I’ve long had a vague feeling, at the back
of my mind, that the women’s colleges of Oxford
and Cambridge ,
as created in the nineteenth century, shared many characteristics with medieval
nunneries.
Vague, that is, until my recent immersion
in research for my work-in-progress, The
Novice’s Tale, set in the 14th century and partly in Godstow Abbey, near Oxford. This has confirmed that feeling in a number of interesting
ways.
I am not saying that those who ran those
women’s colleges devoted their lives to worship, like their medieval forebears,
but that the way they organised their institutions was remarkably similar.
There were other points of similarity, too. When I was a student at an Oxford college, it was
still all-female, and was one of the last to admit both sexes. We were, I now
realise, at a transitional stage. All of the older dons were unmarried and
lived in college, in ‘sets’, consisting of a sitting room cum study, in which
they conducted tutorials, plus bedroom, bathroom, and small kitchen. Their
rooms were cared for by college servants (‘scouts’), they ate most of their
meals in the college Hall, and they foregathered with their colleagues in the
Senior Common Room. It was the form of female college life as portrayed in
Dorothy Sayers’s Gaudy Night (without
the crime!). She had attended my own college during World War I, and some
aspects of that earlier life still remained in my time there.
However, things were changing.
A number of the younger dons were married,
and although they still had rooms in college, they had homes outside, inhabited
by husbands and children. Some of the very youngest were not yet married, and
did live in college, but drove fast cars, instead of riding the ancient upright
bicycles, and were sometimes quite glamorous.
It is in the older form of this collegiate
life that we can see parallels with medieval nunneries.
When the women’s colleges were set up, they
were, naturally, modelled on the men’s colleges. These in turn had begun life
in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries as ecclesiastical institutions, intended
to educate men for the church and other professions, men who had taken at least
minor orders. They therefore closely resembled monasteries and nunneries in
their organisation, so it is not too fanciful to see a direct line of descent
to the nineteenth and early twentieth century women’s colleges.
There were even some correspondences in the
buildings. The central Hall of a college (like those in the Inns of Court)
harks back to the hall of a medieval manor, with a dais at one end for the high
table. In the frater or refectory of
a nunnery the senior nuns would sit here, as the fellows of a college do now,
while the junior nuns and novices, like the students, dined at lower tables. A
comfortable Senior Common Room has replaced the hard stone seats of the chapter
house, but like the chapter house it is used for meetings.
Traditional colleges are enclosed within
walls and built around a series of quadrangles, sometimes with cloistered
walks, again retaining the layout of medieval monasteries and nunneries. There
is a gatehouse, generally with a wicket set into a larger gate, which is
presided over by a porter, again on the medieval model. At night, the gate is
closed and locked.
All the traditional colleges, including the
women’s colleges, have a chapel, like the chapel or church or abbey which was
an intrinsic part of a medieval nunnery or monastery.
The wealthiest colleges – primarily the
older men’s colleges – are supported by the endowment of property from
benefactors through the ages, as the monasteries and nunneries were. The
nineteenth century women’s colleges were less fortunate.
When we look at the occupations of the nuns
in a medieval nunnery, we can see further parallels to a woman’s college. A
nunnery of medium or large extent was a major institution, involving not only
the professed nuns but also novices and often schoolchildren (including young
boys), lay sisters, male and female servants, some senior male staff, and a
home farm with a full complement of agricultural workers. To manage such a
large institution, the senior nuns were required to take on managerial roles
which would not seem out of place in any similar modern institution, including
women’s colleges.
At the top of the hierarchy, if the nunnery
had the rank of abbey, was the abbess.
In the smaller nunneries she was a prioress. Under the abbess was the prioress, and there might also be a subprioress. The abbess was the overall
head of the institution, supervising her ‘obedientiaries’ or senior nuns,
chairing meetings of Chapter, dealing with senior figures outside the nunnery,
and corresponding with the bishop and other important men. Abbesses also had
the right to sit in the House of Lords, the only women to sit in Parliament
until the twentieth century.
Reporting to the abbess, a group of
obedientiaries had defined roles in the organisation. One of the most important
was the treasuress, who handled all
income and expenditure. Her role corresponded closely to that of the bursar of
a college. Agreement would be reached amongst the ‘managing committee’ of
senior nuns as to what proportion of the budget should be allocated to the
various spending departments, for example to purchase food or clothing. Some of
the endowments granted to the nunnery would have been ear-marked for specific purposes,
and these would be taken into account in the planning. A modern parallel might
be scholarships restricted to students from a particular county or to the
offspring of indigent clergymen.
