The monastery of Lérins
Honoratus established his monastery around the year 410 on the island the Romans called Lerina, one of the Lérins Islands off the southern coast of Gaul, which now bears his name as Saint-Honorat. Though he had hoped to live as a solitary, his reputation attracted disciples who organized themselves into a community under his guidance. His monastic rule drew chiefly on that of Saint Pachomius, the great organizer of Egyptian cenobitic monasticism whose practices Honoratus had encountered during his eastern travels.
Through the fifth, sixth, and seventh centuries, Lérins exercised considerable influence as a center of learning and spiritual formation. It produced bishops, theologians, and writers for the churches of Gaul, including Lupus of Troyes, Eucherius of Lyon, and Hilary of Arles among Honoratus's own disciples, and later figures such as Caesarius of Arles, Faustus of Riez, and the author Vincent of Lérins.