The Good Women of the Parish
The Good Women of the Parish: Gender and Religion After the Black Death
Katherine L. French
Series: The Middle Ages Series
Copyright Date: 2008
Published by: University of Pennsylvania Press
Pages: 352
https://www.jstor.org/stable/j.ctt3fhmtr
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Book Info
The Good Women of the Parish
Book Description:

There was immense social and economic upheaval between the Black Death and the English Reformation, and contemporary writers often blamed this upheaval on immorality, singling out women's behavior for particular censure. Late medieval moral treatises and sermons increasingly connected good behavior for women with Christianity, and their failure to conform to sin. Katherine L. French argues, however, that medieval laywomen both coped with the chaotic changes following the plague and justified their own changing behavior by participating in local religion. Through active engagement in the parish church, the basic unit of public worship, women promoted and validated their own interests and responsibilities. Scholarship on medieval women's religious experiences has focused primarily on elite women, nuns, and mystics who either were literate enough to leave written records of their religious ideas and behavior or had access to literate men who did this for them. Most women, however, were not literate, were not members of religious orders, and did not have private confessors. As The Good Women of the Parish shows, the great majority of women practiced their religion in a parish church. By looking at women's contributions to parish maintenance, the ways they shaped the liturgy and church seating arrangements, and their increasing opportunities for collective action in all-women's groups, the book argues that gendered behavior was central to parish life and that women's parish activities gave them increasing visibility and even, on occasion, authority. In the face of demands for silence, modesty, and passivity, women of every social status used religious practices as an important source of self-expression, creativity, and agency.

eISBN: 978-0-8122-0196-3
Subjects: History
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Table of Contents
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  1. Front Matter
    Front Matter (pp. i-vi)
  2. Table of Contents
    Table of Contents (pp. vii-viii)
  3. List of Figures
    List of Figures (pp. ix-xii)
  4. Introduction
    Introduction (pp. 1-16)

    It is a truism, although maybe not true, that women are more religious than men. In modern South Korea, women make up three-quarters of the members of Christian Evangelical churches. Women are similarly drawn in larger numbers than men to Latin American Pentecostal churches.¹ In European churches, men stay away in droves, while old women listen to the liturgy, light the candles, and sweep out the dirt. Even in medieval society where church attendance was mandatory, preachers such as Thomas Bruton and Berthold of Regensburg complained that more women than men attended their sermons.² Although medievalists lack the measurement tools...

  5. Chapter 1 “My Wedding Gown to Make a Vestment”: Housekeeping and Churchkeeping
    Chapter 1 “My Wedding Gown to Make a Vestment”: Housekeeping and Churchkeeping (pp. 17-49)

    In the rural parish of Tintinhull, Somerset, as in many other places in medieval Europe, it was the custom of the women to dress the images of the saints in robes and kerchiefs. On saints’ days and other holy days, the cloth decorated and beautified the images as a sign of love, respect, and supplication. Bequests from women’s wills supplied some of the napery. When Alice Stacy died, she left a linen sheet to the statue of St. Mary, perhaps to be used as a veil.¹ With use and exposure to soot, wax, oil, and even droppings from the bats...

  6. Chapter 2 Hatched, Matched, and Dispatched: Life Cycles and the Liturgy
    Chapter 2 Hatched, Matched, and Dispatched: Life Cycles and the Liturgy (pp. 50-84)

    On 6 April 1423, twelve men assembled at Stoke Gifford in Gloucestershire to testify as to the age of Maurice, son and heir of Maurice de Berkeley, knight, and his wife Joan.¹ The jurors all agreed that Maurice was at least twenty-one years old, born in Stoke Gifford, and baptized in Stoke Gifford parish church on 2 February 1401, the Feast of the Purification. As proof, the jurors offered their own memories of the rituals surrounding his birth. Henry Dagger remembered Maurice’s baptism because he “carried a basin and ewer from the manor of Stoke Gifford to the church to...

