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Andersony Bonnie S. A history of their own : women in Europe from prehistory to the present Bonnie S« Anderson 9 Judith P. Zinsser* 1st ed« New York Farpcr 6 Row. clS88. 2 V. ill. 24 cm. Bibliography: v. 1, p. [5311-552; v. 2, p. [433]-534. Includes indexes. #8383 Ballen $27.50. #8384 Ballen $29.45. ISBN 0-06-015850-6 (v. 1) 1. Woccen Europe History. 2. Feminism Europe History. I. Zinsser Judith P. II. Title
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A
HISTORY OF THEIR
OWN
A HISTORY OF THEIR OWN Women
in
Europe from Prehistory to the Present
BONNIE S. ANDERSON JUDITH P. ZINSSER
VOLUME
I
ML 1817
HARPER & ROW, PUBLISHERS, New
York
Cambridge, Philadelphia, San Francisco, Washington
London, Mexico
City,
Sao Paulo, Singapore, Sydney
Illustration credits follow the Index.
A HISTORY OF THEIR OWN,
VOLUME
All rights reserved. Printed in the
reproduced
in
Copyright
© 1988 by Bonnie
United States of America.
No
S.
Anderson and Judith
part of this
any manner whatsoever without written permission except
tions
embodied
Inc.,
10 East 53rd Street,
&
I.
in critical articles
in the case of brief quota-
and reviews. For information address Harper
New York,
P. Zinsser.
book may be used or
N.Y. 10022. Published simultaneously
in
&
Row,
Publishers,
Canada by Fitzhenry
Whiteside Limited, Toronto.
FIRST EDITION Designer: Sidney Feinberg
Copy
editor:
Ann
Indexer: Auralie
Finlayson
Logan
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Anderson, Bonnie
A
S.
history of their own.
Bibliography:
p.
Includes index. 1.
Women — Europe— History.
HQ1587.A53 1988
ISBN ISBN
2.
Feminism
—Europe—
305.4'094
0-06-015850-6
88 89 90 91 92
0-06-091452-1 (pbk.)
88 89 90 91 92
History.
I.
Zinsser, Judith P.
87-11933
HC HC
10 9 8 7 6
5
4
3 2
1
10 9 8 7 6
5
4
3 2
1
II.
Title.
.
Contents
Acknowledgments Introduction
I.
ix
xiii
TRADITIONS INHERITED
WOMEN FROM THE CENTURIES
ATTITUDES ABOUT
BEFORE 1
800
Buried Traditions:
A.D.
The Question of Origins 3 — Biological Evidence — Evidence — Written Evidence
Evidence
Archaeological
Anthropological
The
2.
Inherited Traditions:
3.
Traditions Subordinating
Women
's
Traditions
Women
Approved Roles
and Concubine 4.
Principal Influences
—
Psychological
Evidence
—
24
26
— Women
's
Dishonorable Roles: Slave, Prostitute,
Misogyny
Empowering
Women
52
Worship of Goddesses — Women Warriors — Women in Power: Queens and Empresses — Women of Wealth — Educated and Artistic Women 5.
The
Effects of Christianity Beliefs
67
and Practices Empowering
Women —
Beliefs
and Practices Subordinating
Women II.
WOMEN
OF THE FIELDS
SUSTAINING THE GENERATIONS I.
The Constants tieth
Centuries The Life Nurturing
of the Peasant
Woman's World: The Ninth
to the
87
— The Landscape — The — Threats to Survival
Year's Activities
-
Children and
Twen-
CONTENTS
VI
2.
Sustaining the Generations
—
Impossible Choices 3.
The
Extraordinary Joan of Arc
4.
—
What Remains
WOMEN
III.
119
— Access
The Family and Marriage
Land - Additional Income —
to the
Survival Outside the Family
—
Giving Value
151
The Witchcraft Persecutions
of the Peasant
Woman's World
174
OF THE CHURCHES
THE POWER OF THE FAITHFUL 1.
The
Patterns of Power and Limitation:
Centuries 2.
The Tenth
Authority Within the Institutional Church
183
The Great Abbesses and Learned Holy Communities
and
Orders: The Twelfth
of the 3.
to the Seventeenth
181
Nun —
the Thirteenth Centuries
—
—
Reformed Religious
The Cloistered Life
Mystics: The Ecstatic Life
Authority Outside the Institutional Church Challenges to Established
Mary — Exemplars,
Dogma and
Tertiaries,
214
Established Orders
and Beguines
—
—
The Virgin
Heresy: The Limits of
Power Through Faith 4.
Authority Given and Taken Away:
The
Protestant and Catholic Reforma-
228
tions
Religious Enthusiasm Reborn: The Sixteenth and the Seventeenth Centuries
Queens, Princesses, and Noblewomen
Nuns, and Martyrs 5.
Traditional Images
— Limiting
Redrawn
—
The Female Nature 6.
The Legacy IV.
—
Roles: The
Woman
's
—
Unorthodox
Proper Place
253
The Christian Family
of the Protestant Reformation
WOMEN
Proselytizers,
Protesters,
264
OF THE CASTLES AND MANORS
CUSTODIANS OF LAND AND LINEAGE 1.
From
Warrior's
Centuries 2.
Wife
to
Noblewoman: The Ninth
269
Constants of the Noblewoman's Life
War -
Marriage
—
272
Land, Faith, and Children
to the Seventeenth
Contents
3.
Power and Vulnerability Wives and Daughters
—
Centuries
vii
297 World
in the
of Feudalism: The Ninth to the Twelfth
Courtly Love and Codes of Chivalry
World of Centralized Monarchies: The ries — Widows and Mothers: The Ninth 4.
Tlie
New
V.
to the
—
WOMEN
In
Law and
Practice
—
Wives and Daughters
in the
Seventeenth Centuries
Flowering of Ancient Traditions
In Literature
—
Thirteenth to the Seventeenth Centu-
332
Woman
The Ideal
OF THE WALLED TOWNS
PROVIDERS AND PARTNERS 1.
The Townswoman's
Daily Life:
The Twelfth
to the Seventeenth
Cen-
353
turies
Alleyways,
Streets,
and Squares
—
The
Poor
—
Guildswomen
—
Merchants'
Wives 2.
Dangers and Remedies Natural Disasters and
378
War —
Repentance, and the Saints 3.
The World
of
Crafts 4.
Prayers to the Virgin
and Provided For
— New
—
Professions: Art
Tales Retold
—
The Business of Marriage and Charity — Old and Medicine — Capitalist Entrepreneurs
431
—
- Abuse of Women: The Ideal Marriage and the Perfect Wife
445
Bibliography
Index
to the Seven-
Sumptuary and Adultery Laws
Violence and Ridicule
Notes
Faith in God,
392
TTie Invisible and Visible Bonds of Misogyny
Old
—
Mary
Commercial Capitalism: The Thirteenth
teenth Centuries Protected
Disease and Childhearing
-
531
553
Illustrated sections follow pages
6,
92, 186, 276,
and
358.
Acknowledgments
This work
—the present book and
years to create.
groups and individuals In tional
the forthcoming
Volume
II
—took ten
During that time, we were encouraged and supported by
common, we
whom
it is
are in debt to
now a pleasure to thank. many outstanding women and two
excep-
men. Without the women's movement, which provided the courage
and confirmation necessary audacity,
we
even to contemplate a project of
for us
could not have written this history. Without Murray D.
this List,
we would never have had such a successful partnership. He envisioned more for us than we dared to hope for ourselves. Hugh Van Dusen, our editor and publisher, never faltered in his trust
and support
for the project.
Without
his
quiet assurance over the years, and the help of his able assistant, Stephanie
Gunning, our
task
would have been much harder. The
rest of
our thanks are
separate.
Bonnie S. Anderson As a woman who came I
to
work
in
women's
history in the early 1970s,
have been fortunate to be part of the supportive and sustaining networks
make New York City such a marvelous place to be. The Curriculum Committee of the Columbia University Women's Liberation Movement enabled me to become a feminist; the CCWHP (Coordinating Committee of Women in the Historical Profession), New York City branch, enabled me to become a feminist historian of women. There met of feminist scholars that
I
Joan Kelly, whose vision and energy were inspiring. She supported this project she nurtured so many other endeavors in women's Her scholarship helped shape my own and I have missed her deeply. The New School of Liberal Arts and the Women's Studies Program at
in its early stages, as
history.
Brooklyn College
first
provided
me
with an academic
home
in
which
I
could
teach women's history and meet with other feminist scholars. During the
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
X
writing of this book,
I
belonged to the Columbia University Seminar on
Women
and Society, the Women's History Group of the Institute for Research in History, and the German Women's History Study Group. All provided the encouragement and support of other women scholars as well as the fun and excitement of shared learning.
The
and Board of Higher Education of the a much-needed year of full-time writing through their Faculty Research Grant and Scholar Incentive Award. My colleagues in the History Department at Brooklyn College have been generous in allowing me to teach the history of women in Europe and in granting Professional Staff Congress
New York
City University of
funded
me the leaves necessary to write. In particular, Renate Bridenthal, also in European Women's History, has been an ideal colleague. Honest, intelligent, generous, and humorous, she has always been supportive and enlivening. She read and commented valuably on a number of sections of this book. Dorothy Helly, whose unswerving support lightened my way, read and made extensive and valuable comments on Part VII, as did Abby Wettan Kleinbaum. Claudia Koonz, whose tenacity and scholarship have been a model, enabled me to keep working on the difficult subject of feminism. Her thoughtful and extensive notes on Parts VIII and IX, as well as her good cheer, helped immensely. The German Women's History Study Group Renate Bridenthal, Jane Caplan, Atina Grossmann, Amy Hackett, Deborah Hertz, Marion read and disKaplan, Claudia Koonz, Molly Nolan, and Joan Reuterschan
—
—
cussed parts of two chapters;
many members wrote comments
as well. Special
thanks to this group for being so hospitable, intelligent, good-humored, and
Amy
Hackett for coming up with the title. and supporters sustained me along the way. They include Arthur A. Anderson, Nan Bases, Verna Gillis, Stephanie Golden, Enid and Paul Gorman, Linda Grasso, Stephen H. Levine, Stanley, Nadia, and Alisa lively,
and
to
Finally, friends
Malinovich, Alice Miller, Pixie and Charlie Piera, Jane Weissman, Jean
Raben and her
family, John, Alison,
Matthew, and
parents, Geraldine
my
also a writer,
in
and Robert Sour. Elizabeth Levy, gave special and steadfast encouragement
Katie,
my
sister
and
dear friend
my
who
is
numerous conversa-
tions throughout the years.
Judith
P.
Zinsser
Everything in
my
professional
life
began
at
Bryn
Mawr
College where
I
Over the years friends among the faculty, the administration, and the alumnae have always made me feel a valued, competent, independent woman. Katharine McBride, Caroline Robbins, Mary Maples Dunn, Phyllis Goodhart Gordan, and Barbara Thacher gave of their time and energy to help in the learned about scholarship, determination, and the
wisdom
of patience.
Acknowledgments
many
realization of
where expeditions to
who
scholars
and
Such
but the most recent and represents
is
debt to them and to the institution. to the Berkshire
find the
Conference of
trillium
first
can discuss the most esoteric
a daughter's
either.
This book
projects.
me repayment of a Bryn Mawr led me
for
xi
Women
Historians,
showed me the wonder of women point of their research one minute
behavior the next without diminishing the significance of
women
gave generously of their expertise and their time. Susan
Groneman, Mary Hartman, Man.'
Bastian, Kathleen Stassen Berger, Carol
Martin McLaughlin, Jane Schneider, Susan Mosher Stuard, and Gabrielle Spiegel identified sources, suggested questions, challenged ideas, and helped refine answers.
My
colleagues at the United Nations International School have always
supported
my
They helped
projects.
in
the completion of this book in
many
ways: everything from adjusting teaching schedules, to sharing the story of a great aunt's
after year
my
life,
to helping
students
me
find a picture of Christine
de Pizan. Year
the Americas classes heard about a mysterious
in
"book" and never doubted that
would be finished and ready
it
be auto-
to
graphed. Lisa Fuhrer, Carol Kessler,
them
chapters and turned I
and Nerieda
have two families to thank. Tliose
standards.
and stapled
my 62nd
in
Street family gave
me
would have an education equal to a man's and From them I gained a sense of personal and professional
the clear expectation that a fulfilling career.
\'idal took pasted
into clean manuscript.
The members
concern and were the
I
of
my
73rd Street family gave
to say that they
first
me
their loving
were moved by our vision of
a true
history of humanity.
My dear to find the
Margot
each
friends,
freedom
way, gave
in their
me
needed to think and
I
their support
and helped
me
to write: Rosalind Cutforth,
Dorothy A. Lavington, John Lippmann, Florita RichardMaria Robbins, David Shapiro. Hilary Ainger made a special contri-
K. Jones,
son, Jane
bution to this endeavor.
When
I
was perplexed or disheartened,
I
knew
I
could draw on her wise counsel, her confidence, and her understanding. Finally,
whom
in
I
wish to thank
many ways
my
daughter, Sarah Katharine Lippmann, for
the book was written
—
that she will never have to borrow
when "A mother heavy in
heroes and a past from men's history as her mother did. She was seven she
made
her work. at
signs for
Do
my
door that always made
not disturb!
work." She believed
in
You may
me
smile.
see her at 6:30
the book, and
now
it
is
.
.
.
Signed, ... an author
done.
^
Introduction
Questions
At the beginning
of the fifteenth century, the
Christine de Pizan started her to a disparity
experience of
women
is
Book
between the image of
French courtier and writer
of the City of Ladies by calling attention
women
presented by
women. While the men concluded
inclined to
and
full
men and
her
own
that "the behavior of
of every vice," Pizan decided otherwise.
"Thinking deeply about these matters," she wrote:
my character and conduct as a natural woman, and, similarly, women whose company frequently kept, princesses, great ladies, women of the middle and lower classes, who had graciously told me of their I
began to examine
I
considered other
I
most private and intimate thoughts, hoping that I could judge impartially and good conscience whether the testimony of so many notable men could be true. ... I could not see or realize how their claims could be true when compared to
in
the natural behavior and character of
women.
This book arose from perceptions of a similar disparity
women and their total absence of women from
—the
disparity be-
tween our own growing knowledge of
activities
and present, and the almost
the pages of history
books.
To
rectify the adverse effects of centuries of vilification
and misre-
women and
chronicled
presentation, Christine de Pizan wrote a defense of
the
lives of
patron.
To
both past
the powerful and virtuous, from Eve to the
counter the subtly denigrating myth that
history" or have achieved
little
worthy of inclusion
Queen
women in
of France, her
either "have
no
the historical record,
written these two volumes: a history of women in Europe. These myths and false impressions were standard when we trained as European historians in the late 1960s. Then we did not think of questioning the traditional periodization, the accepted perspectives, and the masculine gender of the principal figures in history. Only the work and protests of
we have
INTRODUCTION
XIV
scholars
and
activists in
the 1960s and 1970s caused
community to reconsider the ways and delimited.
in
which history
many itself
in the academic had been defined
Gerda Lerner called attention to two had distorted women's past. women out and was structured so as to make
Historians like Joan Kelly and
important ways
in
which
traditional history
History, they argued, both left it
virtually impossible to include
them. Traditional periods reflected men's
when women's were different, they were deemed insignificant and omitted. The resulting history presented "the quarrels of popes and experiences;
kings," but
had "hardly any women
at all," as Jane Austen's heroine
plains in Northanger Abbey. Following Kelly
and Lerner's pioneering
com-
efforts,
many historians began to discover the history of women. Since 1970, research and scholarship on women in Europe has produced hundreds of works. We decided to synthesize this scholarship and write a narrative history of women in Europe. We began by asking questions, and these questions shaped the structure and content of these volumes. First, we wondered, what had ordinary women done as the "history" that excluded them unfolded? How had they lived? What tasks filled their days? What motivated their actions and determined their attitudes? Second, we questioned the startling contrasts between women's and men's lives in the same eras. How had women come to be, in the phrasing of the United Nations Decade for Women Reports of 1985, "the disadvantaged, invisible majority?"^ Why had laws, economic systems, religion, and politics excluded European women from the
How
had cultural attitudes evolved and placed them in a subordinate relationship to men? Why had men done this? And, perhaps even more importantly, why had women accepted or been forced to accept these limitations which devalued their activities, denigrated their nature, and subor-
most valued areas and which defined women
activities of life?
as innately inferior
men? we wondered about the commonality of gender. Did gender unite women? What, if anything, linked a peasant raising her children in
dinated them to Third,
all
twelfth-century France to a craftswoman selling her wares in fifteenth-century
Nuremberg
to a university graduate contemplating a profession in late
nineteenth-century England? Next,
women who had ries:
we looked
at the "exceptions"
—those
achieved prominence and were included in traditional histo-
Heloise, Joan of Arc, Catherine the Great, Florence Nightingale, Marie
Gurie.
Why
had these women gained recognition? Were they exceptions
because of their character or historical circumstance? Finally, we studied those women like Ghristine de Pizan who first became aware of women's disadvantaged and denigrated status. all
women's subordination?
How did
Why did some women come to question they
come
to identify with
women and
xv
Introduction
work
for
expanded opportunities
begin and where might
European culture and
it
lives in
Often
I
did feminism
question the basic values of
questions changed our entire view of European
the
German
feminist, wrote
when she
researched
the 1880s,
was so deeply upset by
And
calls into
it
society?
Our answers to these history. As Minna Cauer, women's
women? How and why
for
lead, as
it
[women's
history] that
I
did not want to read
seemed so wonderful, for told myself: if all that is beneficial and all that is horrible which women have done in the world were included as a factor in history, how different history must be and seem!' further.
then again,
all
I
Answers
The
central thesis of this
factor in shaping the lives of
seen as divided by
been viewed
first
class,
as
women
nation, or historical era,
women,
Trained
thesis reluctantly.
book is that gender has been the most important European women. Unlike men, who have been have traditionally
We
a separate category of being.
in traditional
European
history,
we
came first
to this
assumed
that differences between eras, between classes, and between nations would
be
as
important for
woman
women
as they
were
for
woman
men, that the
gulf
between
a
modern Europe, between a female aristocrat and a female day laborer, between an Englishwoman and a Russian woman would be as great as for their male equivalents. Our historical investigations proved this false. While differences of historical era, class, and nationality have significance for women, they are outweighed by the similarities decreed by gender. As the French socialist Louise Michel wrote in 1885, it has been "painful" for us "to admit that we are a separate caste, made one across the ages," but as we compared our findings from studies of different eras, classes, and nations, no other conclusion was possible. Over and over, we found constants based on gender shaping women's lives. Being born female is the first factor that defines women's experience, separates it in
medieval Europe and a
in
"*
from men's, and gives
a basic
commonality
to the lives of
all
European
women.
The second
factor key to
women
is
that, until very recently, all
were defined by their relationships to men. than
men
ters of
earliest
—remain
in
Many women
the historical record only as
—
women
many more men's women. The daughfar
Priam, Lot's wife, the mother of the Maccabees are but a few of the examples.
And
a
woman
is first
identified as her father's daughter, her
husband's wife or widow, her son's mother.
European
history,
what
No
their class or social rank,
matter what the era
what
in
their nationality or
INTRODUCTION ethnic group, most
dominated
family.
women
have lived their
Even those who
lives as
members
of a male-
joined religious orders were defined by
and were seen as the "brides of Christ." woman's primary functions and roles have been dictated by family. Child rearing and maintenance of the household have been seen as women's preordained, biologically appropriate tasks. Defining women's primary duties as care of the family and the home have not precluded other work. In all historical eras, the vast majority of European women have labored at other chores and assumed other responsibilities. They have worked in the fields. They have earned wages. They have generated additional income for their families. Weeding, reaping, sewing, knitting, their rejection of earthly marriage
As
a
member
of a family, a
cleaning others' homes, raising others' children, working in factories or offices,
women's
labor has
made
the continuance of their families possible.
home and earning additional income has characterized the lives of most European women and differentiated them from men. It is women, not men, who have these multiple responsibilities and must find work compatible with these duties or arrange for substitutes to care for their children and their household while they earn
This "double burden" of caring for a family and
income.
"women's work," whether in the home or outside of it, has less and considered less important than men's work. Raising children and maintaining the home have been taken for granted and have never been valued as much as labor that men perform, whatever it may be. Paid labor available to women has usually been less prestigious than men's, has traditionally required less formal training, and has been more vulnerable to fluctuations in the economy. As a result, when they have been paid for their work, women have consistently received between one half and two thirds of what men earn. Sometimes connected by scholars to different economic systems, this factor has always been present in European history. In reckonings of female and male worth in the Old Testament, in the manor rolls of noble households, in account books of sixteenth-century merchants, in wage In addition,
traditionally
been valued
receipts of nineteenth-
and twentieth-century
The amount which they are economic regulations may raise women's than men.
paid
factories,
may
women
received less
vary; labor shortages or
wages, but so
far,
they have rarely
equaled those of men. All of these factors shaping women's work have limited
European women's
lives
by curtailing their opportunities and resources. able to avoid these limits. A woman from a
Some women have been
propertied Christian family could join a religious order.
Wealthy and
aristo-
women to care for their children and to assist in running their households. Some royal women ruled as queens in their own right. A few talented women achieved as artists and writers. But cratic
women
traditionally hired other
Introduction
xvii
European women, whether queens or nuns, aristocrats or peasants, craftsto Euroor artists, were subject to yet another constraining factor pean culture's largely negative views of women. Considered innately flawed, less valuable, and thus inferior to men, all women were supposed to be subordinate to men. This subordination seemed part of the natural order. A woman who did rule over men, who held a dominant role, whether from a all
—
women
throne or within a family, was seen as "unwomanly," as dangerous to the
which made man come first. These cultural views, expressed in the earliest writings of the Greeks, Romans, and Hebrews, changed remarkably little over time. The biblical injunction to Eve that "your desire shall be for your husband, and he shall rule over you" (Genesis 3:16) is repeated in every era and every European
universe's natural hierarchy
—
The view that "the best woman is she who is silent" first written down in ancient Greece reappears often in European men's writings about women. The assumption that only men are truly human that "a hen is not nation.
—
a bird
and
a
woman
is
—
not a person" as the Russian proverb puts
throughout European history. views completely.
Of
all
No woman
it
—echoes
could escape the impact of these
the factors that have limited women's
lives,
these
negative cultural traditions have proved the most powerful and the most resistant to change.
Despite these limits and restrictions, European
worked
to give value to their lives.
reproductive and nurturing
women, drawing on
women
Many
women
consistently
took pleasure and pride
role, in their tasks,
ing the generations with their labor. ity as
Many
however mundane,
claimed
spiritual or
moral author-
those religious or ethical traditions that
rather than subordinated them.
Most
in their
in sustain-
empowered
did not rebel, or their rebellion
left no traces in the historical record. For the ideology of women's inferiority was so deeply integrated into the fabric of both women's and men's lives that few questioned it. European women have not, however, been victims. Rather, unable to see beyond their culture's attitudes, they have mastered the strate-
gies of those in subordinate positions: manipulating, pleasing, enduring, sur-
Most European women took comfort in the institution of the maledominated family, which guaranteed them subsistence, gave them a partner for life, and provided them with a sense of being protected from forces viving.
beyond their control. But many also did more, giving beauty,
value,
and power
to their lives
despite the disadvantages of gender. In the process, they created magnifi-
Mary Wollstonecraft's women, Paula Modersohn-Becker's self-portraits. Sadly, much of women's creation has been anonymous and evanescent: the basket of willow cence: Sappho's poetry, Hildegard of Bingen's visions,
defense of
branches created to gather food, the weaving
in
hand-dyed wools that clothed
INTRODUCTION
XVlll
Europeans
in the early centuries, the lace tablecloth for a daughter's trous-
seau, the household objects
and more
pleasant.
and children's
toys designed to
make
life easier
And just as so many of the objects created by women
women's lives. Absent from the record and achievements, European women have never had a
have
vanished, so too have
of men's activi-
ties
history of their
Methods of Organization Undercounted and underrecorded, women have left far fewer traces than in the historical record. This is one of the most significant consequences of the negative cultural attitudes about women. For if history is defined as the deeds of men and little value is given to the actions of women, then women's lives become "ahistorical," lived outside of the world of masculine achievements. Women will seem to have no significance, and the record of their past will be lost. But women do have a history that can be pieced together once new categories have been framed and new research completed. In addition, we and other historians of women have developed a new perspective that includes women by definition. For example, to remind ourselves and
men
women
our readers that
are the focus of this history,
we have
reversed
We write of "women
and men," "queens and kings," "mothers and fathers." This simple step is but one way to counter the weight of a male-oriented past and male-dominant modes of expression. Changing the use of language was the start. More had to be done to give European women their history. When we searched for the facts of women's traditional patterns of expression.
lives in
the past,
we
discovered a wealth of material, whole
and research, subject matter material loses significance periodization, founded
women's
history
if it
new
areas of study
thousands of doctoral dissertations. But
for
is
this
simply placed within traditional historical
on the experience of men. "One of the tasks of schemes of periodization.
to call into question accepted
is
..." wrote Joan Kelly, "There was no renaissance for
women
—
at least,
not
during the Renaissance."^ Continuing to use the Renaissance as a historical period forced women's lives into male categories and distorted their experias lacking what men had or for not achievmen did. Such traditional historical periodization makes the vast of women disappear. Their lives become lost, and only the limits on
ence by defining them negatively, ing what
majority
them seem
To
a
place
fit
subject for historical discourse.
women
at the center
and make sense of
reconceptualizing European history so that
would be
like "if
it
we
were seen through the eyes of
values they define," as
Gerda Lerner
their experiences
meant
could understand what history
writes.^
women and
We
ordered by
used the concepts of
Introduction
women
"place" and "function" to see
in this
xix
way. Looking at women's place
we concentrated on women's Whole new categories of organization
within the geographic and institutional context, functions within European society.
emerged. Peasant women, for instance, became a group whose
European history outweighed
Women
centuries.
similarities in
their differences in circumstances or across the
within the Christian churches constituted another cate-
gory united across nations and time. In the modern era, these
new
categories
and function sometimes coincided with class: the experiences of middle- and upper-class women in the nineteenth century differed so markedly from those of working-class women that they constituted separate categories of women. We called them "Women of the Salons and Parlors" and "Women of the Cities," expressing our focus on place as well as function. The lives of working-class women in the cities differed greatly from those of of place
"Women
of the Fields," the peasants, so they
even though the same
woman may have lived
fell
into separate categories,
first in
the countryside and then
in the city.
Within these new
categories, the
same
historical event
may appear more
than once, viewed from the different perspectives of different groups of
women.
Industrialization affected working-class
differently
—
it
and middle-class women very
appears in both chapters as well as at the end of the chapter
on peasant women. The same
is
true of
numerous
events: the Renaissance
World Wars. As traditional historical periods and events receded in significance, others grew in importance. Factors often ignored in histories of men, whether itself,
the Enlightenment, the French Revolution, the
contraception or clothing, diseases or the design of houses proved crucial in
women's
lives.
Use
of sources
changed
as well.
survived, especially in the earlier periods,
Since so few works of
we used women's poems,
paintings as sources as well as their wills, diaries, and letters.
women
plays,
and
We drew on the
work of anthropologists, folklorists, archaeologists, and sociologists as well as historians. This book could not have been written without the prior work of hundreds of scholars, most of them women, working to rediscover European women's history and their experience in the present. This research provides the foundation of our narrative.
Although we began
in prehistory,
of traditions pertaining to
from the ninth century
women,
examining the question of the origins
a.d. to the present.
We defined
terms of geography, not examining cultures
Middle
East.
made up
is on Europe "Europe" strictly in
the focus of these volumes
in Africa,
the Americas, or the
We present the lives of European peasant women
first,
for they
the vast majority of the female population well into the eighteenth
century. Part
II,
"Women
emphasizing the constants
of the Fields," surveys peasant in their
women's
lives,
experience rather than local differences
INTRODUCTION
XX
in
geography, patterns of landholding, or trade. Part
III,
"Women
of the
women within the Christian religion Christianity provided women with a unique environment
Churches," analyzes the experiences of
and
its
institutions.
best understood as a separate category. Part IV,
Manors," argues that the
lives of
"Women
of the Castles
and
Europe's noblewomen from the ninth to
the seventeenth centuries are connected because of their
elite status
and
their
While these women sometimes acquired power and acted in the place of men, they also remained vulnerable because of their gender. Part V, "Women of the Walled Towns," distinfunction as "custodians of land and lineage."
guishes urban
women
counterparts.
From
townswomen
participated in the significant
era,
of the twelfth to seventeenth centuries from their rural
the poorest day laborer to the wealthiest merchant's wife,
economic developments of
their
the formation of guilds and the evolution of commercial capitalism.
them from the constraints of circumstance and women's economic lives. Part VI, "Women
Neither, however, freed
attitude that traditionally limited
of the Courts," argues that the growth of dynastic monarchies
development of elaborate court
life
provided some
women
and the
with opportunities
to become educated, to write, to achieve political influence, and to rule. Royal and court women of the fifteenth through the eighteenth centuries were united by their common environment of the court. Part VII, "Women of the Salons and Parlors," examines the lives of middle- and upper-class women from the late seventeenth century to the present. Despite attitudes, laws, and economic constraints that sought to confine these women to their homes, some overcame the obstacles and won new authority and new roles for themselves and others. Part VIII, "Women of the Cities," deals with the lives of urban working-class women in the same era, focusing on their participation in the economic and political movements of these centuries. "Women of the Cities" parallels "Women of the Fields." Together these sections examine the lives of the two most numerous categories of women: peasants and urban laborers. Placing their lives at the beginning and end of the volumes reflects our belief in the primacy and significance of these women, so often ignored
by conventional Parts sections.
I
histories.
and IX mirror each other and provide
They
exist
a
framework
because of traditions pertaining to
found recurring throughout the centuries.
When
Europe emerged
rate entity in the ninth century, a wealth of traditions
relationship to
men had
for the other
women which we
about
already been established. Part
I,
as a sepa-
women and
their
"Traditions Inher-
Greek, Roman, Hebrew, Celtic, Germanic, and women. Examining the question of the origins of institutions and customs, it argues that the cultural legacy, the many traditions subordinating women, proved crucial in shaping the lives of European women of future generations. In the same way, once women began to quesited," surveys this legacy of
Christian traditions about
Introduction
tion these constraining institutions, customs, a tradition. Part IX, "Traditions Rejected,"
from the fifteenth century to the present.
is
xxi
and
attitudes, they also forged
a history of
Its thesis is
European feminism
that feminism origi-
nated as a rejection of traditions that limited women, and that this process
which
of rejection led to the creation of a feminist view of the world
is still
being elucidated and realized.
While volume
I
focuses on the centuries before 1600 and
those after, this division ple of this history of
women's
lives are.
of peasant I.
not
rigid.
women; the
Thus,
women's
"Women
is
is
volume
II
on
not the organizing princi-
categories of place
"Women
lives in
Chronology
and function demarking
of the Fields" ends with a consideration
Europe today, although
of the Courts," although
it
is
the
first
it is
located in volume
volume
section in
II,
considers the centuries before 1600 to explain the origins of the system of
monarchy and to describe the courtly world of Burgundy and RenaisThe two volumes complement each other and were designed to
absolute
sance
Italy.
be read together,
as a whole.
Choices
Even
in a
work of
this
scope and length,
attention to the diversities of European centuries, different nations,
and
we
could not give the same
women's experiences
in different
different patterns of development.
For
stance, in dealing with subjects like the growth of commercial capitalism its
importance
in
women's
lives,
the similarities in women's experiences, not
the different rates of change in different regions, have been emphasized.
same
is
true of such topics as the role of Christianity
tion, the
in-
and
growth of dynastic monarchies,
and
its
The
later seculariza-
class formation, industrialization,
and urbanization. Readers primarily interested
in these topics
should turn to
specialized histories.
While we have attempted to survey
tried not to all
women
emphasize distinctions, so we have not
in all nations in all eras. In dealing
with the
French Revolution, we examine Frenchwomen, in dealing with industrialization. Englishwomen. We focus as much as possible on the lives of ordinary
women, the women
of the people, the
women
of the masses. Familiar her-
oines also appear, but they are often used to illustrate the lives of
themselves. Joan of Arc
is
women
like
woman; Queen woman empowered by her
seen as an exceptional peasant
Mary Tudor, known as "Bloody Mary," as a faith. Some women's history could only be suggested because so much remains to be researched. For instance, the women who joined religious
Catholic
orders are only beginning to be studied systematically, and almost nothing has
been written about their experiences
We
in
the nineteenth century.
are aware of these gaps in the narrative, but they are for later
INTRODUCTION
XXll
historians to
fill.