My college had both a treasurer and a
bursar, the bursar and her assistant having taken over a number of the roles
below, including those of fratress and cellaress. A housekeeper in charge of
the scouts (who replaced the lay servants of the past) took the place of the
kitcheness and had some of the duties of the cellaress.
The care of the church in the medieval
nunnery was in the hands of the sacrist.
This meant not only being responsible for the fabric of the church and
arranging for repairs when necessary, but also caring for the valuable church
plate, altar clothes and vestments, and providing the candles for both the
church and the nunnery generally. She would purchase wax and tallow and arrange
for candle-making at least once a year, either by a local candle-maker, or by
one of the itinerant makers, who would come to the nunnery for the number of
days needed to make the supply.
The precentrix
or chantress was in charge of all
the music and the church services. She would train the novices in the complex
singing of the services, arrange for the copying of music, and usually also
served as the librarian in charge of the institution’s books. If the nunnery
had a scriptorium for the copying of texts, this would come under her care.
The chapel in a modern college clearly does
not play anything like so important a part in the lives of the members as it
did in the medieval period. The chapel and choir in my college was a personal
interest of one of the dons. In some of the men’s colleges nowadays, of course,
especially those with famous choirs, there will usually be one or more organ
scholars, a chaplain, and a choirmaster, as well as teachers in the choir
school. Now that colleges have much larger collections of books than a medieval
nunnery, the role of librarian has assumed a correspondingly greater
importance.
The frater or refectory was run by the fratress. This involved responsibility
for all the tables and chairs, the dishes and table linen, the cleaning of the
frater and the lavatorium where the nuns washed before eating. She would
supervise the laying and clearing of meals by the servants, but was not
responsible for the food itself.
The cellaress
carried a particularly heavy burden. It was she who was responsible for seeing
that the nunnery always had sufficient stores of food and drink, no simple task
in the days before refrigeration. She arranged for supplies from the home farm
and bought in anything which it could not supply, and as a result also supervised
the home farm. She was in charge of hiring and firing servants, allocating
their duties and overseeing their behaviour. As a result, she carried out most
of the duties undertaken in a country manor by the steward, housekeeper, and
butler.
The actual preparation of the food fell to
the kitcheness, although she
probably did not do much of the cooking herself, but managed the kitchen staff,
mainly seculars, who could be male or female. She reported to the cellaress,
and must have worked closely with her.
The chambress
was responsible for all the clothes and bedding of the nuns and the servants,
which involved buying cloth, employing seamstresses to make it up into
garments, sheets, and blankets, in some cases overseeing full cloth production
– preparation of the raw wool, spinning, weaving, fulling and dyeing. It should
be remembered that in many cases the religious institutions, like the great
estates, tried as much as possible to be self-sufficient, so they would have
had a supply of wool from their own sheep.
The duties of the chambress have lapsed in
the modern world, when students provide their own clothes, and – as far as I
know – none of the women’s colleges has ever had its own flock of sheep!
If the nuns fell ill, they were cared for
by the infirmaress who would need to
combine the skills of an apothecary and a physician. The infirmary was
generally a separate building, to avoid spreading infection, and she would
prepare her medicines in a still room.
Nowadays this is not a duty undertaken by
one of the dons. Members of the college with minor illnesses are treated by the
college nurse. Anything more serious falls to the NHS.
The poor who came to the nunnery for help
would receive money, clothes, and food from the almoness, while guests of the nunnery (travellers or secular women
who retired there), would be in the care of the hospitalless.
Colleges still support charities, and
welcome (paying) guests when rooms are available.
Last, but by no means least, of the major
officials in a medieval nunnery, was the mistress
of the novices. She was responsible for teaching and training the novices,
and also supervised their behaviour. Some girls were given to the nunnery as
oblates (‘gifts to God’) at a very young age, others joined later, either
because they had no marriage prospects, their families wanted to dispose of
them, or they had a genuine vocation. If the nunnery had a school, the mistress
of the novices was usually in charge of this as well.
Clearly all the dons in a college, apart
from those with a pure research appointment, fulfil the functions of the
mistress of the novices, teaching the students, while some have a particular
responsibility for behaviour and discipline, generally the dean.
A medieval nunnery also employed a great
many other people. The steward
tended to be an honorary position, often held by a nobleman, more like a patron
than the usual idea of a medieval steward. Colleges now often have a ‘visitor’,
a similar honorary position, held by some distinguished individual.
Nuns could conduct services, but could
neither hear confession nor administer the sacraments, therefore they had a chaplain, generally with his own
lodgings within the enclave but outside the nuns’ quarters.
The most important lay officer was the bailiff, who rode around the many
properties of the nunnery (which might be scattered) collecting the rents. He
might also be in charge of fetching supplies, if these needed to be purchased
some distance away.
