(go
to HistoryfishHome)
|
Download Chapter Ten
as PDF. Chapter Eight
(2,792 KB)
Public Domain text
transcribed
and prepared "as is" for HTML and PDF
by Richenda Fairhurst, historyfish.net. February 2008. No commercial permissions granted. Text may contain errors. (Report errors to ) |
No account of English monastic
life would be complete
without some special reference to the nuns and nunneries.It is, it may
be first observed in passing,
altogether wrong to apply the word “convent” exclusively to houses of
nuns, as is so frequently done in these days. The title “convent” as
well as that of “monastery” and “abbey” was applicable to any house of
either monks or nuns, and the exclusive use of the word
for a religious house of women is, indeed, of quite modern origin.
It is fortunate that our information in regard to the inner life of the nuns in pre-Reformation England is so scanty.Beyond the delightful picture we get of the social life of the nuns of Kington in Old Jacques’ recollections, as recorded by John Aubrey, and the charming portrait of the prioress who “Was
so charitable and so pitous. . .
and al was conscience and tender herte,” in Chaucer’s tales, there is
but little information to be obtained
about the nuns of England
; of the simple, hard, yet happy lives they led in their cloistered
homes, and
of the ample charity they dispensed to all in their immediate
neighborhood.
--154-- [Illustration:Elizabeth Harvey Abbess of Elstow] [Download 745 KB jpg.] --page not numbered-- --blank page not numbered-- Of course, so far as the usual
forms, manners, and customs of cloister
life are concerned,
what has been already said of the monastic method of life generally,
applies to nuns, with certain necessary reservations, as well as to
monks and canons. It will be useful, however,
to furnish the reader with some account of certain special features of
female religious
life.One of the most charming medieval picture of that life is given in
an account of the abbesses of the
Benedictine nunnery of Wherwell,in Hampshire. It records the
unblemished life and good deeds of the abbess Euphemia, who ruled the
house from A.D. 1226 to
1257, and is translated from the chartulary of the abbey by the Rev. C.
Cox in the
second volume of the Victoria History of the County of
Hampshire.The account is
too delightful not to be given in full.
“On the 6th day of
the
Kalends of May, in the year of grace 1257, died the blessed mother
abbess, Euphemia, most worthy to be remembered, who,
by our affection and good fellowship, and with divine sanction,
succeeded the late abbess Maud of sweet memory. It is,therefore, most
fitting that we should always perpetuate the memory, in
our special prayers and suffrages, of one who ever worked for the glory
of God, and for the
weal of both our souls and bodies. For she increased the number of the
lord’s handmaids in this monastery from forty to eighty, to the
exaltation of the worship of God. To her sisters, both in health and
sickness, she administered the necessaries of life with piety,
prudence, care, and
honesty. She also increased the sum allowed for garments by 12d. each. The example of her holy conversation and
charity, in conjunction with her pious exhortations and regular
discipline, cause each one to know how, in the words of the Apostle, to
possess her vessel
in sanctification and honour.She also, with maternal piety and careful
forethought, built, for the use of both sick and sound, a new and large
infirmary away from
the main buildings, and in
conjunction with it a dormitory with the
necessary offices.Beneath the infirmary she constructed a watercourse,
through which a stream flowed with sufficient force to
carry of all refuse that might corrupt the air.
“Moreover she built there a
place set apart for the refreshment of the
soul,namely a chapel of the Blessed Virgin, which was erected outside
the cloister behind the infirmary.With the chapel she enclosed
a large space, which was adorned on the north side with pleasant vines
and trees.On the other side, by the river-bank, she built offices for
various uses, a space being left in the centre where the nuns are able
from time to time to enjoy the pure air.In these and in other
numberless ways, the blessed mother Euphemia provided for the worship
of God and the welfare of the sisters.But notwithstanding all this, she
also conducted herself with regard to exterior affairs, that she seemed
to have the spirit of a man rather than of a woman. The court of the
abbey-manor, owing to the useless mass of squalid outbuildings, and the
propinquity of the kitchen to the granary and old hall, was in much
danger of fire ; whilst the confined area and the amount of animal
refuse was a cause of offence to both the feet and nostrils of those
who had occasion to pass through. The mother Euphemia, realizing that
the Lord had called her to the rule of the abbey at Wherwell, not that
she might live there at ease, but that she might, with due
care and dispatch, uproot and destroy and dissipate all that was
noxious, and establish and erect that which would be useful, demolished
the whole of these buildings, leveled the court, and erected a new hall
of
suitable size and height.She also built a new mill, some distance from
the hall, and constructed it with great care in order that more work
than formerly might be done therein for the service of the house. She
surrounded the court with a wall and the necessary buildings, and round
it she made gardens and vineyards and shrubberies
in places that were formerly useless and barren, and which now became
both serviceable and pleasant.The
manor-house of Middleton, which occupied a dry situation and
was close to a public
thoroughfare, and was further disfigured by old
