[1041] Erasmus, Colloquies, transl. Bailey, edit. Johnson, 1878, ‘The Virgin averse to Matrimony,’ vol. 1, p. 225.
[1042] Erasmus, Colloquies, ‘The Penitent Virgin,’ vol. 1, p. 237.
[1043] Ibid. ‘The Uneasy Wife,’ vol. 1, p. 241.
[1044] Ibid. ‘The Young Man and Harlot,’ vol. 1, p. 291.
[1045] Ibid. ‘The Lying-in Woman,’ vol. 1, p. 441.
[1046] Erasmus, Colloquies, ‘The Assembly or Parliament of Women,’ vol. 2, p. 203.
[1047] Dugdale, Monasticon, ‘St Radegund’s,’ vol. 4, p. 215, charter nr 3.
[1048] Gasquet, F. A., Henry VIII and the English Monasteries, 1888, vol. 1, p. 62.
[1049] At a meeting of the Cambridge Antiquarian Society (reported in the Academy, Feb. 23, 1895), Mr T. D. Atkinson read a paper on ‘The Conventual Buildings of the priory of St Radegund,’ illustrated by a plan showing such of the college buildings as were probably monastic, and also the position of some foundations discovered in the previous summer. According to this paper the present cloister occupies the same position as that of the nuns, and the conventual church was converted into a college chapel by Alcock. The college hall which is upstairs is the old refectory, the rooms below being very likely used as butteries, as they still are. The present kitchen is probably on the site of the old monastic kitchen, and very likely the rooms originally assigned to the Master are those which had been occupied by the prioress. Further details of arrangement were given about the dormitory, the chapter house, the calefactory and common-room, etc., from which we gather that the men who occupied the nunnery buildings, put these to much the same uses as they had served before.
[1050] Fiddes, ‘Life of Card. Wolsey,’ 1726, Collect., p. 100.