Benedict was of a noble family in Nursia, near Rome, and had a twin sister, Scholastica, also a saint and co-founder with him.
Sent
 to Rome for his education, Benedict abhorred the licentiousness of his 
companions in the city and secretly left Rome. He found his way to the 
village of Enfide, where, far from the din, he realized that he was 
called to a life of solitude.
Climbing higher to a rugged, wild 
place called Subiaco, he met a hermit, Romanus, who giving him a habit 
of sheepskin, initiated him in the hermitical life in a cave high up in 
the mountain.
In this desolate place, Benedict spent three years 
in total solitude, once a day lowering a basket to Romanus who brought 
him bread and kept the secret of his whereabouts.
As the fame of 
the sanctity and the miraculous powers of the young recluse spread, 
disciples gathered. Benedict set up a system of twelve wooden 
monasteries, containing each twelve monks headed by a superior, himself 
directing all from his cave.
Once these communities where 
established, Benedict moved on to Monte Cassino. At the site of a big 
temple, he built two chapels, and around the sanctuary there gradually 
arose the greatest abbey the world has ever known.
Profiting
 from the experience at Subiaco, Benedict now no longer placed those who
 flocked to him in separate houses but gathered them in one 
establishment, ruled over by priors and deans under his general 
supervision. Here he also built guest rooms, for as Monte Cassino was 
nearer Rome, not only laymen but dignitaries came to consult with the 
holy founder.
It was most certainly at this period that Benedict composed his rule of monastic life, which was to influence all of Europe.
At
 Mount Cassino, famous for his sanctity and miracles, Benedict far from 
confining his care to his monks alone, extended it to the population in 
the surrounding country. He relieved the distressed, healed the sick, 
distributed alms, nourished the poor, and is said to have raised the 
dead on more than one occasion.
The great saint, who had foretold
 so many things, also foretold his own death. He notified his disciples,
 and bid them dig a grave six days before the end. As soon as his burial
 site was ready, he was struck with a fever and on the last day received
 Holy Communion. Then, lovingly supported by his spiritual sons, he 
expired, standing on his feet in his chapel, his hands uplifted to 
heaven.
Photo by: High Contrast
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