and crumbling buildings, she moved to
another site, where she erected permanent buildings, new and strong, on
the bank of the river, together with farmhouses. She also set to work
in the same way at Tufton, in order that the buildings of both
the manor-houses in that neighbourhood might be of greater service, and
safer against the danger of fire. These and other innumerable works,
our good superior Euphemia performed for the advantage of the house,
but she was none the less zealous in the works of charity, gladly and
freely exercising hospitality, so that she and her daughters might find
favour with One Whom Lot and Abraham and others have pleased by the
grace of hospitality. Moreover, because she greatly loved to honour
duly the House of God and the place where His glory dwells, she adorned
the church with crosses, reliquaries, precious stones, vestments, and
books. And because the bell-tower above the dormitory fell down through
decay one night, about the hour of Matins, when by an obvious miracle
from heaven, though the nuns were at that moment in the dormitory, some
in bed and some in prayer before their beds, all escaped not only death
but even any bodily injury, she caused another bell-tower of worked
stone to be erected, conformable to the fair appearance of the church
and the rest of the buildings, of commanding height, and of exquisite
workmanship. But as she advanced in years, towards the end of her life,
there was imminent danger of the complete collapse of the
presbytery of the church ; by the advice of skilled builders, she
caused the presbytery to be taken down to the last stone of the
foundations ; and because the ground was found to be undermined and
unsafe, she caused the damp soil to be dug out to a depth of twelve
feet till firm and dry ground was found ; when, having invoked the
grace of the Holy Spirit, with prayers and tears she laid with her own
hands the first stone of the foundations. Moreover she rejoiced to have
found favour with God, so that before her last days were ended she saw
this work that she had begun brought to its desired end. Thus she, who
had devoted herself when amongst us to the service of His house and the
--157-- habitation for His glory, found
the due reward for her merits with our
Lord Jesus Christ, though the
prayers and merits of the Blessed Virgin Mary and of the blessed
apostles SS. Peter and Paul, in whose honour, at the instigation of the
abbess Euphemia, this church was dedicated, who with the Father and the
Holy Ghost, ever liveth and reigneth God through all the ages of
eternity. Amen.”
Of the life, social and religious, led by the nuns of England, something may be learnt from the few scattered account-books that have survived the general destruction of documents in the sixteenth century. The following sketch is founded upon one such paper-book of accounts now in the public Record Office. It was printed privately some few years ago, and is here reproduced as affording, in the judgment of some, a not uninteresting glimpse into the cloister life and work led in the nunneries in the early days of the fifteenth century.The accounts were kept in a small book by a nun called Dame Petronilla. Her family name (of was it that of her birthplace?) was Dunwich, and in keeping her accounts she had as assistant and auditor another nun, Dame Katherine Midleton. Their convent was Grace Dieu in Leicestershire – the only religious house of Augustinian nuns in England.The scanty but picturesque ruins of their old convent may still be see not far from the present Cistercian Abbey of Mount St. Bernard, and quite near to Grace Dieu Manor-house, the home of Ambrose Phillipps de Lisle. The convent was founded in Charnwood Forest by Lady Rohesia de Verdon in the middle of the thirteenth century, and it is said that the boundary of the garden, made by th sisters to resemble that of Gethsemane, may yet be traced with a little trouble. Wordsworth wrote several --158-- [Illustration: Benedictine Nuns in Choir.] [Download 1,559 jpg] --page not numbered-- --blank page not numbered-- of his poems in the immediate
neighbourhood, and thus describes the
situation of the old nunnery as seen, or rather not
seen, from Cole Orton some few miles away:—
“Beneath yon eastern ridge, the
craggy bound
Rugged and high of Charnwood’s forest ground Stand yet, but, stranger, hidden from thy view, The ivied ruins of forlorn Grace Dieu.” Our guide-books, of course,
ascribe the destruction of the convent in
1539 to the fact of serious complaints having been made of certain
irregularities on the part of the inmates. Most people nowadays know
how to estimate these “complaints” at their right value, proceeding as
they did from the Visitors of Henry VIII., who having been sent for the
purpose of finding evidence of irregularities to justify the intended
spoliation, of course found them.In the special case of this convent of
Grace Dieu we have subsequently the direct testimony of the country
gentlemen of Leicestershire, that the fifteen nuns following the rule
of St. Austin then inmates of the establishment, and whose good name
had been so vilely traduced by the king’s emissaries, were all “of good
and virtuous conversation and living,” and that
their presence in the wilds of Charwood Forest was a blessing to the
neighourhood.
We are, however, concerned with
the convent of Grace Dieu in much
earlier days : very nearly a century and a half before its final
destruction in 1539.Dame Petronilla and Dame Katherine kept their
accounts of the establishment in this old paper-book “from the Feast of
the Purification of the Blessed Virgin Mary, in the first year of King
Henry V.,” for four years : that is, from 1414 to 1418.
