By the end of the twelfth century they had more than sixty monasteries, principally in Acquitaine, Anjou and Normandy.
The Fratres Saccati, or Brothers of Penitence, were an order that were active in Spain, France and England.
It is said that they controlled Ashridge Priory and Edington Priory in England, but this has been completely repudiated in an article by Richard Emory in the journal Speculum (1943), who attributes the original connection to Helyot's Dictionnaire des Ordres Religieux, which was compiled in Paris between the late 17th and early 18th centuries.
The Portuguese Boni Homines were founded by John de Vicenza in the fifteenth century.
They had charge of all the royal hospitals in Portugal and sent missionaries to India and Ethiopia.