ABSTRACT

There is no published account of the history of religious women in England before the Norman Conquest. Yet, female saints and abbesses, such as Hild of Whitby or Edith of Wilton, are among the most celebrated women recorded in Anglo-Saxon sources and their stories are of popular interest. This book offers the first general and critical assessment of female religious communities in early medieval England. It transforms our understanding of the different modes of religious vocation and institutional provision and thereby gives early medieval women’s history a new foundation.

chapter Chapter 1|34 pages

Evidential and historiographical problems

chapter Chapter 2|26 pages

Religious women in England before the First Viking Age

chapter Chapter 3|24 pages

The disappearance of the early Anglo-Saxon nun

chapter Chapter 4|26 pages

Women and the tenth-century monastic revolution

chapter Chapter 5|34 pages

Widows and vowesses

chapter Chapter 7|10 pages

Afterword