The volume in question, though simple
--159-- enough in its style of
book-keeping, presents in reality the general
accounts of the house. Probably
Dame Petronilla would have opened her eyes very wide indeed at the
present system of elaborate checks and counter-checks devised to
exercise the brains and possibly the patience of modern cellarers, and
“double entry” and such-like mysteries would probably have seemed to
her a useless expenditure of
time and nerve-power, and hardly consistent with the religious
simplicity which ascetic writers had taught her to cultivate. Her style
is simplicity itself : so much received for such a thing, ordinary or
extraordinary : so much spent, and on what ; that is all.
In one point, however, this
careful nun does not hesitate to take a
considerable amount of trouble. What would a cellarer say to-day, where
he or she asked to give the ages of all the livestock under their
care! Dame Petronilla would have been quite able to do so at any
moment, for from time to time she enters,
not indeed the birthdays of the cattle and pigs, but their ages.In
1415, for example, which by the way was
the ever-memorable year of Agincourt, this is her “tally” ; of all the
pigs in the keeping of the herd,
Nicholas Swon (or should it be Swine?)
“5 boars, i.e.—two aged three years, two aged two, and one aged one ; ten sows, i.e.—nine at three years, and one aged one ; forty-one small pigs of a year, and thirty of six months old ; ten full grown pigs, and ten porcelli lactantes sub matribus of suckling pigs.” Pork, it is clear, must have
been one of the chief articles of food for
the nuns and their retainers, since there are frequent notices of pigs
transferred from the farm to the larder ; on two occasions during
the four
--160-- years, Dame Petronilla
chronicles the death of a good many of the
convent pigs from disease. Their
stock of cattle appears somewhat large at first sight, till it is
realized that with one thing and another there were a good many mouths
to feed in this establishment. Thus in one year we find a list of 32
cows,
“three of which had not calved ; three bulls, 16 steers, 22 heifers and
eight bull calves.” Besides this there were 27 yoke-oxen under the care
of their driver, and 29 calves, one of which on the account-day is
noted as having, since the making of the list, gone to the cook to
furnish forth the conventual
dinner.At this same time Henry Smyth, the outdoor bailiff, gives in the
account of Henry, the shepherd, which shows that that he had 103 ewes
and 52 lambs under his pastoral charge.
The revenue of the convent consisted chiefly of the rent of lands and buildings and the sale of produce, timber, and such-like.Thus we have the rent of a farm at Belton put down as £21 17s. 9d., this being the largest item in the receipts, and indeed a very large item in those days from any farm rent. Form another parcel of land, besides the rent, one year Dame Petronilla and her assistant, Dame Katherine Midleton, account for the price of sixteen quarters of lime at 9¾d. the quarter. Roger Dan, the miller, pays a rent of £5 13s. 4d. for the mill at Belton, and at the same time there is another receipt for “half a hundred merkefish and twelve stone of cheese.” Besides these and other similar sums which are entered under the heading of “ordinary,” we find such “extraordinary” receipts as £3 for twenty-four ash trees, and a few shillings for the skins of lambs that had been used in the kitchen. Another year we see that 100 kids were --161-- sold at 2s.
each, and that there was a sale of hurdles
and faggots about Shrovetide. Thirty stone of wool was purchased at one
time by one Thomas Hunte, a neighbour, who, by the way, had his two
daughters evidently at school in the convent ; once there was a sale of
fish from
the mill down at Belton, and it brought into the nuns exchequer over £6.
The mention of Thomas Hunte’s daughters may be supplemented by evidence in these accounts of other children being under the care of the “White Ladies” of Grace Dieu. Thomas Hunte appears to have paid at the rate of 17s. 4d. for each of his two children, but as it is expressly stated that it was for their food only, probably their education was thrown in without consideration. Lady Beaumont also had a daughter in the convent, for whom she and her lord undertook to pay £2 13s. 4d. a year ; but when Dame Petronilla last made up her accounts, or rather in the last account we have from her pen, the good nuns got only £2. Lord Beaumont, however, was evidently too great a personage to be reminded of the missing 13s. 4d., and the convent authorities evidently desired to stand well in his favour. They fed him well, for instance, when he came to see his child ; for on one occasion Dame Petronilla gives some of the expenses of his entertainment. These included, besides 1½d. for “1 shoulder le molton,” and 8d. for two lambs, an almost unique payment of two fowls for the nobleman’s table. This slight glimpse of the relations between the convent and the neighbouring gentry, in regard to the education of their children, affords a corroboration of one of the laments made at the general dissolution, that their destruction was a terrible thing for those who had hitherto made --162-- use of them of this
purpose.According to Robert Aske, the leader of the
Pilgrimage of Grace, one of
the reasons why the Yorkshire people strongly resented their overthrow,
was because “in nunneries their daughters were brought up in virtue.”
