AUTHOR'S PREFACE

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The monastic ideal and the development of the monastic rule and orders have been studied in many admirable books. The purpose of the present work is not to describe and analyse once again that ideal, but to give a general picture of English nunnery life during a definite period, the three centuries before the Dissolution. It is derived entirely from pre-Reformation sources, and the tainted evidence of Henry VIII’s commissioners has not been used; nor has the story of the suppression of the English nunneries been told. The nunneries dealt with are drawn from all the monastic orders, except the Gilbertine order, which has been omitted, both because it differed from others in containing double houses of men and women and because it has already been the subject of an excellent monograph by Miss Rose Graham.

It remains for me to record my deep gratitude to two scholars, in whose debt students of medieval monastic history must always lie, Mr G. G. Coulton and Mr A. Hamilton Thompson. I owe more than I can say to their unfailing interest and readiness to discuss, to help and to criticise. To Mr Hamilton Thompson I am specially indebted for the loan of his transcripts and translations of Alnwick’s Register, now in course of publication, for reading and criticising my manuscript and finally for undertaking the arduous work of reading my proofs. I gratefully acknowledge suggestions received at different times from Mr Hubert Hall, Miss Rose Graham and Canon Foster, and faithful criticism from my friend Miss M. G. Jones. I have also to thank Mr H. S. Bennett for kindly preparing the index, and Mr Sydney Cockerell, Director of the Fitzwilliam Museum, for assistance in the choice of illustrations.

EILEEN POWER.

Girton College,
Cambridge.

September 1922


CONTENTS

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

                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                           

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