A cell (or cubicle).
A cell (or cubicle).
Yes, rooms for monks are often referred to as cells. These rooms are simple living spaces where monks can meditate, pray, and rest. The term "cell" may also be used to signify the solitude and simplicity of a monk's lifestyle.
they had two diffrent diining rooms because the oblate monks and the novice monks ate in two diffrent rooms
Robert Hooke called them 'cells' because they reminded him of the small rooms of monks (cells).
Robert Hooke called them 'cells' because they reminded him of the small rooms of monks (cells).
He gave cells the name cells because he looked at a cork underneath a microscope and he thought it looked like the Monk's cells.
Irish monks did and do live in Ireland in a Monastery.
Robert Hooke looked at cork with a microscope. He noticed little boxes that he called "rooms" or "cells". Monks and other religious people lived in small cells or rooms.
No. Monks live in Abbeys and Abbots are the head of the Abbey.
No. The term (in science) means a small enclosed space. It was given to cells (in plants and animals) seen under a microscope by a scientist who said that they reminded him of the small rooms that monks spent most of their time.
Monks live in monasteries.
Monks rooms are called hashi minus They're not like prisoner cells, but they weren't luxury either. They had all the basic things that they needed to live.