Another practice revealed by these old accounts was that of people coming to stop at the convent for the celebration of some of the greater feasts. Thus for one “All Saints’ Day,” Mary de Ecton, Joan Villiers, and the two daughters of Robert Neville were lodged and entertained by the nuns. These visitors eventually made and offering for the hospitality shown them ; as, for instance, on this very occasion each of the Neville ladies paid 5s. and Joan Villiers 6s. 8d. The last-named lady was at Grace Dieu no less than four several times in the year 1418, and each time left behind a similar offering. At another time Giles Jurdon paid 7s. for the board of his daughter during the week of Pentecost, when she probably came to visit her sister, who, known as Dame Elizabeth, was a nun in the convent. Roger Roby also, who was apparently the father of Dame Alice, was entertained by the nuns twice in the year 1416, and gave an alms of 6s. 8d. at one visit and 13s. 4d. at the other. It may be of interest to give a list of the nuns at this time living in Grace Dieu. They were fourteen in number, exclusive of the prioress, and their names were:— Dame
Margaret Kempston, prioress.
Dame Alice Mortimer, sub-prioress. Dame Margaret Twyford. Dame Philippa Jake. Dame Alice Dunwhich. Dame Katherine Midleton. --163-- Dame Anne de Norton.
Dame Alice Roby. Dame Margery Witham. Dame Katherine Pounce. Dame Alice Prestwold. Dame Elizabeth Jurdon (originally put 3rd). Dame Petronilla Dunwich (originally put 5th). Dame Elizabeth Hakulthorp. Dame Alice Powtrell or Pouncstrell The spiritual needs of this
community were, of course, ministered to by
a chaplain. He is
generally called “Sir William,” but on one occasion he appears as “Sir
William Granger, or [of?] Norwich.” He was paid 38s. 4d. a year as his stipend, and this was to include 6d. as the price of a pair of gloves. On certain
occasions, as on greater feasts, Sir William had other clerical help,
such as that of “Henry the Chaplain,” and the “Parson of Hatherun.” It
is not uninteresting to notice that the nuns’ little present for the
services of these reverend gentlemen was, it would seem, delicately
handed to them in purses purchased for the purpose.They had also the
ministration of an “extraordinary” confessor, a certain Friar William
Young, and to him was given 1s. 8d. for
the expenses of his journey each time he came to the convent. Something
additional was, of course, bestowed on him when, as in 1418, he
remained to help in the Holy-Week services. At times, not very
frequently, “my Lady,” the prioress, entertained the clergy at a little
simple banquet ; she did not merely provide for them, for that, of
course, the convent always did with true
hospitality ; but she dined with them. Dame Petronilla does not say,
when they “dined with my Lady,” but
--164-- when “my Lady dined with them,”
as, for example, when she notes on the
Sunday within the octave of our Lady’s Assumption in the year 1416:“a
sucking-pig for the table of my Lady, because to-day she dined with the
Vicar.”
It may be mentioned that Dame Petronilla and her assistant Dame Katherine made up their accounts from Sunday to Sunday, as far as expenses are concerned, so that in running through the pages it is possible to form some idea of how these good medieval nuns lived.I do not think that the most captious critic could charge them with feasting on the “fat of the land,” or with much indulgence in the luxuries even of those primitive days.There is one peculiarity, however, in these otherwise excellent accounts, which rather interferes with a full knowledge of the commissariat at Grace Dieu. The sisters did not think it necessary to enter among the payments the value of the farm and garden produce they consumed, beyond the cost of sowing and gathering into their barns. However, we know that they must have eaten bread and made use of the exceedingly few vegetables and pot-herbs that were then grown in the gardens of England, so we may take these as additional to the “food stuffs” shown in the accounts as paid for. A few examples will be sufficient to give the reader an insight into the general catering at Grace Dieu early in the fifteenth century. These are the first entries among the expenses written by Dame Petronilla when she commenced her duties as “Treasurer,” as she calls herself in one place, after the Feast of the Purification, 1414. “For two Sundays after the Purification purchased two small pigs price 6d. For house food during the time of Lent, £3 6s. 8d. --165--For seventy hard dried fish for the same time, 11s. 6d.A calf bought for the convent for Quinquagesima Sunday (Shrovetide) 9d. Four small pigs for the same day, 9d. Beef brought for the same day, 20d. Mustard bought at Ashby, 1d. Cheese bought on Friday in Sexagesima week, 5d.Thomas Fene for 2 quarters of red-herrings for Lent, 12d. Nicholas Swon (the swineherd, as the reader my remember), 2d. for catching two small pike at the sluice.” The Lenten arrangements for
feeding the natural man and woman from Ash
Wednesday to Easter Sunday in those hardy and robust days are,
even to think of, enough to turn our refined and educated stomachs.
Eggs, to a certain limited extend, no doubt
there good religious had ; although, on the principle before explained,
we do not find them mentioned, except as included in their natural
producer, the
domestic hen. But beyond this, during all this penitential time, the
staple food, here as everywhere throughout
--166-- to the time-honoured Easter-day
joke of “the devil on horseback,” or a
split red-herring riding as a jockey on the back of a duck, perpetrated
by the convent cook.