Much
remains to be done.
unsatisfied, eager to learn
women
more,
full
We
hope
of questions.
to leave our readers
The
lives of
European
await further exploration and interpretation by this and subsequent
generations of historians.
Benefits
we hoped to find a "Golden Age" for when European women were not subordinated to and valued less than men. While the possibility of a matriarchal culture in prehistory cannot be completely ruled out, we discovered no era in the historical past In the course of our research
women,
a time
in which women dominated. In addition, the unequal relationship between women and men, present at the beginnings of history in Europe, intensified as time went on. The early nineteenth century marked the nadir of European
women's options and possibilities. In earlier centuries, alternative authorities and customs, as well as regional, governmental, and religious variations created a range of circumstances that enabled some European women to achieve relative independence and relative dominance. Gradually, however, changes in government, law, economy, and religion tending toward centralization, rationalization, and uniformity worked to limit women's lives further and deprive most of them of powers and opportunities available to some
women The
in earlier eras.
centuries from the Renaissance through the Enlightenment broad-
ened the
men, giving more men access to education and They did the opposite for women. New national law
possibilities for
choices in occupation.
codes denied
women
control of their property and earnings, gave primary
authority within the family to the husband alone, outlawed any efforts by
women sexes
the
and barred women from higher education During these centuries, the cultural ideals of the
to control their fertility,
and professional
became
woman
training.
The image of the "angel in the house," home and children, idealized women. The reality was different: most women
increasingly polarized.
happily limited to the care of her
a very restricted life for
continued to earn income, some "angels of the house" created paths out of the parlor and into the world, but the ideal remained for
and
in all
circumstances.
The
creation of
women
women's movements
of
all
classes
in the nine-
teenth century was in part a response to this perceived narrowing of women's
women's own
have changed the and technology have also widened women's options anew. While many limits still remain, most European women today enjoy full rights of citizenship, have access to educaoptions. In the twentieth century,
laws and institutions.
tion
and employment,
Some improvements
live longer,
efforts
in science
and face fewer
risks
from sexual
activity
Introduction
and childbearing than women
Gough Age in It is
observes, "It
in earlier ages.
As the anthropologist Kathleen
not necessary to believe myths of a feminist Golden
order to plan for parity in the future."^
our hope that this book
that parity.
The
is
xxiii
will
contribute to the further realization of
As Louise Otto-Peters, the German
history of
forgotten
For too long,
if
all
times,
and
feminist, wrote in 1849:
of today especially, teaches that
.
.
.
women
will
be
they forget to think about themselves.^
women
have had no written memory of themselves. There can
be no equality when more than half of humankind
is
without
a history.
This
European women, the acknowledged and the unrecognized, from prehistory to the present. In this way the most subtle of Europe's traditions about women the devaluing of women's lives, women's activities, and women's achievements can be challenged and dispelled. books details the
lives of
—
—
The benefits will be for women and for men. Learning the history of women changes irrevocably one's view of the past. "History" can never be the same again. Traditional approaches to history must be adjusted and augmented to include the female as well as the male. The result will be a retelling of the human past enriched and made complete, a retelling that will give us for the
first
time a true history of humanity.
I
TRADITIONS INHERITED •
ATTITUDES ABOUT
WOMEN FROM
THE CENTURIES BEFORE
800
A. D.
—
1
BURIED TRADITIONS:
THE QUESTION OF ORIGINS
One of the oldest
portraits of a
found at Dolni Vestonice 26,400
B.C.,
in
European woman
is
a carved ivory
head
present-day Czechoslovakia. Dating from about
the small carving depicts a female face topped by a bun of hair.i
head is that of an individand her nose has a small bump at the end. This head is unique among the many figurines, tools, and bones found so far at Dolni Vestonice, where a group of about 100 to 120 women and men had established a permanent settlement during the severest period of the last Ice Age. They lived in five or six large huts, each about 40 square
The woman's
features are delicate
Her brow and mouth
ual.
twist
and
up
meters, and hunted the large animals that
roamed the tundra around the
—woolly mammoth,
horses, reindeer
by permanent where meat was cooked and clay objects
site.
springs of water with indoor hearths,
were
singular; the
to the left,
They built
their houses
fired.
Thirteen years after the ivory head was found, a female skeleton was unearthed nearby whose skull had a defect on the left side which could have
produced the twist of the woman's face up to the
The skeleton may well be that of woman, estimated to have been 5
the
woman
left in
the ivory carving.
depicted in ivory. ^
feet 3 inches tall
and about
The
buried
forty years old,
on the western edge of the She was lying on her side, facing west, with her legs drawn up. Her body had been sprinkled with red ochre and two mammoth shoulder blades were placed on top of her, one with lines carved on it in irregular patterns. Her stone tools and an arctic fox's paws and tail were buried with her; the fox's teeth were in her right hand. The grave and the ivory carving
had been
carefully placed in a prepared grave
settlement.
are
all
that have endured of her
life,
and they provide
a fascinating glimpse
woman's existence tens of thousands of years ago. Such glimpses into human life in Europe before the invention
of a
have tantalized thinkers concerned with
human
nature and
of writing
human
society.
TRADITIONS INHERITED
Was
this
woman unusual? Probably. While the use of ochre and her burial common in this era, the mammoth bones were not. But what
position were
does the carving of her signify? Did she rule?
men
How
Was
her status high?
Was
she
and do their lives illumine our own? Are there patterns of human nature which have never changed? For the historian, the absence of written materials makes a sure subordinate to
her group?
in
answer to such questions
Yet the the
first
women
did these people
virtually impossible.
issue of the status of
women
in prehistory
written documents of the Greeks,
subordinated to men.
subordination has been
live,
made
The all
difficult
is
important because
Romans, and Hebrews show question of the origins of this
the more complicated by the tendency of
thinkers to formulate universal theories on very
little
evidence. Traditionally,
and prehistory were used to justify women's subordination; conversely, similar arguments came to be used by feminists to assert that such subordination was culturally imposed and should end. The debate took on a new dimension in the second half of the nineteenth century, when the application of evolution to the development of human society produced a series of works which argued that human society had evolved from arguments from nature,
religions,
a matriarchal past to a patriarchal present.
The most influential writers were J. J. Bachofen, Lewis Henry Morgan, and Friedrich Engels.^ A number of theories were advanced to explain the supposed replacement of female dominance (matriarchy) by male dominance (patriarchy). Bachofen speculated that "mother right," in which women controlled religion, property, and marriage, had fortunately been replaced by "father right," in which men rule, a male god is worshipped, and "the man's spiritual principle dominates."'^ Morgan connected a male-dominant monogamous marriage to the rise of "civilization" and the end of incest. Engels argued that the creation of private property controlled by the male head of the family led to "the overthrow of mother right" and "the world historical defeat of the female sex. "^ Others theorized that men's discovery of their role in
conception led to the end of both goddess worship and high female status
in prehistory. All these analyses
human
attempted to draw moral precepts from
evolution. Until the last few decades, thinkers differed
such evolution had been for good or universalist premise
—
that female
ill,
on whether
but they tended to accept the same
dominance had been replaced by male men had
dominance. Opposition came mostly from those who believed
always been dominant and that the evidence for matriarchy was deficient.
Recent work in archaeology and anthropology leads away from universal Both women's roles in early societies and the absence of male dominance in all societies have been explored.^ Attention has focused on the circumstances that make female subordination more likely rather than on explanations.
Buried Traditions: The Question of Origins
justifying
5
contemporary patterns by appealing to the distant past. The most female subordination is the development of intergroup com-
likely reason for
petition
and warfare, usually
Roman, and Hebrew
writings, because
But these writings appear
tures.
and
as a response to stressful ecological
circumstances. This can account for the subordination of all
women
in
social
Greek,
these cultures were warrior cul-
relatively late in
human development. To
search for the origins of female subordination, historians have turned to other
The most important in casting light on women and men in prehistory have been archaeology,
disciplines for answers.
between
relations
biology,
psychology, and anthropology.
Archaeological Evidence
human past. Although women have been found,
Archaeology examines the durable remains of the
many little
tions
fascinating objects depicting or pertaining to
can be currently deduced about their cultural significance, or the relabetween the women and men who produced them. For many years, for
—
—
was overusually performed by men instance, the importance of hunting emphasized, since weapons and bones endured and figured prominently in archaeological digs. Gathering, by which peoples who hunt procure most of carriers and the vegetables and Recent studies of the teeth of early humans show presumably gathered by the women that the bulk of their diet was vegetable of the group. But the status of these women gatherers cannot be known.
their food, fruits
was undervalued, since baskets and
gathered did not
last.
—
^7
Were
they highly valued because they provided most of a group's food, or taken for granted because they procured everyday sustenance rather than the exceptional supplement of animal protein? tion applies to objects, especially
if
The same problem
they are not obviously useful.
in interpreta-
The
and blades can be assumed, but the significance carving of the woman's head can only be guessed.
of axes, needles, like
the ivory
function
of objects
figurines found at Dolni Vestonice raise many questions but yield few answers. There were bone and ivory pendants shaped like breasts, vulvas, and penises. There were clay figurines of bears, rhinoceroses, lionesses, and humans. Of all these figurines, the one that has received the most attention
Other
from scholars
is
a small, red clay statuette of
an abstract female
figure.
The
naked and has no lower arms, feet, nose, mouth, hair, or genitals. Her arms, eyes, spine, navel, legs, and buttocks are marked out by sharp grooves. Four grooves also line her back, two on either side of the spine. She figure stands
is
fat,
with large, pendulous breasts and broad hips.^
This figurine in
is
but one of the scores of the so-called "Venuses" found sites from Spain to Siberia, all dated within a few
numerous European
TRADITIONS INHERITED thousand years of each other. ^
them, most
Many
speculations have been advanced about
view that allowed these figurines to be called
as facile as the
"Venuses." They have been described objects, although
as
pregnant
women and
called fertility
few are discernibly pregnant and gathering/hunting peoples
tend to limit their
fertility
it. They have been called no evidence of what the people who
rather than enhance
mother goddesses, although there made them believed. These objects
is
the historian very
tell
men in these early societies. Vestonice woman and the "Venus"
little
about
women
or their relationship to
The Dolni
figurines date
from
Europe's early Stone Age, twenty-odd thousand years ago. Until about 6000 B.C.,
humans on the continent
of
Europe
lived like their forebears at Dolni
Vestonice, by gathering and hunting as the climate
warmed and
the tundras
gave way to forests and woodlands. Other, later settlements yield equally intriguing objects.
One culture,
at
Lepensky Vir on the banks of the Danube,
placed carved yellow sandstone boulders in
with abstract designs, others carved into of female genitals incised
matic.
Other
on
early cultures
women, men,
it.
What
have
left
its
houses;
some were decorated one had the outline
fishlike creatures;
these boulders signified remains enig-
behind multitudes of
figurines: birds,
and unrecognizable objects. Attempts to classify and understand them remain speculatively Other evidence from cave paintings and carvings suggests that at least some of these early peoples on the European continent understood both the female and male roles in reproduction. Animals were grouped seasonally, showing copulation in the springtime and pregnant females in the summer. If women or goddesses were worshipped in early European cultures, this worship probably did not rest on women's supposed total control over reproduction, as was often assumed by fish,
abstract shapes,
earlier scholars. ^^
Women's
status
and relationship to men
who
also
remain mysterious
in
the
and hunting to farming and domesticating animals, a change that began about 6000 b.c. in Europe. Early farming communities in the Middle East show some evidence of goddess worship; early communities in Europe reveal neither the veneration of women nor their denigration. At Nea Nikomedia in northern Greece, for instance, people farmed, wove cloth, and made pottery. One large build-
archaeological remains of groups
ing in the
shifted from gathering
community contained two greenstone
axes, three blue-green ser-
women and two of men. Property may have been privately owned, a factor Engels and other Marxists have connected to the subordination of women. But the status of women at Nea Nikomedia can only be guessed at; there is no evidence of either women's dominance or their subordination. ^^ Just as farming has been used to explain the origin of female subordinapentine frogs, and seven abstract
human
figures, five of
1.
"Venus"
c.
26,400
figurine
from Dolni Vestonice
B.C.
2.
Woman
Greek
3.
Greek women spinning and weaving
cloth.
with a water jug leading a
little
boy.
vase, fifth century B.C.
Vase attributed
to the
Amasis painter
c.
540
B.C.
\
W
'
^^^^
6. "Flute Player," symbolizing dishonorable roles for women. "Flute girls" often served as prostitutes. Relief
from Ludovisi Throne
c.
460-450
B.C.
7.
Cleopatra of Egypt. Silver tetradrachma,
first
century B.C.
Relief of two Amazons fighting, commemorating the release from service of two
8.
female gladiators. Greek, tury A.D.
m^
'
I
first
or second cen-
9.
Eve, the Tree of Knowledge and the Serpent. Rehef from the Cathedral of Saint
Lazare,
10.
Autun
c.
1120
Mary Magdalen
relief
a.d.
at Jesus' feet,
from Semur-en-Auxois,
and
his follower
Martha
early thirteenth century a.d.
in
the background. Stone
Buried Traditions: The Question of Origins
tion, so has the rise of the state. in
what
is
now
But the evidence of the
considered Europe
with regard to women's
status.
1
These
state systems
first
— Mycenae and Crete—
is
also
enigmatic
early states built palaces, controlled
large surrounding areas, could support people with specialized occupations,
and invented writing, much of which remains undeciphered. Some of the translated Mycenaean tablets show that women workers in the palace received the same rations as men and that women were equally represented among the religious staff, which points to women having equal status to men.^^ But few Mycenaean objects portray women, and without more information to provide context, those that do have no clearer a meaning than the carved ivory head from Dolni Vestonice. For example, a unique small ivory statuette
from about 1500
b.c. depicts
two women and
a boy.
The women They are
kneel side by side and one has her arm on the other's shoulders.
dressed alike, in elaborately ruffled skirts and intricate necklaces; one has long hair, the other's
is
bound
or short.
The
little
boy stands between them, and
who are these women and what do they signify? Are they human or divine? Do they represent Demeter and Kore (Persephone), her lost daughter, present in later Greek and Roman culture? Do they signal a high status for women in Mycenae? None of these all
the figures seem affectionate and serene. But
questions can be answered at present. ^^^
Though more extensive, the archaeological evidence of Cretan culture is no more enlightening with regard to women's status and relationship to men than that from Mycenae or earlier cultures. This has not stopped some from postulating the existence of a matriarchal Cretan society, which worshipped a peaceful mother goddess whose benevolent rule was overthrown by patriarchal Northern invaders. ^^ Such speculation is fascinating but unsubstantiated. From about 3000 b.c. to 1200 b.c, Crete produced writing and sophisticated and refined seal rings, vases, bronzes, figurines, and frescoes, many of which portray women. But women's role and status in Crete remains enigmatic. ^^ For example, archaeologists have reconstructed two small (34.2 centimeters, 20 centimeters) faience statuettes of elaborately dressed
holding snakes, but there
is
no way of
telling
of snake goddesses, or priestesses performing
with snakes. Although most Cretan
if
women
these were representations
some
ritual, or
simply of
seal rings depict animals, a
women
number show
large women with uncovered breasts, often surrounded by smaller females and males, animals and trees. Their significance is unknown. The famous bull-leaping fresco at Knossos shows one red and two white human figures on either side of a bull. The figures could be female or male.^'^ There is some evidence that agriculture was a male activity and weaving a female one: The Harvester Vase shows men carrying a variety of agricultural tools, and traces of looms were found in some quarters identified with women in the palaces.
TRADITIONS INHERITED But separate functions or men.
their relationship to tradition, for
activities It is
do not determine the
not even
and the male name "Minos"
known who
as
status of
women
or
ruled in Crete. Analogy,
King of Crete are the only evidence
male rulership.^^
indeed any European religion before deciphered writno light on the question of the status of women and their relationship to men. There is no clear evidence, as there is in contemporaneous cultures in the Middle East and Egypt, of powerful female goddesses or one omnipotent Great Mother. A study of 103 small human figurines found in Crete revealed that 37.3 percent were female, 9.2 percent male, 40.7 percent human with no sexual characteristics, and 12.8 percent so fragmented their sex could not be determined. ^'^ Even from such extensive urban sites, with so many kinds of archaeological evidence, no one can deduce with
Cretan
religion, or
ing, also sheds
certainty the roles of Europe's
women
in prehistory or
the origins of their
subordination to men. As the historian Sarah B. Pomeroy writes, "The question is open and may never be answered. "^^ To shed more light on this issue, historians have turned to evidence
from biology, psychology, and anthropol-
ogy pertaining to the roles and relationships of
women and men.
Biological Evidence In the past twenty years, biologists have stressed the differences between
humans and
primates, particularly with regard to the social relations between
females and males. a
The
evolution of both primate and
human
bodies reveals
wider and more complex range of behavior for both sexes than was previ-
ously thought.
males, not
all
While many primate species show females subordinated dominance are complicated: In a number
do. Patterns of
to
of
young males defer to both older females and older males. Primate evolution seems to have selected for females that are "highly competitive, socially involved, and sexually assertive individualists," as the primatolo-
species, for instance,
gist
Sarah Blaffer Hrdy writes. ^i Earlier, simplistic equations of humans to
differ markedly (like baboons, whose females been superseded by more sophisticated studies of a wider range of species. But little can be applied with certainty from primate behavior to human actions, because humans difiFer so markedly from
primate species where the sexes
are half the size of males) have
primates in key areas of sexual and social behavior.
Of
all
the primates, only
cycle. In estrus,
humans have
a menstrual rather
than an estrus
both female receptivity and male arousal are hormonally
triggered. Intercourse inevitably occurs at a fixed time in the cycle; the female
can become pregnant only then.
With
menstruation, there
is
no equivalent
compulsion, and humans, unlike other primates, have intercourse
when
their
— Buried Traditions: The Question of Origins
culture
deems
many more
it
appropriate. ^^
Human
9
become pregnant
females also can
times a year than primates, a prosurvival evolution. All
human
composed of the mother, the father or father-surrogate, and children. Primates show far wider variations. In some species, the husband/father role is nonexistent; in others, monogamy and male aid in child rearing is normal. Then, while primates share with humans societies are based
on
families, usually
"millions of years of natural selection for social intelligence," the
world
radically different
is
"human
because of
largely
Language and cultural variation have molded human beyond primate models. Primatology does not currently explain why women should be subordinate and men dominant in many human the
human
from that of other primates,"
behavior
brain. ^^
far
societies.
Neither does biology. Increasingly sophisticated studies of
omy and
human
anat-
physiology reveal no clear reason for either sex dominating the other.
Biological evidence does explain differentiation of function, but
many animal
In contrast to differences
little
more.
which there are dramatic anatomical
species in
between females and males
—
in coloration, size,
and strength
human females and males differ relatively little from each other. (See Table 1.) The organ which most distinguishes humans from other animals is the brain, and innate intelligence does not differ according to gender. ^^ Many of the character traits associated with to
one sex or the other have been shown
be the product of culture rather than biology.
identical
male twins, born
century, one of
whom
in
A
classic case involved
the United States in the middle of the twentieth
was accidentally castrated
as
an infant. Differential
upbringing alone produced a "girl" twin and a "boy" twin by age
five.
Since
these changes preceded hormonal production, they point to a great deal of
behavior being controlled by culture rather than nature. ^^
Women
bear children and
men do
not, but childbearing does not auto-
matically imply physical weakness or inferiority. In
females are the primary hunters; in
many human
many animal species the women, whether
societies
pregnant or not, perform the major share of heavy labor. Cultures tend to assign tasks to
one sex or the other not on the
compatibility with child care.
women
The female
basis of strength, but
on
capacity for lactation has led to
being primarily responsible for the care of nursing infants, but the
primary role of
women
in
parenting older children seems to be culturally
rather than biologically determined.
No
biological basis for a "maternal
Even
instinct" has
been found except immediately
mothering
largely learned rather than instinctive behavior. ^^
is
association with childbearing, nursing, cally lead to either social
dominance
and
after birth.
in
animals,
Women's
early child care does not automati-
or subordination.
Biology distinguishes four physiological differences between females and
Table
1.
SOME PHYSICAL DIFFERENCES BETWEEN THE SEXES Male
Female Fetus XX
chromosome
chromosome More susceptible to sex-linked diseases Androgen production to change female ma-
xy
Less susceptible to sex-linked diseases No androgen production
trix
By
third
male
month, divergence of sexual structures, but organs are analogous
At Birth Development one month "ahead"
More
to
Development one month "behind" Less resistant
resistant to disease
boys than
die
in
1
st
more
year
Longer, heavier
Shorter, lighter
Larger hearts and lungs
Smaller hearts and lungs Higher percentage of body weight
is fat
Higher percentage of body weight
Shoulder and hip sockets, pelvic bones shaped
Ages
one-third
to disease:
girls
is
muscle
differently
1-8
Similar
hormonal production and
similar physical
development
Puberty hormonal production of estrogen and progestin starts, leading to men-
Cyclical
Noncyclical
production
starts, leading to
testosterone
of
the production of sperm
struation
Voice changes and body and
Breasts and body hair grow
Distinctive shoulder-pelvic
facial hair
grow
shape develops: / \ or \ /
Maturity
Capable
Capable
36% 10%
42% 10%
of gestation, birth, and lactation body weight is muscle shorter and lighter Lower metabolic rate Higher percentage of body weight is fat: greater endurance of extreme tempera-
of
of insemination
body weight is muscle taller and heavier of
Higher metabolic rate
Lower percentage of body weight is fat: less endurance of extreme temperature
ture
More endurance, but
less at
some heavy
physical exertion
Less general endurance, but more heavy physical exertion
Distinctive shoulder-pelvic shape:
Aging Decreased hormonal production leads
/ \
or \
to lessening of sexual differences
Menopause
"Male menopause'
10%
10%
longer-lived
/
shorter-lived
at
some
1
Buried Traditions: The Question of Origins
males which
may
determine
appearance.
its
1
contribute to female subordination, although they do not
women
will be,
men.2'7
Some women
If
conditions of diet, health, and exercise are equal,
on the average, 10 percent
shorter, lighter,
and weaker than
be stronger than most men; some
will
weaker than most women. But
in addition,
the
hormone
men
will
be
testosterone, pro-
duced exclusively by males from puberty on, has been associated with "a differential readiness to
aggression
dominance
may is
respond
lead to male
not universal
in
in aggressive ways.''^^
dominance
human
of
women
society,
Male strength and so: Male
but need not do
and male aggression
is
culturally
controlled in a variety of ways.
On if
women have the ability to give birth. In addition, women will be longer-lived than men, by a factor of
the other hand, only
conditions are equal,
10 percent. 29 Like male strength and aggression, female childbearing and longevity could lead to dominance. But such
because of their physiology alone ical
is
dominance by females
or males
neither inevitable nor universal. In biolog-
terms, either sex could dominate the other, but
it is
not determined that
Given this, how can the fact that in most societies women are subordinated to men, or at best, equal to them, be explained? Why are men more likely to subordinate women than women to subordinate men? While biology ofiFers no conclusive answers, psychology can shed some light on this question. either will, nor even that
one must do
so.
Psychological Evidence In contrast to archaeology
and biology, psychology
explanations of men's propensity to dominate over
oflFers
women. From
convincing its
earliest
days in the nineteenth century until the present, psychology has explored the psychic and social implications of sexual differences. While Sigmund Freud and many of his followers argued that women did not develop as completely as men and must "accept the fact of being castrated," later theories have stressed male fear and envy of women. Instead of seeing women as "castrated men," men have been viewed as "psychosexually frailer" than women. ^^ This "frailty" is seen especially in a boy's passage to manhood and in a man's sexual vulnerability. It may explain men's need to subordinate women. One consequence of female mothering virtually universal in human societies seems to be that girls have an easier time becoming women than boys have becoming men. A girl can naturally identify with her primary parent, the mother, and her passage to womanhood is made relatively easy by both this identification and a clear physical signal menstruation. The girl child's need to separate herself from her mother does not become tied up with establishing her own female gender identity, as the sociologist Nancy Chodo-
—
—
—
TRADITIONS INHERITED
12
row argues. ^^ The boy must break his initial identification with his mother and realign himself with the men of his group. Menstruation and her consequent ability to bear children give a woman an obvious function and value to her group;
men have no
natural equivalent.
Women
become women and
gain value by natural physical processes: menstruation, conception, child-
Men seem to have compensated by inventing analogous which mark their passage from boyhood to manhood. Frequently
birth, lactation. social rituals
and mysterious, these
painful
rites of
passage often involve symbolic equiva-
lents to menstruation or childbearing: bloodletting, scarification, the coura-
geous bearing of pain. In most cultures, the
forming deeds, by doing rather than being. ^^ envy and fear of
women more men are
In addition, adult not.
The male
genital injury or castration fears.
than female envy and fear of men.^^
genitally vulnerable in
is
Women
ways that
female's,
women
and male
are
fear of
many cultures. ^"^ Women seem to many societies, it does not seem
present in
While rape
exists in
to carry the negative psychological weight for
men.
passage to
usually
more exposed than the
genitals are
have no equivalent
likely
manhood is more become men by perSy^h difficulties may make male
ritual
Men
than the passage to womanhood.
difficult
women
that castration does for
can feign or hide sexual arousal; a man's arousal
quickly
is
evident and often beyond his conscious control. In sexual intercourse, a
woman
can experience multiple orgasms; a
capacity. Moreover, a
man may be
prevent him from inseminating. Even is
has a more limited orgasmic
if
a
woman
is
among
other things will
not sexually aroused, she
capable of intercourse, conception, and motherhood. Motherhood
still
woman
gives a
cultures.
more
man
impotent, which
value and a function; fatherhood
Women know
indirect proof of their paternity.
man
tion, a
is
far less significant in
that their children are their own;
cannot be positive of
Even when
his paternity.
clear
on
men must his role in
most
rely
on
concep-
As the psychologist Erik
Erikson has written, "Behind man's insistence on male superiority there
women who
an age old envy of
are sure of their
be sure of his fatherhood only by restricting the female. "^^ For all these reasons, many psychologists have argued that greater fear of
women
—and
thus,
resentment. "Boys and
mechanisms ward
to
men
it is
far
more
likely that
it
led to envy, fear,
a
than in in
and
develop psychological and cultural/ideological
cope with their
Nancy Chodorow. "They
off
men have
—women
Women's ability to give birth and greater ease may have led to male awe and worship of them
humanity's distant past, but
writes
need to dominate and control
have of men.^^
sexual performance
is
motherhood while man can
fears
without giving up
women
altogether,"
and poems that the dread by externalizing and objectifying women. "^^ Such psycho-
logical formations
account
create folk legends, beliefs,
easily for the greater
prevalence of female subordi-
Buried Traditions: The Question of Origins
nation in
human
and the devaluation of women found Romans, and Hebrews.
societies
writings of the Greeks,
These psychological formations may
Women's ability
to bear children
create in an area
human endeavor fighting,
13
also
may have
where men were
account
led to a
in
the earliest
in part for warfare.
male need to achieve and
clearly superior to
women. No
area of
provides this so fully as hand-to-hand combat. For in such
men's 10 percent advantage
in size
and strength becomes
crucial.
One root of the origin of warfare may be men's need to act in an area in which their superiority to women and necessity to society were paramount. ^^ The role of warfare in human society has primarily been studied not by psycholThere is also additional anthropological data women's subordination to men.
ogy, but by anthropology.
bears on the origins of
that
Anthropological Evidence Anthropology studies contemporary peoples and uses cross-cultural analy-
human
behavior. Extrapolating backward
sis
to attempt to explore patterns of
in
time to deduce the behavior of prehistoric peoples
known modern
is
problematic. All
been influenced by outsiders (even by the presence of the anthropologists collecting data), and modern ways of living cultures have
may not be the same as those of prehistoric peoples. But anthropologists have become aware of these problems, and in recent years, earlier generalizations about relations between the sexes have given way to more complex and sophisticated studies.
There have been attempts
to
compensate
for past biases
in
the collection and interpretation of data. As a result, female subordination
is
increasingly seen as a variable rather than a universal
While no
cultures have
been found where
women
human
condition.
dominate, there
is
ample
evidence of societies where the sexes are either "integrated and equal" or "separate and equal. "^^ Interest has turned from asserting or denying the universality of female subordination to studying those factors that
more
make
it
or less likely. Attention has turned especially to the implications of the
sexual division of labor. All
other.
human societies specify certain tasks as appropriate for one sex or the The division is not totally arbitrary. In all known human societies,
females have primary responsibility for early child care; males have primary responsibility for
big-game hunting. "^^ But the division of labor alone does not
mean that the labor of one sex is more highly valued than that of the other. The division of labor leads to female subordination only when societies are subjected to specific kinds of social stress. The most crucial factor automatically
seems to be pressure on the environment, which leads to competition within the group or with neighboring groups for diminished resources. Although the
TRADITIONS INHERITED
14
connection between diminished resources and female subordination was neither inevitable nor automatic, female subordination appeared only where
there was such ecological and social
stress.'*^
Basing her conclusions on a survey of 186 cultures, the anthropologist
Peggy Reeves Sanday hypothesizes that in the earliest human societies, before population pressure, women and men may have lived in a relatively egalitarian
numbers grew, and hunger, forced migration, or war became the means for the group's survival, the tendency to subordinate women became more likely. In such societies, female subordination was rationalized and justified. Women came to be portrayed as dangerfashion.
But
as their
against other groups
ous and in need of control. Menstrual taboos appeared, aimed primarily at protecting
men from
"contamination." Childbirth was treated as a handicap-
ping experience, and the group sometimes practiced selective female infanticide.
Males were supposed to be active and aggressive, females passive and
obedient. These traits were taught to children and
became
so accepted that
they were often seen as innate and natural to the two sexes.
Once
in place,
female subordination seemed both correct and inevitable. In addition,
it
was
powerfully reinforced by the appearance of warfare.'^^
As resources necessary to survival diminished, groups competed both and externally for them. It is probably under such conditions that early warfare developed. In early warfare, weaponry was simple and it was the weapons of the hunt that became the weapons of war. Most societies teach weapons skills only to their male children. Male monopoly of these weapons and the skills to use them can easily lead to male dominance of women, either through action or the threat of force. "^^ No culture is known in which women are trained to be as warlike and aggressive as men, and in most warlike internally
cultures only males are urged to
submissive and obedient to
be aggressive. Females are trained to be
males.'^'*
Not all cultures, even those who "Whether male dominance is
nance.
war, develop a system of male domipart of the solution to stress depends
on the previously prevailing configuration of culture," writes Sanday. But many cultures move from participation in warfare to male dominance to the creation of a warrior culture.'*^ In such cultures, war was the most important male
activity. In war,
the male risked his
life for his
thus had a valued function. "^^ In warrior cultures,
family and group and
women
are subordinated
and are valued less than men. But women have accepted such subordination and devaluation. Women have rarely sought to be warriors or to fight to the death. ^'7 Instead, they have depended on the protection of male warriors. Once male warfare is present, a woman needs protection from other male warriors, especially if she is pregnant or caring for young children. The price
Buried Traditions: The Question of Origins
for
such protection has often been her subordination, but
must be paid
The
for her
own and
evolution of warfare and the development of
War
Mycenaean
existed
it
is
a price that
her group's survival.
warrior cultures explains the subordination of Europe's writing occurs.
15
among Europe's
objects found, for instance, are
some
societies into
women
by the time
prehistoric societies:
weapons or portray
warriors.
Most
Once
became an almost inviolable system. It ensured become a hostile world. Its values were passed generations and came to be seen as both natural and inevitable.
a warrior culture developed,
it
the group's survival in what had
on to future
A
group's beliefs, stories, and religions justified and glorified war and male
The earliest writings of European culture do Homer (written down in the eighth century B.C.),
The Greek
warriors.
this.
of
the Twelve Tables of
Ancient
Rome
down between
(c. c.
450
1 1
B.C.),
50 and
c.
and the Pentateuch of the Hebrews (written 250 b.c; primarily known today
books of the Old Testament of the Bible) the subordination of
women
epics
is
all
as the first five
portray warrior cultures in which
well-established.