  7. Chapter 3 “My Pew in the Middle Aisle”: Women at Mass
    Chapter 3 “My Pew in the Middle Aisle”: Women at Mass (pp. 85-117)

    On 19 March 1535, the Friday before Palm Sunday, Bridget Stokes alleged that Sir Oswald Wylsthorpe and eleven others broke into the locked south chapel in the church of Bylton, Yorkshire, and destroyed the pews placed there.¹ In the melee that followed, the attackers injured her servant Anthony Wardell. Stokes brought a suit to Star Chamber, where she explained that her late husband “Robert Stokes and all his ancestors … of long time have had and used a pew or a seat for them and their wives and children at all such times as they were disposed to serve God...

  8. Chapter 4 Maidens’ Lights and Wives’ Stores: Women’s Parish Groups
    Chapter 4 Maidens’ Lights and Wives’ Stores: Women’s Parish Groups (pp. 118-156)

    Sometime in the 1540s, Geoffrey Alsip, a parishioner of Chepmonger, Essex, went to the Court of Chancery on behalf of his wife Agnes.¹ In his petition, Geoffrey claimed that some twenty years earlier an old widow of the parish had left his wife a frontlet of gold, jewels, and pearls on the condition that she would “fit and put the said frontlet upon the image of Saint Margaret to garnish the same image … at every … feast.”² Geoffrey claimed that Agnes had fulfilled this obligation faithfully until 1536 when Henry VIII ordered the removal of all saintly images from...

  9. Chapter 5 “To Save Them from Binding on Hock Tuesday”: The Rise of a Women’s Holiday
    Chapter 5 “To Save Them from Binding on Hock Tuesday”: The Rise of a Women’s Holiday (pp. 157-179)

    When the parishioners of St. Margaret’s, Westminster, decided to rebuild their parish church in the 1480s, they needed to raise large sums of money.¹ Although well-to-do community members did front much of the cost, parish leaders still created fundraising strategies that specifically included the middling and poor and the women of the parish community. In addition to regular door-to-door collections, the parish began celebrating a new holiday and revel activity called Hocktide in 1497 that specifically facilitated women’s participation.² Hocktide fell on the second Monday and Tuesday after Easter. In its fullest form, celebrations of Hocktide started on Monday with...

  10. Chapter 6 A Cross Out of Bread Crumbs: Women’s Piety and Impiety
    Chapter 6 A Cross Out of Bread Crumbs: Women’s Piety and Impiety (pp. 180-222)

    In the early fifteenth century, a cleric composed a set of devotional instructions for a pious English layman. The instructions explained how the man could turn his daily activities in and outside his house into occasions for prayer and religious meditation.¹ In the background of these instructions is the man’s house and household, including his wife. Her only appearance in these instructions is at dinner when the instructions admonish the man to “let the family be silent at table and always as far as possible expound something in the vernacular which may edify your wife and others.”² After dinner, the...

  11. Epilogue: Women and the Reformation
    Epilogue: Women and the Reformation (pp. 223-230)

    In 1536, Henry VIII ordered the closure of many small monasteries and hospitals. In response, a group of women in Exeter went to the Priory of St. Nicholas and assaulted the Breton workmen hired to dismantle the rood screen. Reportedly the women grabbed the two men and carried them out of the priory, temporarily halting their work. Later, the mayor of Exeter in a communiqué to the marquis of Exeter reported that he had interrogated “a great number of women which were among others the chief evil doers of the said unlawful assembly and also diverse of their husbands …...

  12. Appendix A. All-Women’s Groups
    Appendix A. All-Women’s Groups (pp. 231-232)
  13. Appendix B. Hocktide Celebrations
    Appendix B. Hocktide Celebrations (pp. 233-234)
  14. List of Abbreviations
    List of Abbreviations (pp. 235-236)
  15. Notes
    Notes (pp. 237-298)
  16. Bibliography
    Bibliography (pp. 299-322)
  17. Index
    Index (pp. 323-334)
  18. Acknowledgments
    Acknowledgments (pp. 335-337)
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