strata Florida,
Conwy and
Valle Crucis became among the most hallowed names in the history of religion in medieval Wales. Their austere discipline seemed to echo the ideals of the
Celtic saints, and the emphasis on pastoral farming fit well into the Welsh stock-rearing economy. , mother house of the Cistercians in Scotland In
Yorkshire,
Rievaulx Abbey was founded from Clairvaux in 1131, on a small, isolated property donated by
Walter Espec, with the support of
Thurstan,
Archbishop of York. By 1143, three hundred monks had entered Rievaulx, including the famous
St Ælred. It was from Rievaulx that a foundation was made at
Melrose, which became the earliest Cistercian monastery in
Scotland. Located in
Roxburghshire, it was built in 1136 by King
David I of Scotland, and completed in less than ten years. Another important offshoot of Rievaulx was
Revesby Abbey in
Lincolnshire.
Fountains Abbey was founded in 1132 by discontented Benedictine monks from
St. Mary's Abbey, York, who desired a return to the austere Rule of St Benedict. After many struggles and great hardships, St Bernard agreed to send a monk from Clairvaux to instruct them, and in the end they prospered. Already by 1152, Fountains had many offshoots, including
Newminster Abbey (1137) and
Meaux Abbey (1151).
Mellifont Abbey was founded in
County Louth in 1142 and from it daughter houses of
Bective Abbey in
County Meath (1147),
Inislounaght Abbey in
County Tipperary (1147–1148), Baltinglass in
County Wicklow (1148),
Monasteranenagh in
County Limerick (1148), Kilbeggan in
County Westmeath (1150) and
Boyle Abbey in
County Roscommon (1161). Following the
Anglo-Norman invasion of Ireland in the 1170s, the English improved the standing of the Cistercian Order in Ireland with nine foundations:
Dunbrody Abbey,
Inch Abbey,
Grey Abbey,
Comber Abbey,
Duiske Abbey, Abington,
Abbeylara and
Tracton. This last abbey was founded in 1225 from
Whitland Abbey in Wales, and at least in its earliest years, its monks were
Welsh-speaking. By this time, another ten abbeys had been founded by Irishmen since the invasion, bringing the total number of Cistercian houses in Ireland to 31. This was almost half the number of those in England, but it was about thrice the number in each of Scotland and Wales. Most of these monasteries enjoyed either noble, episcopal or royal patronage. In 1269, the
Archbishop of Cashel joined the order and established a Cistercian house at the foot of the
Rock of Cashel in 1272. Similarly, the Irish-establishment of
Abbeyknockmoy in
County Galway was founded by
King of Connacht,
Cathal Crobhdearg Ua Conchobair, who died a Cistercian monk and was buried there in 1224. with the
Abbey of Savigny merged with the Cistercian Order. By 1152, there were 54 Cistercian monasteries in England, few of which had been founded directly from the Continent. Nearly half of these houses had been founded, directly or indirectly, from Clairvaux, so great was St Bernard's influence and prestige. He later came popularly to be regarded as the founder of the Cistercians, who have often been called Bernardines. Bernard died in 1153, one month after his pupil Eugene III.
The Iberian Peninsula , Hungary, founded in Portugal in 1153 In 1153, the first King of Portugal,
D. Afonso Henriques (Afonso, I), founded
Alcobaça Monastery. The original church was replaced by the present construction from 1178. The abbey's church was consecrated in 1223. Two further building phases followed in order to complete the nave, leading to the final consecration of the medieval church building in 1252. As a consequence of the wars between the Christians and Moors on the
Iberian Peninsula, the Cistercians established a
military branch of the order in
Castile in 1157: the
Order of Calatrava. Membership of the Cistercian Order had included a large number of men from knightly families, and when King
Alfonso VII began looking for a
military order to defend the
Calatrava, which had been recovered from the Moors a decade before, the Cistercian Abbot Raymond of
Fitero offered his help. Lay brothers were to be employed as "soldiers of the Cross" to defend Calatrava. The initial successes of the new order in the Spanish
Reconquista were convincing, and the arrangement was approved by the General Chapter at Cîteaux and successive popes; the Knights of Calatrava were given a definitive rule in 1187, modeled upon the Cistercian rule for lay brothers, which included the evangelical counsels of
poverty, chastity, and obedience; specific rules of silence; abstinence on four days a week; the recitation of a fixed number of
Pater Nosters daily; to sleep in their
armour; and to wear, as their full dress, the Cistercian white mantle with the scarlet cross
fleurdelisée. Calatrava was not subject to Cîteaux, but to Fitero's mother-house, the
Abbey of Morimond in Burgundy. By the end of the 13th century, the knights had become a major autonomous power within the Castilian state, subject only to Morimond and the pope. They had abundant resources of men and wealth, lands and castles scattered along the borders of Castile, and feudal lordship over thousands of peasants and vassals. On more than one occasion, the Order of Calatrava brought to the field a force of 1200 to 2000 knights – considerable in medieval terms. Over time, as the Reconquista neared completion, the canonical bond between Calatrava and Morimond relaxed more and more, and the knights of the order became virtually secularized, finally undergoing dissolution in the 18th–19th centuries. The first Cistercian abbey in Bohemia was founded in
Sedlec near
Kutná Hora in 1142. In the late 13th century and early 14th century, the Cistercian order played an essential role in the politics and diplomacy of the late
Přemyslid and early Luxembourg state, as reflected in the
Chronicon Aulae Regiae. This chronicle was written by Otto and Peter of
Zittau, abbots of the
Zbraslav abbey (Latin:
Aula Regia, "Royal Hall"), founded in 1292 by the
King of Bohemia and
Poland,
Wenceslas II. The order also played the main role in the early
Gothic art of Bohemia; one of the outstanding pieces of
Cistercian architecture is the
Alt-neu Shul, Prague. The first abbey in the present day Romania was founded in 1179, at
Igris (Egres), and the second in 1204, the
Cârța Monastery. == The Cistercians in Italy ==