Written Evidence
Romans, and Hebrews form the and Odyssey, the laws of Rome, the first five books of the Bible, shaped the views of later European generations. These writings remained revered and even sacred long after the Greeks, Romans, and Hebrews had ceased to dominate their regions. Through these writings, Greek, Roman, and Jewish views of women and their roles would be transmitted throughout the centuries to later eras, where they had a powerful and far-reaching influence in European history. The images they provided, the morals they drew, the values they embodied became traditions inherited by European women up to the present day. Earlier Mycenaean and Gretan writings had little later influence because their writings became indecipherable; slightly earlier Middle Eastern texts from Egypt, Sumer, and Babylon had virtually no influence on later European culture. But the Homeric epics, Roman laws, and Hebrew Bible did, and they transmitted the views of warrior cultures in which women are valued less than men and are subordinated to them. These were the values later generations of European women and men inherited. The basic premise of a warrior culture is that men are intrinsically more valuable and more important than women. Thus, women are supposed to be subordinate to men, and this subordination is rationalized and justified in a variety of ways. Women are supposed to be less powerful than men and so. These
early writings of the Greeks,
matrix of later European culture.
The
Iliad
TRADITIONS INHERITED
16
women
(and in the Greek and is supposed to be subordinate to the most powerful god. As in heaven, so on earth: Powerful mortal women of high rank and status are shown, but they are usually subordinate to an even more powerful man. While women were honored if
although these writings often portray powerful writings, goddesses), even the
most powerful goddess
is
they remained within the relatively few roles allowed them
widow, and
in
Greece and Rome,
priestess
—they
are
—
wife, mother,
overshadowed by males
and their concerns. The first writings of each of these ancient cultures have a male content and focus. War is a major topic, and there is little material on women. What there is portrays some powerful women and goddesses, but they are ultimately controlled by male figures. Still, the existence of any powerful female is important, and their existence has led historians of antiquity to argue that women's status overall may have been higher in these early warrior cultures than in the societies that followed them.^^ of
women
in early
Greece, Rome, and
Israel did
The
actual status
not endure, but the images
and values presented in Homer, Roman law, and the Hebrew Bible did. Although images of some powerful women were transmitted by these writings, their overall message was that if women were not subordinated to men, danger and even chaos would result. In the writings of Homer, the need for female subordination can be seen even in the portraits of powerful and attractive goddesses. While each goddess is important and while goddesses compose half the Greek pantheon, there
is
no goddess who is the equal of either Zeus or Apollo."^^ More limited more restricted in their sexuality, the goddesses probably
in their attributes,
mirror the accepted view of
men's
fears that unless
human women
female power
is
as well.
Their images embody
controlled by a male principle,
women
be dangerous to men. The images of these goddesses: Hera (Juno), Aphrodite (Venus), Athena (Minerva), Artemis (Diana), Hestia (Vesta), and Demeter (Ceres) in their Greek and later Roman forms continued to be significant centuries later in European culture, long after their worship had will
ended.
The
desirability of their ultimate subordination
can be clearly seen
in
the portrait of Hera in the Homeric writings. ^o Figuring prominently in the
Iliad,
Hera
joins
with Aphrodite
in
supporting the Greeks against the
Trojans, and her vindictiveness leads to the total destruction of Troy.
goddess of
fertility
and motherhood, Hera
is
The
the patron of marriage. Both
is portrayed as beautiful but nagging. Zeus comhe can keep her "but barely in my power, say what I will.'''^ She embodies female beauty and sexual power, which she uses when she decides to seduce her husband so as to influence the war. Making an alli-
Zeus's sister and wife, she plains that
ance with the gods Sleep (Hypnos) and Love (Aphrodite), she dresses
for
Buried Traditions. The Question of Origins
17
many European women would
the occasion, seeking, as so
in later ages, to
succeed by her beauty: Hera,
having anointed
all
her graceful body,
and having combed her hair, plaited it shining in braids from her immortal head. Then she hung .
.
.
mulberry-colored pendants in her eadobes,
and
shone round her.
loveliness
white as the sun she took to
A new
veil
headdress
her glory,
and on her smooth feet tied her beautiful Exquisite and adorned from head to foot she left her chamber. ' 2
sandals.
Helpless before this beauty and sexual power, Zeus, "the Father,"
is
"subju-
gated by love and sleep. "^^
But Hera's victory
only momentary.
is
tormented by
his wife,
handed work,
eternal bitch!"
it
is
While the
clear that ultimate
power
father of the gods is
his.
is
"Fine, under-
he threatens, reminding her of
his superior
physical power.
Do
you forget swinging so high that day? weighted both your feet with anvils,
I
lashed both arms with golden cord
you couldn't break, and there you dangled Under open heaven and white cloud.
,
Some
gods resented
this,
but none could reach your side or
Zeus's aflfection
Most
is
set
you
free.^^
reserved not for his wife, but for his daughter, Athena.
especially Zeus's child, she
is
born of no mother, but from
his
own
combining elements considered both masculine and feminine in these early cultures. The goddess of war as well as of weaving, she often wears male garb. In the Odyssey, she takes the form forehead. She
of a
man
is
partly
male
(Mentor), and
her robe and puts on a
in nature,
when
Iliad,
she casts of?
golden helmet.
The goddess
she goes into battle in the
shirt, breast
armor, and
a
costume suggests both sexes. She is usually male breast plate, helmet, and spear. Like a male in many ways, she is seen as the goddess most beneficent to men. Like her sister goddesses Artemis and Hestia, she is a maiden, remaining
wisdom and shown wearing
of
virginal in
all
agriculture, her
a
woman's
dress with
the legends told of her.
Her opposite
is Aphrodite, sometimes considered the child of Zeus, sometimes born from the sea foam. The goddess of love and beauty, Aphrodite's power is the power of sexual attraction and erotic madness. Even the
TRADITIONS INHERITED
18
gods cannot withstand her order and hierarchy
is
when she chooses
to use
it,
and
its
power
to disrupt
graphically portrayed. Aphrodite gives her "pieced,
brocaded girdle" to Hera to enable her to seduce Zeus: "Her enchantments
came from
this
allurement of the eyes,/ hunger of longing, and the touch of
wisdom from the coolest men."^^ Nor are women immune: Helen's flight to Troy was inspired by Aphrodite, and her influence on both mortals and immortals was seen as irresistible for good or ill. Artemis, Hestia, and Demeter appear hardly at all in the Iliad and Odyssey; however, they are the subjects of Homeric hymns and figure in early lips/ that steals all
Greek art. Artemis the huntress is Apollo's twin, but she has far fewer powers and attributes than he. Virginal and childless herself, she presides over menstruation and childbearing. Associated with the moon and the bear, she embodies a wild female power. Hestia is the opposite: Represented only as a flame, she is the center and spirit of the home. "She has her place in the center of the house to receive the best in offerings," says the Homeric hymn to her. 5^ The Homeric Hymn to Demeter shows the power of "fair-crowned Demeter" as both the goddess of grain and a mother. Able to win her daughter back from Hades, the king of the underworld, for two thirds of the year, Demeter embodies the power of fertility and motherhood. Goddesses needed priestesses to lead their worship, and in both Greece and
Rome
them was
a
few
women
served as priestesses, although the preferred role for
and mother. Those few might possess a great deal of power. The six Vestal Virgins, mentioned in the oldest laws of the city of Rome, were exempted from the male guardianship applied to all other women. The priestesses of Vesta (Hestia), they guarded the city's sacred that of wife
flame, spending thirty years of their lives as virgins in the service of the
goddess and acquiring influence
among
also served as priestesses to goddesses like
the city's leaders. ^'^ Greek women Athena and Hera. But the Hebrews
worshipped one male god, and masculine pronouns are used with "God" the original texts.
exception Israel in
—the
figure of
God
Miriam, Moses' is
sister.
Miriam
crossed, but
when
leads the
women
of
she later challenges
punishes her with leprosy. ^^
preferred and most
slave in these Greek,
in
served exclusively by male priests with one possible
is
song after the Red Sea
Moses' authority,
The
He
common
role for all
Roman, and Hebrew
women
above the rank of
writings was that of wife
mother. As a warrior's wife, mother, or daughter, a
woman had
a valued
and and
role, so long as she remained within the family and marriage. In Homer's Odyssey, Penelope, the faithful wife, who remains loyal to Odysseus
honored
even after twenty years of separation,
and mother. She
is
is
extolled as an ideal daughter, wife,
Buried Traditions: The Question of Origins
19
a valiant wife!
True
to her husband's
honor and her own,
Penelope, Ikarios' faithful daughter!
The very gods themselves will for men on earth mistress of
—
sing her story
her
own
heart,
Penelope! 59
Penelope's steadfastness in resisting her numerous and importunate suitors is rewarded by a happy reunion with her husband. They both weep for joy and spend the night talking and making love. Odysseus himself extols the
glories of marriage:
"The
best thing in the world"
is
"a strong house held in
where man and wife agree. "^^ Even in the Iliad, which concenon war rather than home, the marriage of Hector and Andromache is
serenity/ trates
match and provides a counterweight to the Hera and Zeus. the goddesses, women were supposed to be ultimately subor-
consistently presented as a love
marital discord of
But
like
dinated to men. Honored
if they remained within the duties allotted to wives and mothers, they were chastised if they ventured beyond them. The most famous scene between Andromache and Hector takes place on the ramparts of Troy, where she urges him not to risk his life and her future by leading an attack beyond the walls. "Lady, these many things beset my mind no less than yours," he replies,
But
if
like a
nor
am
how
to
coward I
I
moved
I
should die of shame
men and noblewomen
before our Trojan
,
avoided battle, to.
Long ago
I
learned
be brave, how to go forward always and to contend for honor. Father's and mine.^^
Andromache to leave war to him; she should At first, this passage may seem to imply separate but equal roles for women and men: She spins at home, he fights abroad. However, this is a situation where Andromache's own life is at stake. Regardless of a happy marriage, her opinion is dismissed, and she is told to tend to her woman's work. The situation and even the words are paralleled in the Odyssey, when Telemachus dismisses his mother Penelope from the crucial conHector concludes by
telling
return to her spinning.
test
with her
suitors:
Return to your own hall. Tend to your spindle. Tend your loom. Direct your maids at work. This question of the bow will be for men to settle,
most of
all
for
me.
I
am
master here.^^
TRADITIONSINHERITED
20
woman
in Homer's works. Even she is suborwhere her life and interests are directly involved (if a suitor wins, she will be forced to marry him). Honored if they remained within the relatively small territory of home and family, women in
Penelope
the most admired
is
dinated to her son in a
vital issue
warrior cultures were also confined to that territory.
In
Hebrew
writings as well,
women
are defined in relation to
men and
book of Genesis in the Bible, Adam calls Eve "bone of my bones, and flesh of my flesh" and it is stated that a man "cleaves to his wife and they become one flesh. "^^ Abraham's wife Sarah is "a woman beautiful to behold. "^'^ Abraham's son, Isaac, "loved" his wife Rebekah, who "alighted from the camel" when she first saw him; Isaac's son Jacob serves fourteen years to win the "beautiful and lovely" Rachel, and they seemed but a few days because "whom he served seven years for are seen as the objects of male desire. In the
.
he had
of the love
for her."^^
.
.
Eg^h
of these
women
is
described in terms of
dependent on God, who has the power to "open" their wombs and enable them to conceive. Eve is given her name by Adam because it means "mother of all living." Sar'ai her maternity, but their ability to birth children
when God
(Sarah) laughs
tells
is
her she will bear a son at ninety, but
it
happens,
and she becomes as God predicted, "a mother of nations." Isaac's prayers that Rebekah conceive are fulfilled with twin boys; Rachel's plea, "Give me children or I shall die," is answered with a son, Joseph. ^^ Barrenness was a woman's failure. When Rachel conceives, she says, "God has taken away my reproach." Gonversely, mothers were supposed to be respected. One of the Ten Commandments given Moses is to "honor your father and your mother."^'^
Despite such precepts, less
than men.
"Women"
applied to cowardly men.^^ cant.
The
women is
in warrior cultures
an insult
in
were inevitably valued
the Iliad and the Old Testament,
Even within the family, women were less signifiHomer and the Old Testament rarely give
lengthy genealogies in
the names of mothers and present lineage solely through the male
just
line.
In
Roman
custom, only boys were given individual names; girls bore the family name and were distinguished from each other by nicknames.
traditional
A
law attributed to Romulus, the legendary founder of the city of Rome, compelled citizens to rear "every male child," but only "the first-born of the females. "^^
Being valued dination. In
less
Homer's
contributed to and supported a system of female suborwritings, in
Roman
law, in the
Old Testament, women
men, and this relationship is justified in a variety of ways. The fourth of the Twelve Tables of Rome is called Paternal Power and gives the father sole and absolute authority over his children. In the fifth table, it is specified that "because of their levity of mind" all women (except are explicitly subordinated to
— Buried Traditions: The Question of Origins
21
the six Vestal Virgins) shall be under a man's guardianship; both guardianship and inheritance passed through the male line to male relatives. Paterfamilias, the father of the family, was an important legal concept in ancient Rome; there was no female equivalent materfamilias was an honorary title given to the father's wife, but carried no power or rights^^ In the Old Testament, a woman's word stands only if her husband or father
do not disagree with
of females
and males
her; otherwise, their views prevail. In a valuation
higher: 3 shekels for a girl baby, a
5 for a
boy; 30 shekels for a
man. In the story of Lot, Lot's goodness
refusal to give
males are consistently valued
at various stages of life,
two male guests
is
mob; he
to an angry
woman, 50
for
by
his
demonstrated
in part
offers his
two
virgin
daughters instead. "^^
Although two versions of the creation of human beings are given
God
Genesis, the more egalitarian one, in which
image
.
.
.
who
is
"man
in his
male and female created he them" tended to be ignored
of the fuller, older version. There,
she
created
Eve
is
created from
Adam's
"beguiled" by the serpent into disobeying the Lord.
basis for female subordination will greatly
I
in
is
rib,
The
in
own
in favor
and
it is
principal
given in God's punishment of her:
multiply your pain in childbearing;
pain you shall bring forth your children,
yet your desire shall be for your husband,
and he
God
punishes
Adam
and so broke God's of good and evil.'^'
shall rule over you.'^^
"because you have listened to the voice of your wife"
rule
about not eating the
Female subordination behavior allowed
fruit of
also expressed in the
is
women and men. The women
double standard of sexual
practices of these early warrior
cultures catered to male sexuality. Normally, the
were slaughtered and the
the tree of knowledge
enslaved.
men
These
of a defeated group
slave
women were
then
used by the victorious warriors as concubines and servants, and male sexual
woman was
taken for granted. The precipitating cause of Agamemnon's decision to take Achilles' slave girl, replacement for his own Chryseis, who had been ransomed by
use of any slave
action in the Iliad Briseis, as a
her father. But slave
is
women were
themselves not allowed such freedom. In
the Odyssey, Telemachus hangs the slave ope's suitors; their crime
is
women who had
sex with Penel-
seen as disloyalty as well as unchastity.^'*
In the Laws of Rome and the Old Testament, women were condemned and punished for behavior allowed men. Laws attributed to Romulus specified that a husband could kill his wife for adultery or wine drinking, and a Roman
history of that early period states that
when Egnatius Metellus "took a cudgel
TRADITIONSINHERITED
22
and beat his wife to death because she had drunk some wine, not only did no one charge him with a crime, but no one even blamed him."'^^ Another Law of the Kings stated that wives were not allowed to divorce their husbands, but that husbands could divorce wives "for the use of drugs or magic on account of children or for counterfeiting the keys or for adultery." The Twelve Tables mention only the husband's right to repudiate his wife7^ In the Old Testament as well, only the husband has the right to divorce, and a divorced woman is described as "defiled. "'^'^ There is an elaborate test called "the law of the jealousies," which allowed a husband to check if his wife had been faithful.
—
The wife was given
the "water of bitterness that brings
and nothing happened, she was considered innocent; if "her body shall swell and her thigh shall fall away" she was considered defiled and "a curse among her people."''^ There was no reciprocal test of a husband's fidelity. While the Hebrews were unusual among warrior cultures in calling for the death of both adulterers, woman and man, female unchastity was more severely punished in some instances. If a woman were not a virgin, she could be stoned to death; if a man raped a virgin, he could make the curse"
if
she drank
it
by paying her father and marrying her.^^ In the early books of the Old Testament marriage demands fidelity from the wife, but not the husband; the husband commits adultery when he has sex with another man's wife, not when he has sex with another woman. There are numerous instances of respected patriarchs having two wives or a wife and a concubine. Abraham has intercourse with Hagar because his wife Sarah is barren; Jacob marries Leah and Rachel and takes two of their maids as concubines as well.^° This double standard is embodied in the language used to describe husband and wife; the husband is the baal or master of his wife rather than just her restitution
husband. ^1 In
Greek and Roman law
not the
men who
Roman
law from about 700
as well as the
B.C.
some
ultimate abuse, and to death, especially
if
but
inferiors.
A
century B.C. excluded prostitutes from
Old Testament, there
"Whore" and
are both slave
"harlot" are used as terms of
be burned no condemna-
biblical verses called for prostitutes to
they were priest's daughters. ^^ There
men who bought
In addition, the ritually
fifth
religious cults. ^^ i^ the
concubines and prostitutes.
tion of the
prostitutes,
forbade a "concubine" to touch the altar of
Juno, and Athenian laws from the
many women's
Old Testament,
used them, were condemned as outcasts and
is
their services.
Old Testament
classified all
impure when they menstruated. In
bodily discharges, menstruation
is
healthy adult
women
as
and "her impurity" and makes a
a section dealing with disease
described as
woman and everything she touches or sits on unclean for seven days. (Ejaculation, in contrast, rendered a man unclean only until the evening of the day
Buried Traditions: The Question of Origins
it
occurred.)
with her, he cally
If a is
man
touches her, he
unclean for seven days;
if
man
he has sex
if
woman
automati-
she has other bleeding or discharge from her
with a bodily discharge caused by disease,
unclean until seven days after
it
ended. ^'^
woman
If a
is
gives birth to a son,
unclean for seven days and cannot go to the temple for thirty-three
is
days;
unclean until evening;
unclean for seven days. Her period makes a
vagina, then she, like a
she
is
23
she gives birth to a daughter, she
if
cannot go to the temple
is
unclean for fourteen days and
for sixty-six days.^^ "Y\x[^ ritual impurity turns
both
menstruation and childbirth, especially of a daughter, into contaminating
These laws have the
events.
menstrual taboos were not so
women
effect of devaluing
widespread
strict or
in
are described in the writings of early scientists like
Historians of
women
Greece, Rome, and
have noticed
Israel
that,
and
although the
earliest writings of
women
in general.
That came
the Greek poetry of Hesiod and Semonides, writing in the seventh
sixth centuries B.C.; in the satires
Rome;
Although
contain and justify female subordination, they are
not misogynist; they do not express a hatred of later: in
as well.
Greece and Rome, they Aristotle and Pliny. ^^
in
and poetry
of
first
century a.d. Imperial
Jewish and Christian interpretations of the Old Testament ranging
from the second century
be stigmatized
B.C. to
as innately evil.
a.d.^'^ Then women would woman would be seen as a
the third century
The
creation of
punishment for man, and woman would be identified as the enemy of both men and civilization. She would be seen as the source of disease and trouble, be equated with various despised animals, be described in the most disgusting of terms.
Female subordination, with
its
lesser valuation of
to such misogyny. Exceptional circumstances
images for women. Imperial
Rome
also
women,
might favor other
led easily roles
and
saw the achievement of great female
power; some Jewish and Christian authorities stressed women's equality; century after Hesiod's diatribes against for her verse.
women,
But female subordination remained
most important tradition inherited by coalesced in the ninth century a.d.
a
the poet Sappho was honored is the first and European culture
in place. It
women when
a truly
INHERITED TRADITIONS:
THE PRINCIPAL INFLUENCES
A
DISTINCT European culture emerged with the coronation of Charlemagne
in
800
and
A.D.
and
artists,
his creation of
an empire
in the early ninth century.
prescriptions about
women and
perpetuated or revived ancient views of
women. This new Europe drew on Greek, Roman, brew, and Christian sources for cally,
Writers
philosophers and theologians used ancient sources and texts for
uneven
its
attitudes
and
Celtic,
Germanic, He-
institutions.
in their influence, these ancient sources
Used
ahistori-
continued to shape
European culture and society for centuries.^ Greek images and beliefs about women were both preserved and transformed by the Romans, who carried them to the outer reaches of their vast empire. Roman attitudes toward women, chiefly in the form of laws and in Europe long after the collapse of the Roman Empire in the course of the fifth century. The new invaders, the Celtic and Germanic peoples, learned writing from the Romans and Christian missionaries and eventually recorded their own laws and epics in which women
customs, remained influential
figured.
The Hebrews, scattered throughout the Mediterranean world in the Roman period, continued to influence the new European
diasporas of the culture
and
its
writings as the initially
views of
women
Old Testament
favorable to
women
but
century on. Persecuted by the
through the acceptance of their sacred
of the Christian Bible. Christian influence, later restrictive,
grew unevenly from the
Roman Empire
in
first
the third century a.d.,
became the Empire's preferred religion in the fourth century. Between then and the ninth century, it spread by conquest and conversion across the continent and the new Europe of the ninth century identified itself as Christian. Christianity both perpetuated old traditions about women and Christianity
added new customs. Before the advent of Christianity, women's experience varied greatly within different cultures. Greeks of the
fifth
century B.C. contrasted the
Inherited Traditions: The Principal Influences
circumscribed
A
wealthy
without
a
lives of
of the
male guardian, bore
woman living had little in common Jewish
nium
Athenian wives with the
Roman matron
earlier.
in
first
little
freer life of Spartan
women.
centur\' ad., able to transact business
resemblance to her
cosmopolitan Alexandria
in
with her biblical counterpart
Celtic carvings and
25
Germanic grave
own
slave
woman.
A
the second century a.d.
in pastoral
sites reveal
Judea a millen-
wealthy, power-
ful women absent from the dry paragraphs of the law codes. The lives of women in these early cultures have been pieced together by historians. While much of their experience did not endure and had no influence on later European culture, many traditions concerning women were preserved and
perpetuated. Despite differences of culture, law, and circumstance, the
Greek, Roman, Celtic, Germanic, and Hebrew traditions about
more
similar than they are different.
The
women
are
bulk of the pre-Christian traditions
women subordinate and limit them, seeing women as inferior and dependent on men. Some of these pre-Christian traditions, however, consist of images and eras in which women's equality, power, and independence flourished. Never totally erased, they too form part of the legacy of inherited about
to
Europe's women. Christianity, largely because of believers
and
its
its initial
emphasis on the equality of
divergent views about sexuality,
these earlier traditions about
women. Within
came
to
Christianity
change
itself,
a
all
few of
women
were
allowed a far wider range of activities in the early years of the religion than in its later centuries.
the Christian
wider roles for
Although women's
Church became
roles
were severely restricted when
institutionalized in the fourth century, the
women mentioned in the New Testament remained The pattern of freedom followed by
the European cultural heritage. tion, set in the early Christian
actions regarding It is
a
model
for later
restric-
Church
women.
these sources
—which
Church, provided
part of
—Greek and Roman,
Celtic and Germanic, Jewish and
European women when Europe coalesced in the ninth century. Many of them, whether restrictive or liberating, remained part of European culture for many centuries, and in some cases, until the present. They are the foundation of attitudes and circumstances that governed most European women's lives; they form the basis of customs and laws; they lay behind the views which both subordinated and empowered women in the succeeding centuries. These traditions comChristian
furnish the traditions inherited by
prise the rest of this section. Since the sources for societies before the ninth
century are limited and uneven, the focus is
to
in
the remainder of this section
women in each culture, but rather on those traditions pertaining women that shaped European women's lives in the ninth century and
not on
beyond. 2
—
TRADITIONS
SUBORDINATING WOMEN
The
earliest, and in
Christianity
—the
many
cases,
most sacred writings of the cultures before
Greek, Roman, Hebrew, Germanic, and Celtic
—
en-
shrined female subordination. As the centuries passed, belief in female subordination endured and acquired the authority of hallowed tradition. Female
subordination limited women's roles and function;
nature and the proper use of their bodies.
pean culture, which emerged
in the
It
Greek wrote
in the fifth
century
defined their essential
new Euro-
ninth century.
"All men's thoughts have been shaped by a
it
passed intact to the
B.C.,
and
Homer from this
the beginning,"
remained true
in future
Egypt between the fourth and fifth centuries b.c. were Homeric works or commentaries on them. Homer's epics continued to influence Europe's culture.^ Roman law was based on early centuries. Close to half the papyri
found
in
Germanic peoples Lombards wanted laws written down, he investigated "the old laws of the Lombards known either to our self or to the old men of the nation," and this corpus was added to in the following centuries. ^ For the Hebrews especially, military defeat and colonization by Greece and Rome led to increased reliance on "the book," which distinguished them as a people, so that both the Old Testament and the commentaries that developed on it built on the basic ideas about women precepts and cited precedents as justifications. Celtic and
did the same. In 643 a.d.,
when King Rothair
of the
expressed in the Pentateuch. In each case, the basic premises of female
— women were by nature dependent on and —were repeated and As time went on, these premises came
subordination
men
to have the
inferior to
that
elaborated.
power of axioms: They seemed natural, inevitable, and in some Each of these cultures argued that woman's physical body
cases God-given.
her menstruation, her uterus, her ability to give birth her from war, law, government, and
woman's body necessitated
much
—by
of religion.
definition excluded
Each argued
that
that she be confined to the protected sphere of
Women
Traditions Subordinating
home
the
possible.
if
Each gave the men
of her family (or male guardian)
authority and power over her, and each saw her
connected to the family. Each valued
much
27
women
less
almost exclusively
life as
than men, sometimes so
more boys were raised than girls. Each excluded women from deemed most important, whether it was warfare, philoso-
so that
the activities they
phy, or the study of sacred books.
The premise even by thinkers
of
women's innate
who
by nature superior, and the female is
ruled," stated the
inferiority
was hardly ever questioned,
questioned other basic premises of
and the one
inferior;
Greek philosopher
"This principle of necessity extends to
life.
rules
"The male
is
and the other
Aristotle in the fourth century B.C.
all
mankind." This inequality
is
"per-
manent" because the woman's "deliberative faculty" is "without authority," like a child's.^ Adapted by later Jewish and Christian thinkers, Aristotle remained the scientific authority for Europe into the sixteenth century. Like the Greek philosopher, Roman jurists stood by traditional premises where "^
women were concerned.
In the
of their weakness of intellect"
first
century
women
all
B.C.,
Cicero argued that "because
should be under the power of male
guardians; in the third century a.d., Ulpian asserted that guardians were
necessary for
all
women "on
account of the weakness of their sex and their
ignorance of business matters. "^ In Celtic Ireland, law codes ranked
women
and drunks.^
as "senseless," like slaves, prisoners,
Jewish thinkers built on the same premises about the female's inferior nature. In the
first
century a.d., Philo, a Jewish philosopher influential
among
both Jews and Christians, commented on Genesis:
The
soul has, as
Now
it
were, a dwelling, partly women's quarters, partly men's
men
where properly dwell the masculine filled with freedom and boldness, and kin to wisdom. And the female sex is irrational and akin to bestial passions, fear, sorrow, pleasure and desire from which ensue incurable weakness and indescribable diseases. quarters.
for the
thoughts [these
are] wise,
there
is
sound, .
.
a place
just,
prudent, pious,
.
"^
same era, the Jewish historian Josephus stated that in the eyes of Jewish "The woman ... is in all things inferior to the man."^ In Hebrew law,
In the law,
this inferiority implied incapacity.
together and flighty,
women were
minds. '"^ By the
prayers thanked
Women,
children,
and
slaves
were classed
forbidden to testify "because they have first
God "who
female prayer was to thank
century
has not
God
a.d.,
Jewish
men
in
their
light,
i.e.
morning
made me a woman." The equivalent having "made me according to thy
for
will."io
In the Mishnah, the collection of Jewish legal commentaries, there are two sections which deal specifically with females, one on women and one on
TRADITIONSINHERITED
28
menstruation.il viticus,
The
remained
classification of
menstruation as unclean, based on Le-
fully in force in later centuries
and was the subject of
commentaries, which elaborated the rules about contamination from men-
women. Women's periodic "impurity" was further reason for exthem from religious duties within the temple. The belief that healthy women become contaminating once a month, because of a natural process struating
cluding
that cannot be controlled, inevitably contributes to the view that women are by nature inferior to men. Other cultures offered their own evidence that women's menstruation
men and their unfitness for male roles. Bo Cualinge {The Cattle Raid of Cuchulainn, seventh or eighth century). Queen Medb (Maeve) of
demonstrated their basic
inferiority to
In the Celtic epic, Tain
written
down
Cruchan
is
the
in
A
presented as a powerful, beautiful, and wealthy woman.
formi-
dable warrior and general, she seems an equal opponent for the hero Cuchulainn, until the climactic end of the epic. Then, while in battle, gets "her gush of blood"
and has
to leave her
war chariot to "relieve
Cuchulainn, the hero of the epic, comes up behind her captures her.
The
scene of the defeat
"is called
Medb
herself."
at this point
and
Fual Medba, Medb's Foul
Place, ever since," states the epic.^^
Greek and Roman
scientific
tion as a mysterious, dangerous,
cians
and medical texts often described menstruaand contaminating event. The male physi-
whose writings formed the
influential Hippocratic
Corpus
(largely
from
fourth-century B.C. Creece) described the menses as blood which might
wander through the body; it might cause consumption if it entered the lungs. 1^ The Corpus tended to assume that menstruation was controlled by the moon and that all women menstruated at the same time of the month, a belief perpetuated by Aristotle. ^"^ All manner of supernatural powers were ascribed to menstrual blood. Aristotle wrote that a menstruating
could
make
woman
a clean mirror "bloody-dark, like a cloud" because the menstrual
blood passed through her eyes to the surface of a mirror. ^^ Aristotle also believed that
women had
fewer teeth than men, and such glaring errors
in
the work of a normally careful observer point to Aristotle's prejudices about
women Roman
overriding his evidence.!^ Pliny the Elder, the authority on natural history, wrote that
heavily every third month. strual fluid,
some
Contact with die, seeds in
it
of
He
women
also perpetuated popular beliefs
which would remain current
turns
first
new wine
sour, crops
gardens are dried up, the
century a.d.
menstruated more about men-
for centuries in
touched by
it
become
fruit of trees falls off,
Europe:
barren, grafts
the bright surface
which it is merely reflected is dimmed, the edge of steel and the gleam of ivory are dulled, hives of bees die, even bronze and iron are at once seized by rust, and a horrible smell fills the air; to taste it drives dogs mad and infects .^'^ their bites with an incurable poison. of mirrors in
.
.
Traditions Subordinating
The
Women
persistence of such beliefs in the face of
29
ample evidence
contrary effectively denigrated those processes and organs unique to
to the
women.
Beliefs about the uterus and reproduction were even more derogatory. Greek and Roman men who wrote on science and medicine took the male as the standard and saw the female as an inferior variant. "The female is as it were a
deformed male," asserted
menstrual discharge
is
on reproduction, "and the
Aristotle in his treatise
semen, though
an impure condition;
in
i.e., it
lacks
one
constituent, and one only, the principle of Soul.''^^ Galen, the eminent
physician of the second century a.d., argued that outside
The
in.
of "perfection"
were "smaller,
ovaries
compared
women were men
turned
and woman's lack man was explained by the need of the species
to
less perfect testes"
to reproduce. 1^
Taking the male organs
as
standard and viewing the female organs largely
by analogy, these ancient writers enshrined the dered" around the body
and masterful,
like
like
is
them
womb
"wan-
an animal disobedient to reason, and maddened with the
sting of lust," wrote the fourth-century the same
belief that the
an "animal." As the penis becomes "rebellious
the case with the so-called
Greek philosopher
womb
or matrix of
Plato,
women;
the animal
and when remaining unfruitful long beyond its proper time, gets discontented and angry, and wandering in every direction through the body, closes up the passages of the breath, and, by obstructwithin
is
desirous of procreating children,
ing respiration, drives
them
to extremity, causing
This theory of the "wandering
number
womb"
all
varieties of disease. ^^
proved remarkably persistent.
