The only one I could find is a cookbook called 'Perl Monks Cookbook.' Of course any Bible used by a monk would be called a 'monk's Bible.'
The bible.
The God of the Bible.
the silent game and bible triva.
Monks studied religious works and wrote copies of the Bible in buildings called scriptoriums. These were typically found within monastery complexes, providing a quiet and focused environment for the monks to transcribe and illuminate manuscripts by hand.
Monks hand printed the Bible until Gutenberg invited the printing press in 1450. The first book he printed was the Bible.
yea they copied the bible but i don't know why that's what im trying to figure out right now.
Monks of the middle ages copied books by had, and in this way produced manuscript copies. This was the only way books were published at the time, and it was nearly always done by monks. The book they copied most was the Bible, but they did other works as well, and most surviving medieval literature was copied by monks at one time or another.
Monks (possibly on the Island of Ipna, off Scotland)
No one could read nor write so there were no books. The only books produced were by monks and they were handwritten about the bible or copied from ancient texts. The Book of Kells is a good example of what the monks did.
Scribes essentially are known for writing. An example would be the monks who wrote the bible during the times prior to the Enlightenment.
Some types of monks include Benedictine monks, Franciscan monks, and Trappist monks. Each type of monk belongs to a different religious order with its own set of customs, practices, and rules.
The collective noun for monks is an abomination of monks (from the older 'an abominable sight of monks').