ABSTRACT

Nicky Hallett has uncovered a major new source of material by and about English nuns living in exile in the Low Countries during the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. This volume presents the women's voices in unmediated form, direct in all their vibrancy, with an extensive introduction that provides historical and cultural contexts for an understanding of the Lives, their sources and their authors. Lives of Spirit draws upon several remarkable sets of papers compiled in enclosed convents between 1619 and 1794. These documents show that religious women developed an astute system of auto/biographical practice within a protean political situation, and that, even in exile and from within enclosure, they sought to shape a distinctive contribution to devotional change within a reforming church. This volume reveals how the women's Lives challenge, as well as affirm, notions of gendered spirituality, refiguring traditions of female life-writing that extend from Catherine of Siena (1347 - 80) through the work of the Carmelite reformer, Teresa of Avila (1515 - 82), into the later modern period. The newness of the material in this book allows a radical reappraisal of the self-representation of religious women and of paradigms of life-writing in, and beyond, the early modern period. This book is of significant interest to scholars interested in early modern women's writing, female spirituality, and auto/biography more widely as a genre.

chapter |29 pages

General Introduction

chapter |3 pages

Editorial Note

chapter |2 pages

Sources and Abbreviations

chapter 1|4 pages

The Inspiration to Compose

Burial in Oblivion and the Miraculous Discovery of an Incorrupt Body

chapter 3|4 pages

Teresa of Jesus Maria, Sister of Anne of the Ascension

Her Career and Remarkable Death

chapter 4|2 pages

Margaret of St Francis

The Holy Simplicity of a Lay Sister at Antwerp and Lierre

chapter 5|4 pages

Anne of St Bartholomew

Her Sight of the Infant Jesus Handing out Sugar-plums, and the Remarkable Discovery of Her Uncorrupted Body

chapter 6|6 pages

Catherine of the Blessed Sacrament

The Vocation of a ‘Poor Imperfect Religious' who Relished Patched Clothing

chapter 7|6 pages

Anne of St Teresa

Her Career at Various Convents, Her Terror about an Apparition and Her Instructions for the Enclosure of a Convent

chapter 8|4 pages

Agnes of St Albert

Her Overwhelming Sense of Vocation that Led Her to Break into the Convent

chapter 9|2 pages

Clare of the Annunciation and Delphina of St Joseph

Two Religious Linked by Marvellous Events

chapter 10|2 pages

Anne of St Maria and Tecla of St Paul

Childhood Friends in Religion, One a Favourite of the King

chapter 11|2 pages

Anne of the Angels

Her Grand Entrance and Clothing

chapter 12|4 pages

Paula of St Joseph and Alexia of St Winefrid, Two of Anne Somerset's Entourage

A Sudden Death whilst Whitewashing and the Life of a Little Mouse

chapter 13|2 pages

Anne of St Bartholomew and Mary Teresa of Jesus

Their Entries at an Advanced Age

chapter 14|2 pages

Francisca of the Blessed Sacrament

Her Near Abduction as a Child and Her Later Seduction by Witchcraft

chapter 15|4 pages

Mary Frances of St Teresa

The Instigator of the Antwerp Lives, a Treasure of the Community, Drawn to Her Vocation by Reading

chapter 16|4 pages

Teresa Joseph of the Sacred Heart of Jesus

Her Father, Like a Jealous Lover, Resists her Teresian Vocation

chapter 17|2 pages

Clare Joseph of Jesus Maria

Her Dreams and Spiritual Favours; and Her Appearance to Another Religious in a Vision

chapter 18|2 pages

Mary Margaret of the Angels

Her Conversion from Protestantism by Reading Books of Controversy; and Her Death from Gangrene

chapter 19|4 pages

Winifred of St Teresa

Her Miraculous Recovery as a Child; Her Life and Death as a Lay Sister

chapter 20|2 pages

Anne Maria Joseph of St Xaveria

The Widowed Sister of Catherine Burton

chapter 21|4 pages

Mary Joseph of St Teresa

The Life and Death of the First Compiler, who Knew Her Vocation at a Country Dance and who Left Loving Instructions for her Sisters

chapter 22|4 pages

Teresa de Jesus and Ann Joseph of the Ascension

Two Lives of Mutual Care

chapter 23|4 pages

Mary Magdalen of St Joseph

Her Dramatic Journey from Maryland, Her Teresian Vocation, and Her Cure from Rheumatism

chapter 24|2 pages

Mary Xaveria of the Angels

Her Mental Affliction in which She Fancied Herself to be a Priest and Excommunicated the Bells

chapter 25|2 pages

Mary of St Barbara

The Life of an Oblate from the Coffee-house

chapter 26|2 pages

Angela Maria of St Joseph

Her Early Life in which She Almost Dies of Malnutrition; and Her Seduction to Become a Carmelite after which She Once Drank her Own Urine in an Act of Misplaced Obedience

chapter 27|2 pages

Mary Margaret of the Angels

Her Journey from Maryland in which She Almost Falls in Love with a Young Gentleman; Her Burial as the Convent is Threatened by Imperial Edict

chapter 28|28 pages

Mary Xaveria of the Angels

Her Illness, Miraculous Cure and Her Spiritual Favours Before and After Death

chapter 29|8 pages

Mary Margaret of the Angels

The Discovery of her Incorrupt Body and the Writing of her Life

chapter 30|8 pages

Margaret of St Teresa, the First Prioress at Lierre

Her Early Sense of Vocation and Progress towards a Religious Life; Her Skill in Resolving Conflicts; Her Devotion to Anne of the Ascension and her Death in which She is No Longer Wrinkled or Crooked

chapter 31|18 pages

The Lives of the Mostyn Family

chapter 33|4 pages

Mary Gertrude of the Annunciation

An Impediment in Her Head, Her Early Vocation and Subsequent Afflictions

chapter 34|6 pages

Mary Magdalen of Jesus and Agnes Maria of St Joseph

Their Double Deaths and Burial

chapter 35|4 pages

Mary Terease of Jesus

Her Vision of Her Mother, All in White, on Her Way to Heaven

chapter 36|4 pages

Anne Teresa of Jesus

A Colonel's Daughter, Scrupulous in Saving Time when She Met with her Brother; Mortified in Sleepiness, and a Lover of Poverty after whose Death from Leprosy Singing was Heard

chapter 37|2 pages

Marie Teresa of St Albert

A Lay Sister of Extraordinary Strength, a Lover of Solitude who Sat in the Trees

chapter 38|2 pages

Teresa Maria of Jesus, Mary of St Joseph and Elizabeth Ursula of the Visitation

Three Religious of Extraordinary Humility – Who Ate Scraps, were Sparing in their Use of Candle and Pen, and who did Servants' Work

chapter 39|4 pages

Anne Therese of the Presentation, Anna Maria of St Joseph and Joseph Teresa of the Purification

Three Lay Sisters who Learned the English Manner of Cooking

chapter 40|2 pages

Mary Rose of the Sacred Heart of Jesus

her dramatic journey from Maryland and Her Death, after which She Continued to Sweat