Men-
Corpus of the fourth century B.C., it was strenuously restated by Aretaeus of Cappodocia in the second century a.d., who wrote that "on the whole, the womb is like an animal within an animal" because it roamed about the body but could be attracted to its tioned a
of times in the Hippocratic
rightful place with sweet odors. ^i In
both Greece and
Rome
the symbol of
the erect male organ signified good fortune and was often placed before
homes and
in gardens;
the symbol for the female genitals identified brothels.
Seeing the uterus as a revolting "animal within an animal" contributed to the denigration of woman's role in conception, also a common feature of Greek and Roman writings on reproduction. In Aristotle's writings and the
Hippocratic Corpus, the role
woman
and yet her contribution
is
seen almost exclusively in her reproductive
to reproduction
is
usually considered far less
important than that of the man, whose "strong sperm"
will produce a boy and "weak sperm" a girl.^^ Barrenness was the woman's fault, however. These views that men were primarily responsible for conception contributed to and were often connected by ancient authors to women's innate inferiority. Plato began his section on the "wandering womb" by explaining that men were
created
first;
women were
the offspring of those
men "who were cowards
or
TRADITIONSINHERITED
30
and were thus
led unrighteous lives"
human
A
race.^^
semen," an
symbol of the degeneration of the
a
female was a female because of her "inability to concoct
inability Aristotle
ture." Menstrual fluid
thought came from the "coldness of her na-
was deficient semen;
to supply only the "matter" of a fetus, to
woman was
a deficient
man, able
which the superior male contributed
"form" and "soul."^^
The belief that women were "cold" and "moist" while men were "hot" and "dry" came from Hippocrates; as in Aristotle, "cold" was seen as inferior and was used to prove the female's inferiority to the male. "The female is less perfect than the male for one, principal reason," wrote Galen in the second century
Valued In Greece
Rome
and
than boys.
"because she
a.d.,
women
than men,
less
colder. "^5
is
survived less often to adulthood than men.
especially, there
The normal
is
ratio of girls to
evidence that fewer
boys at birth
is
girls
were raised
100 to 105. In both
the city of Athens and the Roman Empire, there are population figures which show the ratio skewed far to the male side. Ancient Greek censuses, lists of citizens and gravestones show a far larger number of males than females, and a recent estimate
Athens were not
argued that 10 percent of the female babies of the city of raised
by
their families. ^^
Even taking
into account under-
Roman Empire of women greatly outnumbered by men: in Roman Egypt, 100 women to 105 men; in Roman Spain, 100 women to 126 men; in Rome itself 100 women to 131 men; in Roman Italy and Africa, 100 women to 140 men.^^ reporting of female births and deaths, censuses from the
the second to fourth centuries a.d. show
Infants were rarely killed outright; rather, they were "exposed"
on garbage heaps or
outside,
in public places, in
might rescue them. Brothel owners collected infant be is
prostitutes. 28 In direct.
From
father to raise
Rome, evidence
as early as the
all
his sons,
early third century a.d.,
females"
among
more boys than care of the
you," a
the
girls
luck to you!
—you bear
raised
them
far
to
female infants
in
a
the
more males than
nobility of Augustus' era, the practice of raising
was taken
and
left
Twelve Tables, which required
of the
which remarks that "there were
Roman husband
and
but only one daughter, to a history written
Roman
little child,
girls
for the routine exposure of
Law
—
the hope that a passerby
as
for granted. 2*^ "I
soon as
we
wrote his wife,
offspring,
if
it is
beg and beseech you to take
receive wages
Alis, in
a
male
Egypt
I
in
will 1
send them to
B.C. "If
let it live; if it is a
—good female,
and women were assumed to need less to eat than boys and men, and so they were usually given less. In the fourth century B.C., Xenophon wrote that outside of Sparta, Greek "young girls who are destined to become mothers and considered well brought up are stinted in their basic diet and eat as little as possible of other expose it."^o In both Greece and Rome,
girls
Traditions Subordinating
foods. "^^ In
Rome, food
Women
was provided
assistance
31
far
more often and
for
and women. The Roman bread dole was only for men, and the records of a typical fund in northern Italy of the second century a.d. show 246 boys aided, but only thirty-five girls. ^2 Even where the effort was made to support equal numbers of girls and longer periods of time to boys and
—
men
than
girls
in the second century a.d. by the wealthy Macrina girls' grants were between 20 and 40 percent less than boys and ended two years sooner. ^^ These practices and the hazards
boys
fund established
as in a
—
heiress, Caelia
women
faced in childbirth shortened women's
under conditions of
relative equality
women's
percent, throughout antiquity shorter than a man's. ^'^
women
of
The system
life
expectancy.
tend to outlive life
men by
expectancy was
While women a factor of
five to
10
ten years
of female subordination deprived
some
life itself.
Outside Greece and Rome, infanticide and exposure were condemned, but
girls
and
women
continued to be valued
less
than boys and men. Both
the Hebrews and the Celts set monetary equivalents for their people to serve as a
measure of compensation
in case of injury or death.
females lower than those for males.
Of
the
Germanic
Both
tribes,
set values for
the Lombards,
women equally with men of the same Among women, variations came because of the ability to bear children.
Burgundians, and Anglo-Saxons valued status.
For example, among the Salian Franks, the wergild (valuation) of a girl before menarche and a woman after menopause was a third that of a menstruating
Women
's
Approved Roles
Those women who grew
found in place a which assumed they would function only in their approved roles of daughter, wife, mother, and widow. Women were defined by the family and, within the family, by their relationship to the men of the group. Life within the family protected and supported a woman. Laws rewarded and institutionalized her dependence and subordito maturity in these cultures
complete system of values and
nation.
Each
institutions,
of these early cultures explicitly excluded
women from
activities
outside the family, activities these cultures valued most. Powerful cultural this division of roles and activities, excluding women from the important areas assigned to men: warfare, government, philosophy, science, law, and in some cases religion. In classical Greek culture, the male
messages reinforced
was identified with
civilization, reason,
emotion, and chaos.
Men
to control
emotion and
needs. ^6 Although
and order, the female with nature,
could be expected to apply reason and logic to
instinct;
women would
give in to impulse
and
life,
selfish
some Greek playwrights created sympathetic and powerful
TRADITIONS INHERITED
32
women in their dramas, classical scholars still debate whether Athenian women were even permitted to watch these plays. Most often, the notion of a woman attempting to assume male roles was considered intrinsically humorous, as in Aristophanes' cles'
comedy The Congresswomen
famous Funeral Oration,
in
women that the greatest glory men whether for good or for
bravery and pursuit of glory in war, advised "will
be hers who
is
(Ecclesiazousae). Peri-
which the Athenian leader extolled male
least talked of
among
the
bad."57
Roman
culture similarly disapproved of
tinued to base
becomes
a
itself
on the power of the
women
in
men's
roles
and conAeneas
father. In Vergil's Aeneid,
hero and a worthy founder of the city of
Rome
in part
by
resisting
the temptation posed by Dido, a powerful foreign queen. Instead he chooses the docile and obedient Lavinia as his wife. She
is
appropriately silent, in the
manner urged on Greek and Roman women, and never utters a word in the epic. The expansion of elite Roman women's economic and political power during the early Empire (first century b.c. to first century a.d.) became a major criticism of the Empire itself; only a degenerate government, argued
women such power. '^ woman from the study of the
the historians Livy and Tacitus, would have allowed
Among
the Hebrews, her sex excluded a
Torah and the Talmud (the Pentateuch, its commentaries, and the laws), which was a primary religious obligation of Jewish men. Although Rabbi Ben Azzai argued, around 200 a.d., that a father had an obligation to teach his daughter Torah, subsequent practice supported the opinion of Rabbi Eliezar that "whoever teaches his daughter Torah is in effect teaching her lasciviousness."^'' The Palestinian Talmud argued that it was "better the words of Torah were burned than put into a woman's keeping" and the Babylonian Talmud asserted that "There is no wisdom in woman except with the distaff" [used to spin yarnj.'^o Women's function was to keep a home which abided by Jewish law and to pass traditional practices on to their children. Mothers educated daughters until they were married and sons until they reached the age of seven and went on to men's schools. But even within the home, a Jewish woman was subordinated to the male's dominance in religion. Able to light the Sabbath candles, a woman was forbidden to say the prayers blessing the bread she had baked or the wine she had poured. The Talmud says "cursed be the man who lets his wife recite the blessing for him on Friday night."^!
Celtic and
honored male that
if
a
Germanic activity.
woman
cultures excluded
One Lombard
warfare, the
participated in a brawl, no penalty fine need be paid
women. "^^2
i^ the Celtic epic,
most if
she
manner dishonorathe Tain Bo, Queen Medb's beauty,
were injured, since "she had participated ble to
women from
law of the seventh century specified
in a struggle in a
Traditions Subordinating
leadership,
made
and heroism
in battle
Women
33
cannot override the fact of her womanhood,
When
graphic by her menstruation.
she has been defeated, she speaks
with Fergus, up to that point her loyal lieutenant:
"We have had shame and shambles here today, Fergus." "We followed the rump of a misguiding woman," Fergus said.
"It
is
the usual
thing for a herd led by a mare to be strayed and destroyed."'*'
Excluded from the public powers reserved to men, women in these early had their own proper roles and functions. Defined in relation to men, women were categorized primarily by their sexual activity with men. From cultures
the earliest writings of these cultures, there
women and bad women daughter.
When
she lost her virginity
option only for the tiny she
ity),
tute
—
a
became bad
number
either a wife
sexually active
—
is
of priestesses
good
a
woman.
between good
a strict division
A
good daughter was a virginal (and remaining virginal for life was an
this regard.
in
A
whose
service required virgin-
sexually active
woman
—
or a prosti-
wife had sex with one man, which
defined her as chaste, a prostitute with many, which defined her as wanton.
"A woman's
greatest virtue
is
to second century B.C. Italy, cultures. ^"^
A
chastity," stated a Pythagorean text
and
this
sentiment was repeated
major inherited tradition of European
from third
in all these
women was
that they
good or bad, proper or improper, respectable or outcast, because of their sexual connections with men. Virginity and chastity were seen as inextricably connected to obedience.
would be defined
as
girl to be obedient, especially to her father, would ensure that she would maintain her proper behavior within the family as a virginal daughter and later as a chaste wife and mother. Laws institutionalizing her subordination to men set the pattern of restrictions for the European culture to come. Within the family, a woman had little more authority than a child. She was
Training a
always subject to her nearest male relative,
and property. Marriage meant the to another.
"No
free
woman who
who had
authority over her person
transfer of this authority
lives
from one male
according to the law of the Lombards
... is permitted to live under her own legal control, that is, to be legally competent" went the seventh-century Lombard law stating this. "But she ought to remain under the control of some man or her king."'^^ Typical of laws in all these early cultures, guardianship of women was assumed to be the
way of maintaining order in the family and society. The ideal woman subordinated her feelings, instinct, and judgment to her father, husband, or
best
male guardian. The
ideal
woman
in all these early cultures
willingly subordinated herself to the
Other laws and legends sought
men
was
a
woman who
of her family.
to ensure a daughter's obedience.
Greek
dramatists saw the conflict between a daughter's obedience and ethical behav-
TRADITIONSINHERITED
34 ior as tragic: fleet;
Iphigenia must die as a sacrifice to raise a wind for her father's
Antigone must die
if
she
is
to
kill
his
daughter
was the focus of
if
he thought
number of
a
demands
true to the
buries her brother against her uncle's order. it fit.
Roman
Not used
of her rehgion
and
law gave the father power
in historic times, this po\yer
legends. Livy recounted the tale of Horatia,
who
mourned the death of her brother's enemy. He killed her, and the murder was upheld when their father stated in court that Horatia deserved to die."^^ Hebrew scholars focused on Eve's disobedience in eating from the tree of knowledge as the source of evil. Lombard law stated that if a daughter opposed her father or brother, he could do whatever he wished with her property.
Most Hebrew,
of the writings
and legends about daughters
and Germanic cultures focus on the
Celtic,
Homer's Odyssey, Princess Nausicaa, an
ideal
in
Greek, Roman, virginity.
girl's
young woman,
tells
In
Odysseus
that I
myself should hold
for
any
girl
it
to flout her
shame
own
dear parents,
taking up with a man, before her marriage. "^^
Solon, the lawgiver of sixth-century B.C. Athens, forbade into slavery except the sale of a girl virginity
who had
lost
her
all sales
virginity."^^
of children
A daughter's
was inextricably connected to her family's honor, and intercourse
without her guardian's approval tainted that honor. "Virginity
not entirely
is
wedding hymn by Catullus, the Roman poet of the first century B.C. "One third your father owns, one third your mother,/ one third alone is yours: Don't fight with two/ who've sold a son-in-law their rights to yours,"
went
you.""^^
Roman
a
before marriage;
law called for the death of a daughter
Hebrew law allowed the death
her virginity to a
who
lost
her virginity
of a betrothed daughter
who
man
other than her fiance before the marriage; she could be stoned to death for "playing the harlot in her father's house. "^o Both lost
Roman and Hebrew
law sought to distinguish between cases where a
could have avoided rape by crying for help without risking her
life,
girl
and those
where she could not be expected to save herself. In the latter case, she was seen as an innocent victim and not punished; in the former, she could be executed. 51 Both Roman and Hebrew writers used the wanton daughter as a symbol of their culture's decline; in the book of Isaiah in the Old Testament, for instance:
The Lord
said:
Because the daughters of Zion are haughty
and walk with outstretched necks, glancing wantonly with their eyes,
Traditions Subordinating
mincing along
as
Women
35
they go,
tinkling with their feet;
the Lord will smite with a scab the heads of the daughters of Zion,
and the Lord
Germanic laws
fined the
will lay
man who made
warrior's daughter. Like Greek, loss of virginity
bare their secret parts.^^
sexual advances or gestures to a
Roman, and Hebrew
laws, they
viewed the
outside marriage as an injury to the guardian, not to the young
woman. The compensatory
fines
should she be so "corrupted" went to him.^^
woman negated the fine-^"^ The few fragments of ancient writing by women which deal with
Willingness on the part of the young
virginity
Temple dedications, especially to Artemis, show that Greek women regularly made an offering just before their marriage. Often this included the toys of her girlhood, which would end when reveal their acceptance of these attitudes.
she married and lost her virginity legitimately: Timareta before her wedding has dedicated to you, Artemis of the Lake, her tambourine, her pretty ball and the caul that upheld her hair, her dolls too, and their dresses: a virgin's gift, as is right to a Virgin. Artemis, hold your hand above the
girl
lose
in
has a bride ask, "Virginity
you?"
A
O
my
ideal
Where
virginity/
second voice answers "I'm
from. "56 Another fragment reads
The
her purity. ^^
wedding hymn by Sappho, the Greek poet of the seventh century
Part of a B.C.,
and purely preserve her
"Do
ofT to a place I
still
I
long for
will
shall
my
you go when
never
I
come back
virginity?"^^
daughter would be beautiful as well as obedient and
virginal.
Descriptions of youthful feminine beauty are remarkably uniform in Greek,
and Germanic writings. The ideal features included fair hair, and red lips. Found in Greek novellas, Roman poems, and Germanic epics, such descriptions echoed the following one, which is Geltic:
Roman,
Geltic,
pale skin,
The after
color of her hair was like the flower of the it
has been polished.
.
.
.
White
as the
iris
snow
in
summer
or like pure gold
one night were her hands, Her the mountain foxglove. of
and her lovely cheeks were soft and even, red as eyes were as blue as the hyacinth, her lips as red as Parthian leather. High, .^8 smooth, soft and white were her shoulders, clear white her long fingers. .
.
.
.
Beauty was honored
in itself; in a
daughter,
it
would aid
in
making
a
.
good
match.
The in
expected goal of
all
women who were
both ancient Greek and Hebrew, the word
not slaves was marriage, and
for
"woman" was
also the
word
They went together in all these cultures. Menarche, the start of menstruation, meant the girl was ready for marriage, and in the ancient for "wife."
world, as throughout European history,
menarche
usually occurred
between
TRADITIONSINHERITED
36
twelve and fourteen years. Families with property were eager to
make the
alliance marriage created with other families as soon as possible. ^^ Various
when the bride was under twelve; an eighth-century Lombard law specified that the date should be at the end of her twelfth year "because we know there have been many controversies over this matter, and
laws forbade marriage
it
appears to us that
years. "^'^
ages of the couple. far
more
girls
are not mature before they have completed twelve
Among the elite of these
cultures, there
was often
a disparity in the
Women's deaths in childbirth ensured that men
always be far older than the bride.
The
remarried
groom would almost
often; at his second or third marriage, the
marriage of a
with a
girl
was her senior by a number of years was often considered
man who
desirable. It
both
mirrored and perpetuated the ideal of wifely subordination within the marriage. Aristotle said
a
groom
the ideal marriage was between a bride of eighteen and
"my master"; fhe husband would guide and
of thirty-seven. ^^ Jewish wives called their husbands
"my
husbands called their wives
daughter. "^^
teach his wife; the wife would bear healthy children for her husband.
The arrangements
transfer of authority over a bride's family
Hebrew,
come. There was nothing casual about the
young woman from one man
and the groom or
concern that the young especially in
daughter in these early cultures
for the marriage of a
set the pattern for the centuries to
woman
Celtic,
to another.
his family negotiated the marriage.
not be forced to marry against her
and Germanic
The
There was will,
cultures. ^^
In addition to the transfer of authority, marriage involved the exchange of gifts, compensation to the bride's family for her loss, in the
new
and provision
for her
some came to the marriage with a portion of her Greece and Rome, the bride's family gave her a dowry,
relationship with her husband. In the wealthier classes of
of these early societies, the bride family's wealth. ^^^ In
which would be returned
to her or her
through divorce or death. ^^
Among
male guardian
if
the marriage ended,
the Hebrews, the bride received a pay-
ment from her husband on marriage that was written into the marriage document (ketubah) specifying her husband's obligations to her.^^ Geltic and Germanic custom usually also involved a gift from the groom to the bride, to be used for her support when he died. These cultures also provided a gift from the groom's family to the bride
became her
property. In
as well. Increasingly, this "bride gift"
Lombard law
father retained the gift; a century later,
it
of the seventh century, the bride's
was
largely hers.^^
Germanic
brides
received a third payment, the morgengabe or "morning gift," given to her
by her husband a queen, the
after the night
instance, the Merovingian cities of
on which the marriage was consummated. For
morgengabe could be
substantial. In the sixth century a.d., for
King Ghilperic
I
gave his queen, Galswintha, the
Limoges, Bordeaux, Cahors, Beam, and Bigorre
as a
morgengabe. ^^
Women
Traditions Subordinating
37
All these cultures expected the bride to bring personal possessions to begin
her
new household:
linens, clothing, kitchen utensils
—and
in royal or
monied
these could be lavish and substantial.^^
circles,
Both the betrothal (the occasion of the agreement on the marriage conand the marriage (the joining of the couple) were considered events
tract)
worthy of celebration, and feasting and drinking followed the ceremonies.
Each culture had fertility to
and symbols thought
rituals
many
the union, and
good fortune and
to bring
passed later into European culture. For
instance, the custom of placing a ring on the third finger of the bride's left hand came from Rome; it was believed that a nerve ran directly from that finger to the heart. Though marriage was viewed first as a social and economic union, these early societies passed on to European culture the expectation that the wife and husband would find affection and pleasure together. Love might not be expected, but even in an arranged marriage it was hoped for, and a number of Greek and Roman epitaphs testify to love between wife and husband. "Theodorus, my husband," reads one from an Athenian colony, "I pray that late though it be, you will come and 1 shall meet you and we shall share our bed, so that we shall forget our misfortune. '"^^ A plasterer in Roman Lyons raised a tombstone "to the eternal memory of Blandinia Martiola ... his wife incomparable and most kind to him." She died at eighteen and had married at thirteen. "You who read this," the epitaph ended, "go bathe in the baths of Apollo as I used to do with my
wife
—
I
wish
I
still
could. "^^
Epitaphs and funeral tributes give evidence of a wifely deceased
women were
said to
have
fulfilled.
"Praise for
ideal,
all
which some
good
women
is
simple and similar, since their native goodness and the trust they have
maintained do not require mother's funeral in the
My
dearest
a diversity of
first
century
mother deserved greater
words," stated a
praise than
all
propriety, chastity, obedience, woolworking, industry
in virtue,
whom
handsome and reputable
century
Book
others, since in modesty,
and honor she was on an place to any woman
wife causes her husband's "property to grow and increase, and she
grows old with a husband a
son at his
women, nor did she take second work and wisdom in times of danger.'^^
equal level with other good
The good
Roman
a.d.:
b.c.'^'
A
similar,
of Proverbs in the
A
who loves her, the mother of poem from Greece of the sixth tribute comes from the Hebrew
she loves and
family," declared a
but more detailed
Old Testament:
good wife who can find? She is far more precious than jewels. The heart of her husband trusts in her, and he will have no lack of gain.
TRADITIONS INHERITED
38
She does him good, and not harm, all
the days of her
life.
She seeks wool and flax, and works with willing hands.
The wife's work
is
described further: She provides food for her household and
gives her servants their orders; she buys a field, plants a vineyard, a profit; she spins
and makes clothing, some
for her household,
and makes
some
for sale.
Strength and dignity are her clothing,
and she laughs at the time to come. She opens her mouth with wisdom, and the teaching of kindness is on her tongue. She looks well to the ways of her household, and does not eat the bread of idleness. Her children rise up and call her blessed; her husband also and he praises her: "Many women have done excellently, but you surpass them all."'^'^
The Celts and Germans emphasized
the wife's role as the warrior's supporter.
In the epics, mothers of heroes like Ness of the Tain
legend protected their warrior sons. told
how
An
Bo
or Frigga in Norse
eighth-century Anglo-Saxon riddle
the "loyal kinswoman" cared for the warrior: [She] "wrapped
in clothes
and kept and cherished me,/ enfolded
As kindly
as she did for her
own
children.
.
.
me
."^^ Warriors' wives
expected to celebrate victories, as the Danish queen
Beowulf does by providing
a lavish banquet.
mourn the death of her spouse; mean her enslavement or capture. to
A
me
in a protective cloak/
in
were
the Germanic saga
warrior's wife
was expected
as in earlier centuries, his defeat
could
In these early cultures, the ideal wife was expected to be sexually faithful
and bear healthy children, preferably boys, to its duties herself, and to support her husband's military endeavors. Always seen in relation to her husband, her life was expected to be spent ministering to his needs. All of these early cultures decreed that, just as a daughter should be virginal, so a wife must be chaste. Just as a daughter's loss of virginity to her husband, to
be
fertile
manage the household
or perform
dishonored her father, so a wife's
infidelity
dishonored her husband.
Of
becoming pregnant by another man and her passing off the illegitimate child as her husband's. "She gave me children just like myself," was a common tribute in wives' epitaphs from Roman husbands. All these early cultures used both coercion and praise to ensure the wife's fidelity. Adultery remained primarily a woman's crime; a man could commit it only by having sex with another man's wife, not with greatest concern was the chance of her
Traditions Subordinating
Women
39
another woman. All had harsh laws to punish a woman's sexual
infidelity. In
Athens, the male seducer was also
him and
"The
out the offending wife.
guilty; the
husband could
kill
lawgiver seeks to disgrace such a
cast
woman and
make her life not worth living," explained an orator in the fourth century Hebrew law gave the husband the right to kill both the woman and Roman law became less harsh as the centuries passed; initially the the man. B.c.^^
'7'^
penalty was death, later
it
changed to
exile, later still to loss of
property to
compensate the dishonored husband. '^^ Celtic and Germanic laws allowed murder or execution of the offending wife or, as in the case of the AngloSaxons, allowed the husband to discard her and to collect her monetary value (wergild) from her lover. Thus, the
Wifely chaste
fidelity
was
also
husband could negotiate
encouraged by cautionary
women. The Roman legend
in future centuries.
Both
stories
new
wife."^^
which extolled
in
and the Hebrew tale of European art and literature
were remarkably
similar. In each, a beautiful
of Lucretia
Susannah and the Elders figured prominently
young wife
for a
fables,
man
men) who threaten
to lie and say had sex with them in order to force her to give in to their sexual demands. Susannah proclaims her innocence and is saved by divine is
imperiled by an
evil
(or
that she has already
intervention. Lucretia,
—her
who
yielded after being threatened with a dishonora-
he would show her family her corpse bed together redeemed herself by suicide, an honorable death in Roman culture. Even though innocent, she dies rather than "provide a precedent for unchaste women to escape what they deserve."^^ The moral was clear: A virtuous wife should die before being ble death
and that of
a
royal antagonist declared
male slave
—
in
unfaithful to her husband.
This
fidelity
and
exclusivity did not apply to the husband.
Except among
the Hebrews, where a husband's infidelity was disparaged in the centuries after
800 b.c,
a
double standard prevailed, and husbands were routinely
expected to have sex not only with their wives, but with slavewomen and prostitutes.^^
"We
[male citizens of Athens] have courtesans for the sake of
pleasure, concubines for the daily care of the body,
and wives
to breed
legitimate children and be a trustworthy guard of possessions indoors," stated
the orator Demosthenes in the fourth century b.c.^^
The
wife's duty to breed legitimate children
remained one of her most
important functions. All these cultures assumed that childlessness was the
woman's
fault,
A
and
all
allowed a husband to divorce her for her supposed
woman was a pathetic figure in cultures that valued and in Greece, Rome, and Israel, barren women sought divine aid: praying and sacrificing to goddesses associated with fertility in Greece; par-
barrenness. ^^
barren
fertility,
ticipating in fertility rituals in
Israel.
Since
fertility
and
cults in
Rome; beseeching God
for children
was associated with divine approval, the barren
TRADITIONS INHERITED
40
woman was
used to provoke her sorely, to
"rival
the Lord had closed her
womb,"
states
Samuel
I
in
even her husband's attempt to comfort her, asking, than ten sons?" could not console In
all
especially
irritate her,
the Old Testament, and
"Am
I
not more to you
men to obtain, The tradition
these early cultures, divorce was relatively easy for
on the grounds of the
Europe. In
classical
Roman
wife's adultery or barrenness.
Church sought
to
end
last
divorce in
all
Athens, divorce was usually initiated by the husband. ^^
Women
law gave the right to divorce only to husbands.
divorce by the
as well
because
her.^"^
prevailed even after the Christian
Early
women
doubly disfavored and was looked down upon by
men. Hannah's
as
century b.c, but there
is
could
evidence that such divorces were
often engineered by the wife's father. Easy divorce primarily benefited in
the family,
women
who
of their
sought to establish
allies. ^^
new
political alliances
men
by marrying the
Divorce remained unequal throughout
Roman hisman to
law of the Emperor Constantine allowed a
tory; a fourth-century
divorce his wife for adultery, procuring, or poisoning; he could also divorce
her on "light grounds"
two
for
years.
The
he agreed
if
poisoner, or a grave robber, but
Among
deported. ^"^
to give
up her dowry and not remarry who was a murderer, a
wife could divorce a husband if
she acted on any other grounds, she was
the Hebrews, divorce was the sole prerogative of the
man.^^ In addition to being faithful and fruitful, the wife had a third responsibility to
her husband. She must see to the household. These early cultures
passed on to European society the traditional standard that a good wife saw to her family's basic needs,
member
of a
Germanic
her household garden. Early cultures freed their male
even
most exalted
in the
vise their slaves
ing wool."^^
"the .
.
.
silver
she
basket/
is still
women were
Helen
is first
rimmed
in
elites
expected at
clan working
from work, but least to super-
traditional labor, spinning
and "mak-
seen in the Odyssey, her servant brings in
hammered
gold, with wheels to run on.
and cradled on it/ the distaff swathed in wool."^^ Her yarn and tools are royal, her distaff is golden, but
heaped with
dusky violet
families,
and perform woman's
When
Roman matron
whether she was the wealthiest
supervising her slaves or the poorest
fine
spun
stuff,
expected to spin yarn
like a
poor woman,
whom Homer
in a simile in the Iliad:
Think
of an honest cottage spinner
balancing weight in one pan of the scales
and wool yarn on the other, trying
to earn
a pittance for her children: evenly poised as that
were these great powers making war.^^
invokes
Traditions Subordinating
Women
41
Throughout antiquity, cloth making was always women's work, so much European cultures, the "distaff side" signified the females of [and] the work considered a family. Spinning is "the work they understand most honorable and suitable for a woman," stated the fourth-century B.C. so that in later
.
.
.
Greek historian, Xenophon.'^^ Roman epitaphs for wives used the statement "She kept the house and worked in wool" so often that it became a routine and expected tribute.''^ The Jewish housewife in the Book of Proverbs "puts her hands to the distaff, and her hands hold the spindle. "^^ By the late Roman Empire, women were so often associated with textiles that the word gynaecea (women's places) was used
in legal contracts to designate
weaving,
Qf all this labor, what remains is only "Of the millions of yards of stuff woven
spinning, and dyeing establishments. ^^
the tradition of
women making cloth.
our period covers," write the authors of Art of the
in the thirteen centuries
Ancient World, "only
no
a
few square inches survive so that we have practically
what they were
direct information of
The
like."^^
women in these European women was
vast majority of
cultures
worked the
land.
One
would be paid less than men when they worked for wages, even when they performed the same labor. As early as the eighth century B.C., the Greek poet Hesiod advised a farmer on how to save money. In winter, he should "let go the hired man; hire a tradition inherited
by
childless girl."^'^ In addition,
"The
bands.
women were
poor, not having any slaves,
that they
expected to cater to their hus-
must employ both
their
women and
children as servants," wrote Aristotle in the fourth century b.c.^^ In the cities, women performed a wide variety of activities to earn income. Women's "double burden" performing housework and childcare and earning extra income tures.
Most
—
is
of these
Women
as well.
—
another tradition which dates back to these early
means
of earning
sold food, clothing,
became and
cul-
traditional female occupations
trinkets in the public markets
and
They provided food and lodging. They managed brothels and worked prostitutes. They hired themselves out as wet nurses (wealthy Greek and
streets.
as
Roman women They
also
often hired poor
worked
as
women
to suckle their children for them).
midwives; throughout the centuries, European
women
by other women. The presence of a trained midwife was sought after. Male doctors were only called in for dire emergencies or to supervise births in the wealthiest families. By the second century a.d., the Roman doctor Soranus specified the characteristics of a good usually gave birth at
home,
assisted
midwife:
She
will
be unperturbed, unafraid
in
danger, able to state clearly the reasons for
her measures, she will bring reassurance to her patients, and be sympathetic. .
.
.
She must love work
who
in
order to persevere through
ail
vicissitudes (for a
wishes to acquire such vast knowledge needs manly patience).^*'
woman
TRADITIONSINHERITED
42
Soranus described
throughout
European
technique which
another
later centuries:
midwives used
measuring the dilation of the cervix with their
fingers.
Women
worked
at
such occupations only
families sought to ensure their daughters'
the poorer classes; wealthy
in
freedom from such labor by provid-
ing her with a dowry. In addition to managing her husband's household, a
wife was expected to be a political and dynastic link between families. In
when
times
small
numbers
of noble families or a particular dynasty ruled,
marital alliances to bolster or protect political
power became common. Most
often in such cases, the man's needs were dominant, and he could take
wives (either divorcing the old or adding to his previous necessary to preserve his political interests.
Seleucid dynasties of the fourth to so did the powerful (the
first
Roman
The Macedonian, Ptolemaic, and women this way;
centuries b.c. used
families of the late Republic
centuries b.c. and a.d.). Ambitious
unmade betrothals and allegiances. Julius
was
first
men
and
Empire
early
of that era
made and
marriages to mirror and confirm their shifting political
Caesar broke a childhood engagement to Cossutia when he
because she did not belong to the
fifteen,
new
he deemed
tally) as
politically
powerful equestrian
him with her powerful father, L. Cornelius Cinna, who had been consul in Rome. After Cornelia's death, class.
His
first
marriage, to Cornelia, allied
Caesar married Pompeia, the daughter of another powerful consul, but vorced her for his
when
numerous
make another
she was suspected of adultery. (Caesar himself was affairs
with both
women and
political alliance; his third wife,
men.) This
left
him
di-
known free to
Calpurnia, was the daughter
of another important consul. Caesar sealed his political alliance with
Pompey
—she became Pompey's fourth
wife.^o^
by marrying
Of
his
daughter
him
Julia to
the Germanic cultures, the Franks forced alliances and acquired
wealth by abducting
women and
marrying them. Charlemagne, emperor of
the Franks in the eighth and ninth centuries, had four wives successively
chosen and discarded either for reasons of state or because he disliked them. His grandsons each married a
empire he was to
inherit.
woman
to help in controlling the third of the
Lothar took an heiress of Alsace, Pepin a wife from
the Chartres area, and Louis a kinswoman from East Austrasia.^^i Occasionally, powerful this
women
of these cultures attempted to manipulate
system of dynastic alliances for their
marriages into bids for power, sons, or brothers.
