Page:Medieval English nunneries c. 1275 to 1535.djvu/37

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THE NOVICE
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of different convents among the citizens of London. Between the years 1258 and the Dissolution, 52 wills contain references to one or more nuns related to the testators[1]. From these it appears that the most popular house was Clerkenwell in Middlesex, which is mentioned in nine wills[2]. Barking in Essex comes next with eight references[3], and St Helen's Bishopsgate with seven[4]; the house of Minoresses without Aldgate is five times mentioned[5], Haliwell[6] in London and Stratford-atte-Bowe[7] outside, having five and four references respectively, Kilburn in Middlesex three[8], Sopwell in Hertfordshire two[9], Mailing[10] and Sheppey[11] in Kent two each. Other convents are mentioned once only and in some cases a testator leaves legacies to nuns by name, without mentioning where they are professed. All these houses were in the diocese of London and either in or near the capital itself; they lay in the counties of Middlesex, Kent, Essex, Hertford and Bedford[12] It was but rarely that city girls went as far afield as Denny in Cambridgeshire, where the famous fishmonger and mayor of London, John Philpott, had a daughter Thomasina.

Thus the nobles, the gentry and the superior rank of burgess—the upper and the upper-middle classes—sent their daughters to nunneries. But nuns were drawn from no lower class; poor girls of the lowest rank—whether the daughters of artisans or of country labourers—seem never to have taken the veil. A certain degree of education was demanded in a nun before her admission and the poor man's daughter would have neither the money, the

  1. Not counting legacies left to various nunneries, without specific reference to a relative professed there.
  2. Sharpe, op. cit. i, pp. 107, 300, 313, 324, 408, 501, 585, 701. Philip dl Taillour had three daughters here in 1292 (i, p. 107), and William de Leyrevhad three daughters here in 1322 (i, p. 300)
  3. Ib. i, pp. 222, 303, 569, 638, 688; ii, pp. 20, 76, 115.
  4. Ib. i, pp. 229, 303, 342, 400, 435; ii, pp. 47, 170. Ten nuns in all
  5. Ib. ii, pp. 119, 267, 331, 577, 589.
  6. Ib. i, pp. 26, 126, 238, 349, 628. Ralph le Blund's three daughters and his sister-in-law were all nuns here in 1295 (i, p. 126) and Thomas Romayn, alderman and pepperer, left bequests to two daughters and to their aunt in 1313 (ib. i, p. 288).
  7. Ib. i, pp. 34, 111, 611; ii, p. 119.
  8. Ib. ii, pp. 167, 271, 274.
  9. Ib. ii, pp. 474, 564.
  10. Ib. i, pp. 510, 638.
  11. Ib. i, p. 119; ii, p. 306.
  12. There are two exceptions, Greenfield (Lincs.) (ib. ii, p. 327), and Amesbury (Wilts.) (ib. ii, p. 326), but the testators in these cases are not burgesses, but a knight and a clerk.