Ambrosians are members of one of the religious brotherhoods which at various times since the 14th century have sprung up in and around Milan and also a 16th-century sect of Anabaptist Ambrosians.
.
Only the oldest of the Catholic Ambrosians, the Fratres S. Ambrosii ad Nemus, had anything more than a very local significance. This order is known from a bull of Pope Gregory XI addressed to the monks of the church of St Ambrose outside Milan.
Saint Ambrose, Bishop of Milan, certainly did not found religious orders, though he took an interest in the monastic life and watched over its beginnings in his diocese, providing for the needs of a monastery outside the walls of Milan, as Saint Augustine recounts in his Confessions. Ambrose also made successful efforts to improve the moral life of women in the Milan of his time by promoting the permanent institution of Virgins, as also of widows. His exhortations and other interventions have survived in various writings: De virginibus, De viduis, De virginitate, De institutione virginis, De exhortatione virginitatis, and De lapsu virginis consecratae. Ambrose was the only Father of the Church to leave behind so many writings on the subject and his attentions naturally enough led to the formation of communities which later became formal monasteries of women.
What do you know about it?
Who has told you so?
It makes no differnece
The world can know
I loved and I lost
It happens to the best
So I loved and I lost
And i might as well confess
She was so beautiful
Like flowers that bloom in May
Her kiss was like the rolling wind
It left me speechless with nothing to say
I loved and I lost
The fire would not egnite
So I loved and I lost
And I wish her back with all my might
'cause she was so very good to me
The love that I lost, baby
It happens to the best
So I loved and I lost
And I might as well confess
I loved and I lost, mmmm
I loved and I lost
I loved and I lost