But
a
if
own
ends.
They
parlayed their
not for themselves, then for their husbands,
woman who attempted
to
do
this
moved beyond the
allowed limits. She was acting contrary to her culture's role for her and was subject to the severest criticism
and punishment
if
her hold on power faltered.
The tradition the lives of such women transmitted was the danger of letting a woman seize political power. This legacy can be clearly seen in the life of
Traditions Subordinating
Agrippina
(15-59
II
a.d.),
the
Roman
both the achievements and Hmits of
The daughter
II
43
empress whose career demonstrates
this sort of
power.
Roman Emperor
of a granddaughter of the
adopted grandson, Agrippina
his
Women
was raised
Augustus and
the highest pohtical
in
circles.
—
him a son the future Emperor Nero when she was twenty-seven. That same year, her brother became the Emperor Caligula. He exiled Agrippina II and her sister; Married
at thirteen to the
—
son of a powerful consul, she bore
a few years later, Agrippina's
returned to
Rome
husband
after Caligula's death
In exile for four years, she
died.
and married her second husband,
a
who left her a fortune when he died. Agrippina was thirty-two made her boldest bid for power by courting the new emperor,
wealthy senator then, and she
Claudius, her uncle, whose powerful wife Messalina had also died recently.
She managed to persuade Claudius to make her in 49 A.D. a marriage which required a special
—
its
his
empress and fourth wife
senatorial decree because of
incestuous nature. Claudius gave her a great deal of power; he allowed her
be called "Augusta" (the
to influence his decisions, ordered that she
empress to be given Five years
later,
this title
while
still
Claudius was dead
alive),
and made her son
first
his heir.
—perhaps poisoned, perhaps by Agrip-
Her seventeen-year-old son became emperor and, for the first years of his reign, allowed his mother power; she advised him on crucial matters, listened to delegations from behind curtains, and was portrayed on coins equally with him. He then turned against her. She went to live with her first husband's mother, and it was there that she wrote her memoirs, which have been lost. In 59 a.d., five years after his accession to the throne, Nero arranged for his powerful mother's murder. She was forty-four, and her dying pina.
words were supposed to have been "Smite
my womb!"
in recognition that
her son had ordered her death. ^^^ In his history of the era, Tacitus all
things
human
commented on
the most precarious and transitory
Agrippina's death: is
a reputation of
which has no strong support of its own.''^^^ Women bidding power found that this power ultimately lay with men, who could
them
if
necessary. Moreover,
political circles ries
afterward.
were severely
^O'*
Roman
women who criticized,
achieved influence
both
in their
in
for dynastic
rule without
dynastic and
own day and
for centu-
historians linked female influence to violence
decadence, as did Gregory of Tours
in his
"Of
power
and
account of the sixth-century
Prankish queens, Brunhild and Fredegund. Their bloodthirstiness and treachery are emphasized as they are described deceiving inciting
war
to
keep themselves or their kin
Brunhild, the surviving queen,
is
shown dying
in
men, murdering, and
power. Like Agrippina
horribly; she
II,
was dragged to
death at seventy. ^^^
By attempting
to gain political power, a
woman
contravened the
activities
TRADITIONS INHERITED
44
allowed a wife and mother.
When she entered the political arena, she became
anomalous and exposed. The ties left their
women who
seized
power
in these early dynas-
granddaughters at best an equivocal heritage; the
female power was always overlaid with strictures against powerful
women
were used to
illustrate
it,
memory
and the
the dangers of permitting
of
lives of
women
to
exceed their proper roles and functions by venturing into areas meant only for
men.
and mother held firm. From the earliest had been extolled by men. As far as can be told, it was also accepted by women; within the home, as a cherished wife, a woman achieved the safest and most secure existence possible. The role of the chaste wife and mother, who was prolific, hardworking, and devoted to her housekeeping and her family remained one of the most powerful traditions Instead, the ancient ideal for wife
records, this wifely ideal
inherited by later generations of European
Women
's
As old
women.
Dishonorable Roles: Slave, Prostitute, and Concubine as the tradition of respect for the
contempt, fear
—and
desire
—
for the
good wife was the tradition of the rules and had sex
woman who broke
with more than one man. As a slave woman, a prostitute, or a concubine, a
woman was
cast out
and mothers.
from the traditional protections accorded chaste wives
Women who
used their sexuality to augment their power were
stigmatized as prostitutes no matter
how
high their social rank; the
Romans
called Cleopatra regina meretrix,
"the prostitute queen," because of her
sexual liaisons with Julius Caesar
and Mark Antony. ^^^ Hebrew prophets
made no
between prostitution and adultery, seeing in women's independent sexual behavior an ultimate betrayal and subversion of values. "Plead that she put away her harlotry from her face, and her often
.
distinction
.
.
adultery from between her breasts," wrote Hosea. Hosea, Isaiah, and other
Hebrew prophets religious
apostasy
the period used —"the land commits of
of exile
"harlotry" to
great
harlotry
condemn
Israel's
by forsaking the
LORD."io7
women were simultaneously appealing and dangerous. One women were criticized was for using their sexual attractiveinfluence men. From the earliest writings of these cultures, men had
To men,
such
reason powerful ness to
expressed fear of the power of women's sexual attraction over them. solution of these early cultures to this
women
into
two separate and
problem consisted
distinct categories: the wife
The
in trying to divide
and the whore.
A
wife should be obedient to her husband and follow his lead, even in the bed.
Independent female sexuality was stigmatized as characteristic of a prostitute. In Plutarch's Moralia, for instance (a first to second century a.d. Greek work
Traditions Subordinating
generally positive about
women's
capacities
Women
and
45
talents), Plutarch states that
a wife
ought not to shrink away or object when her husband starts to make love, but not herself to be the one to start either. In the one case she is being over-eager like a prostitute, in the
Slave
other case she
being cold and lacking
is
in affection. ^^^
women were the most vulnerable; the earliest writings of all these slave women serving warriors' sexual needs. But as sexual to the men of the household, slave women were also in a position show
cultures
partners
to use their sexual attractiveness to increase their status and security. Greek and Roman slave women might eventually gain their freedom; Celtic and Germanic slave women might advance beyond the position of concubine.
The
sixth-century Prankish
slave, attracted
women ters of
Queen Fredegund,
King Chilperic from
naturally incurred suspicion
began life as a and married him. Such from the wives and daugh-
for instance,
his first wife,
and
distrust
the household. Functioning as household prostitutes, they undermined
the hard-won status of the virginal daughter and the chaste wife. Slave
women were
not condemned for having sex with their masters,
them because of it. European men attempted women's sexual power over them by confining it. They rethe wife and regulated the prostitute. (The line between slave and
only for trying to influence to control stricted
prostitute blurs in these early cultures; slaves could function as household prostitutes; prostitutes
were often slave women.) Not only did men
these early cultures classify any titute,
condemned the
they
woman.
A
woman who had attempt to
sex only with
women
more men threatened the social balance. This women's sexuality, however, conflicted with the double
other than their wives.
male prostitution,
and dishonorable
her husband or master; a
sex with
restrict
standard of sexual behavior, which allowed
with
in
of independent sexuality as a pros-
prostitute as a despicable
woman had
good
woman
in
which
women
The
men result
in these early cultures sex
was the institution of
provided sex to
men
in
money, but were simultaneously despised and stigmatized later European centuries,
This tradition endured into the other aspects of prostitutes'
fe-
exchange
for
doing
so.
for as
did
many
lives.
Institutionalized prostitution in cities
is
present in the earliest records of
the Greeks and Romans. Solon, the sixth-century b.c. Athenian lawgiver, was
supposed to have established a large brothel so that "young
work
off their lust
is
certainly a
is
client in first-century B.C.
Rome.
could thus
anyone who
men should be forbidden to make love, even to man of stern righteousness," argued Cicero on
thinks that young
he
men
without disordering families. "^^9 "jf there
prostitutes,
behalf of a
m TRADITIONS INHERITED
46
But he is out of touch not only with the free life of today, but even with the code and concessions which our fathers accepted. For when was that not customary? When was it blamed? When was it not allowed? When was it not lawful to do what is a lawful privilege?^ *o cultures had no need for prostitutes; men used slave and practiced polygamy when it suited them. Little stigma attached to the men who bought sex from women. The women themselves were stigmatized, marginalized, and regulated.
Celtic and
women
Germanic
for sex
This tradition endured into the tutes rifices
allowed other
women's
cults.
A
women;
free-born
in
European
later
were forbidden to participate
centuries. In Athens, prosti-
in public religious
ceremonies and
sac-
Rome, they were excluded from important
Roman man was
forbidden to marry a prostitute
or the freed slave of a prostitute or procurer, but a male procurer could
become
a full
Roman
citizen. In
Hebrew
writings, the
female and was used to signify a low and degraded city has
become a harlot, she that was
full
word "harlot" was
state:
"How
the faithful
of justice!" wrote the prophet Isaiah
about Jerusalem. In
Rome, another
tradition about prostitutes
was established. They were
forbidden to wear a respectable matron's dress and instead were forced to don the short tunic and toga usually worn by men.^i^ Throughout subsequent
European
history,
men attempted some
to
make
prostitutes instantly identifiable
it was justified on the grounds would protect respectable women from being approached by men, and would make it easier for men to find a prostitute for hire. Both Greek and Roman cities also founded the tradition of making money off prostitution; magistrates and states established brothels and then taxed them heavily.
by
their clothing or
signal of costume;
that this
License fees were also established and became lucrative sources of revenue. Liable to physical violence and disease, prostitutes also faced the hazards unwanted pregnancy. In the first century B.C., the Roman writer Lucretius referred to "movements used by prostitutes" in their attempts to avoid pregnancy. Some ancient contraceptives (especially those which blocked the cervix or acted as spermicides) may have been effective, but most were not.^ ^^ In the second century a.d., the Greek writer Lucian wrote a "Dialogue of the Gourtesans" which realistically presented a pregnant prostitute:
of
And
I
so near
my
time! Yes, that
is all
I
have to thank
the prospect of having a child to bring up; and you
poor
girls.
I
mean
to
keep the child, especially
my
lover for; that,
know what
if it is
a boy.
that
means
and
to us
.^^'^ .
.
While prostitutes remained generally despised and vulnerable, a talented and quick-witted woman could rise to the better role of courtesan. Famous not only for their sexual services, but also for their social
skills as
hostesses
Traditions Subordinating
and companions, courtesans moved courtesans were the only
women
in
Women
the highest
circles. In classical
permitted to participate
symposia which formed a large part of the
elite
in
woman
in
Greek male's
praised the intelligence of Aspasia, Pericles' mistress,
the "most famous
47
social
life.
Plato
and she was considered
Athens."^ ^^
in fifth-century [b.c]
Athens,
the dinners and
A clever woman
the right circumstances could turn her sexual connection with an impor-
tant
man
and even powerful future. Although this happened dream fascinated future generations of poor European girls. 497-548), for instance, the daughter of a dancer and bear
into a secure
infrequently, this
Theodora
(c.
keeper at the Hippodrome in Constantinople, rose to
Empress of the Roman Empire
in this
way from
prostitute
in the East.
Theodora's father died when she was four, and she soon joined her older
performing
sister in
caste in the
dancer and mime. (Actresses and actors were lower
as a
Roman Empire and were
usually ranked
on the same
level as
Famous for her wit, she performed as a comedienne at private parties. She became the mistress of an administrative official and lived with him briefly in Egypt before returning on her own to Constantinople. ^^^ It was during this period of her life that she met men on the highest level of prostitutes.)
and the future heir
to the
and nephew to the Emperor,
fell in
church
society: various religious thinkers,
officials,
throne, Justinian. Justinian, himself forty, unmarried,
love with her.
To make
laws which forbade free
his marriage with her possible,
men
to marry prostitutes.
he amended the old
When he succeeded to the
throne in 527, two years after the marriage, Theodora became his cornier.
Empress of the Eastern Roman Empire. Justinian
my
delight" and described her as "partner in in his plans
and
political
called her "his sweetest
deliberations." ^^"^
maneuverings and participated
"always apologizing for taking the liberty to
talk,
being a woman."! ^^ She had
entourage, and her
own
the Nika Revolts of 532, she persuaded Justinian not to
flee,
her
own
imperial seal, her
own
official
She shared
in councils of state,
court.
During
shaming him
into staying by her speech in the Council of State: If
I
had no
safety left but in flight,
the crown should never survive as
Empress. Caesar,
are ready, the sea
is
if
you wish to
clear.
But
I
I
would not
still
its loss. I'll
flee,
flee.
Those who have worn
never see the day
well
shall stay.
when
I
am
not hailed
and good, you have money, the ships I
love the proverb: Purple
is
the best
winding sheet. ^^^
Theodora was unique in her sympathy for both women and prostitutes. She was instrumental in passing legislation which gave women more property rights and was responsible for an edict which made pimping a criminal offense and banished all brothel keepers from the city. She founded a convent for
TRADITIONSINHERITED
48
former prostitutes and was known for buying prostitution, freeing (at
them, and providing
the church of San Vitale, in Ravenna,
wearing an elaborate crown, robed
in black
she died, and
and
little
The most
Italy)
sold into
Her mosaic
shows her
portrait
royally bejeweled,
and
bracelets.
She
is
with no expression on her face. At fifty-one,
effective legislation
and
who had been
collar, earrings, necklace,
stares straight
detailed
girls
for their future.
was passed by Justinian after her death.
factual source for Theodora's life
is
Procopius'
Theodora is presented as a sexual monster, a woman for whom no deed was too infamous, no sexual act too revolting. She is described as at the mercy of her whims and emotions and as a ruthless manipulator of men.^^o She is called a "demon" and is shown contemporaneous Historia Arcana. In
it,
presiding over the castration of a young man. All the early accounts of her
which have been preserved
life
the lowliness of her origins and the
stress
horror of her slow death from cancer. Despite her obvious abilities and it was impossible for men to write realistically about her; moral had to be drawn to discourage other women from the same path. Condemnation, even of the most highly placed courtesans, remained part of
influence,
lessons
European
traditions about
women
sexually active outside marriage.
In male writings about prostitutes in these early cultures, fantasies super-
seded
reality,
and the
fantasies also
endured
in later
European
was the fantasy that the prostitute was "honest" and
really
culture.
There
had "a heart of
made her preferable to a coy girl from a respectable family. There was the fantasy that the prostitute would be so pleased by her client that she would not charge her customary fee.^^i Greek plays of the fourth and third centuries B.C., which long remained popular with Roman audiences as well, often showed the hero falling in love with a slave prostitute, who, it gold," which
from
turns out,
is
The hero
rescues her
a virgin
a higher caste
and gains
who
a beautiful
has been accidentally enslaved.
and
grateful bride.
These were the benign fantasies. Others more malign also became enduring traditions in European culture. Much Roman literature argued that within every respectable
when
woman
the opportunity presented
there lurked a whore, ready to satisfy her lust itself.
The
story of the wife of Ephesus,
who
has intercourse with the soldier guarding her newly dead husband's tomb, was told
and retold
in
subsequent centuries.
(It first
appeared
in Petronius' Satyri-
Wanton women and prostitutes were major subjects of Roman satire. More specifically, Roman poets singled out the old prostitute for castigation
con.
)
in the
scar/
most revolting and obscene terms. "Your teeth are black and furrows
With
century
wrinkles
all
your forehead's length!" wrote Horace in the
B.C., in a typical
example:
Your filthy private gapes between Shrunk buttocks like a scrawny cow's;
first
Traditions Subordinating
Women
49
Your chest and wizened breasts are seen Like horses' teats, and flabby shows Your belly, and your lank thighs strung
To
women,
Invective against to
be sexually
active,
was
Lust drives
wrath! 122
especially old prostitutes or
major subject
a
express fear and hatred for sive sexuality.
my
swollen calves, provoke
women,
all
women
women who
Latin literature. These
in
especially of
dared
poems
women's supposed
exces-
men: betraying
to crimes against
their
husbands, prostituting themselves for sex rather than money, being unfaithful
no crime
to their lovers. In these poems,
commit; they urinate on their husbands,
and even have sex with animals
such images, the world of realm where is
the
too revolting for
is
women
women
to
conspire with their mothers-in-law to cuckold
altars,
reality
is
left far
to satiate their lust.^^'
behind, and
we
With
enter a nightmare
are seen as men's enemies. This set of horrifying images
worked to subordinate European women. These
final tradition that
early cultures passed
on
a substantial
comprised an important strand
in
body of misogynist
literature
which
the European cultural heritage.
Misogyny "Misogyny" means hatred of women, and it was present not only in literature, but in Greek and Hebrew writings as well. These cultures blamed the first woman for bringing evil into the world. At the end of the
Roman
eighth century B.C., the Greek poet Hesiod wrote an account of creation that supplied images to later European culture. In
it,
man
is
happily until, in punishment for Prometheus' stealing first
to
woman, Pandora.
Beautiful to look
at,
she
is
first and lives Zeus creates the
created fire,
"the hopeless trap, deadly
men."
From her comes all the race of womankind, The deadly female race and tribe of wives Who live with mortal men and bring them harm,
No
help to them in dreadful poverty
Women
are
bad
for
men, and they conspire Thunderer made it so.^^'*
In wrong, and Zeus the
In a second
poem, Works and Days, Pandora,
her "box" and unleashes "pains and evils" biblical
Eve
in
"this ruin of
Hebrew
writings, possibly
tended to make Eve into such a figure as temptation and did that which
God had
Similar to the
blamed for all the evils because of Greek influence,
her failure to be obedient. Pandora
of the world. Later
mankind," opens
among men. 1^5 is
well: a
forbidden
woman who
—
gave
in to
eating and persuading
TRADITIONSINHERITED
50
to eat from the Tree of Knowledge of Good and Evil. "From a woman had its beginning," wrote Joshua ben Sirach in the second century B.C., "and because of her we all die."^^^ The tradition of blaming women and considering the best of women to be inferior to men was well-established in the ancient world. "Better is the wickedness of a man than a woman who does good; and it is a woman who brings shame and disgrace," declared ben Sirach. Even earlier, in the third century B.C., "the Preacher" had stated woman is "more bitter than death."
Adam sin
"One these
[righteous] I
man among a thousand I found, but ^he Hebrews also created
of Lilith, formed simultaneously with
Adam
to be his
creation of Eve. Lilith refused to be subservient, left
geance by menacing children and
Monsters imagined by these later
European
literature
who
monsters: Circe, into a dis,
menacing
and
turned
men
rock, with snake's
all
the legendary figure first
wife, before the
Adam, and took
ven-
infants. ^^^
early cultures
art.
woman among
a
have not found." ^27
became
The Greeks
traditional images in
created numerous female
into swine; Scylla, the
nymph
and dog's heads growing from
the deadly whirlpool; and the Sirens,
who
lure
men
transformed her;
Charyb-
to death with their
tells of Echidna, half girl and half snake, who gives dog of hell, of the Chimera, of the Sphinx, and other monsters who menace male heroes like Hercules and Jason. 1^9 He also men-
beautiful songs. Hesiod birth to Cerberus, the
tions the Furies (Erinyes), three inexorable females
who
wrongdoers. Later Greek myths supplied the Harpies
—
—
relentlessly
—ravenous,
punish
filthy birds
and the Gorgons hideous women with snakes for whose gaze turns men to stone. Medusa, the Gorgon Perseus killed, is portrayed in Greek sculpture as a grotesque face with her tongue hanging down to her chin. The male hero of Greek legends moved through a landscape thronged with female monsters, whom he must defeat or outwit in order to survive. The same was true of Germanic cultures. The Vikings with women's heads hair,
believed in Sigurd, a giant daughter of the gods associated with the under-
ground world of death; starvation was her
knife,
famine her
her bed.^^^ In the epic, Beowulf proves his heroism
Grendel, the old hag,
The similarly
in
an underwater
table,
in part
and care
by defeating
battle.
literature of these early cultures also presents ordinary
men
in a
embattled stance, usually with regard to their wives. They portray
wives as idle and vengeful, shrewish and unscrupulous, as figures to be con-
quered or derided. Semonides of Amorgos wrote a famous century B.C. classifying
women
man. The others are the sow "who sits "wicked vixen," who knows nothing, the sea
woman, who
satire in the sixth
Only one, the bee, is good for by the dungheap and grows fat," the
into ten types.
"raves," the ass,
who
bitch,
who
is
"always yapping," the
"puts up with everything," the ferret,
Traditions Subordinating
Women
who "makes any man
she has with her sick," the horse
and, worst of harm. "1^1
monkey who
all,
the
is
51
who "proves a
plague,"
"hideous" and does "the worst possible
Semonides and Hesiod transmuted the hatred of misogyny into the mock-
The
nagging, wasteful, wanton wife,
who
is always talking and European humor in the centuries to come. Hesiod argued that a man "couldn't live with 'em and couldn't live without 'em." If a man did not marry, he faced a "miserable old age" with no children to care for him; if he did marry, he "lives all his life/ With never-ending pain.''^'^ gy j-j^^ fourth century B.C., making fun of wives had become a standard theme in the comedies performed in Greece and later Rome. "I wish the second man who took a wife would die an awful death," went a fragment from fourth century b.c. Athens. "I don't blame the first man; he had no experience of that evil."^^^ Husbands complain that their wives never stop talking, long for the day their wives will die, and try to be rid of them if possible. Plautus' popular comedy The Twin Menaechmi
ery of humor. is
a
torment to her husband, became
a staple of
concludes:
Menaechmus
sells his
property
Cash and no delay All must go house and Slaves and furniture Wife goes too
—
if
anyone takes
lot
a fancy to her.
Misogyny has no female counterpart in European culture. Women almost made jokes about men and probably had their own stereotypes about men's nature. But these were not written down, and so did not become a tradition inherited by later generations. Male humor about women was not balanced by female humor about men in the written record and literature generally. Repeated over and over, misogynist stereotypes came to appear valid and accurate portrayals of women. The following passage, from the Greek playwright Aristophanes, was written in 392 B.C., but was echoed in certainly
writings of later centuries:
Women just as
roast their barley sitting, just as they always
have
.
.
.
they bake cakes,
they always have; they nag their husbands, just as they always have; they
sneak their lovers into the house, little tit-bits, just as
just as
they always have; they buy themselves
they always have; they prefer their wine unwatered,
they always have; and they enjoy a good fuck,
just as
just as
they always have.^'"*
For women, the most powerful traditions in Western culture have been those which try to subordinate and denigrate them.
TRADITIONS EMPOWERING
WOMEN
Traditions subordinating women were powerful, but not These early cultures also contained images and beliefs that
empowered the
women
all-powerful. glorified
and
female. In addition, exceptional circumstances occasionally
prominence in fields usually and accomplishments of Sappho, Deborah, Cleopatra, and Boudica are also part of the traditions inherited by European women. Centuries after the old empires and kingdoms had disappeared, women would take inspiration from these female images and figures. allowed
of unusual ability to rise to
reserved to men.
The
lives
Worship of Goddesses All these early cultures except the
female
figures.
^
The
chief god in the
cultures was male, but
who
all
Hebrews gave supernatural powers to Greco-Roman and Germanic-Celtic
these groups also postulated powerful female forces
controlled the lives of heroes
and sometimes even the gods.
Fate in these early cultures was female, and the ultimate power of death, of destiny and necessity was personified as a
women. Associated with
and
time, the Fates were often perceived as spinning,
weaving, and cutting the thread of men's the most
life
woman or a group of three
lives,
commonplace and ordinary female
transforming cloth making,
activity, into a
symbol of
ulti-
mate power. To the Greeks, the three Fates were Clotho (the Spinner), Lachesis (the Disposer of the Lots), and Atropos (the Inflexible), who cut the thread of life with her shears of death. In Germanic beliefs, the three Fates were the Norns, who sewed the web of fate and cast lots over the cradle of every baby. They were Urda, Verdandi, and Skuld, and represented the past, the present, and the future. Potent but shadowy figures, the Fates provided the matrix which could determine the lives of the most powerful men and even the gods themselves; to the Greeks, the power of Fate (Moira) was even stronger than the gods; the Norns brought about the end of the Golden Age.^
Women
Empowering
Traditions
Romans worshipped Fortune
In addition, the
as a
53
female goddess of good
European iconography. Fortune is almost always personified as a woman. Fortune was worshipped by Romans at numerous temples and shrines, where her aid was sought for a particular situation in life. Fortuna luck,
and
in later
Liberum controlled the destiny Fortuna
Virginalis,
unmarried
of children, Fortuna Private,
girls,
marriage, Fortuna Publica,
Virilis,
family
life,
Fortuna Muliebris, women, Fortuna the state, and Fortuna Caesaris,
the
imperial family.
These cultures
also
connected the power of the earth and
its fertility
with
the female. Greeks and Romans, Celts and Germans, personified the earth as female, in
and
as
farming and
were perceived
Mother Earth she continued
fertility rituals
as
having power
to the fields or stay
to
which survived in these
be worshipped and placated
for centuries.
away from them, touch the seed or leave
might be poured or sacrifices made and menstruation might be seen as a potent
force,
of power: the earth, the seasons, time,
life,
The Greeks and Romans
Often
women
ceremonies; they might have to go
in rituals
it
alone. Blood
concerning blood, women's
connecting her to deep sources
and death.
and and rhythms. In the Mediterranean world especially, goddesses such as Artemis (Diana), Demeter (Ceres), the Great Mother (Cybele), and Isis were worshipped for centuries. Most of the ceremonies of these cults have been lost, for many of their rites were processes: fertility, the
moon,
associated goddesses with natural forces
cyclical returns
and confined to initiates.^ Among the Roman religions, the cult of Diana of Ephesus was popular, and the multibreasted figure of this goddess of maternity was found throughout the Mediterranean world. There was also a state cult of Ceres (Demeter), in which women, under the leadership of secret
By the
third century
of Asia Minor,
had become
priestesses, celebrated the Mysteries to ensure fertility."^ B.C.,
the cult of Cybele, the Great
popular in the
Roman
Mother
Empire; by the
first
century
B.C.,
worship of the
Egyptian goddess Isis was even more widespread. Evidence of Isis worship has been found from Spain to Asia Minor, from North Africa to Germany. ^ Assimilating the practices of other cults and the attributes of other goddesses to herself, Isis became a popular and powerful supreme goddess. "You who are one and all," went a Roman inscription to her, and a hymn from the first century
B.C.
endowed her with
than goddesses
attributes
more often
associated with gods
in these early cultures:
I
gave and ordained laws for
I
am
she that
is
men which no one
called goddess by
women,
I
divided the earth from the heaven.
I
brought together
I
ordained that parents be loved by children.
I
revealed mysteries unto men.
women and men.
is
able to change.
TRADITIONSINHERITED
54
women
I
caused
I
made an end
I I I
am am am
to
be loved by men.
to murders.
in the rays of the
Queen
the
of
Sun.
War.
the Lord of Rainstorms.^
In the centuries immediately before the rise of Christianity, the worship of Isis
was the most widespread religion
The
in
the
Roman
Empire.
material remains of this early goddess worship are impressive, and the
temples and statues built to honor them remained potent symbols
in
the
European culture to come. The temple of Diana at Ephesus was considered one of the seven wonders of the ancient world. Numerous statues of Aphrodite endured, sometimes buried for centuries. But in their Greek, and later Roman versions, they became powerful icons of European culture. The Aphrodite of Melos (Venus de Milo) remained a lasting image of female beauty
in its
prime. Other female figures and forces survived in statuary form:
the great Victory of Samothrace, a heroic forward-striding
Museum
wings, has stood at the entrance of the Louvre
woman
in Paris for
with
many
years. '^
Many goddess cults
required female priestesses, and as priestesses,
achieved their greatest legitimate power
in
women
Greece and Rome. Freed from
women, priestesses shared the superFrom the Pythia at Delphi, who acted as the Vestal Virgins of Rome, a few women
the restrictions which confined ordinary natural powers accorded goddesses.
the oracle of the god Apollo, to
achieved spiritual power and religious leadership. By the
women
first
century a.d.,
often held the position of priestess-magistrate, combining religious
and secular power. Superseded by Christianity, in which only men could be priests, memories of powerful priestesses endured, both in the temples and and in warnings against letting women perform statues they left behind
—
such important functions.^
Women
Warriors
In addition to goddesses
and
priestesses, these early cultures
From
presence of warrior women.
the legendary Greek
recorded the
Amazons
to the
queen Boudica, they transmitted empowering of subsequent generations. For whether women
historical figure of the British
images to European
women
actually wished to fight physically or not, the
women who had done in
the quintessentially male
One
of the
mere mention of legendary and competence
so provided a tradition of strength field of warfare.
most powerful and enduring of these
traditions
was that of
the Amazons. Although no certain historical proof of this female society of
women
warriors has been found,
Greek culture
is
filled
with portrayals of
Traditions
them. Almost always shown friezes
Empowering
in battle
Women
55
Amazons
with men, the
figure in the
atop the Athenian Acropolis and Parthenon. They were supposed to
have besieged Athens around 1200 b.c, and the fifth-century historian Herodotus believed
them
to have
come from
b.c.
Greek
Women's tombs
Asia.
from east of the Don River reveal that some were buried not only with jewelry and mirrors, but also with swords, spears, arrows, and in one case, a full set of contemporary armor. While such evidence does not substantiate the allfemale Amazon society of Greek legend, it does imply that some women were warriors.^
Amazons were to
portrayed with one breast bare and,
amputate one breast
to
draw
their
bows more
but have no other connection with them; to
later,
were supposed
mate with men, give away their boy babies and easily; to
Mentioned twice in the Iliad, they figure prominently in Greek legends: Theseus married the Amazon Hippolyta; Achilles
raise only the girls.
a
number
fell in
of
Amazon
love with the
queen, Penthesilea, as she lay dying from his
blows; one of Heracles' labors was to steal the girdle of an
Male
victory over an
Amazon proved male
superiority.
On
Amazon
queen.
the other hand,
the very existence of such a powerful female image remained a source of inspiration
and strength
to
European
women
Mary de la
in later centuries. ^° In
1710,
Manley published a "Table of Heroines" in her magazine. The Female Tatler. She included "all the Amazonian Race," and stated that "The pleasing View of so many dazzling Heroigns gave me extream Delight, and made me sensible of the Advantage for instance, the English writer
I
possessed in being a
Riviere
Woman." ^^
Hebrews occasionally depicted women funcDeborah is called a prophetess and a judge although she is female, a wife, and a mother. She rallies the Hebrews against their enemies and is aided by Jael, another woman, who slays the enemy general by hammering a nail into his head. Deborah
The Old Testament
of the
tioning heroically in roles traditionally allotted to men.
saved her people. arose,
"The peasantry ceased
Deborah,/ arose
Hebrews paid
as a
a similar tribute to
in Israel,
in Israel"
enemy general. Pretending she was going to "took down his sword that hung there and .
all
they ceased/ until you
went a hymn to her.^^ jj^g the pious widow Judith, who also slew an
mother
.
.
Holofernes' bed, she instead
she struck his neck twice with
her might, and severed his head from his body." Bringing the head back
in a
"food bag" carried by her maid, Judith roused the Hebrew army to
victory. Afterward, she led "all the people" in a ing,
assuming another
fame and the honor terror
among
song and dance of thanksgiv-
role traditionally reserved to
of having saved her people:
men. Her reward was
"No one
ever again spread
the people of Israel in the days of Judith or for a long time after
her death. "^^
Germanic and Celtic
epics also depicted warrior
women. The
Valkyries
TRADITIONSINHERITED
56 of Norse legend served
The
world
A.D., described a
power. Despite
was
Odin and
selected male heroes for entry into Valhalla.
Celtic epic, the Tain Bo, written in
which
down
women
Queen Medb's (Maeve's)
a formidable
in
the seventh or eighth century
ruled, fought,
and possessed great
ultimate defeat by Ciichulainn, she
and honored opponent. A wealthy and powerful queen, she She fought and had affairs independently of
ruled equally with her husband.
him. She
A
is
described as
She had a head of yellow long-faced woman with soft features. and two gold birds on her shoulders. She wore a purple cloak folded about her, with five hands' breadth of gold on her back. She carried a light, stinging, sharp-edged lance in her hand, and she held an iron sword with a woman's grip tall, fair,
.
