| PAGE |
CHAPTER I. THE NOVICE |
Situation, income and size of the English nunneries | 1 |
Nuns drawn from (1) the nobles and gentry | 4 |
(2) the middle class | 9 |
Nunneries in medieval wills | 14 |
The dowry system | 16 |
Motives for taking the veil: |
(1) | a career and a vocation for girls | 25 |
(2) | a ‘dumping ground’ for political prisoners | 29 |
(3) | for illegitimate, deformed or half-witted girls | 30 |
(4) | nuns forced unwillingly to profess by their relations | 33 |
(5) | a refuge for widows and occasionally for wives | 38 |
|
CHAPTER II. THE HEAD OF THE HOUSE |
Superiors usually women of social standing | 42 |
Elections and election disputes | 43 |
Resignations | 56 |
Special temptations of a superior: |
(1) | excessive independence and comfort | 59 |
(2) | autocratic government | 64 |
(3) | favouritism | 66 |
The superior a great lady in the country side | 68 |
Journeys | 69 |
Luxurious clothes and entertainments | 73 |
Picture of heads of houses in Bishop Alnwick’s Lincoln visitations (1436-49) | 80 |
Wicked prioresses | 82 |
Good prioresses | 89 |
General conclusion: Chaucer’s picture borne out by the records | 94 |
|
CHAPTER III. WORLDLY GOODS |
Evidence as to monastic property in |
(1) | the Valor Ecclesiasticus | 96 |
(2) | monastic account rolls | 97 |
Variation of size and income among houses | 98 |
Methods of administration of estates | 99 |
Sources of income: |
(1) | rents from land and houses | 100 |
(2) | manorial perquisites and grants | 103 |
(3) | issues of the manor | 109 |
(4) | miscellaneous payments | 112 |
(5) | spiritualities | 113 |
Expenses | 117 |
(1) | internal expenses of the convent | 119 |
(2) | divers expenses | 123 |
(3) | repairs | 123 |
(4) | the home farm | 125 |
(5) | the wages sheet | 129 |
|
CHAPTER IV. MONASTIC HOUSEWIVES |
The obedientiaries | 131 |
Allocation of income and obedientiaries’ accounts | 134 |
Chambresses’ accounts (clothes) | 137 |
Cellaresses’ accounts (food) | 137 |
Servants | 143 |
(1) | chaplain | 144 |
(2) | administrative officials | 146 |
(3) | household staff | 150 |
(4) | farm labourers | 150 |
Nunnery households | 151 |
Relations between nuns and servants | 154 |
Occasional hired labour | 157 |
Villages occasionally dependent upon nunneries for work | 158 |
|
CHAPTER V. FINANCIAL DIFFICULTIES |
Poverty of nunneries | 161 |
(1) | prevalence of debt | 162 |
(2) | insufficient food and clothing | 164 |
(3) | ruinous buildings | 168 |
(4) | nuns begging alms | 172 |
Reasons for poverty: |
(1) | natural disasters | 176 |
(2) | ecclesiastical exactions and royal taxes | 183 |
(3) | feudal and other services | 185 |
(4) | right of patrons to take temporalities during voidance | 186 |
(5) | right of bishop and king to nominate nuns on certain occasions | 188 |
(6) | pensions, corrodies, grants and liveries | 194 |
(7) | hospitality | 200 |
(8) | litigation | 201 |
(9) | bad management | 203 |
(10) | extravagance | 211 |
(11) | overcrowding with nuns | 212 |
Methods adopted by bishops to remedy financial distress: |
(1) | devices to safeguard expenditure by the head of the house | 217 |
(2) | episcopal licence required for business transactions | 225 |
(3) | appointment of a custos | 228 |
|
CHAPTER VI. EDUCATION |
The education of the nuns: |
Learning of Anglo-Saxon nuns, and of German nuns at a later date | 237 |
Little learning in English nunneries during the later middle ages | 238 |
Nunnery libraries and nuns’ books | 240 |
Education of nuns | 244 |
Latin in nunneries | 246 |
Translations for the use of nuns | 251 |
Needlework | 255 |
Simple forms of medicine | 258 |
Nunneries as schools for children: |
The education of novices | 260 |
The education of secular children | 261 |
Boys | 263 |
Limitations: |
(1) | not all nunneries took children | 264 |