Lent, however, is naturally not a fair sample of the food supplied to the Grace Dieu nuns, so let us take the page of expenses for Easter week.Here it is:— “A stall-fed ox, 16s.1 pig from the farm.3 small pigs, price 14d.1 calf, price 2s. Almonds and rais (raisins), 12d., and for Friday 150 fresh herrings and a stockfish (i.e.cod), 2s.” The almonds and raisins were a
great luxury to the good sisters, and
only on a few other occasions during the four years of Dame
Petronilla’s housekeeping does this extraordinary expense
occur! We cannot help thinking, too, with what pleasure the nuns must
have welcomed the change of fish diet on
the Friday in Easter week. Two shillings was in those days a great sum
to pay for any article of food, but the fresh sea fish must have been
scarce enough in Charnwood Forest before the days of railroads. “White
herring fresh, if it be seaward and newly caught, with the roe white
and tender,” says an old authority,
“is toothsome food” ; and the Book of Nurture tells
“the cook” how best to prepare it for this master’s eating.
“The white herring by the bak a
brode ye splat him sure,
Both roe and bones voided, then may your lord endure to eat merily with mustard.” We need not linger further over
the food supplied to the sisters.One
week was very much like another, and the
changes were few and far between.It is not often that the accounts show
such expenses as “paid to the wife of
James the miller for Twelve Chickens for the table, 12d.”
–spring chickens, too, they must have been for they were
--167-- eaten on Low Sunday.One All
Saints’ Day, by the way, the nuns had four
geese, for which the price
paid was 3d. each ; and one Christmas Day their table
was supplied from the farm with nine fowls, and we are told they had
seven at their dinner, the other two being reserved to furnish
forth their suppers.Pork, beef, veal, and fish : these were the
ordinary dishes supplied. Mutton,
curiously, though not altogether rare, does not appear very frequently
in their menu, and lamb is named as a dish at only one of my lady
prioress’s little banquets ; although the receipt for “lamb-skins sold
from the
kitchen” shows that it was not altogether unknown to the common table.
Probably these nuns were “good housewives” in the best sense, and
preferred to get all they could out of their flocks in the
shape of wool, etc., rather than eat tender, but tasteless and immature
mutton.
It should be remembered that in
the commissariat of Grace Dieu was
evidently included the
feeding of the retainers of the convent, as well as that of the
nuns.These domestics were many, and were fed
certainly as well, and sometimes apparently better than were the ladies
themselves.The names of two-and-twenty
men-servants and eight women who were retainers of the convent, and
their wages, or “rewards” as they were called, are preserved in the
account book. They vary very considerably, from 25s.
8d. paid to one Henry Smith, to 2s. 6d. bestowed on “Hirdeman” ; and among
the women the difference ranges from 22s 6d.
paid to Isabel Botelor, to 1s. 8d. to
Matilda Gerrard.Henry Smith, named above, seems to have been a sort of
factotum, a real treasure and excellent servant. He is called bailiff
in one place, and was no doubt of a higher standing than most
--168-- of the others.Whatever there
was to be done, inside or outside the
house, it is evident that no one but Henry Smith could see to it
properly.
Besides their wages, these
retainers of the Augustinian dames had their
cottages and clothes looked to for them by the convent bursar. Thus
before the autumn work of cleaning the land and sowing the winter corn
commences, we find a report of “twenty-four pairs of shoes” given out,
which are charged to the convent account at 2s.
8½d.—not the pair, but the dozen. This sum would
appear, perhaps, ridiculous small, even for those days, had we not some
reason to thing that the leather for making them was provided to the
local cobbler from the convent store ; for on one occasion Dame
Petronilla notes that she paid 8d. for tanning (pro albacione) the skin of a horse,
bought of Robert Harston. Another present from the nuns to their
workpeople in view of these autumn
works, the cost of which appears in these accounts, was a pair of
gloves to each of the thirty men and women about to be engaged in the
weeding and ditching and hedging ; as for their clothes, these were all
made on the premises from the raw material. This on one year we read :—
“Paid for the
spinning of --169-- farm, and in the laundry, the kitchen, and the bakehouse, etc. Curiously, as it seems to us
perhaps now, each of the nuns had a
maximum allowance of 6s. 8d.
a year for clothes.It taught them, nodoubt to look after the articles
of their dress with care and thrift,
better than if the white woollen tunic, scapular and veil, woven from
the produce of their own flock of sheep, and the still whiter linen
wimple spun from
the flax and made into good sound cloth by their own hands, or at least
under their own
direction, were to appear to drop from the hand of Providence without
reference to cost. One or two curious entries seem
to show that friends sometimes gave the annual sum allowed for the
clothing of some of the nuns. Thus one year William
Roby paid “for the clothes of his relation, Dame Agnes Roby” ; and at
another time Margaret Roby brought the 6s. 8d.
for the same purpose when she came on a visit. One interesting item of
knowledge about the work of the nuns is conveyed in a brief entry of
receipt. It is clear that these ladies were good needlewomen, and their
work must have been exceptionally
excellent, seeing that a cope was purchased from them by a neighbouring
rector for £10.