.
.
hair,
over her head
—
a massive figure, i'*
In addition to such
Tacitus
left
accounts of
myra and Boudica
women warriors of women who fought
Roman
legend,
historians like
Rome. Zenobia
against
of Pal-
most famous. Boudica
of the Iceni remained the
(d.
62
Roman army in Britain. Her husband on his kingdom to Rome and half to his daughters. When
A.D.) led a revolt against the
death had willed half his the
Roman
procurator claimed
it
all,
assaulted the queen, and raped her
daughters, she joined with neighboring kings against the Romans. Described as
big-boned and harsh-voiced, with red hair to her knees, she led an assault
from the north which penetrated defeat, rather than
as far as
be forced to march
London. She took poison
in a
Roman
after her
triumphal parade. ^^
Two centuries later,
the Roman Emperor Aurelian forced captured Goth march in such a procession wearing placards proclaiming them to be Amazons. 1^ What remained important and empowering to European
women
to
women
about warrior
existed at
women was
Later female
all.
artists
not their
final defeat,
but the fact that they
and writers would use these
early
women
warriors as inspirational examples; see, for instance, the writer Christine de Pizan's use of the
Amazons
in
her Book of the City of Ladies in the fifteenth
century, or the artist Artemisia Gentileschi's use of Judith in her paintings in the
seventeenth century. By assuming the roles normally allocated men,
warrior
women
kept alive the possibility of
as warriors in a warrior culture
usually restricted to
Women
in
women
and succeeding
functioning successfully
in realms of
war and leadership
men.
Power: Queens and Empresses
Women warriors remained exceptional, and in these early cultures, strong women more often gained power by using their intelligence and their dynastic and
familial connections to
become
rulers in their
own
right. Particularly in
Empowering
Traditions
Women
57
periods of political transition and uncertainty, inheritance of the throne even
by
female seemed preferable to
a
which would endure
tradition
men
change,
women
in
civil
of enterprise could seize the opportunity to rise to power;
were able to do
of enterprise
them. For unlike men,
who
such regencies resulted
all
jointly (a tradition in the
Arsinoe
II in
in
the
object of
much
circumstances favored
own name,
royal
they could rule with or
women
for.
While
Ptolemaic dynasty of Egypt, established by Queen
known
some ambitious women
of these
queen of independent Egypt,
last
if
female rulership, acting as a regent or ruling
gain the throne and to forestall
ties to
The
B.C.),
whom
the second century B.C.) enabled
the power for themselves. Best
(69-30
this as well,
could rule alone in their
almost always needed a male relative not
war and disorder. This too was a
the later European centuries. In times of
Roman
to take
women is Cleopatra VII who seized her opportuni-
annexation of her kingdom.
hostile Latin literature, Cleopatra established a tradition
—
—
power in Europe. While later authors like Shakespeare focused on her beauty and seductive wiles, the historical record reveals a woman and a ruler of energy and intelligence. Making and breaking alliances, skillfully taking advantage of circumstances, she ruled Egypt for over twenty turbulent of female
and her ultimate defeat should not overshadow her accomplishments. She succeeded to the throne of Egypt in 51 B.C., when she was seventeen and her brother, Ptolemy XIII, ten. Contemporary coins and portraits show years,
her as a forceful-looking
woman
with a long nose, not a beauty by past or
present standards. She favored an alliance with
Rome; her brother and the
council regents did not and forced her to flee to Alexandria where she recruited an Arabian
army
to assert her position. It
Julius Caesar, himself in search of Egypt's wealth,
was there that she met but
officially
present to
reconcile the warring siblings. She was twenty-one; he was fifty-two. sexual liaison with Caesar took
—
no
special skill
—Caesar was
Her
notoriously easy
to bed but she was also able to enlist his support for her rulership. Caesar helped her conquer the Egyptian army, established her on the throne with
another younger brother, Ptolemy XIV, and considered both herself and
Egypt
allied to
Two
him.
years later, in
successful dictator of
46 B.C., Cleopatra came to live with Caesar, now the Rome. She brought her infant boy, whom she called
Caesarion and declared was Caesar's son. Caesar gave her royal honors
Rome,
treating her like the
queen she was, and adding
in
a large gilt statue of
Venus he had built. She lived with him in his villa until 44 B.C., and the suspicion of her influence may have contributed to the plot against his life. The same year, her brother was assassinated, and it is a credit to her political skill that she was able to maintain herself as queen of an independent Egypt, now ruling jointly with her to the
Temple
of
his assassination in
.
TRADITIONSINHERITED
58
her three-year-old son. Three centuries
later,
the
Roman
author Plutarch paid
tribute to her:
Her actual beauty, it is said, was not compared with her, or that one could contact of her presence,
if
in itself so
remarkable that none could be
see her without being struck by
you lived with her, was
irresistible;
it,
but the
the attraction of
her person, joining with the charm of her conversation, and the character that
attended
she said or did, was something bewitching.
all
She used her charms
Roman general,
her meeting with
in
in 41 b.c.
^'^
Mark Antony,
He summoned her to meet him
in
the successful
Tarsus to discuss
an alliance against the Parthians; according to Plutarch, she made the
trip
into a dazzling encounter:
She came sails
up the
Cydnus,
river
in a
barge with gilded stern and outspread
and fifes and canopy of cloth of gold, dressed as Venus picture, and beautiful young boys, like painted Cupids, stood on each side
harps. in a
sailing
of purple, while oars of silver beat time to the music of flute
She
under
herself lay alone
a
to fan her. 18
She won Mark Antony's
affections
and bore him
alone for three years, consolidating her power.
twins.
The
She then ruled Egypt
couple married in 37
B.C.
She supported Antony in his struggles against Antony was married already when he wed his rival (and brother-in-law Cleopatra) Octavian, Caesar's heir and the future Roman Emperor Augustus. Egyptian hegemony was asserted over much of the Middle East, supported by Antony's generalship and Cleopatra's troops and supplies. Together, they proclaimed themselves gods, appearing as Isis and Osiris-Dionysus. From then on, Cleopatra was addressed as Thea Neotera, the younger Goddess, and and thereafter ruled
as equals.
—
she
may have been
as a
god to the future ruler of Rome, Octavian. In 32 B.C., Octavian declared war on Cleopatra alone, judging that he had
indirectly responsible for suggesting this tactic of reigning
Rome. Cleopatra and men and went to western Greece in early 3 1 There, at the Battle of Actium, they watched their final defeat. Although both Cleopatra and later Antony succeeded in breaking away from the Roman ships, three quarters of their fleet was sunk or abandoned. Both fled to Alexandria and there separately committed suicide. Whether Cleopatra to break her
power
and Antony
raised ships
in
the East to establish his rulership of
actually used a poisonous snake
dressed in her Arsinoe, to
full royal regalia
march
in
is stifl
uncertain, but
it
is
known
that she
before she died. Octavian had forced her
chains in a
own hand, Cleopatra avoided
Roman
that fate.
sister,
triumphal parade; by dying at her
Only
thirty-two, she left a lasting
image of female royal power, i*' In the centuries that followed, other royal
women
seized
power when
Traditions
times of uncertainty favored
Empires,
women
a legacy of
Women
In both the Eastern
this.
59
and Western
ruled with male relatives and in their
own
Roman
right, creating
female empresses. First with her nephew and then with her son,
Galla Placidia
388-450) ruled the Western
(c.
From
(empress).
Empowering
Roman Empire
as
Augusta
the age of fifteen she governed as regent for her brother
Honorius and shared power with him
until his death in 423.
governed for a time on behalf of her son, Valentinian
She then
Galla Placidia's
III.
stepniece, Pulcheria (399-453), was declared regent for her brother, the ruler of the Eastern Empire, Theodosius
be the
the scenes even after herself
Acknowledged by contemporaries
II.
to
member of the family, she continued to rule behind he had come of age. On his death in 450, she declared
diligent, forceful
and her husband Marcian
her death three years of the Byzantine
later. ^o
his successors,
Empress Irene
753-803). She overthrew and then
(c.
blinded her son in order to rule in her
her power for
and they ruled together until in the ruthless hands
This tradition continued
own name and managed
to hold onto
five years.
European centuries to come, some royal women would continue power when circumstances favored them, living according to tradi-
In the to seize
tions
women
which empowered
Women
of
instead of subordinating them.
Wealth
Cleopatra's power had rested not only on her lineage and intelligence, but also
on the wealth her kingdom represented. In other eras of
changing economic and
political
transition,
when
circumstances favored the amassing of
wealth in female hands, some propertied
women were
able to use their
and sometimes influential lives. All Greek, Roman, Hebrew, Celtic, and Germanic althese early cultures lowed daughters to inherit, especially if there were no sons or male relatives. One important tradition passed on to European women in later centuries was that families would strive to keep their property intact, even if this meant
economic power
to lead independent
—
—
giving
it
to a
woman. Among Athenian Greeks and the Hebrews, daughters
were forbidden to inherit
if
sons were alive, but
if
there were none, the
daughter inherited the entire property. She was, however, supposed to marry a
kinsman or
at least a
member of her father's tribe, to keep the Roman law allowed both daughters and
within the original group. inherit. Celts in
probably divided the property evenly and gave
it all
property
wives to
to daughters
the absence of sons; Germanic peoples tended to favor sons, but gave their
daughters
a portion of
the inheritance and
all
of
it if
there were no sons.^^
Rome that women were able to accrue the greatest economic power and rights. One of the few times Roman women intervened in politics It
was
in
TRADITIONSINHERITED
60
was
in
195
b.c. to
demand
the repeal of the Oppian Law, which limited their
right to use expensive goods, like gold
and
carriages.
According to Livy,
respectable matrons in the city and every entrance to the Forum. As the men Forum, the matrons besought them to let them, too, have back the luxuries they had enjoyed before, giving as their reason that the republic was thriving and that everyone's private wealth was increasing every day.^^
blockaded every street
came down
to the
Twenty-six years that
women
later,
the Voconian
Law was
passed, limiting the
amount
could inherit. This type of control proved ineffectual in the long
run, for in a time of increasing wealth, families tried to keep their fortunes
together by giving
them
to their daughters,
Augustus exempted a number of
A.D.,
if
necessary. In the
women from
first
century
guardianship and thus
male control over their property. The law limiting their inheritance
fell
into
and by the second century, women could make their own wills freely. Eventually, guardianship became limited to minor children. ^^ There is ample evidence that some wealthy Greek and Roman women in disuse,
these eras
managed
their
Faustilla, signed notes,
year in interest.
own
finances freely. In Pompeii, a moneylender,
had numerous
A woman named
creditors,
and charged 45 percent
a
owned an apartment building Many women, including priestesses,
Julia Felix
and rented rooms, shops, and baths. ^"^ acted as public benefactors, and at the height of the Roman Empire, women like men vied in erecting buildings and statues, presenting games and prizes, giving lavish parties and entertainments. The enduring effects of women's wealth were twofold. First, wealthy women were able to construct and endow public buildings: temples, baths, meeting halls. Carved into stone, the record of their creations and endowments might be publicly visible for centuries, perhaps empowering other women. "You see here, stranger, the statue of a woman who was pious and very wise, Scholastica," read an inscription from Ephesus. "She provided the great
had
sum
fallen
of gold for constructing the part of the [two public baths] here that a woman to acquire an woman could make an enduring impact in poetry, While very few either women or men were liter-
down."^? Second, wealth could enable
education, and an educated painting, or philosophy.
—
ate, leisured, or artistic in these centuries, the
became one
—
memory
of those
who were
European women's most empowering traditions. Through the centuries, examples from the past, especially Greece and Rome, would be used by those who advocated education and wider intellectual and creative roles for
of
women.
Traditions
Educated and
women
the mother of Philip
B.C.),
Women
61
Women
Artistic
Literacy was a privilege for
390
Empowering
II
in these early cultures.
Macedon and
of
Eurydice
(d.
the grandmother of
Alexander the Great, commemorated her gratitude for learning to read on a stone tablet:
Eurydice, daughter of Irrhas, offers this shrine to the
Glad
Muses,
wish of her heart
for the
granted by them to her prayer. Since by their aid she has learned,
when mother
of sons
grown
to
manhood,
Letters, recorders of words,
learned
Eurydice lived at the accrue wealth, and
Greece
(c.
start of
it
fourth to
Imperial eras in
how
was
first
Rome
and to write.^^
to read
one of the periods when those periods
in exactly
women were
—the
able to
Hellenistic era in
centuries B.C.) and the late Republican and early
(first
some women were
able to
presence in science,
art,
century B.C. to the second century a.d.)
become educated. They
left
—
that
records of their
philosophy, and literature.
and for many centuries thereafter, the most likely way for a woman to enter the sciences or the arts was to be born into a family which specialized in those fields. There are some epitaphs to women doctors in Greek and Roman cities from the first century a.d. on; a number of them associate the woman with a medical family. "You guided straight the rudder of life in our home and raised high our common fame in healing though you were a woman you were not behind me in skill," went a tribute to Panthia from her husband Glycon in the second century a.d.^'^ Qf the eight women artists mentioned by ancient authors, a number are described as the "daughIn the ancient world
—
ter
and student" of a father who painted. ^8 The who worked in Rome about 100 B.C.:
fullest
account
is
of laia of
Cyzicus,
She used both the
women most
painter's brush and,
on
ivory, the graving tool.
frequently, including a panel picture of an old
She painted
woman
in
Naples,
which she used a mirror. No one's hand was quicker to paint a picture than hers; so great was her talent that her prices far exceeded .^^ those of the most celebrated painters of her day.
and even
a self-portrait for
.
While none
of these
women's works
tradition they established of
European images of
centuries.
On
women which
made by men.
.
of art from this era have survived, the
women
working
in
the arts endured in later
the other hand, the powerful representations and
have endured
in
the art of these early cultures were
TRADITIONSINHERITED
62
To some some
writings, the a
degree, the
same
most extensive argument
male philosopher. Despite in
that remain of their
empowering women comes from
Plato's misogynistic passages in his other writ-
women and men
are the
nature and therefore should be given the same education. In the
Republic, there
is
a sustained
men and
be equal to
women
for
While the names and
all
Republic and the Laws, he argued that
ings, in the
same
true in philosophy.
is
brief accounts of female philosophers are
argument that
in the ideal state
women should "Men and
share in administering the government:
alike possess the qualities
which make
their comparative strength or weakness."
a guardian; they differ only in
These guardian-women
spared the "hard work" of child care and will "share in the
toils
the defense of their country."'^ Written in the fourth century
be war and
are to
of
these
B.C.,
Utopian ideas were preserved and ensured that in the centuries to
come
the
female equality would be encountered wherever Plato's philoso-
possibility of
phy was studied. ^1 Six hundred years later, in the third century a.d., Diogenes Laertes wrote that Plato had two female students at his Academy who dressed as men. Knowledge of other female philosophers comes largely from such late sources and is fragmentary, only hinting at the influence and intellectual prestige of these early educated women. Three women have reputations and are mentioned by name as philosophers in the ancient world: Hipparchia of thirdcentury B.C. Athens; Beruriah of second-century a.d. Jerusalem; and Hypatia of fourth- to fifth-century a.d. Alexandria. ^^ j^\\ ^^^^ the subject of pithy anecdotes illustrating their quick wit and command of argument. "I am much stronger than Atalanta from Maenalus [the famous runner], because my wisdom is better than racing over the mountain," Hipparchia is supposed to have declared. "You don't think that badly," she replied to a
on weaving
for
cited in the
my
critic, "if
I
I
have arranged
have used the time
I
my
education. "^^ Beruriah was one of the very few
Talmud
for her scholarship. In
life
so
would have wasted
women
one passage, she corrects her
husband. Rabbi Meir, for praying for the death of some sinners. Citing verses
him to pray for them and they repented." A
that said "let the sins (not the sinners) cease," she convinced
the sinners' repentance, and "he did pray for
number say.
of passages cited her as an authority
and
start,
"Rightly did Beruriah
."^"^ .
.
Hypatia
(c.
370-415)
left a
of her writings have survived.
reputation as a great scholar, although none
The daughter
both mathematics and philosophy popular teacher and was
invented a
number
known
as
The Nurse
of scientific instruments
and mathematics. In 41
5
of a mathematician, she taught
at the university in Alexandria.
or
The
She was
a
Philosopher. Hypatia
and wrote works on astronomy
the Christian Patriarch of Alexandria incited a
mob
— Traditions
Empowering
Women
to attack her; she
was pulled from her chariot and
her body and
her books were burned.
all
Some women's cultures
—have
writings
—
The
survived.
letters
poetry
63
killed
by the crowds. Both
and poetry from the Greek and the best written by
rivals
men
Roman
of the day,
and one of the most important traditions which has empowered women in European history is this heritage of women writing, articulating a woman's life. The quality of this writing could not be denied, and the fact that women were able to create great literature, even within cultures that subor-
view of
dinated them, put the lie to assertions of women's innate inferiority. Throughout the centuries, some women were able to create literature which endured. Although much of this writing has been lost, enough was preserved
women
to establish a tradition of
Honored by
their
own
dreams. In the third century
wrote of a
writers,
societies,
beginning with these early poets.
they expressed women's concerns and
B.C., for instance,
the Greek poet Anyte of Tegea
sorrow:
little girl's
The
Myro made
child
this
tomb
for her grasshopper, a field-nightingale,
and her cicada that lived in the trees, and she cried because pitiless death had taken both of her friends. '^
Writing on very
little
their
own themes, women chose to focus on love and to say much poetry written by men. In their own
about war, the subject of
day and thereafter, their championing of love and upon. While male poets wrote about love as well, of female love poetry in
Nothing
Come
From my mouth
—
Has not
What
The Greek
sweeter than love,
is
it.
this
is
I
created a tradition
I,
other blessings
Nossis,
But one
so.
all
all:
have spat even honey
whom
loved, will never
Kypris [Aphrodite]
know
roses her flowers are.'^
poet Nossis of Locri wrote this verse
centuries later, the
claims was remarked
which love was the greatest good of
second to
Say
its
women
Roman
in
the third century
poet Sulpicia echoed her sentiments:
This day has brought a love it would shame me to conceal If I
I
sin,
will
I
glory in sinning:
not wear virtue's mask
the world shall
know we have met
and are worthy, one of the
other. '^
B.C.; four
TRADITIONS INHERITED
64
Of most
the female poets, Sappho of Lesbos
all
brilliant.
Acknowledged
—the
time
earliest in
as a poetic genius in her
own
—was the
day, she garnered
becoming an inspiration to women of other and other cultures. Plato called her the "tenth Muse," and her writings were cited by other poets and writers on literature as examples to be studied praise throughout the centuries,
eras
and imitated. ^^ Little
is
known
about her
for certain
Probably born about 630 b.c,
life.
she wrote in Greek about two hundred years after the works of first
name
recorded. She married, although the
and she had
of her
husband
Homer were in
is
doubt,
a daughter:
have a beautiful child
I
who
my for all
looks like golden flowers
darling Cleis,
whom
I
would not
[take]
'^
Lydia
Like other poets of her day, she almost certainly performed while playing a lyre
(hence the
sang, "speak to
name
lyric
me and
poetry for her work).
"Come,
.'"^^
find yourself a voice.
.
.
divine lyre," she
She considered
not only a poet, but a good one: "I do not imagine that any looked on the light of the sun future.
will
have such
[poetic] skill at
girl
herself
who
any time
in
has the
""^1
Sappho wrote nine books
of lyric poems; only
one poem survives
intact.
]VIuch of her writing was preserved because her phrases were considered
exemplary and were cited as the in fragments,
finest illustrations of poetic techniques.
Even
her vivid metaphors and turns of phrase convey her talent. She
described Aphrodite's chariot as drawn by "beautiful swift sparrows whirring
down from heaven moods with simple declarations:
fast-beating wings [who] brought you above the dark earth
through the mid-air.
.
.
."^^ gj^g articulated
The moon
She used
intricate
midnight, and time goes by,
and
I
And
lie alone."^'
metaphors
foot in the mountains, fragment.^'*
she
has set and the Pleiades;
it is
—
"like hyacinth
which shepherds tread under-
and the ground, the purple
knew the power
Hesperus [the Evening that shining
Dawn
flower.
of simple repetition:
Star],
bringing everything
scattered,
you bring the sheep, you bring the goat, you bring back the child to
its
mother.'^^
.
.
."
went one
— Traditions
Of
all
her poetic
Empowering
was her
gifts, it
skill at
Women
65
love poetry that
made her most
renowned. Love was her major theme and her only complete remaining poem is
goddess of love, to give Sappho her heart's desire,
a plea to Aphrodite, the
the love of a
woman
she adores:
Come
me now again and me from oppressive anxieties; fulfill all that my heart longs to fulfill, and you yourself be my fellow-fighter.'^^ to
deliver
hymn and other poems are women as men, and from antiquity on, Sappho was criticized for being "irregu""^'^ (The formation of words to define female homolar" and a "woman-lover. "Sapphic" and "lesbian" sexuality from Sappho's name and birthplace are from recent centuries.) The criticism did not override the admiration, however, and it is Sappho's descriptions of the sensations and feelings love evokes which have been remembered through the centuries. "Love shook my heart like a wind falling on oaks on a mountain," she wrote, "Love has obtained for me the brightness and beauty of the sun."'*^ She described jealousy as "a subtle fire [which] has stolen beneath my flesh" and the sight
The
objects of Sappho's love in this
well as
—
made her
of her lover with another
feel "little short of dying.""^^
She honored women, valuing their love and their perceptions. She described women as complete human beings, fully worthy of love and admiration. In her verses, the theories of female subordination and the justifications of female inferiority do not exist and with her creation of a world in which
women were cherished equals, she denied those who disparaged women. Even more, she valued the claims of love over culture. In this she
poetry, although few poets after her for a
all
else in life
—even war
would be
women
expressing their love
woman: Some
say cavalry
and others claim
infantry or a fleet of long oars is I
in a warrior
helped to create the long tradition of European love
the supreme sight on the black earth. say
it
is
the one you love.
these things remind
who
is
far,
and
I
for
me now
of Anaktoria
one
would rather see her warm supple step and the sparkle of her face than
all
the dazzling chariots
and armored infantry of Lydia.'^
TRADITIONSINHERITED
66
In one of her verse fragments, say, will
remember
forgotten, her
name
man
survived.
Other
endured. In the these
He
.
traditions inherited
come.
"Someone,
I
was to be: Never entirely
And
as
long as Sappho was
could write and write as well as any
follow her example, writing on their own and doing it so well that their writings also century B.C., the Greek poet Meleager praised some of
many white ."^^ The roses.
ries to
to posterity:
included them in his Garland, an anthology of epigrams.
of Anyte,
.
woman
it
voices
as "weaving into the garland many lilies Moero, and of Sappho, few flowers, but these tradition of women writing endured. It was one of the
described choosing the
few,
so
women would
own
first
women and
And
survived through the ages.
mentioned, the tradition that a subjects in their
Sappho looked
us in the future."^^
lilies
poems
of
which most empowered European
women
in
the centu-
a
THE EFFECTS OF CHRISTIANITY
Beliefs
and
Empowering
Practices
The Greek, Roman, Hebrew, a
mixed legacy of
Overall, ited
Women
and Germanic cultures bequeathed European women of the ninth century.
Celtic,
traditions to
women's subordination was
were images and memories of
justified
and perpetuated, but
women which empowered
also inher-
them.
The
life
and teachings of Jesus of Nazareth, later institutionalized as the beliefs and practices of the Christian Church, added both to traditions that empowered women and those that subordinated them. Initially, Jesus' words and actions included
women
in
ways that were new and surprising
nated Palestine of the teachings between
first
century a.d.
women and men,
He made
in
the Roman-domi-
little
distinction in his
despite the occasional consternation this
may have caused his male followers; when he talked at length with a Samariwoman, his disciples "marveled that he was talking with a woman." To some of his contemporaries, Jesus appeared to reject traditional ideas of tan
^
status, of free and slave, subordinate and inferior. He saw no special flaws in woman's nature. He included women in his preaching and allowed them a life and a role outside the family and their relationship to a man. He used his authority to call for a reversal of contemporary and traditional values and attitudes. In his Sermon on the Mount, he favored "the meek, for they shall inherit the earth," and those "who are persecuted for righteousness' sake, for both theirs is the kingdom of heaven." He encouraged rich and poor
— him, promising they and — new Christian He promised the "kingdom heaven" — death — who embraced
women and men would
to leave their families
life after
to
follow
of
family.
find a
his teachings, regardless of status or
all
gender. 2 Jesus thus rejected
much
had taken for granted. Most European women, he preached the equal-
that earlier cultures
significant for future generations of
TRADITIONSINHERITED
68
By
ity of all believers in his doctrine.
and
his actions
his words,
he rejected
the traditional descriptions of females as inferior and undermined the ancient justifications for their subordination. in
God's image
men.
just like
Eve from Adam's
He
He
consistently saw
women
as created
never referred to the secondary creation of
nor did he ever ascribe any special sin to Eve rather
rib,
Adam for the disobedience in the Garden of Eden. The act of baptism cleansed women equally with men from the taint of sin. Women's piety, just than
like
men's, would determine their
Jesus gave equal value to
women
men
as well as
death and enable their bodies to
who denied
him.^
of the rich, for "they
her poverty has put
compared
women
all
who believed in him would know salvation before The poor widow's gift was worth more than that
contributed out of their abundance; but she out of everything she had, her whole
in
he used and charity
in other ways. In his parables,
to illustrate the values of faith, humility,
that he favored. "Harlots" priests
life after
heaven.
rise into
faith to "a grain of
mustard seed which a
living."'*
man
When
he
took and sowed in
he immediately followed it with an example which would mean more to women: "The kingdom of heaven is like leaven which a woman took and hid in three measures of flour, till it was all leavened. "^ "Five wise maidens" who filled their lamps with oil and were prepared to "meet the his field,"
bridegroom" exemplified the true believers ready to receive God's blessing.^
He
used the metaphor of birth to describe his mission and promised that his
followers
would
bleeding
woman
condemn
feel
the joy of a
woman who
has given birth. '^
her, but
comforted and healed her.^
He
saved the
most despised
figures in Jewish society, the adulteress, also
contemporary
cultures.
said,
"Let him who
at her,"
is
Hebrew law without
and when no one
and do not
When
a
sought his help and touched his gown, he not only did not
did,
sin
life
of
one of the
an outcast
in
many
be stoned to death; Jesus among you be the first to throw a stone called for her to
he told
her, "Neither
do
I
condemn
you; go,
sin again. "^
Most unusual of all his actions with regard to women, Jesus spoke directly them of his doctrines and accepted women as his special followers along with men. In Roman-dominated Hebrew Palestine, women hardly ever to
first
Talmudic teachings,
let
alone as
declared his divinity to a Samaritan
woman,
figured as subjects of Jewish rabbinical or students. In contrast, Jesus
which women were subordinate and Samaritans outcasts. He stated his mission to Martha of Bethany: "I am the resurrection and the life; he who believes in me, though he shall die, yet shall he live, and whoever lives and believes in me shall never die."^o He raised her brother Lazarus from the in a culture in
dead as proof. Mary of Bethany, Martha's sister, even "sat at the Lord's feet and listened to his teaching." When Martha complained that Mary was not
The
helping her serve the meal, Jesus replied that portion,
which
shall
69
Effects of Christianity
"Mary has chosen the good
not be taken from her."ii Christian
women
in
the
European centuries to come repeatedly cited this affirmation of women's right to learn and preach to justify their studies. Later generations also took his recommendation to John to care for his mother, Mary, as a reminder of
women
the special significance of
Mary
as
mothers. Early Christians portrayed
and statues as a queenly mother, the Virgin enthroned with the holy infant on her lap, his hand held up in blessing. Jesus' favoring of women and his encouragement of their untraditional in their wall paintings
behavior continued throughout his
key roles
in
life.
Women
rather than
men
played the
the events surrounding his death and resurrection. In describing
the crucifixion, the four Gospels report that
all
the apostles had fled except
women remained to pray at the foot of the death. ^^ The women made plans to prepare his body
and
John, but that the
cross
witness his
for burial.
Mary Magdalene She, "from followers,
first
whom
returned to the
tomb and
discovered his body gone.
he had cast out seven demons," not one of
his
male
witnessed his resurrection, the ultimate proof to the faithful
first
Mark and Luke reported that the male disciples did not Mary Magdalene and that Jesus later rebuked them for their lack of
of Jesus' divinity.
believe faith.15
Women's
presence in the Gospels, whether as pious example, as mother,
women in the European Testament which deal with the death, the Acts and the Epistles, offered
or as follower, remained a powerful tradition for
centuries to come. years,
Those books
of the
immediately following Jesus'
many models of women
New
acting as equals within the
generations could find in these writings of the for roles outside the family
tently
mention
five
women
new faith.
first
Women of later
century a.d. justification
and marriage. ^'^ Accounts of
Jesus' life consis-
companions: Mary Magdalene, Mary of Bethany,
The verses of the Acts of the Apostles are women who helped the new faith after his death.
Joanna, Susanna, and Salome. ^^ sprinkled with
names
of
Tabitha, a seamstress living in the Jewish community of Joppa, was called a "disciple" and was considered so essential to her followers that they prevailed upon Peter to bring her back to life.^^ Despite his other teachings, which pointed to the desirability of women's
subordination, the Apostle Paul declared to the Galatian Christian
commu-
"There is neither Jew nor Greek, there is neither slave nor free, there is neither male nor female; for you are all one in Christ Jesus." ^^ Paul's Epistle to the Romans mentions thirty-six colleagues, sixteen of them women. ^^ Women labored "side by side" with him, and he met and corresponded with them as leaders of their own congregations.^'' In Corinth, Paul taught with a woman, Prisca (Priscilla). She and her husband Aquila had once nity that
TRADITIONSINHERITED
70 saved Paul's
and had probably
life,
congregation in
jointly led their
Rome
before fleeing to Greece to avoid persecution. ^o Paul's follower, Thecla of
Iconium,
left
her family to teach with him and became a model in those
women.
centuries for devout Christian
In the centuries of the persecutions, Christian
women
other than those
and evangelists played untraditional roles as that would be embraced as powerful traditions by
associated with the apostles priests
and prophets,
roles
women
religious Christian
in later centuries.
The
denounced by the mainstream
of sects later
Gnostics, a scattered group
of Christian leadership, are
women
believers in North Africa to act as priests, By the second century, the Gnostics had produced a number of books and teachings which stressed both the active participation of women and the bisexual nature of God. One Gnostic hymn listed the attributes of God in terms reminiscent of contemporary hymns to
presumed
to
have allowed
leading prayers and baptizing.
Isis:
For
I
I I
The Montanists ers in the
I
am am am am
I
am
the
first
and the
last.
the honored one and the scorned one.
the whore and the holy one. the wife and the virgin. [the mother]
and the daughter.
two
of Phrygia included
women
.21 .
.
prophets
among
their lead-
beginning of the third century. Prisca preached the imminence of
the second coming of the Savior and recorded a vision in which she saw Jesus in
female form. 22
The
other prophet, Maximilla, assumed leadership of the
group on the death of Montanus. Under attack, she saying, "I
am
word and
spirit
pursued
like a
wolf out of the sheep fold;
justified I
her role by
am no
wolf:
I
am
and power. "^^
Most powerful
of the images to
be preserved from these early centuries
women who
and legends of the
of the Christian faith were the portraits
became martyrs in the persecutions of the Roman Empire. They, more than any other women, became the heroines for future generations, models of independence, of bravery, and of the power faith could give
a
devout Chris-
tian female willing to die for her beliefs.
