This article explores the retirement of male and female monastic superiors in late medieval England. It examines the practicalities of abbatial retirement, along with attitudes towards resigning and resigned superiors, and developments taking place in these matters over the later Middle Ages. The majority of monastic heads died in office, and attempts to resign might be resisted by convents and/or the ecclesiastical authorities. On the other hand, the retirement of infirm or incompetent superiors could protect monastic communities from serious mismanagement. The cost of maintaining a quondam superior was not negligible, and gradually grew over the fifteenth and early sixteenth centuries, as retirement provision for ex-heads became more gene...
This article presents an overview of the Cistercian monasteries that were founded in Sweden in the 1...
This article examines the regulation of religious life in the late Middle Ages (14th and 15th centur...
The Cistercian order, which had its origins in the late eleventh century, transformed the spiritual ...
This article studies the retirement arrangements known as corrodies, which could be purchased by lay...
Most of us would probably think of retirement planning as a modern phenomenon; however, concerns abo...
In this thesis I examine the opportunities for individual agency and social and spiritual autonomy i...
This volume provides a record of the response, by eight expert scholars in the field of medieval mon...
Late medieval English nuns have rarely commanded the attention of historians. Most scholars concentr...
In this thesis, the dissolution of the monasteries is treated as an event in the history of patronag...
In 1536 the English Parliament under pressure from Henry VIII and the Lord Chancellor, Thomas Cromw...
The literary portrayal of the charismatic founders of monastic communities, and of their successors,...
Taking the monastic habit late in life A study of adult conversion (1050-1200). This article takes...
The Gilbertine order was unusual in that it was founded for both men and women who\ud lived in adjac...
and religious devotion, arguing that “among the upper classes widowhood could provide for the first ...
This paper argues that the now-abandoned notion of a ‘crisis of cenobiticism’ in the late eleventh a...
This article presents an overview of the Cistercian monasteries that were founded in Sweden in the 1...
This article examines the regulation of religious life in the late Middle Ages (14th and 15th centur...
The Cistercian order, which had its origins in the late eleventh century, transformed the spiritual ...
This article studies the retirement arrangements known as corrodies, which could be purchased by lay...
Most of us would probably think of retirement planning as a modern phenomenon; however, concerns abo...
In this thesis I examine the opportunities for individual agency and social and spiritual autonomy i...
This volume provides a record of the response, by eight expert scholars in the field of medieval mon...
Late medieval English nuns have rarely commanded the attention of historians. Most scholars concentr...
In this thesis, the dissolution of the monasteries is treated as an event in the history of patronag...
In 1536 the English Parliament under pressure from Henry VIII and the Lord Chancellor, Thomas Cromw...
The literary portrayal of the charismatic founders of monastic communities, and of their successors,...
Taking the monastic habit late in life A study of adult conversion (1050-1200). This article takes...
The Gilbertine order was unusual in that it was founded for both men and women who\ud lived in adjac...
and religious devotion, arguing that “among the upper classes widowhood could provide for the first ...
This paper argues that the now-abandoned notion of a ‘crisis of cenobiticism’ in the late eleventh a...
This article presents an overview of the Cistercian monasteries that were founded in Sweden in the 1...
This article examines the regulation of religious life in the late Middle Ages (14th and 15th centur...
The Cistercian order, which had its origins in the late eleventh century, transformed the spiritual ...