The indication that these
accounts give us of the farming operations of
the Grace Dieu nuns is sufficient
to make us wish that Dame Petronilla had been a little more explicit ;
still we are grateful for what we learn about the crops, and their
sowing, and
weeding, and gathering, the stacking of the wheat, the oats, and peas,
and the threshing out
of the grain.Thus the wages of Adam Baxter and his wife, and the wife
of Robert Hartston for weeding thirty
acres of barley are set down. Each of these, by the way,
--170-- had a pair of gloves given them
before they were set to the task, and
the entire work cost the convent 10s. 3d.
Three men beyond the usual farm staff were ordinarily employed in
cutting the grass, and in making and stacking the hay. In the general
harvesting, men and women were
employed in the fields ; and, be it remarked, their labour was paid for
at the same rate. What are called the autumn works—the harvesting and
the subsequent cleaning of the ground—seem to have lasted about seven
or eight weeks, and were begun soon after the feast of the Assumption
of our Blessed Lady. It is curious, and not uninteresting, to find that
the Irish came over for the harvesting in Leicestershire in the
fifteenth century as they do now ; thus we have Mathew Irishman and
Isabel Irish named, together with Edward
Welshman, as engaged in the fields of Grace Dieu in 1415. Altogether,
the cost of the extra labour in the autumn
works amounted to nearly £10, a large sum indeed
in those days.
Besides payments of extra money
for the harvesting and regular work,
some indication of
the kindly way in which the good nuns recognized the services of their
dependents on special occasions appears in these accounts. In the
lambing season for instance, Henry, the shepherd, was given 2 d. “for his good service and care of the sheep.”
And John Stapulford received the same
sum “for looking after the labs before their weaning,” whilst John
Warren for “fold-hurdling” was rewarded with 1s. ; and
to make another instance of a somewhat different kind, the convent
bailiff at Kirby, one Richard Marston, was given a purse, as a sign
that the nuns appreciated his care of their property. One chance entry
shows that when the sheep were being sheared, the labourers were given
extra meat for
--171-- their meals, since Dame
Petronilla gives 16d. for a
calf to feed them
specially, on a day when evidently she and her sisters in religion were
eating fish
in the convent refectory.
A word must now be said about
the necessary item in the accounts of
very well-regulated
religious house, “repairs.” These seem to have exercised the two
bursars of Grace Dieu very considerably. The special trouble evidently
began with the roof of the house. In the first year of
their stewardship they had in, of course, Robert the Slater, and for
some reason his bill was only partly met in that twelvemonth. All
during Lent, he and his mate were at work mending holds, and making
others. From the house his ministrations extended to the cloister. Then
came the gutters all over the establishment, which stood in urgent need
of attention, as gutters always appear to do, even in our more
civilised days. Next it was found that the church must be looked to ;
and
before this was over, the dependants had come to the conclusion that
whilst all this repairing was being done at the convent and Robert the
Slater was about with his mate and his materials upon the ground, it
would be a pity not to renovate their cottages. Poor Dame Petronilla
must have been well-nigh distracted at the thought that Robert the
Slater—who, by the way, did more than roofing, and seems to have been a
jack-of-all-trades, though loose tiles were his forte—having once
secured a foothold in the establishment, had come to stay.But she gave
in with exemplary resignation, and the dependants had their cottages
repaired, or what was the same thing, received money to pay for them.
Taking one thing with another, more than £10
went in this way during the first
year of the procuratorial reign of Dames Petronilla and Katherine.
--172-- Among the workmen that haunted
Grace Dieu in these days, and who, if
there is any
fitness in things so far as ghosts are concerned, ought to be found
haunting the ruins
to-day, was on called Richard Hyrenmonger. He came, we learn, from
Donington, and the accounts prove
that he must have had a good store of all kinds of nails, and keys, and
bolts, judging by
the variety he was able to produce. Under him worked John the Plumber,
or rather two Johns the Plumber, senior and junior; and, like modern
plumbers are wont to do, they appear to have plagued Dame
Petronilla and her assistant with their constant tinkering at the pipes
and drains of the establishment. “John the senior” and “John the
junior,” for example, were six days mending “le pype,” for which they
were paid 3s. 4d. ; but apparently it
was not properly done, for just after this, “le pype” misbehaved itself
again, and Dame Petronilla had to purchase a new brass
pipe to bring the water to the door of the refectory, and the two Johns
were at work again. Of course Richard the Ironmonger always found a lot
of work for himself on the farm, so that what with one thing and
another, Grace Dieu must have been a very comfortable inheritance for
him.