Until the beginning of the fourth century
when
their doctrines
became
the "preferred" religion of the Empire, over 100,000 Christians suffered this fate,
as
from Carthage
in
North Africa
emperors and their prefects
the gods of the
Roman
state
and imagination blurred
became
"saints"
—
in
literally,
to
Lyons
in
France to Vienna
in Austria,
tried to extirpate a cult that refused to
and preached
pacifism. ^^
The
lines
the glorification of the martyrs as those
"holy ones"
—
worship
between
who
fact
died
objects of prayer, the subject of
The exemplary
and Christian iconography.
tales
71
Effects of Christianity
In the centuries to
come many
female saints became readily identified by the symbols of their persecution in a
Europe where few could
read: Saint
Catherine and her wheel, one of the
instruments of her torture; Saint Margaret and a dragon, one of the beasts
one
that attacked her; Saint Barbara holding a tower, a miniature of the
which she was imprisoned by her parents. of the
way
to achieve Christian salvation.
was whipped, burned, and
finally
died trussed in a net gored by a bull, but
won
she had exhausted her torturers and
adherence to the Christian
their admiration for her staunch
Other women
faith.
chose death rather than marriage to a non-Christian her priesthood to Minerva; Saint Anastasia
noblewoman. Saint Pelagia of Antioch, an exemplary
Amid
martyrdom.
Known all
oflF
a prostitute,
of the days
woman
stands
and hours leading to her
the liturgical calendar as Saint Perpetua of Carthage,
she died in the persecutions of the
was a model of
left
faith.
own account
in
Davia
Yugoslavian
threw herself
virgin,
the legends and the bits of historical evidence one
out, for she left her
would
life as a
than suffer rape. Saint Afra of Augsberg, originally
converted and also died for her
and girl,
suitor. Saint
her
left
lives
Roman
comfortable
left
high positions to become Christians. Saint Agnes, a well-born
a roof rather
in
Many became archetypal models The slave woman, Saint Blandina,
first
decade of the third century. Perpetua
that pious Christian
aspire to: self-sacrifice, courage,
the time of her imprisonment and
women
in
the subsequent centuries
and steadfastness. Only twenty-two
still
nursing her infant son, she
at
initially
"was terrified, for I had never before been in such a dark hole" as the prison. ^^ She refused to listen to her father's pleadings that she recant, and she was baptized in prison, the final act of faith for an early Christian. ^6 She nursed her baby in prison and began to have significant dreams, including one in
which she saw
herself as a
man
fighting as a gladiator in the arena:
and suddenly I was a man. My seconds began to We drew close rub me down with oil, as they are wont to do before a contest. to one another and began to let our fists fly. My opponent tried to get hold of
My
clothes were stripped
off,
.
my
feet,
fell flat
but
on
I
kept striking him
his face
and
I
towards the Gate of Life.
An unknown
in
the face with the heels of
stepped on his head. ...
Then
I
awoke.
I
.
.
my
feet.
began to walk
in
...
He
triumph
^'^
observer recorded her death. She refused to dress in the
robes of a priestess before entering the arena. Knocked off her feet by the
charges of a wild cow, she straightened her clothes, repinned her hair, and
walked across the arena to rejoin her companions. At the end, she guided the
sword hand of the inexperienced soldier who had been unable to the
first
blow. 28
kill
her with
^
TRADITIONSINHERITED
72
The
martyrdom and the creation
opportunities for
continued
women came
as
of Christian heroines
Roman
under attack when the frontiers of the
Empire collapsed in the invasions of the fifth century on. Saint Marcella, a Roman matron who studied with the Church Father, Jerome, was killed by the Visigoths when they sacked Rome in 410. Saint Ursula of Cologne (and her legendary
1 1
,000 virgins) probably died at the hands of the
Huns about
Gudula of Brussels died in a Viking raid about 680. The Vikings came by sea and sailed up Europe's rivers to seize the treasuries of the churches and religious communities. Terrified of being raped, Christian nuns created another tradition of female piety and martyrdom, mutilating their faces in hopes of repulsing the attacker. Saint Usebia did the same when 500. Saint
threatened by an Arab (Saracen) invasion of Spain in the eighth century.
With the end of the persecutions, invasions, and the occasions for martyrdom, Christian women found other ways to serve and advance their faith. As in
the
first
decades of the religion, they assumed functions and roles outside
women. They acted
those usually assigned to
and
to Christianity
women. Legends
like
men
in
converting others
so created another tradition for Europe's Christian
Mary Magdalene being shipwrecked and then win-
told of
ning converts in the south of France. Ireland reputedly became Christian
through the
eflForts
of
two
missionaries: Saint Brigid
and Saint
Patrick.
The
daughter of a Celtic chieftain and his Christian bondswoman, Brigid (c. 450-523) supposedly refused to marry so she might dedicate her life to the faith. "I
never crossed seven furrows without turning
my mind
to
God," she
reputedly declared. ^9
Like men. Christian women converted their families as well as strangers. Mothers converted children; wives converted husbands. When these women were members of royal or imperial families, such actions could have far-
woman could shape the faith of an Roman Emperor who made Christianity
reaching consequences; a
Constantine, the
religion of the empire,
mother, Helena preserved
(c.
may have been
the preferred
influenced by the Christian zeal of his
248-328?). During his reign she worked to convert others,
sites associated
Minor, and intervened
with Jesus'
life,
Eastern
in Palestine and Asia At age seventy, she traveled Female rulers of the sixth- to
built
churches
in religious controversies.
to Jerusalem in search of the true cross. ^^
ninth-century
entire people.
and Western Empires,
like
Eudoxia,
Pulcheria,
Theodora, and Irene followed her example and actively intervened in the religious controversies of their day. Each used her power to favor one doctrine over another, or one Pope over another.^
Among
the
Germanic
peoples, royal wives converted their husbands and
thus whole kingdoms. In sixth-century France, Clothilde told her husband Clovis, king of the Franks,
'The Gods you worship
are
no good.
.
.
.
They
The
73
Effects of Christianity
haven't even been able to help themselves
let
alone others."
When he blamed
the death of their son on her choice of gods, she thanked "the Creator of all
kingdom a child conceived in my womb."^^ he prayed to his wife's Christian god brought Clovis' Similarly King Ethelbert of Kent and King Edwin of
things" for welcoming "to His
Victory
in battle after
conversion.
Northumbria wives
In the
came
England converted because of the
in
Queen Bertha and her daughter to
first
efforts of their Christian
Ethelberga.^^
centuries of the religion, the most holy
life for a
be one of asceticism. These Christians attempted to
live
Christian
not for this
world, but for the next. Their goals were spiritual growth and moral improve-
ment, cultivated by prayer, charitable
acts,
and immersion
in
the Scriptures
through study and discussion. Spiritual growth also necessitated the denial of bodily appetites, which were thought to chain the soul to earth and prevent it
from approaching God. Asceticism meant denying the body's needs
for
and sleep as much as possible. Some Greek, Roman, and Hebrew men had extolled asceticism and followed this path themselves, but Christian asceticism went further; it extolled not only sexual continence, but sexual virginity. Earlier ascetic women usually married and had children; Christian ascetic women could reject marriage and childbirth. Ascetic Christian women might be widows who had been married and borne children, or they might be women who wished to remain virgins and thus food, water, sex, cleanliness,
rejected
marriage and childbearing altogether. Like men, these
women
and dedicated themselves
to a life
wished to abandon their traditional of celibacy
roles
and pious devotion.
In the early legends about Thecla, she preached with Paul; in later versions, she also
became an
anchorite, a religious hermit, living alone, pray-
ing and fasting. In the fourth century, Bishop Palladius estimated that twice as
many women
as
men had chosen
to live as solitary ascetics.^'*
But to
live
women, and even male women who wished to pursue
alone in the desert posed particular dangers for anchorites tended to cluster in groups. Instead,
such a
life
began to gather together and
to create religious
communities,
endowed establishments under the supervision of a male churchman. This became the pattern in future European centuries. By 800, monasteries, convents, and abbeys founded by women and men for the female devout dotted the European landscape.^^
Precedents existed from the
first
century of Christianity for
women leavRoman
ing their families to join groups dedicated to religion. In the days of persecutions, as "deaconesses" assisted with the
women had
taken vows of chastity and had
baptism of female believers. By the third century, groups
widows had gained official recognition as religious orders designated to pray and care for the sick. The Church Councils of Nicaea and Chalcedon authorof
TRADITIONSINHERITED
74 ized
women
over forty to pour the wine at
baptized mothers and their children. '^
It
communion and was
to teach newly
the course of the fourth
in
through sixth centuries (called the Patristic Age because of the leadership of the
men known
Church Fathers) that such groups evolved became women's religious orders.
as the
kinds of avowed communities that
women and
centuries, pious
their
male mentors established the
attributes of Christian spiritual
life.
communities denied
by
and
physical needs
and
desires.
Like men, these
women
In these essential
of these religious
and the suppression of
spent their days in study for
European
Roman matron Paula (347-404) and her Eustochium exemplified all that women could achieve in such a life.
of future generations, the
daughter
They became models
women who
(later called Saint
a typical wealthy
women who had
European Christian
of behavior for those well-born
wished to devote themselves
380 Paula
In
women
Like men,
fasting, celibacy,
For Jerome, the fourth-century Church father, and
prayer.
women
their bodies
into the
fully to their religion.
Paula the Elder) abandoned her
Roman matron and
life
of
joined a circle of Christian ascetic
gathered around the widow Marcella. Paula had been wid-
Roman Senator, she had five children and was She experienced a religious crisis and walked the streets of Rome giving away her money. When she joined Marcella's group, it had been meeting regularly for thirty years. These high-born ascetic women lived
owed
that year; the wife of a
thirty-three years old.
a life almost the opposite of that
expected of wealthy
Roman women. They
did not go to social functions or parties and stayed secluded indoors except for visits to Christian shrines or churches.
remained
celibate.
They
They
ate as
little as
possible
and
did not wash and wore the coarse clothing of the
poor.
They allowed themselves
floor.
Their only reading was Scripture, and they studied with Jerome while
he was secretary to the Pope Jerome praised Paula She mourned and she weeping.
.
.
.
as
little
in
sleep
and took that on hard mats on the
Rome.
an ideal Christian woman:
fasted.
She was squalid with
The Psalms were
dirt;
her eyes were dim with
her only songs; the gospel her whole speech;
continence her one indulgence; fasting the staple of her
When
the
Roman
synod exiled Jerome
life.'''
in 385, Paula left
her three younger
children to travel to Egypt, Bethlehem, and Jerusalem with him.
Only Eustochium, her daughter who had also pledged herself to a pious accompanied her. Jerome extolled Paula's choice of the spiritual Christian life, a choice made by some women in succeeding generations. "She overcame her love for her children by her love for God," he wrote approvingly life,
to
Eustochium:
75
TTie Effects of Christianity
Yet her heart was rent within her, and she wrestled with her were being forcibly separated from parts of the laws of nature, she endured this
sought
They
it
with
a joyful heart.
.
.
.
with unabated
though she
grief, as
Though
was against
it
nay more, she
faith;
.'^ .
.
Bethlehem and, admiring the monastery established by
settled in
another wealthy
trial
herself.
Roman widow, Melania
the Elder, Paula supported the
founding of four similar communities, three female and one male. She and her
women
On
her death, Eustochium succeeded Paula as head of the female monaste-
studied Scripture and prayed at intervals throughout the day.
Jerome praised Paula's
ries.
studies;
he reported she had learned Hebrew so
well that she could sing the Psalms without a Latin accent.
Eustochium edited Jerome's
Her daughter
translation of the Bible, the future Latin Vul-
gate.
Other Church Fathers and leaders helped religious
and
establish groups in Carthage,
women major
the foundation of female
in
women
communities. Augustine, bishop of Hippo, encouraged
Under the
in his diocese.
cities of central
women. '^
his sister, Perpetua,
France
in
founded an order
auspices of Bishop Caesarius,
of the
the sixth century created communities for
In the eighth century, the missionary Boniface founded
monasteries (establishments for both
women and men)
and propertied women and men gave
their lands
these religious communities.
all
to for
Women
also
and
in
the dual
endow women.
their wealth to
founded monasteries
community became its first
all
Germany. Royal
women
for
Saint Brigid established the religious
for
Ireland in the fifth century and
abbess. Saint Gertrude's
mother founded Nivelles
for her, the seventh-century dual
at Kildare in
monastery which
she ruled near Brussels. Osric, the eighth-century King of Northumbria,
founded Gloucester
for his sister, Kineburga.
were over twenty monasteries
for
women
in
By the eighth century, there
England and over twenty
in
the
Frankish lands of France and Belgium; by the ninth century, there were (out of a total of twenty) in German Saxony. '^ Queen Radegund (518-587) became the model pious foundress for Europe's women. A princess of Thuringia who had been taken as booty on the death of her parents, she became the fifth-ranked wife of the
eleven for
women
In France,
Frankish king, Clothar quarreled with
I.
Dedicated to
him over her
caring for the sick.
When
a religious life since childhood, she
pious vocation and her desire to spend her time
she feared he would have her
killed,
she
fled,
and
with her property and the support of Germain, her bishop, she founded
community
for
women
at Poitiers.
As abbess she provided an example
community, and her chaplain wrote
after her death:
"Human
a
to her
eloquence
is
TRADITIONSINHERITED
76 struck almost
dumb
by the
piety, self-denial, charity, sweetness, humility,
""^^ uprightness, faith, and fervor in which she lived.
the fourth century on, the support and encouragement of a
From
prominent male Christian leader came to be increasingly
significant, as the
developing Church created a male hierarchy and tried to enforce uniformity
of practice
and doctrine. Paula and Jerome had followed the
Melania the Elder
in
ideas of
formulating the rules for their religious communities;
male leaders came to be preferred. All
increasingly, the ideas of
insisted
on
modesty, chastity, and obedience for religious Christian women. All envisaged a
life
women
devoid of luxury and devoted to prayer, with the
separated from regular activities and cloistered away from daily contact
with others, especially men. In the fourth century, the Church Father
Gregory of Nyssa, wrote of 379), describing the
women
should aspire
As
if
of
life
their spirits
his sister. Saint
ideal
life
Macrina the Younger
she and her
women
lived
(c.
327-
which other
to:
had been delivered from
was regulated to imitate the
on the incorporeal nature;
life
a nature freed
by death ... so their way
their bodies
of the angels.
.
.
.
from human
Their existence bordered cares.'^^
Between 512 and 534 Caesarius, bishop of Aries, wrote the rule that would spread across the Western kingdoms and become the basis of Christian women's religious orders in the European centuries to come. The devout gave up
all
their property
and took vows
Their community was to be
to
remain cloistered and celibate
self-sufficient,
with the
for
life.
women performing house-
hold tasks themselves. Adaptions of Benedict's rule (formulated for his monastery at
Monte Cassino
gave their
lives carefully
in Italy) in
the seventh century to women's groups
demarcated occasions
psalms, with study and duties
filling
for prayer
and the singing of
the interstices. These rules later regulated
the monasteries, convents, and abbeys of Europe.
By the ninth century. Christian women, their families, and their ecclesiasmentors had created an alternative to the conventional roles allowed
tical
women
in earlier societies. In Christian
Europe, devout
women
could leave
eschew marriage, and forgo childbearing. They could become "brides of Christ" and reap the rewards of that spiritual union which Jerome
their families,
had described
for
Eustochium:
Let the seclusion of your
own chamber
ever guard you; ever let the Bridegroom
you pray, you are speaking to your spouse; if you read, He is speaking to you. When sleep falls on you, He will come behind the wall and will put His hand through the hole in the door and will touch your flesh. And sport with you within.
you
will
awake and
If
rise
up and
cry: "I
am
sick with love.""^'
The
77
Effects of Christianity
They could devote themselves
They could fulfill a new They sang of their joy in an early
to spiritual concerns.
role within the protection of their church.
Christian hymn: Fleeing from the sorrowful happiness of mortals,
having despised the luxurious delights of
life
and
love,
We
leave marriage for
Thee.
Singing a
new
.
.
and the bed of mortals and
song, the
company
towards the high heaven.
Beliefs
The
and
of virgins ascending to
and celibate
became
lives,
Women women must
roles,
their female followers as different
men. They modified
male
men
—and
women
to
abandon
Caesarius and Benedict saw
like
inferior
—
in
nature from devout
accommodate what they called women's the acceptance of some pious Christian women
their rules to
"weaker" nature. For despite in
a
by European abbesses and nuns of
the centuries after 800. Even while they allowed these
and
live sepa-
under the watchful guardianship of
a tradition inherited
their traditional functions
Thee
.
Christian belief that even the most religious
ecclesiastic,
golden house
.'*'* .
Practices Subordinating
rate, cloistered,
a
.
the untraditional roles of teacher, martyr, missionary, and foundress, other
Christian teachings and practices justified both women's traditional roles and their subordination to
men. There were three chief sources
there were the passages subordinating
women
became
it
as sacred to the Christians as
subordinating
women were
in
for this. First,
the Old Testament, which
was to the Jews. Second, traditions
present in every culture where Christianity
—among the Greeks, Romans, Hebrews,
Celts, and Germans. Third, women's subordination in the writings of Paul, other apostles and evangelists, and early Christian writers. All these men described women as inferior by nature and thus justified their subordination to "superior" men. Christian traditions subordinating women became an important part of the legacy inherited by later generations of European women. In contrast to Jesus, the writings of Peter, Paul, and Timothy, and of the Church Fathers like Jerome, Tertullian, Augustine, and John Chrysostom emphasized women's inferiority and declared that women should be subordinate to men. As Christianity became accepted and institutionalized, the equality granted women in its first centuries was disavowed. Paul and other apostles and evangelists separated the women who aided them from the vast
spread
there was scriptural justification for
majority of
women, whom they
preferred to remain in traditional female
TRADITIONSINHERITED
78
Drawing on Hebrew law and custom, Paul
roles.
women
asserted that
should
be veiled and keep silence
in
the churches. For they are not permitted to speak, but should be
subordinate, even as the law says.
them ask
let
their
husbands
at
there
If
home. For
is
anything that they desire to know,
it is
shameful for a
woman
to speak
church. ^^5
in
"man
Invoking the second account of Creation, Paul stated that
is
the image
and glory of God; but the woman is the glory of man." Referring to Eve's supposed creation from Adam's rib, he added, "For man was not made from woman, but woman from man. Neither was man created for woman, but woman for man.'"^^ The letter to Timothy repeated this argument in stronger terms: Let a
woman
learn in silence with
or to have authority over
then Eve; and
Adam
all
men; she
submissiveness.
is
to
keep
silent.
was not deceived, but the
I
permit not
Adam
For
woman was
woman
to teach
was formed
first,
deceived and became
a transgressor.'^'^
women to be "submissive" so that they could "win over" more converts who would be attracted by their "reverent and chaste behavior."'*^ Like earlier Hebrew prophets, he admonished women for Peter was supposed to have told
adorning themselves and urged them to be modest, invoking the figure of Sarah,
who called her husband men could be bishops in
"lord."'*'^
only
the
New
Testament, these prescriptions were perpetuated when and wherever
new
Both Timothy and Titus argued that Christian churches. ^^ As part of the
Christian scripture was accepted.
By the
fifth
century, the male leaders and theologians of Christianity had
accepted and restated the most denigrating traditional views of women. All that was inferior or evil they associated with the female, superior with the male. In the second century, the
male and female
qualities in the soul
—the male
all
that was
good and
Church Father Origen saw qualities
were the superior
same century, Clement of Alexandria recommended that women and men grow beards to emphasize the difference between the
ones. In the
wear
veils
sexes:
His beard, then, It is is
older than
is
the badge of a
Eve and
is
man and shows him
unmistakably to be a man.
the symbol of the stronger nature.
.
.
.
His characteristic
action; hers passivity. ^^
Following Paul and the other apostles, the Church Fathers often referred to the creation story of Eve fashioned from Adam's
rib.
Eve's act of disobedi-
Carden of Eden became evidence of all women's inherent weakness and evil, and the principal justification for her eternal subordination to ence
in the
The
79
Effects of Christianity
her "natural" superior, the more spiritual and rational male. Contemporary Jewish scholars and rabbis also stressed Adam's relative innocence and Eve's
and some of these writings were accepted as orthodox by the Church Fathers as well.^^ The Christian Church Fathers also drew upon the Greek legend of Pandora, which was familiar to them. All stressed the resemblance between Pandora and Eve as bringers of evil to men. From the second century on, Eve was seen by the Christian Church as the source of sin, the temptress of man, and the embodiment of all women. "And do you know that greater guilt,
you are [each] an Eve?" wrote Tertullian around 200,
The
God on
this sex of yours lives in this age: the guilt must of You are the Devil's gateway. You are the unsealer of that forbidden tree. You are the first deserter of the divine Law. You are she who persuaded him whom the Devil was not valiant enough to attack. You destroyed so easily God's image, man. On account of your desert, that is death, even the Son of God had to die.^'
sentence of
necessity live too.
Two hundred years later, argument.
"What
in
the
asked, after a passage blaming Yes, indeed: they are
Eve alone
century, John Chrysostom repeated this
fifth
then about other women,
all
Eve
weak and
frivolous.
suffered from deception, but that
"Woman"
is
if
this
for corrupting
.
.
was Eve's doing?" he
Adam.
For we are told here, not that
.
"Woman"
was deceived. The word
not to be applied to one, but to every woman. All feminine nature
has thus fallen into error.
.^'* .
.
This misogynist fear and hatred echoed older images of women's seductive power.
It
took on
new dimensions
in
the theological treatises of the
Church
Fathers and passed into both secular and religious European culture as a tradition inherited
by women.
In the writings of the
became the tion
of
Church
Fathers, the act of disobedience to
from the act of disobedience
Good and
Evil to the
first
in eating
the fruit of the Tree of Knowledge
sex act. Increasingly,
innocent and as the embodiment of mind, the temptress and the trine,
God
"original sin." In describing this transgression, they shifted atten-
embodiment
man
—the
as relatively
corrupted by Eve,
of flesh. Augustine enunciated the doc-
which became Christian dogma.
retribution" the
Adam was seen
who had been
Adam
personification of
saw Eve naked, and in "just mind and spirit lost control
—
of his body. In the uncontrolled erection that the sight of her inspired, "the flesh
began
to lust against the spirit."^^ Fear of the male's sexual response
became fear of sexuality in general and led to denunciations of the female. The Church Fathers portrayed Eve as object, as the cause of lust and the personification of
all
that was uncontrolled. ^^
From condemnation
of
Eve and the
lust
she inspired in
Adam,
the
TRADITIONSINHERITED
80
Church Fathers came to condemn men. The Church Fathers praised
all
women and
celibacy
the lust they inspired in
and wrote with disgust of any-
this. "You have heard not commit adultery,' " Jesus stated in his Sermon
thing sexual. There was ample Christian precedent for that
it
was
said,
'You
shall
on the Mount, "but I say to you that every one who looks at a woman lustfully has already committed adultery in his heart."''^ He declared there would be no marriage in heaven. Jesus himself never married and stated that there would be some men "who have made themselves eunuchs for the sake of the kingdom of heaven. He who is able to receive this let him receive it."^^ Paul acknowledged the danger of "passion" and wrote to the congregation at Corinth: "It is well for a man not to touch a woman. "^^ Building on this, the fourth-century Church Father Jerome reasoned that "if it is good not to touch a woman, then it is bad to touch a woman. "^^ The Church Fathers
ranked the completely celibate
women became strength against man is
life
higher than even the chaste married
In their eyes,
the means by which
Devil's
in his loins," as
men
life.
sinned. "All the
Jerome explained to Eusto-
chium.^^ Seeing
women
as flesh, as potentially
incorporation into Christianity of
all
dangerous to men, made easy the
the older beliefs and practices surround-
women's bodies and reproduction. Drawing especially on the Hebrew Old Testament, Christian writers gradually asserted that woman's body had the power to pollute. "Nothing is so unclean as a woman in her periods," wrote Jerome. "What she touches she causes to become ing
traditions of the
unclean. "^2
Some
ing
women, even
century,
all
early Christian congregations followed the
Hebrew
prac-
female and male believers. By the third century, menstruat-
tice of separating
altar. ^^ By the seventh myths about the destructive power of menstrual blood had
deaconesses, could not approach the
of the
been revived and
reasserted. Bishop Isidore of Seville insisted that the touch
woman could prevent fruit from ripening and cause plants Pope Gregory the Creat "commended" women who stayed away from church when they were menstruating, but did not insist that they do so.^'* Childbirth was once again seen as a contaminating experience. By the end of the sixth century, the Hebrew tradition that a woman remained unclean for thirty-three days after the birth of a son and sixty-six days after the birth of a daughter had become Christian practice as well.^^ The Christian cere-
of a menstruating to die.
mony
of "churching" evolved.
specified time
A
priest ritually purified a
woman
after the
from the contamination of childbearing and the greater con-
tamination of having birthed a daughter. Only then could she reenter the
member of the congregation. women played their part as Christians began to formalize the organization of their Church. Women's inherently "weaker" church and participate again
These denigrating views
as a
of
The nature, their role in the
fall
ness" were cited to exclude
81
Effects of Christianity
from divine grace, and their periodic "unclean-
women from
all
the positions of responsibility and
By the
leadership they had initially enjoyed.
many
third century
congrega-
such as the Gnostics, having different beliefs and practices, and with
tions,
on women (they praised Eve, considered Mary Magdalene an and allowed women priestly functions) found themselves condemned as "heretics" and successfully expelled from the mainstream of Christian orthodoxy. ^^ In particular. Christian women were excluded from the priesthood. Paul and Timothy's injunctions against women speaking were cited. different views apostle,
Third- and fourth-century ecclesiastical treatises attributed to the apostles
and drawing on to
men
became
their authority spoke with a uniformity that
ingly characteristic of Christianity.
They
because, as they argued, "the weak [woman] shall be saved by the
strong [men]."6'7 These documents justified the exclusion of
a
mother. apostles tions
Had
life:
women
Jesus intended
"If
it
to perform these functions,
would not have been men."^^ Both the injunction and the
became
all
women
of his
justifica-
traditions reverently referred to in subsequent centuries
ever devout European of
women, even
had been lawful to be baptized woman, our Lord and Master would have been baptized by Mary, his
deaconesses, by referring to Jesus'
by
increas-
specifically limited the priesthood
when-
again claimed religious authority equal to that
men.
new functions, women were supposed to be traditional The appropriate role for Christian women according to
Barred from these wives and mothers.
for the Greeks,
Romans,
Hebrews, Celts, and Germans: She should be an obedient wife and
a prolific
male Church leaders was the same
The Christian
as
it
had been
and Church Fathers found more justifications and even narrowed the traditional limitations and subordination. "Yet woman will be saved through bearing children, if she continues in faith and love and holiness, with modesty," explained the first-century author of the Epistles to Timothy. 6^ The Church Father Ambrose explained that procreation was "the precise function of their [the women's] sex.'''^^ By the fourth mother.
apostles
century the Church Fathers
Genesis to
in
woman "Your the
justify
obeys, as
God
is
referred to God's curse as described and subordination. "Man commands,
husband and he
deal with "all that
her situation for "it lord,
role
said to her at the beginning,"
desire shall be to your
woman would
commonly
women's
is
wrote John Chrysostom.
will lord
it
over you." As wife,
within the house" and willingly accept
better for you to be under
him and
than that, living freely and on your own, you
to
fall in
have him
as your
the pits."^^
The
"Constitutions" attributed to the apostles described the ideal Christian wife
no differently from her predecessors in previous "meek, quiet, gentle, sincere, free from anger, not
cultures.
She should be
talkative, not clamorous,
TRADITIONSINHERITED
82
not hasty of speech, not given to
evil
speaking, not captious, not double-
tongued, not a busybody."'^^ Subsequent European generations idealized the
same
qualities,
used the same reasoning, and looked to the same biblical
sources to justify the subordination of their wives and the designation of
procreation and care of the household as
The While
Christian leaders extolled the
insisting
changes
on
women's appropriate of wife and mother
life
a wife's submission to her
in practice that
would grant
a
functions. for
women.
husband, they also advocated
woman more
equal status and more
protection within marriage. Jesus had emphasized the indissoluble nature of
"The two
the union:
shall
joined together, let no
remarriage even
if
become one
man
flesh.
.
.
.
What
therefore
God
has
put asunder." Christianity opposed divorce and
the couple separated.''^
The Church
Fathers Chrysostom,
and Augustine spoke of the couple as companions. Augustine '^'^ defined the first duty of marriage to be fides, loyalty to each other. To achieve such companionship and have the marriage endure for a lifetime, Christian churchmen insisted on the consent of both partners. To ensure this. Church councils made provisions against incest and against
Tertullian,
women
men
being betrothed against their
will.
Christianity advocated a
single standard of sexual behavior. Adultery
was
a sin for
or
both wife and
husband. Although the older traditions proved strong and the Church's prohibitions could not be uniformly enforced, the secular law codes of the
Roman Empire and
the Germanic kingdoms increasingly included these
Christian views of marriage. "^^
Augustine ranked loyalty above procreation as the
purpose of mar-
first
most Christian leaders stressed procreation. Of all the Christian traditions inherited by European women, this one most defined and limited their riage;
lives.
With
sexuality
made
a potential source of sin. Christian writers begin-
ning with Paul insisted that intercourse should take place only within marriage. It could have only one legitimate purpose: the impregnation of the
woman. Feelings of pleasure and sexual arousal became "concupiscence." Intercourse when impregnation was not possible became the sin of "fornication.
"'^^
Although the Greeks, Romans, Hebrews, Celts, and Germans had valued women for their reproductive ability, all had allowed women some means of control over their own fertility. None condemned contraception or abortion with the vehemence of the Christian Church Fathers. They denounced any
form of contraception, even withdrawal. Jerome called contraception "murder" of "a
man
not yet
tinian's sixth-century law
cide."
Churchmen even
taken control of women's
born."'^'^
Following
for the
set
penances
fertility.
this Christian reasoning, Jus-
Roman Empire made
code
for miscarriage.''^
Whatever improvements
abortion "homi-
The church had a wife or
mother
— The
83
Effects of Christianity
might have gained from the Christian view of marriage, she
the
lost to
Church's view of her body7^
Given these views, women might wish Christian salvation
— the path promised
to
to follow the path of virginity to
men "who have
not defiled them-
women. "^0 Like men, women could deny their sexuality, remain "innocent," and so achieve redemption. By denying herself intercourse with a man, a woman negated the reproductive function which made her female, and so, in the eyes of the Church Fathers, rose above her "inferior" nature. In this way, according to Christian teaching, a woman could become a man. Jerome, the greatest advocate of virginity for women, explained this transforselves with
mation:
As long is
from
woman
as
But
soul.
cease to be a
Virginity freed
if
is
for birth
and children, she
different
is
from man
as
body
she wishes to serve Christ more than the world, then she
woman and
will
woman from
"her weak sex
.
.
natural law, should have been subservient to a stated in the seventh century. ^^
will
be called man.^i
The
.
[and] her body, which,
man,"
respect for a
as
Leander of
woman who
by
Seville
chose a virgin
became a tradition inherited by Christian Europeans. But respect and value came only because the woman had denied her gender. Women's nature, function, and roles were denigrated anew by the glorification of those few life
women who had
rejected them.^^
The
ancient definitions of
women
as
honorable wives and mothers or dishonorable prostitutes and concubines
remained intact
in the Christian era.
As
virgin, wife, or prostitute, a
woman
remained defined by her sexual relationship with man.
By the ninth century, Christianity had both empowered and subordinated European women. Cains included the new role of honored virgin, able to live outside the family, and the addition of a new source of authority to which
women might
appeal.
A girl betrothed against her will could
cite the
custom-
and ask for the intervention of the local churchman. A wife about to be divorced by her husband could appeal to the Church to maintain the marriage. In addition, the Church periodically passed through waves of reli-
ary law
gious enthusiasm and reform. In these eras, as in the anity,
women
within them. a sense of
joined
first
new movements and performed
They preached,
a
decades of Christi-
wide range of
roles
prophesied, and taught, and thus were allowed
functioning as the equals of male believers.
eras of ferment, experimentation, and change passed rapidly. Each was succeeded by a far longer period of consolidation and conservatism. As in the third and fourth centuries, these times of consolidation reinstated often in even stronger form the age-old traditions of male dominance and female subordination. Female subordination easily became associated with
But these
—
TRADITIONSINHERITED
84
women more seemed The Church, like the and taught that women were
and orthodoxy. Allowing
dangerous,
unnatural, and counter to standard views.
family and
the state, fundamentally believed
inferior to
tradition, order,
men and
should be their subordinates.
