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Eileen Power - The Complete Works of Eileen Power

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Eileen Power The Complete Works of Eileen Power
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The Complete Works of Eileen Power
Eileen Power


Shrine of Knowledge
Shrine of Knowledge 2020
A publishing centre dectated to publishing of human treasures.
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means without the prior written consent of the succession or as expressly permitted by law or under the conditions agreed with the person concerned. copy rights organization. Requests for reproduction outside the above scope must be sent to the Rights Department, Shrine of Knowledge, at the address above.
ISBN 10: 059989489X
ISBN 13: 9780599894891
This collection includes the following:
Medieval English Nunneries c. 1275 to 1535
Medieval People
MEDIEVAL ENGLISH NUNNERIES
GENERAL PREFACE
There is only too much truth in the frequent complaint that history, as compared with the physical sciences, is neglected by the modern public. But historians have the remedy in their own hands; choosing problems of equal importance to those of the scientist, and treating them with equal accuracy, they will command equal attention. Those who insist that the proportion of accurately ascertainable facts is smaller in history, and therefore the room for speculation wider, do not thereby establish any essential distinction between truth-seeking in history and truth-seeking in chemistry. The historian, whatever be his subject, is as definitely bound as the chemist to proclaim certainties as certain, falsehoods as false, and uncertainties as dubious. Those are the words, not of a modern scientist, but of the seventeenth century monk, Jean Mabillon; they sum up his literary profession of faith. Men will follow us in history as implicitly as they follow the chemist, if only we will form the chemists habit of marking clearly where our facts end and our inferences begin. Then the public, so far from discouraging our speculations, will most heartily encourage them; for the most positive man of science is always grateful to anyone who, by putting forward a working theory, stimulates further discussion.
The present series, therefore, appeals directly to that craving for clearer facts which has been bred in these times of storm and stress. No care can save us altogether from error; but, for our own sake and the publics, we have elected to adopt a safeguard dictated by ordinary business commonsense. Whatever errors of fact are pointed out by reviewers or correspondents shall be publicly corrected with the least possible delay. After a year of publication, all copies shall be provided with such an erratum-slip without waiting for [Pg vi] the chance of a second edition; and each fresh volume in this series shall contain a full list of the errata noted in its immediate predecessor. After the lapse of a year from the first publication of any volume, and at any time during the ensuing twelve months, any possessor of that volume who will send a stamped and addressed envelope to the Cambridge University Press, Fetter Lane, Fleet Street, London, E.C. 4, shall receive, in due course, a free copy of the errata in that volume. Thus, with the help of our critics, we may reasonably hope to put forward these monographs as roughly representing the most accurate information obtainable under present conditions. Our facts being thus secured, the reader will judge our inferences on their own merits; and something will have been done to dissipate that cloud of suspicion which hangs over too many important chapters in the social and religious history of the Middle Ages.
G. G. C.
October, 1922.

[Pg vii]
AUTHORS PREFACE
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 VIIIs 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 Alnwicks 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
[Pg viii]

[Pg ix]
CONTENTS
PAGE
THE NOVICE
Situation, income and size of the English nunneries
Nuns drawn from (1) the nobles and gentry
(2) the middle class
Nunneries in medieval wills
The dowry system
Motives for taking the veil:
(1)
a career and a vocation for girls
(2)
a dumping ground for political prisoners
(3)
for illegitimate, deformed or half-witted girls
(4)
nuns forced unwillingly to profess by their relations
(5)
a refuge for widows and occasionally for wives
THE HEAD OF THE HOUSE
Superiors usually women of social standing
Elections and election disputes
Resignations
Special temptations of a superior:
(1)
excessive independence and comfort
(2)
autocratic government
(3)
favouritism
The superior a great lady in the country side
Journeys
Luxurious clothes and entertainments
Picture of heads of houses in Bishop Alnwicks Lincoln visitations (1436-49)
Wicked prioresses
Good prioresses
General conclusion: Chaucers picture borne out by the records
WORLDLY GOODS
Evidence as to monastic property in
(1)
the Valor Ecclesiasticus
(2)
monastic account rolls
Variation of size and income among houses
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