DOMINICAN MONASTERY
Address: Vene 16
One of the best-kept secrets
of Tallinn is to be found in the very center of the city. It is
a medieval Dominican monastery, which is located near Viru Street,
between Muurivahe and Vene Streets, which reveals a fascinating
dimension of the city's history.
A Spaniard Saint Dominic Gusman founded the
Dominican Order in 1216. Up to that moment only bishops were permitted
to preach, but their performance was inadequate because of the
time they had to devote to the administration of their dioceses.
The result was that many Christians heard the Word of God rarely
if at all. Dominic envisioned the creation of a body of trained
theologians who would scatter throughout Europe and proclaim the
gospel in the most remote areas. Nordic countries appeared very
early on the Dominic agenda.
To reach Tallinn the friars followed the trade route
along the southern coast of the Baltic Sea, and reached Estonia some 750
years ago. The monastery in Tallinn was certainly in existence by 1246.
Constructed in gothic style, it exhibits a number of Interesting architectural
features, and contains the largest collection of carved stones in Estonia.
The site of the monastery in the Old City was carefully
chosen in order to facilitate both the ministry of the friars and their
business interests. They traded fish in order to support themselves, but
their reason for existing was preaching the word of God. The seal of the
monastery bore the words "Order Of Preachers". The people, however,
knew it as "Blackfriars Monastery" because of the black cloaks
the friars wore in public over their white habit. As medieval documents
say the monastery was dedicated to Saint Catherine. A common symbol of
the Dominican Order is a black and white dog holding in his mouth a burning
torch. It derives from a pun on the Latin name of the friars, "Dominicanes",
which means "the followers of Dominic". But the name could be
split into two words "Domini canes" which means "the hounds
of the Lord". The torch represents the flame of truth. The monastery
was celebrated for its scholarship. Its best known prior was an Estonian
from Tallinn named Mauritius. He studied theology in Cologne with one
of the most eminent medieval scholars, Saint Albertus Magnus, and may
have been a fellow-student of St. Thomas Aquinas. Mauritius completed
his studies at the University of Paris, which was then the best in Europe.
On his return to his native land Mauritius kept in touch with colleagues
in Germany. His intellectual stature is indicative of the quality of the
monastery's leadership.
The offerings made on the occasion of family festivals
made a significant contribution to the monastery's finances. The various
guilds gave gifts when their feast days were celebrated. The Merchant
Guild, for example, each year in December gave the friars a tun of meat,
a tun of codfish, and a tun of peas. Rich burgers left legacies to the
monastery for the privilege of having a family tomb in the church. But
these did not suffice to sustain all those whom the monastery housed.
The friars, in consequence, becaipe farmers and fish-mongers. In addition
they ran a brewery, which produced four different kinds of beer. In northern
Europe beer occupied the place enjoyed by wine in the south, and was a
staple element of both the monastic and secular diet. The monastery also
drew profit from the veneration of relics. Many documents mention twelve
silver reliquaries containing the heads of saints. Some reposed on the
high altar whereas others were enshrined on side altars. Each head was
reputed to cure a different set of diseases.
In 1517 the Reformation started in German and very quickly
spread into the Baltic states. The loyalty of the friars to Rome made
them immediate victims. In 1523 a Lutheran mob burnt down the Franciscan
monastery in Kuramaa. The Dominican monastery in Tallinn was destroyed
in 1524.
In the year of 1954 the former garden, cloister and
refectory of the Dominican monastery were restored and opened to visitors.
One of the most beautiful and peaceful places in Tallinn is the cloister
garden, which is bordered on one side by the church of Saints Peter and
Paul and on the other by the original church of Saint Catherine. A permanent
exhibition of carved stone slabs also takes place in cloister and refectory.
Sea and limestone (dolomite) are two symbols of northern Estonia. Carved
stone decorated public buildings and private houses. Tallinn owes much
of its distinctive flavor to the use of the beautiful stone in its walls
and towers, and in its secular and religious architecture. Carved stone
decorated public buildings and private houses.


