Woman under Monasticism / Chapters on Saint-Lore and Convent Life between A.D. 500 and A.D. 1500
London: C. J. CLAY AND SONS, CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS WAREHOUSE AVE MARIA LANE. Glasgow: 263, ARGYLE STREET.
Leipzig: F. A. BROCKHAUS. New York: MACMILLAN AND CO.
WOMAN UNDER MONASTICISM
CHAPTERS ON SAINT-LORE AND CONVENT LIFE BETWEEN A.D. 500 AND A.D. 1500
BY LINA ECKENSTEIN.
CAMBRIDGE: AT THE UNIVERSITY PRESS. 1896
Cambridge: PRINTED BY J. & C. F. CLAY, AT THE UNIVERSITY PRESS.
TO MY FRIENDS KARL AND MARIA SHARPE PEARSON.
The restlessness, peculiar to periods of transition, is a characteristic of the present age. Long-accepted standards are being questioned and hitherto unchallenged rules of conduct submitted to searching criticism. History shows us that our present social system is only a phase in human development, and we turn to a study of the past, confident that a clearer insight into the social standards and habits of life prevalent in past ages will aid us in a better estimation of the relative importance of those factors of change we find around us to-day.
Monasticism during the ten centuries between A.D. 500 and A.D. 1500 exhibits phases of vital significance for the mental and moral growth of Western Europe. However much both the aims and the tone of life of the members of the different religious orders varied, monasticism generally favoured tendencies which were among the most peaceful and progressive of the Middle Ages. For women especially the convent fostered some of the best sides of intellectual, moral and emotional life. Besides this it was for several centuries a determining factor in regard to women’s economic status.
The woman-saint and the nun are however figures the importance of which has hitherto been little regarded. The woman-saint has met with scant treatment beyond that of the eulogistic but too often uncritical writer of devotional works; the lady abbess and the literary nun have engrossed the attention of few biographers. The partisan recriminations of the Reformation period are still widely prevalent. The saint is thrust aside as a representative of gross superstition, and the nun is looked upon as a slothful and hysterical, if not as a dissolute character. She is still thought of as those who broke with the Catholic Church chose to depict her.
Lina Eckenstein
WOMAN UNDER MONASTICISM.
PREFACE.
CONTENTS.
ERRATA.
§ 1. The Borderland of Heathendom and Christianity.
§ 2. The Tribal Goddess as a Christian Saint.
§ 3. Further Peculiarities of this Type of Saint.
§ 2. St Radegund and the Nunnery at Poitiers.
§ 1. Early Houses in Kent.
§ 3. Ely and the influence of Bishop Wilfrith.
§ 4. Houses in Mercia and in the South.
§ 1. The Women corresponding with Boniface.
§ 2. Anglo-Saxon Nuns abroad.
§ 1. Women’s Convents in Saxony.
§ 1. The new Monastic Orders.
§ 2. Benedictine Convents in the Twelfth Century.
§ 1. Art Industries generally.
§ 2. Herrad and the ‘Garden of Delights.’
§ 2. Women-Saints connected with Charity and Philanthropy.
§ 1. Mystic writings for women in England.
§ 1. The External Relations of the Convent.
§ 2. The Internal Arrangements of the Convent.
§ 1. Visitations of Nunneries in England.
§ 2. Reforms in Germany.
§ 1. The Dissolution in England.
§ 2. The Memoir of Charitas Pirckheimer.