Monks studied religious works and wrote copies of the Bible usually in Churches.
Another possibility:
The term you're looking for may be "monastery."
Monks were, and are, men who are devoted to religious life. They live in buildings called monasteries. So monks are people are monasteries are buildings, so in that way they are not alike at all.
Monasteries are buildings or communities where monks or nuns live and practice religious life. They often serve as places of prayer, work, and communal living dedicated to following a specific religious rule or tradition.
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.
The Bible was originally translated and hand-written by monks in Latin. Latin was the common language used by the Roman Catholic Church for religious texts and services during the Middle Ages.
very religious people
The God of the Bible.
The bible.
monasteries
monks.
Monks perform the tonsure ritual by shaving their heads as a symbol of humility and devotion to their religious beliefs. This practice is often done in a ceremonial manner, with prayers and blessings from fellow monks or religious leaders.
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.
Monks and nuns are cloistered religious, and, as such, do not normally leave their monastery. The biggest thing that monks and nuns have provided in the way of "social services" would be education, they were really the first public education provided to the laity. They, also, in their Scriptoriums kept literature alive by their saving copies of many works of antiquity which otherwise would have been completely lost to us.