Among the miscellaneous manners
and customs of the good nuns of Grace
Dieu which are
recalled to us in these faded papers of accounts, very few of course
can find
place there.One such is the yearly visit of the candle-maker to prepare
the tallow dips for the dark
winter evenings.The preparation made for his coming appears in the
purchase of tallow and mutton fat to be used for rush-lights and
cresset-lights, which must have done hardly more than make visible the
darkness
of a winter evening and an early winter morning at Grace Dieu. My lady
prioress apparently
--173-- had an oil lamp of some kind,
and we read of special candles for the
wash-place and at the door of the refectory, etc. It is to be supposed
that the nuns had some means of warming themselves during the cold
winter months, for we read of a travelling tinker employed upon mending
a chimney to the hall fireplace, and
probably they were burning logs from out of the Charnwood somewhere or
other ; but in these accounts there is no mention of fuel except on one
occasion, when Richard the Ironmonger had some coal purchased for him ;
but this was only that he might heat a ploughshare that had got out of
shape.
Another most important matter in medieval times was the annual salting ofthe winter provision which took place in every establishment. On St. Martin’s Day, November 11th, the medieval farmer considered seriously what was the number of this live stock, what was his store of hay, and how long the one could be kept by the other.The residue of the stock had to go into the salting-tub for the winter food of the family and dependants.So at Grace Dieu the purchase of the salt for the great operation is entered in the accounts. On one occasion also Dame Petronilla, “when a boar was killed”—whether by accident or not does not appear—had it spiced as well as salted, and it was no doubt served up on great occasion as a special delicacy in the common refectory. The picture of the Grace Dieu nuns afforded by these accounts is that of charming, peace-loving ladies ; good practical Christian women, as all nuns should be ; taking a personal interest in the welfare of their tenants and dependants ; occupied, over and besides their conventual and religious duties, in works of genuine charity. They taught the daughters of the neighbouring gentry, and --174-- were not too exacting in
requiring even what had been promised as the
annual pension.They
encouraged ladies to come and join them in celebrating the festival of
the
church, and out of their small means they set aside a not insignificant
portion
for the care and clothing of sick in their infirmary ; whist out of
their
income they found not less than eight corrodies—or pensions—which cost
them £ 7 7s. 4d.,
or more than five
per cent. of their annual revenue. Of their work mention has already
been made. They grew the wool and spun it and wove it into cloth, not
only for their own garments, but also for those of their retainers ;
whilst a chance entry of
receipt reveals that they were indeed skilled in a high degree in
ecclesiastical embroidery. That they were
not guilty of “dilapidation” of their house their extensive repairs
prove ; and that they cared for
their lands and farm buildings must be obvious from the purchases made,
and the items
of expense in connection with every kind of agricultural implement.
They took their burden in common
ecclesiastical expenses, even contributing their quota of 3d.
towards the expenses of the Procurator cleri of the
district to Convocation. They were peace-loving, if we may judge from
the absence of all law expenses, save and except one small item for an
appearance at the local marshal’s
court, and whether even this was for themselves or for one of their
tenants, and what it was about, does not appear.As it was only 2d., it could not have been much to interfere with the
general harmony whith apparently existed in the neighbourhood.They
lived, too, within their income, which was, more or less £103
13s. 6d. a year. It is true that
in the first year, owing probably to the exceptional repairs which the
nuns undertook, they went somewhat
--175--
beyond their means. The sum was only slight, being but £7
11s. 10½d., and it is pleasant
to observe that “out of love of the nuns,”
and “to relieve the house of anxiety,” a lady paid the deficit, making
her gift £7 12s.
Dame Petronilla and Dame
Margaret ! how little they could have thought
when they
penned their simple accounts that they would have given much
pleasurable information
five hundred years after their time ! How little they could ever have
dreamed of the pleasant light their
jottings would have thrown on so many of their doings and their little
ways! they were kind, prudent, charitable
souls, without a doubt, and if they might at times have used better ink
than
they did, that fault was a point of holy parsimony.And if they might
have given here and there
just a little more information on certain points, they are willingly
forgiven
and more than forgiven, for what they have left to posterity. Their
souls, oft so troubled and vexed by the
many cares incidental to the office of a conventual Martha, have long
doubtless
been in peace, and their spirits no longer vexed by Richard the
“Hyrenmonger”
and the two Johns, the senior and junior plumbers. What would they
think, could they to-day
revisit the scene of their former labours and cares? The old home they
evidently loved so well is
past repairing now, and not even the kindly help of that old servant
and friend
of the convent, Henry Smith, could avail to suggest the best way of
setting about reparation.