As well as household maids, and personal
maids for some of the senior nuns, there would be a large domestic staff, both
men and women: cook and kitchen servants, brewer, maltster, baker, laundress,
dairy woman (to milk the cows and make butter and cheese) and grooms to look
after the stable. The home farm employed the usual workers: ploughmen, cowherd,
oxherd, swineherd, shepherd, carters, farm labourers, and (at harvest and other
busy times) casual labourers.
Certain essential craftsmen might also be
employed or hired from the nearest village – blacksmith, wheelwright, thatcher,
carpenter, mason, and others.
The modern college is spared the need for
many of these people, but will still buy in the services of those like builders
as the need arises, just as the medieval nunnery did.
What I find most striking is the skill and
competence of the nuns who managed a medieval nunnery. These were complex
organisations. The nuns needed to be able to read and write and keep accounts.
The money management alone was demanding, especially when the income from rents
or the produce of the home farm could fluctuate alarmingly. A number of
obedientiaries have left behind comprehensive manuals of instruction for their
successors on how to carry out their responsibilities.
I suppose the usual general idea we may
have of a medieval nunnery is that it was a group of unworldly women, shut away
from secular life and contact with the outside world, their lives devoted
entirely to prayer. The truth could hardly be more different, although prayer
was certainly important. As an alternative to being married off to some
distasteful husband and forced to bear child after child, with all the
desperate risks of death in childbirth, these women could lead a fulfilling
life where they had real careers and responsibilities, beyond anything most of
them would have experienced in the secular world. Those early dons in the
women’s colleges, fighting for women’s rights to an education and a more
fulfilling life, were – in a curious and ironic way – carrying on the work of
those celibate and enclosed sisters in the medieval nunnery.
Ann Swinfen
http://www.annswinfen.com
http://www.annswinfen.com
What an interesting comparison! And it says something, doesn't it, that the cellaress's job was doing stuff that in a country manor would take three people!
ReplyDeleteI found the research fascinating, Sue. And I agree about the cellaress. There must have been some extremely competent women running those nunneries over the centuries they lasted. So many of their names lost to us, except for those who left written guidance notes for those who came after. One of the duties of the chambress was to keep the moths out of the clothes - good luck to her, when they were mostly made of wool!
ReplyDeleteVery interesting - thank you, Ann!
ReplyDeleteAnn, I hear good things about your fiction, but I can't find it on iBooks, in the local bookshops or the library. Is it likely to be available any time soon somewhere other than by on line order? I don't much like handing over my card details on line if I can avoid it and the Aussie dollar is weak! Do you have a distributor Down Under?
ReplyDeleteVery interesting! As you say, the life of the nunnery is one of the chapters of women's work and capability in the past, for too long unnoticed or commented on by historians! I'd never thought of the parallels with a woman's college, but it's quite clear - now you've explained it. I adore Gaudy Night. It was the first Peter Wimsey book I ever read, picked it up in a house my parents rented at Herne Bay for a week one summer, when we were between houses.
ReplyDeleteFascinating! My college (Newnham) is the last bastion standing I think of a women only college in Oxbridge. Unless what used to be New Hall is. Murray-Edwards?
ReplyDeleteSue Bursztynski, I know there have been problems in Australia, though a bookshop should be able to order my books through the distributor Ingram. They do function in Australia, don't they? Most of my sales are through Amazon, which is, of course, online. I know that some readers in Australia have bought them through the Book Depository, though that may be online as well. I do have quite a lot of readers in Australia, so they must get hold of them somehow!
ReplyDeleteMary, I know that St Hilda's recently went mixed, the last of the Oxford women's colleges to do so. I don't know about New Hall. I wasn't aware that Newnham was still all women. I thought it was a pity when Somerville went mixed. It was founded to promote higher education for women.
ReplyDeleteJust a further general thought - some of these were very large institutions indeed, so managing them was no trivial task. I'm writing here about the nunneries of the high Middle Ages, but of course there were interesting early examples too, such as Whitby, an abbey for both men and women, presided over by Hilda, later St Hilda, and the meeting place for the Synod of Whutby. She must have been quite a character!
ReplyDeletevery interesting comparison - I find it fascinating that so many women in the medieval period did run all sorts of businesses, as well as nunneries!
ReplyDeleteThank you, Anne, for all this. A very fine comparison, What well-organised, orderly places - or even havens - those old convents must have been. (An aside. Given the finance involved, I'm wondering if lay sisters ever became full sisters, including "as fully accepted"?)
ReplyDeleteSue Bursztynski, I am a fan from Australia too. I use booktopia in Australia and have a paypal account to cover security. Book depository is also great, free postage anywhere in the world and they also accept paypal.
ReplyDelete