(2) | only gentlefolk taken | 265 |
(3) | disapproval and restriction of nunnery schools by the ecclesiastical authorities | 270 |
What did the nuns teach? | 274 |
Life of school children in nunneries | 279 |
‘Piety and breeding’ | 281 |
|
CHAPTER VII. ROUTINE AND REACTION |
Division of the day by the Benedictine Rule | 285 |
The Benedictine combination of prayer, study and labour breaks down | 288 |
Dead routine | 289 |
The reaction from routine | 290 |
(1) | carelessness in singing the services | 291 |
(2) | accidia | 293 |
(3) | quarrels | 297 |
(4) | gay clothes | 303 |
(5) | pet animals | 305 |
(6) | dancing, minstrels and merry-making | 309 |
|
CHAPTER VIII. PRIVATE LIFE AND PRIVATE PROPERTY |
The monastic obligation to (1) communal life, (2) personal poverty | 315 |
The breakdown of communal life: division into familiae with private rooms | 316 |
The breakdown of personal poverty | 322 |
(1) | the annual peculium | 323 |
(2) | money pittances | 323 |
(3) | gifts in money and kind | 324 |
(4) | legacies | 325 |
(5) | proceeds of a nun’s own labour | 330 |
Private life and private property in the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries | 331 |
Attitude of ecclesiastical authorities | 336 |
|
CHAPTER IX. FISH OUT OF WATER |
Enclosure in the Benedictine Rule | 341 |
The movement for the enclosure of nuns | 343 |
The Bull Periculoso | 344 |
Attempts to enforce enclosure in England | 346 |
Attempts to regulate and restrict the emergence of nuns from their houses | 353 |
The usual pretexts for breaking enclosure: |
(1) | illness | 361 |
(2) | to enter a stricter rule | 363 |
(3) | convent business | 367 |
(4) | ceremonies, processions, funerals | 368 |
(5) | pilgrimages | 371 |
(6) | visits to friends | 376 |
(7) | short walks, field work | 381 |
The nuns wander freely about in the world | 385 |
Conclusion | 391 |
|
CHAPTER X. THE WORLD IN THE CLOISTER |
Visitors in the cloister are another side of the enclosure problem | 394 |
The scholars of Oxford and Cambridge and the neighbouring nunneries | 395 |
Regulations to govern the entrance of seculars into nunneries: |
(1) | certain persons not to be admitted | 401 |
(2) | certain parts of the house and certain hours forbidden | 402 |
(3) | unsuccessful attempts to regulate the reception of boarders | 409 |
The nuns and political movements | 419 |
Robbery and violence | 422 |
Border raids in Durham and Yorkshire | 425 |
The strange tale of Sir John Arundel’s outrage on a nunnery | 429 |
The sack of Origny in Raoul de Cambrai | 432 |
|
CHAPTER XI. THE OLDE DAUNCE |
Nuns and the celibate ideal | 436 |
Sources of evidence for the moral state of the English nunneries | 439 |
Apostate nuns | 440 |
Nuns’ lovers |
LIST OF PLATES PLATE | I | Page from La Sainte Abbaye | FRONTISPIECE | | (Brit. Mus. MS. Add. 39843. Folio 6vº.) | | TO FACE PAGE | II | Abbess receiving the pastoral staff from a bishop | 44 | | (From The Metz Pontifical, 82(b)vº and 90vº, in the Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge.) | III | Page from La Sainte Abbaye | 144 | | (Folio 29.) | IV | Brass of Ela Buttry, the stingy Prioress of Campsey († 1546), in St Stephen’s Church, Norwich | 168 | | (From Norfolk Archaeology, Vol. VI; Norf. and Norwich Archaeol. Soc. 1864.) | V | Page from La Sainte Abbaye | 260 | | (Folio 1vº.) | VI | Dominican nuns in quire | 286 | | (From Brit. Mus. Cott. MSS. Dom. A XII f.) | VII | The nun who loved the world | 388 | | (From Queen Mary’s Psalter, Brit. Mus. Royal MS. 2 B. VII.) | VIII | Plan of Lacock Abbey | 403 | | (From Archaeologia, LVII, by permission of the Society of Antiquaries and Mr Harold Brakspear.) | | | MAP | | Map showing the English Nunneries in the later middle ages | AT END |
MEDIEVAL ENGLISH NUNNERIES
|