All the larger nunneries and
probably most of the smaller ones, to
whatever Order they belonged,
opened their doors for the education of young girls, who were
frequently boarders.In fact the female
portion of the
--176-- [Illustration:Franciscan Nuns in Choir] [Download 1,826KB jpg.] --page not numbered-- --blank page, not numbered-- population, the poor as well as
the rich, had in the convents their
only schools, nuns their only teachers, in
pre-Reformation times. Chaucer, in describing the well-to-do miller of
Trompington, says—
“A wyf he hadde,
come of noble kyn
; John Aubrey, too, writes almost
as an eye-witness of the Wiltshire
convents that “the young maids were brought up . . . at
nunneries, where they had examples of piety, and humility, and modesty,
and obedience to
imitate and to practise. Here they learned needlework, the art of
confectionery, surgery (for anciently
there were no apothecaries or surgeons—the gentlewomen did cure their
poor neighbours ;
their hands are now too fine), physic, writing, drawing, etc.Old
Jacques could see from his house the nuns
of the priory (St. Mary’s, near Kington St. Michael) come forth into
the nymph-hay with their rocks and wheels to spin : and with their
sewing work.He would say that he had told threescore and ten ; but of
nuns there were not so many, but in all, with lay sisters and widows,
old maids and young girls, there might be such a number. “This,” he
concludes, “was a fine way of breeding up young women, who are led more
by example that precept ; and a good retirement for widows and grave
single women to a civil, virtuous, and
holy life.”
In the well-known case of Nunnaminster, Winchester, there were, at the time of the suppression, twenty-six girl boarders who were reported by the local commissioners to be daughters of “lords, knights, and gentlemen.”The --177-- list that is set forth begins
with a Plantagenet and includes
Tichbornes, Poles, and Tyrrells. So,
too, in the case of the Benedictines of Barking, of Kingsmead, Derby,
and of Polesworth and Nuneaton, Warwickshire ; of the Cluniacs of
Delapré, Northampton ; of the Cistercians of Wintney, Hants ;
and of the Gilbertines of Shouldham, Norfolk, it can be established
that not only were many of
the nuns of good birth, but that their pupils were in the main drawn
from the same class.
The Episcopal Visitations of the Diocese of Norwich for 1492 to 1532, edited by Dr. Jessop, throw some interesting light on the inner life and social working of the nunneries of East Anglia.From the names of the inmates it becomes evident taht some of these houses were in the main occupied by ladies of gentle birth, such as Willoughbys, Everards, Wingfields, Jerninghams, and the like. This was especially the case with the Austin house of Campsey and the Benedictine houses of Bungay and Thetford. When Bishop Nicke visited the last of these houses in 1514, complaint was made to him by one of the ladies that the prioress was intending to admit an ignorant (indocta) novice, and particularly one Dorothy Sturges, who was deaf and deformed. Apparently the arguments of the objector prevailed, but poor Dorothy was, not long after, admitted to the smaller nunnery of Blackborough. When the priory of Carrow, a
favourite retreat for the religious
daughters of the citizens of Norwich, was
visited in 1526, several of the ladies were advanced in years. The
sub-prioress, Dame Anna Marten, had been
in the convent of sixty years, and two others, Dames Margaret and
Katherine, had been thirty-eight years in religion.It
--178-- is a little touching to note
that almost the only complaints that
reached the bishop’s ears were those of the aged sub-prioress and Dame
Margaret that the pace of chanting the Office by the sisters was too
rapid, and lacking their proper pauses, and that of Dame Katherine who
found the beer to small. At the next recorded visitation, six years
later all these good old ladies were still at Carrow, though
Dame Anna’s age did not allow her to discharge the duties of
sub-prioress ; but she
was then (1532) in charge of the infirmary. At this time the bishop
interfered, probably at the
suggestion of the aged dames, to stop an accustomed Christmas game (on
Holy Innocents’ Day), when
the youngest of the novices assumed the functions of a lady abbess,
after the
same fashion as a boy-bishop amongst the choir boys.The nuns of Carrow
maintained a school for
some of the better-class girls of the city and district, and doubtless
this
Christmas-tide sport was intended in the main for their delectation.
[Illustration:Nun Asking Pardon of an Abbess [Download 206KB jpg] --179--
|
Historyfish
pages, content, and design copyright (c) Richenda
Fairhurst, 2008 All rights reserved. No commercial permissions are granted. The Historyfish site, as a particular and so unique "expression," is copyright. However, some (most) source material is part of the public domain, and so free of copyright restrictions. Where those sections are not clearly marked, please contact me so I can assist in identifying and separating that material from the Historyfish site as a whole. When using material from this site, please keep author, source, and copyright permissions with this article. Historyfish intends to generate discussion through shared information and does not claim to provide, in any way, formal, legal, or factual advice or information. These pages are opinion only. Opinions shared on historyfish are not necessarily the opinions of historyfish editors, staff, owners or administrators. Always consult proper authorities with questions pertaining to copyrights, property rights, and intellectual property rights. It is my intent to follow copyright law (however impossibly convoluted that may be). Please contact me should any material included here be copyright protected and posted in error. I will remove it from the site. Thank you. |