The Beguines () and the Beghards () were Christian lay religious orders that were active in Western Europe, particularly in the Low Countries, in the 13th–16th centuries. Their members lived in semi-monastic communities but did not take formal religious vows. Although they promised not to marry "as long as they lived as Beguines", to quote an early Rule of Life, they were free to leave at any time. Beguines were part of a larger spiritual revival movement of the 13th century that stressed imitation of Jesus' life through voluntary poverty, care of the poor and sick, and religious devotion.
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Archive-ugent-be-B06F870C-8F5A-11E3-8041-11B8D43445F2 DS-31 (cropped).jpg
Fragment uit een manuscript van het begijnhof Sint Aubertus (Poortacker) te Gent. Gemaakt ca. 1840.
De baghine Des dodes dantz Lubeck 1489.jpg
Gravure sur bois représentant une béguine, tirée de l'ouvrage Des dodes dantz, imprimé par Matthäus ...
Kloesterle-cannstatt.jpg
Béguinage at the Bad Cannstatt District of Stuttgart, Germany
Kortrijk - Beguinage and Sint-Maartenskerk.jpg
Beguinage, and church of Saint Martin in Kortrijk, West Flanders, Belgium.