TRIDENTINE RENEWAL AND SPIRITUAL EDUCATION OF WOMEN IN THE EXPERIENCE OF FEMALE MONASTICISM. THE CASE OF VERONA IN THE SIXTEENTH CENTURY (original) (raw)

The catholic world of the Sixteenth century, especially after the Council of Trent, exalted the condition of monastic life as the most perfect and noblest of the conditions of life traditionally reserved for women. The monastic state became the model to which the educational path of every woman had to conform to, even if she was destined to live in the world (as mother, virgin, widow, or married woman). The strong paradigmatic value exerted by the monastic condition of life is clear from the analysis of the pedagogical literature devoted to women published in this period. The present article focuses on two relevant examples of this literature: the Costituzioni per le monache (Constitutions for Nuns, 1539) by Gian Matteo Giberti and the Ricordi lasciati alle monache (Recollections left to nuns, 1575) by Agostino Valier. The two texts contain very interesting reasons for understanding the pedagogical directions of the time, which are highlighted by the author with specific references to the historical context and thanks to the support of documentary and published sources. These two works were written by two great reformer bishops, and are highly meaningful not only because they complement each other, since both were prepared for the religious women of the diocese of Verona, but mainly because they offer one very vivid insight into the growing importance assigned to the monastic modus vivendi in Sixteenth century Catholic society.

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Female monasticism in Italy in the Early Middle Ages: new questions, new debates

Reti Medievali Rivista, 2019

This is the Introductory chapter to the Saggi in Sezioni monografiche Il monachesimo femminile in Italia nei secoli VIII-XI: famiglia, potere, memoria a cura di Veronica West-Harling, a volume based on the conference held in Venice on 4 May 2017. The second half of this Introduction is a presentation of the database ITNUN. This presentation is composed of two parts, the first written by me, the second by Annamaria Pazienza - even though she is not credited with the authorship of this section in the volume.

“Women’s Semi-Religious Life in Rome (15th-17th Century).” In Early Modern Rome 1341-1667. Proceedings of a Conference held in Rome May 13-15, 2010, pp. 488-498. Ferrara: Edisai, 2011.

The aim of this essay is to provide an overview of women's religious life outside the convent in Rome, from a wide chronological perspective, roughly between the early fifteenth and the end of the seventeenth century, focusing in particular on the period of the Council of Trent. It is a work in progress, in which I have tried to reconstruct a history of semi-religious women, considering their forms of life, spirituality, as well as the opportunities and limits offered by their relationship with the church. It is an attempt both to provide a synthesis of existing studies that had focused on specific aspects and to highlight, in a tentative manner, factors which are relevant to this history.

Books in Women's hands: Liturgy, Learning and the Libraries of Dominican Nuns in Westfalia

The religious practices and intellectual skills of Dominican nuns in the late Middle Ages are generally not very well known. In contrast to their appreciation of the highly educated Dominican friars, most scholars tend to disregard the intellectual skills and learning of the nuns as presumably negligible. The impressive graduals written by the sisters of the convent of Paradies near Soest, however, once more raise the basic question of the educational background of Dominican nuns in the late medieval period. This question is difficult to answer, particularly for the fourteenth century 1 . On the one hand, sources from within convents, that is, manuscripts written by the women themselves, such as convent diaries, collections of letters, etc., are much scarcer than in the fifteenth century. On the other hand, the women's education depended on several factors: the stance of the order or the province, on the supervision of the local Dominican friars, and the social status of the families whose daughters convened at the nunnery. We therefore begin with the historical context of the two Westphalian convents, St. Marien in Lemgo and Paradies near Soest, as well as to the normative foundations of the women's education and training. After that, with the help of the library catalogue of the Dominican nuns in Lemgo, this paper proceeds to a discussion of the intellectual horizons of women in Westphalia in the second half of the fourteenth century.

Monastic Women and Religious Orders in Late Medieval Bologna

2014

Sherri Franks Johnson explores the roles of religious women in the changing ecclesiastical and civic structure of late medieval Bologna, demonstrating how convents negotiated a place in their urban context and in the church at large. During this period Bologna was the most important city in the Papal States after Rome. Using archival records from nunneries in the city, Johnson argues that communities of religious women varied in the extent to which they sought official recognition from the male authorities of religious orders. While some nunneries felt that it was important to their religious life to gain recognition from monks and friars, others were content to remain local and autonomous. In a period often described as an era of decline and the marginalization of religious women, Johnson shows instead that they saw themselves as active participants in their religious orders, in the wider church and in their local communities.

The Influence of the Tridentine Reforms on Aristocratic Convents and their relations to the out side World

When eight-year-old Mariana joined the convent of Nossa Senhora da Conceicao, she had no desire for a monastic life nor did she understand what her life would be like living as a cloistered nun. Born in 1640 in Beja, Portugal, Mariana was the daughter of a wealthy aristocratic landowner, Alentejo Francisco da Cunha Alcoforado. Mariana's life was not unique and would have gone unnoticed by historians if it were not for her alleged love affair with a French officer. 1 Mariana's love affair became public when her letters addressed to Marquis de Chamilly was published in Paris in 1669 under the name of The Letters of a Portuguese Nun. Within days the love letters became popular among men and women alike. The religious authorities refused to believe or admit that a cloistered nun would write so directly and passionately about love, while intellectuals found the idea of a secluded woman writing so skillfully impossible, yet intriguing. 2 Although a small collection, the letters are a fine example of how an aristocratic nun pushed against the conventual boundaries and challenges the ecclesiastic authorities. The decrees of the ecclesiastic

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