The following is a list of colleges and universities founded or operated by the Benedictines within the United States.
Institutions edit
A closer look edit
Belmont Abbey College edit
- Belmont Abbey College is a private liberal arts Catholic college located near Charlotte, North Carolina. It is also a Benedictine monastery.
Benedictine College edit
- Benedictine College is a co-educational university.
Benedictine University at Lisle edit
- Benedictine University at Lisle is a private Roman Catholic university.
Benedictine University at Springfield edit
- A branch campus, Benedictine University at Springfield, formerly known as Springfield College in Illinois (SCI) or Springfield College, is focused on adult learners.
Benedictine University at Mesa edit
- Is a branch campus in Mesa, Arizona.[1] It is a co-educational liberal arts university and offers undergraduate and graduate degrees grounded in Benedictine values. It is the only Catholic liberal arts college in the Southwest.
College of Saint Benedict edit
- The College of Saint Benedict (CSB), for women, and Saint John's University (SJU), for men, are partnered liberal arts colleges.
College of Saint Scholastica edit
- The College of Saint Scholastica is a private college with its main campus located in Duluth.
Conception Seminary College edit
- Conception Abbey is a monastery of the Swiss-American Congregation of the Benedictine Confederation.
Mount Angel Seminary edit
- Mount Angel Seminary comprises a Graduate School of Theology, a College of Liberal Arts, and a Pre-Theology program for Seminarians.
Mount Marty College edit
- Mount Marty College is an American academic community in the Roman Catholic Benedictine liberal arts tradition.
Saint Anselm College edit
- Saint Anselm College is a nationally ranked, Catholic, Benedictine, liberal arts college.
Saint John's University edit
- The College of Saint Benedict (CSB), for women, and Saint John's University (SJU), for men, are partnered liberal arts colleges.
Saint Joseph Seminary College edit
- Saint Joseph Seminary College, also known as St. Ben or St. Ben's, is a private four-year seminary college.
Saint Leo University edit
- Saint Leo University is a private, non-profit, Roman Catholic liberal arts university.
Saint Martin's University edit
- Saint Martin's University (formerly Saint Martin's College) is a coeducational, Catholic, liberal arts university.
Saint Vincent College edit
- Saint Vincent College is a four-year, coeducational, Roman Catholic, Benedictine, liberal arts college.
Thomas More University edit
- Thomas More University, historically a liberal arts college, was founded in 1921 as the all-women's Villa Madonna College in Covington, Kentucky, across the Ohio River from Cincinnati, by Covington's Benedictine Sisters. The school became coeducational in 1945, and moved to a new campus in the nearby suburb of Crestview Hills, Kentucky in 1968, at which time it was renamed Thomas More College. It adopted its current name in 2018, shortly after Kentucky's higher education council granted it university status; this coincided with plans to add select postgraduate degree programs.
University of Mary edit
- The University of Mary (abbreviated U-Mary) is a four-year Catholic university.
References edit
External links edit
- The Association of Benedictine Colleges and Universities, founded in 1991