European women, like the women before them, would live whose values, laws, images, and institutions decreed their inferiority and enforced their subordination to men. Female subordination was the most powerful and enduring tradition inherited by European women. In the end,
in a culture
II
WOMEN
OF THE FIELDS
SUSTAINING THE GENERATIONS
THE CONSTANTS OF THE PEASANT
WOMAN'S WORLD: THE NINTH TO THE TWENTIETH CENTURIES
The Life Until the
women
last
decades of the eighteenth century 90 percent of Europe's
lived in the countryside,
dependent upon the land and what
it
could
produce.^ Monographs about specific communities, about different aspects of their evolution describe regional
example, they activities
tell
how
and temporal
variations in these lives. For
climate and geography caused differences in seasonal
and crops produced,
in
how
the use of building materials,
ancient
customs led to varied patterns of landholding, how combinations of economic,
social,
new methods
and
political factors
of cultivation to
and not another. Yet
for
brought the adoption of new attitudes and
one region and not another,
hundreds of
years, in
Europe, the constants of peasant women's
in
one century
thousands of villages across
lives far
outweighed the
differ-
ences of place and time.
Generation after generation their
lives
bear an
awesome
similarity to each
The margins of a fifteenth-century Book of Hours show a peasant woman in the fields in her broad-brimmed straw hat. She has tucked the edge of her overtunic into her waistband so that her legs can move easily. They show a woman churning butter, another catching fruit in her hat in the other.
orchard, another plucking a bird for a holiday meal. In a nineteenth-century
painting by the Belgian artist Henry van de Velde, a peasant
woman
rakes
the grain dressed in a pale gray blouse and skirt and a clean, white apron; she
wears her reddish hair
wooden Hours
in a
rake just as the
did. It
bun high
woman
was long handled and
the long grasses into piles and
lift
In the 1950s Teresa, a peasant
southern
Italy, assisted
ofiF
the nape of her neck. She holds the
of the fifteenth-century Burgundian light, so that
the
women
them onto the wooden
woman from
Book
of
could easily pull carts.
the village of Torregreca in
her husband in the harvest in the same way as the
^
WOMENOFTHEFIELDS
88
woman
pictured in an English psalter from the fourteenth century. Both
walked behind the man, bent over, catching the armfuls of wheat cut with the
sickle.
Both
the cut wheat from his
skillfully
made
as they
were
the stalks into bundles. Teresa lifted
arm. She divided the bunches of grain by eye,
left
turned the halves heads to bottoms and with a quick twist of a few strands
bound them together and let them fall to the ground. Others made these images. Peasant women themselves left few records of their lives. Well into the twentieth century the vast majority could not read and could write no more than their name for a village notary. ^ Yet the historian can re-create rural women's world and their concerns. Household accounts, manor rolls, court and parish records, note these women's obligaowed, the births and deaths of their and fifteenth-century illuminators, artists from the sixteenth to the nineteenth century, pictured them at their seasonal tasks and celebrations. In the nineteenth and twentieth century, folklorists and antions to the landlord, the fines they
children. Fourteenth-
thropologists recorded their words, their songs, their stories, and photo-
graphed them
in their traditional clothing at their traditional tasks.
All testify to the sources of peasant
women's
strength: their veneration
of the land; their acceptance of responsibility for the survival of the family; their willingness to work; the
dictated the rhythms of rural
beliefs. These and the choices they made
comfort they took from their
women's
lives
through the centuries. First there
was the land;
Torregreca in southern
Italy
women hundreds
country
To me my
job
is
still
precious in the 1950s
saw her
no
priorities as
when Teresa
diflFerent
of
from those of
of years before:
up the children, make them
to see this land gets farmed, to raise
go to school and teach them what's right and get work, as much work get while I'm still young enough to work in the fields, because that's all
as I
I
can
know.
4
Cettina, also of Torregreca, explained
to
how
different the perspective
on
life
women. "We have to care," she explained. "We're the ones who have make do, however it is."^ Women concerned themselves with the practical
was
for
aspects of
life
and accepted
responsibility for the survival of the family. "If
dead, the family suffers," went a nineteenth-century Sicilian proverb. "If the mother dies, the family cannot exist. "^
the father
To
is
ensure survival, the peasant woman's
as described
woman
in
by the
Irish
proverb
still
the house be always working."'^
children through maturity to old age, rural
knew no
division of labor,
life
was one of continual labor,
current in the twentieth century:
From
women
no separate spheres
"One
the time they were small
for
expected to work. They
women and men. They
The Constants
of the Peasant
Woman's World
89
worked everywhere. They performed all but the heaviest tasks having to do with the preparation of the fields and the harvest. They helped to plow, to spread manure, to weed, to reap, to thresh. They did all the work of the
They gathered kindling, hauled water from the well, tended the They gardened, they tended the animals, nursed the children, cooked the food, swept the clay floors. Well into the twentieth century, in addition to
household. fire.
the household tasks, the
make money needed selves out as
worked
fields,
and the animals, they
also did extra jobs to
for rent, for taxes, for necessaries.
So they hired them-
day laborers or laundresses, they sold cheese and butter, they
their spindles, knitted,
made
lace.
And
care for, pregnancies, infants to breast-feed,
always there were children to
all
around and about the other
tasks.
The multiplicity and the never-ending quality of their work sets peasant women apart from their contemporaries and endured as a constant reality generation after generation. In a fourteenth-century English poem, Piers the
Ploughman calls between
Dame
his wife
Work-while-you ve got a chance.
his description of the
differed
woman waking
in
^
Little
the middle of the
winter night to "rock the cradle cramped in a corner," rising again "before
dawn
to card
and comb the wool,
rushes for their rushlights
—
"
to
wash and scrub and mend
and the memory
.
.
.
and peel
of a Breton son of his mother's
day at the end of the nineteenth century. She dressed and arranged the folds of her coif (the headcovering
Then
She fed the children and sent as she
commonly worn by Europe's peasant women). a pig to prepare slops for, a cow to milk. them oflF to school, worked a small piece of lace
she tended to the animals
—
walked back the half-league from where she had pastured the cow.
Some housework, some
clothes to wash,
and the
tasks of the day continued:
get the midday meal ready, crochet as she returned to the
with as
much
strength as she could muster,
come back
field,
pulling the
work the land
cow by
its
rope
and with a load of hay on her back or a heavy basket on her hand, find her children at home, make them behave and do their homework, mend the worn clothing, rage and fume or laugh heartily, depending on the circumstances, cram some
more food down the pig, milk the cow a second time, cook the gruel or potatoes, do the dishes, put the whole brood to bed, tidy up, return to her crocheting or wait for father and not get to bed until he had.^ her sewing .
.
.
The Breton woman's
children
went
to school
—
a
change brought about by
state-supported public education in the nineteenth century life
was
little
Montaillou
different
in
France,
from that of in a
a peasant
mother
in
—otherwise her
fourteenth-century
sixteenth-century English village, in twentieth-
century Yugoslavia.
The
days, months,
and years of seemingly endless and unchanging
tasks
WOMENOFTHEFIELDS
90
could lead to resignation. "I have rocked
be different," went
my babe, and
a lullaby a Russian peasant
willed to
it
that things
mother sang to her
child.
some changes, some bread. me there'll be no change,
There'll be There'll be
But
More
for
I'll
see nothing different,
I'll
eat
no bread and
salt.^°
discouraging, living as she and her family did on the edge of subsist-
ence, the fruits of her labors could be suddenly wiped away.
War,
disease,
and
extremes of weather could bring years of catastrophe that tested peasant
women's strength and endurance. "When necessity is upon us, we must suffer," went a fourteenth-century English proverb. ^^ In the 1950s Teresa received two hectares (about five acres) from the land reforms in southern Italy, which she tended while her husband Paolino worked in Germany. She lived in the fields in a lean-to with no window and the tools stacked in the corners. Two years she plowed and prepared for the harvest and then the hailstorm came:
My
I keep thinking I'm going to be sick. That time I found on the ground and chewed looking. I came in here [to the storeroom] and sat and cried for hours. Every time I felt a little better and I started to do something I don't know, mix the feed for the chickens I'd look out that door and see the fields again and I couldn't help it I'd cry.^^
heart pounds and
it all
lying
—
—
—
Countrywomen might give way to resignation, to bitterness, to rage, but They found ways to explain, to justify, and to give value to their lives. Peasant women took comfort from their faith. They believed that they could influence the uncontrollable, even make sense of and bring order rarely to defeat.
to the often brutal
and capricious
by ancient explanations and
life
rituals.
of the countryside
by
spells
and
prayers,
Countrywomen and men made no
clear
between material and spiritual reality, between the natural and the supernatural, the living and the dead, the real and the imaginary. This was a world of "wishing" as countrywomen described it in their folktales. This was a world in which ghosts might appear at the fireside for wine once a year, a dog could turn into a raven, the croaking of a frog foretold the future, and a blue bead would keep away "the evil eye." Well into the twentieth century, peasant women and men continued to value and attempted to influence this world of the spirits. Thus they perpetuated age-old beliefs and customs in the modern countryside and in the towns and cities to which they migrated. This world of older beliefs and customs did not conflict with the comforts of more formal religion. The shrines of Christian saints were built over older places of worship, and the Christian holy days came to coincide with those distinctions
The Constants
of the Peasant
Woman's World
91
honoring other goddesses and gods and with days honoring the natural
phenomena of the agricultural year, like the solstices. Formal religion gave countrywomen comfort in other ways. It explained and justified the harshness of
life,
honored
their activities,
and offered rewards
in
the future. Divine
displeasure could explain a plague of caterpillars or an earthquake.
make their place German folktale God
in
In a
told Eve:
proper and necessary for
It is
Were
A
divine
the village world seem essential and honorable.
plan could
me
through your children to provide for the whole
who would cultivate the grain, thresh, and bake? Who would forge, weave, hew, build, dig, cut, and sew? Everybody must have his place, so that one may support the other and all, like the parts of a body, be nourished. ^^ earth.
they
all
princes and lords,
grind,
Christianity gave explanations of the creation of the world, the source of
death in Eve and Adam's
fall
from Grace, and promised the redemption of
the faithful through the crucifixion of Jesus. Christianity explained that by
God's mercy, by prayers, by dedication to the
rituals of
the religion,
all
believers could achieve bliss in the Christian heaven.
Whatever happened, however
little
they had, Europe's peasant
women
took pride and pleasure whenever they could, balancing the reality of today
with hope for the future.
good thoughts
fill
"May
colorful clothes
bedeck your shoulders!/
And
your mind!" went another Russian lullaby. ^"^ They valued
what they had, what they could do, and what they could teach their children. tales they told stressed ingenuity it was the "smart and artful" who
—
The
German stories collected by folklorists in the nineteenth Peasant women emphasized the practical: "Don't promise us a
survived in the century.
crane
in
^5
the sky, give us a titmouse in the hand," went a traditional Russian
proverb. ^6 greatest
They had
trial: in
and
in death.
themselves to question. "People say they can't life,"
women at the times of And they rarely allowed make out how we lived that
the companionship of other
childbirth, in sickness,
remembered Mary Coe, born
in
an English
village in 1889:
remember, we'd never had anything else. Our parents before had had the same life. You see, when you've never had anything, you never miss it.^''' But
I
say,
"You never miss of
it,"
industrialization
Mary Coe, and so it was until the beginnings some aspects of the countrywoman's tasks.
explained eased
Throughout the centuries peasant women gave their energies to the basic needs of their families, to survival. Even so, they could sometimes make special gestures for their daughters. Mary Coe remembered that when her mother provided the Christmas present of an apple or orange it was "ever so grand. "^®
WOMENOFTHEFIELDS
92
The Landscape
The
landscape the peasant
centuries.
More
families
much
changed, but for
woman
were able to
of
European
inhabited changed
live
history,
it
looked as
the fifteenth-century Books of Hours: a village, the
ownership,
just ditches,
sown with
over the
it
fields
was portrayed
in
with no signs of
thorned hedges, or woven twig fences protecting the
plantings from the animals. Peasant
others
little
from the land, the uses of the land
grains, others
women saw some
plowed and waiting
furrows lying fallow,
for the next harvest cycle.
They saw vineyards, orchards, a common pasture, the parish church, the fortified manor or castle of the local lord, who retained some of the lands for himself as his domain (demesne), and gave over others as tenant strips that families
The
worked
for themselves.
forest, called
of the landscape.
"the waste" by rural
Well
women and men,
filled
the rest
into the seventeenth century, the forest held great
were menaced by its dangers. In peasant women's folktales the boars came out of its depths and trampled crops or wounded livestock; the hares ate the cabbages of the household garden; countrywomen ground wolfsbane and monkshood into an aconite powder to poison wolves, foxes, and rats. Yet, all could use the forest. From the forest floor peasant women gathered wood for their fires. Along its paths lived men who helped their families: the woodcutter (like the one who saved Red Riding Hood) and the charcoal burners who gave them fuel, the sabot maker who significance in their lives. All
carved their wooden shoes.
Throughout the centuries countrywomen and their families used the and the lean-tos where they stored food and sheltered animals. Unless unusually prosperous, when they would use stone (like Joan of Arc's fifteenth-century French family and the yeomen farmers forest to build their houses
of sixteenth-century England) peasant
women and
their families built in
wood and other easily accessible materials like birchbark in Norway, thatch from the meadows and thickets for the roofs of southern England, or the peat "soddies" of western Ireland. All across Europe use of the forest was part of ^^ peasants' rights, whether they were serfs or tenants.
The houses the The lengths
design.
peasants built for themselves were small and simple in of the available timber determined the size of the
beams
and thus the width of the house and the height of the ceiling. Local stone placed under the key supporting posts kept the walls from sagging. Woven twigs stuffed with moss and overlaid with plaster made from lime, water, and sand or clay made the walls the "wattle and daub" of English folktales. Dirt, clay, or flagstones made the floor. Given the limitations of their building
—
materials, peasants did not
change the design of
their houses over the centu-
1.
Peasant couple harvesting grain.
Italian manuscript, fifteenth century.
2.
Peasant
From an
woman making
century.
3.
Danish milkmaid,
late
nineteenth century.
.?'
mH'
ricotta cheese.
Italian manuscript, fourteenth
From an
4.
Mother and her
child.
Hungary,
twentieth century.
5.
French peasant family, 1912. Photographed by the composer Ernest Bloch.
lU I"
9-
a:^
y
\
6. Portrait
of a
French peasant by Fran-
goise Duparc, eighteenth century.
7.
The Witches
of Mora. Engraving from
Sweden, 1670.
8.
Soviet peasant
woman
operating a cotton picker, 1970s.
9.
Women
talking in a village square. Southern Italy in the 1950s.
— The Constants
Woman's World
of the Peasant
93
Into the twentieth century, wherever they hved in Europe, peasant
ries.
women had one large central room, anywhere from
5 to
25 meters long, about
4 meters wide, with one section for people and one for animals. ^^ The building would be one story, sometimes with a sleeping loft, sometimes with rooms added at the end of the house when an aging mother and father had given over the land to daughters and their husbands or to their sons. They covered whatever windows they had with translucent substances like waxed cloth, horn, or cut talc. In the warmer climates, there was no covering, and
when
they simply closed the wooden shutters
Though
in the population, neither altered the basic
women
colder weather came.
the centuries would bring changes in cultivation and increases
lived. In
environment
in
which peasant
the ninth, tenth, and eleventh centuries, they lived with
their kin in the least forested areas, tilling the easiest, loosest soils, using
natural clearings for their small household gardens
where they
raised the
legumes, roots, and cabbages on which the families subsisted. Sporadic periods of peace and order, warmer weather
in
the eleventh, twelfth, and thir-
teenth centuries allowed families to cut and burn into the edges of the forest,
They drained inland and coastal marshes become new fields, new fields met old settlements, and families moved across Europe to new valleys. Thus more could live in the old areas. From the fourteenth to the seventeenth centuries, new kinds of wars, colder, wetter winters despite less favorable conditions the consolidation of settlements and cleared fields followed much the same clearing
new
land, strip
by
with dykes. Gradually the
strip.
strips joined to
—
patterns: thirty to forty households clustered together in the
mid-fourteenth century; sixty-eight households of the mid-seventeenth century;
surrounded by the 1960s.
Only
lies live in
in
fields for
northwestern
still
about
women, the
fifty families, their
Germany and
houses together
Scandinavia did peasant fami-
in
and only from the Elbe to the Urals
vistas of cleared plains.
essential
England of the
southern French village
cash and food crops, in a Greek village in the
sparsely populated groups,
would they see
in a
For the majority of Europe's peasant like the essential elements
elements of the landscape,
of their lives, remained the
same through the
centuries: the clearly
cated settled areas, the houses clustered in the village with the
demar-
fields all
^^ around; the forest, and the spires of the market town in the distance.
The
Year's Activities
Europe's peasant
women and
seasons with the feast days of the
months
their families marked the Ghurch and the labors that
Lammas
(1
out the
and seasonal changes fell into a August) to Michaelmas (29 Sep-
of the agricultural year. Feast days
pattern for Christian Europe:
cycle of the filled
WOMENOFTHEFIELDS
94
tember), the time of harvest; Michaelmas (29 September) to Christmas (25
December)
for preparation of food for the winter;
hardest time of the year waiting for the
Lenten days when fasting became a or
Tuesday
with the
after Easter) to
first
of
May
time.
The
new
virtue; Easter or
Lammas
midsummer
August), the
(1
Monday summer growing time,
Hocktide (the
day. For peasant
year of possibilities,
illustrations for
barley, wheat,
Christmas to Easter, the
grains, corresponding to the
a traditional date for the celebration of spring
John's Day, June 24,
beginning, of a
first
came not
women
in January,
and
St.
the sense of
but
at harvest
the fifteenth-century Books of Hours show the
and rye ready to be
cut, the
hops
for brewing, the purple
and
green grapes clustered on the vines ready for picking, the honey waiting to
be collected from the
abundance of the
hives.
Throughout the continent
all
celebrated the
harvest.
Harvest Time Until the early part of the eighteenth century, a Russian peasant killed the
woman
goose she had raised for the eighteenth of September to celebrate
the coming of the
New
Year. Into the nineteenth century in England, the
goose was fattened on the stubble of the harvested
fields for
the Michaelmas
celebration on the twenty-ninth of September. Others celebrated on All
Day (31 October, 1 November, November), Christian days replacing the harvest festivals of earlier faiths. In the sixteenth century near Nuremberg, the peasants danced in the meadows. Into the nineteenth century English families made it a time for revelry, for tricks, for feasting on spiced cakes and frumenty made of boiled wheat, milk, raisins, and currants that the women had dried in the late fall. For English and French villagers harvest was also a time for propitiating the Hallows' Eve, All Saints' Day, and All Souls'
and
2
dead and
for
honoring the
whole region participated
local saint
with special masses. In Brittany the
in the procession to the saint's
church or shrine and
the feasting afterward.
Celebration
came
after the
hard labor
in the fields.
The
peasant
woman
and her husband harvested their own strips. In addition, as a servile tenant (tied to the landholder by obligations of service and goods owed in kind) she would be summoned to a "bid reap," as it was called in thirteenth-century England. A woman might cut with the hand sickle, but more often reaping was men's work with the heavy two-handed scythe. Instead, the peasant wife, like the woman at the Abbey of Werden in the Rhineland of the ninth ."^^ These century, would "bind the sheaves, collect them and pile them up continued to be the countrywoman's tasks, whether in the fourteenth-century French village of Montaillou, on the lands of the fifteenth-century Dukes of .
.
The Constants Burgundy,
of the Peasant
Woman's World
95
southern Italy in the 1950s. This was also the time for harvest-
in
—
hemp
the hemp for making rope and sacks, the flax for linen. Then, with Michaelmas at the end of September, the cycle of plowing for the year began again. The peasant woman and her children herded the cattle ing flax and
Other
into the cut field to eat the stubble. for planting.
According to English
the ground by All Hallows Eve.
If
fields left fallow
Cutting, binding, and hauling the sheaves did not labors.
Much had
to
had
winnow the
women had
be done before peasant
peasant
to thresh the grain
grain from the
the grain, the
flailed
women
chaflF.
women
tresses.2^ it
Once
sitting
stalks;
field,
it
into bags.
the staple
men
windy day
a
air,
and matpeasant wife might
From
to the grinding mill instead of doing
fifteenth-century Books of
by the stone
On
stuffing for pillows
she had woven from marsh grasses. it
and her
her job was to
throwing the grain into the
new
the wheat was separated from the chaff, a
in baskets
in
the end of the flour,
In nineteenth-century Brittany the
brought the bags to the
century on, she could take
The
from the
raked and swept
catching the chaff on a cloth to use as
store
be
peppers for the men.
mean
of their families' diet. In thirteenth-century England, a country wife
husband used the oxen
to
not helping with the plowing, the peasant
women might bring a midday meal of bread, cheese, and fall
would be prepared
tradition, the winter grains
the eleventh it
by hand.^'^
Hours show mousetraps, or the family
fireplace, all to protect these valuable grains that
cat
ensured
the family's survival. Into the eighteenth century in France, for instance, grains
made up 95 percent
women
usually
baked
of the diet.^^ In the earlier centuries, peasant
their bread in the lord's ovens. In Vasilika in twentieth-
century Greece, they used their own. During the harvest season Greek peas-
women
two or three in the morning to bake for the whole week work in the fields. Aside from coarse black bread, peasant women made a variety of other foods from the grains: oatcakes, pancakes like blinis and crepes, porridges and gruels. In the fall and winter months rural women added to the family's meals with the vegetables they produced from their household gardens. Vegetables were the other staple of
ant
rose at
and then went
to their
the peasant's diet into the twentieth century. century, there
is
evidence that peasant
broad beans, and roots
and
beets.
From
From
women grew
as early as the ninth
peas, vetches (wild peas),
like turnips, onions, radishes, parsnips, leeks, carrots,
the sixteenth century on, they also had potatoes. In nine-
teenth-century France, the Breton son remembered that in his childhood "potatoes had kept us alive lots of times. "^^
The
peasant mother and her daughters prepared one main meal a day for
the family.
The hour
shifted,
depending on
local
custom.
century Yorkshirewoman had
it
terpart in France prepared
for five in the afternoon.
it
A
seventeenth-
ready at noon, her eighteenth-century coun-
Throughout Europe
WOMENOFTHEFIELDS
96 peasant
women
like a stew,
stored.
The
served the same basic fare: bread and a thick broth,
made from
big cauldron simmered on the hearth
was boiled to cook vegetables
hours; either water
lire for
in cloth bags, or the fire
was
set in the
cauldron
while an earthenware pot containing the broth and stewing ingredients
itself,
was placed
inside.
Leaving
this to
simmer,
a peasant wife
other tasks. In the earlier centuries families drank wine, harvested and prepared in the fifteenth-century
men
much
peas and beans they had dried, from roots they had
Book
of
pick the grapes, the
toward the manor
fall
or cider,
all
months. In the Tres Riches Hemes, the
Hours of the Duke de Berry, peasant women carry the heavy baskets on
One
castle.
went about her ale,
woman
peasant
women and their heads
stands adjusting her cloth
headdress, her white apron bulges over her blue and red dress as
if
she were
pregnant; she leans favoring one side perhaps to relieve the ache in her back.
From
as early as the ninth century in France, peasant
wine making
families helped in the
century English brewsters
in
made beer
What meat countrywomen and
women and
their
October and November. Seventeenthin
the
to
fall
their families
sell
to other villagers.
had was prepared
in these
summer and fall. The livestock and the fowl were women's responsibility. The peasant wife took charge of the litter of five to six piglets born in the early spring. She weaned them at six months and then in the fall months fattened them on nuts in the forest. In eleventh-century England on the manor of Ramsey Abbey, peasant women collected the acorns, but were months
of late
allowed only enough to
fill
"hose of reasonable
century Beauvaisis peasants purchased of of
size."^'^
In seventeenth-
the right to collect nuts. Best
g/^znc/ge,
all would be to have the right of pannage, like the women of the Books Hours who let the pigs run loose and threw sticks into the oak trees to make
the acorns
fall
to the ground.
The sow would be
saved for the next year, the
teenth-century English fifteenth-century
Book
of
women
litter
slaughtered. Thir-
November "blood month." The Duke de Rohan showed a man wield-
called
Hours of the
ing the long-handled ax to slaughter the pig. part of the animal. Into the nineteenth
A
peasant
and twentieth
woman
used every
centuries, she caught
the blood as the throat was
slit,
putting
She boiled the carcass in water so that she brushes or to add to plaster for her walls. The
it
adding
it
to her grains as blood pudding,
in casings as Blutwurst.
could scrape
off
the hair for
bladder could be used to store the lard, the trotters boiled for their gelatin. In
many
villages the
which peasant
butcher went from house to house cutting the meat,
women
then stored covered with
salt in barrels,
or
hung from
the rafters over the hearth or up the newly cleaned chimney to smoke.
and smoked pork would be the the long winter months to come. salted
The
family's principal source of protein in
The Constants Peasant
women and
of the Peasant
made
first
Salted whitefish and cod might be bought at the local
catch freshwater
fish
The men would
also
—
eels
and
flukes
97
might have access to seafood. In the to salting and preserving herring.
their families
fourteenth century references are
Woman's World
—with
nets
or the
fair,
and weirs
in
men might
the mill pond.
be responsible for special meals of small game, rabbits, on the fall migration. In most instances, the livestock and fowl proved too valuable to eat, and peasant women had other uses for them. They fattened the cows on the stubble of the harvested fields, sold them at the fall market and purchased or wild birds netted
new ones in the spring. Thus they did not have to feed the animal over the when marsh grass might be the only fodder available. The wife in a German folktale chose to slaughter the cow and sell the hide, first tanning winter
it
to pliability
by soaking
it
water and oak bark. Only well-to-do families
in
ate mutton; for the rest, the sheep were
more valuable
for their
wool or
for
the price they would bring at the market.
The same was
true of the chickens
and the
geese.
Well
into the eigh-
teenth century, the chickens and their eggs were kept to pay the dues the landlord or for the market. Local
fairs
came,
century Montaillou in southern France, on All Saints'
when peasant women walked
twenty miles to
fifteen to
goose would be for the harvest feast day, in Martin's
Day on November
1 1
.
Peasant
the feathers before the carcass cooled.
down. 28
An
English peasant
the oven and used
them
for
the goose roasted over the
woman
lubricant^ a waterproof coating,
summer
sun.
Some
for St.
nothing; they plucked feather dusters.
a feather
bottle nipples
woman
bed
filled
A
with
would go
and
for spigots.
As
collected the grease, a
something to protect the
ened with honey from the manor's
1)
One
dried the bigger feathers overnight in
the peasant
of the grease
their surplus.
The wings became
lamb and baby fire,
Day (November
sell
Germany and Denmark
women wasted
Danish wife needed twenty-four geese to make
owed
as they did in fourteenth-
pig's skin
from the
for a holiday pastry or pie, sweet-
hives.
The Winter Christmas and Easter, the two most important calendar, framed the hardest part of the peasant
festivals of
woman's
the Christian
year: the
months
before the spring grains; the months on a Breton farm of the nineteenth
century described as "truly black, not only because break of day was late and the night
came too
quickly, but because of the black cold, the black
mud,
the black rain, the black wind."^^ European peasants celebrated the twelve days of Christmas, merging the holy days from Jesus' birth on to January 6, the
Epiphany commemorating the
visit
December 25
of the three kings, with
WOMENOFTHEFIELDS
98
older celebrations of the winter and
its
solstice
(December 21-22). Long
before Christianity, Europeans burned the "yule" logs and collected the sacred mistletoe.
To
churchmen added ceremonies
this tradition
peasant families added rituals and
festivities to
celebrating the nativity;
brighten and cheer the dark
winter days. In fourteenth-century Montaillou in France, Christmas was a
On
market day. a
communal
the
feast,
Dean
manor
of Wells's
with the wife of John de
in
North Curry, Somerset,
Cnappe having produced
of bread, ale, bacon, cheese, a hen,
and two candles
nineteenth century
women
in Russia,
peasant
with their Christmas celebrations, decorating to
mark the
it
was
loaves
for light. ^° Into the
broke the seven-month winter fir
trees,
making dough
crosses
day. In Caltagirone, Sicily, into the beginning of the twentieth
century, peasant mothers and fathers offered their two-year-olds to play the
manger as their alms to the church for the Christmas mass. There would be little for rural men to do in the months after Christmas beyond preparing the fields for spring planting. In England, Candlemas, child in the
February
2,
commemorating the churching
of the Virgin after the birth of
her son, signaled the start of spring plowing; the wife and husband plowed
—
together one day to do one acre.^^ He guided the plow while she team of oxen or horses along the strips. By Lady Day, March 25 the Feast of the Annunciation celebrating Jesus' conception the men had sowed the spring grains. Most of these months, however, peasant families spent indoors, around the central hearth of their main room, the ceiling blackened from its smoke. The hearth, or in a more well-to-do home, the wall fireplace, was their source of heat and light. A woman of central Europe might have a tile stove or a clay oven instead. Peasant women used dung or peat that they had dried in the fall sun for fuel. In France they used wood and claimed the right of estover to collect it from the landlord's forest. Countrywomen had resin from evergreens for torches, the herb mullein
the
fields
—
led the
—
dipped
in
peasant
beeswax, or sheep
women
easier to collect the
the
air
and
to
long months
fat, for
lighted wicks. In the poorest houses
kept their cows or goats inside for warmth and to
make
it
manure. They used the plants savin and rue to sweeten
keep away the
fleas
and
when they could not
lice that
plagued the family during the
bathe. Peasant
women knew how
to
mix
the juice of the houseleek and sage with water to ease the itching and pain of the insect bites.
The
illustration for
February
in
the
Duke
fire
with her
skirt pulled up,
her feet
of Burgundy's
Book
of
Hours
on a bench in front of the extended to warm them. Her wash hangs
shows the countrywoman's winter world. She
sits
from rods suspended along the edges of the ceiling. In Russia the poorest peasants had earthen ledges along the walls to sit on. Most peasant women
The Constants
of the Peasant
Woman's World
acquired other furniture and household possessions.
planed pieces of wood into the family's
He might
clean with sand or cinders.
earthenware pots and plates
in a
trestle table,
poor households
sion. In
it
A husband might have which the wife polished
have carved bowls that she stored with
down
cupboard. Old barrels could be cut
for stools. Into the nineteenth century the family
by the chimney
99
bed was her major
might be nothing more than
posses-
a raised plank set
warmth, but in most households the bed was a more elaborate wooden structure, complete with doors and hangings to keep out for
the cold.
Anything with metal peasant
women
prized particularly.
century English widow, Christina of Long Bennington
her ironbound chest
in
her
In the sixteenth century,
will.
The
thirteenth-
in Lincolnshire,
noted
Thomasina White-
head of Farnsfield
in Nottinghamshire listed her three brass pots, her kettle, and her candlestick as part of her wealth; other women like Joan Atkinson and Katherine Francis left their metal and pewter to their daughters as their legacy. ^2 In nineteenth-century Brittany, a son remembered that his mother
polished the brass nails in the furniture every Saturday morning.
Most
of the peasant
woman's time during the winter months went
providing cloth for her family.
women
were responsible
collecting the raw wool
From
as early as the ninth
for all aspects of fulfilling the family's needs,
and
flax to finishing
to
century peasant
the shirt or coverlet.
The
from
simple
standing loom rested against the wall. In addition to providing for their families, as tenants into the twelfth century in
women owed
Germany and
France, peasant
days of service in the lord's sewing rooms or finished pieces of
linen or woolen cloth. ^^
The primacy of
this female responsibility, especially the making of thread beyond written memory. The image of the peasant woman long stick to hold the raw wool, her distafiF, in one hand, the
for the cloth, goes
spinning
—
a
spindle used as a spool in the other, with the thin thread of wool held taut
between them
—
lasted into the twentieth century.
commonly used by European countrywomen This simplest method of spinning gave names not
side," the "spindle side" of the family. In
Peasant's Rebellion
made
delved and Eve span/
(The spinning wheel was
until the sixteenth century.)
to the female: the "distaff
1378 the rebels of the English
the image part of their rallying cry:
Who
was then
a
"When Adam
gentleman?" Nineteenth-century
hemp as an offering to the Virgin on their Grandmothers told stories and sang ballads of magical ways to spin, cut, and sew. The dwarf Rumpelstiltskin spun gold out of straw for the queen, the maid in "The Elfin Knight" had to sew a shirt "without any cut or hem," to "shape it knife-and-sheerless," and to sew it "needle-threadFrenchwomen
wedding
lesse."^5
day.^'*
of Baugeois spun
WOMEN
100
OF THE FIELDS
In reality, there was no magic, just the painstaking labor of turning raw
wool or
flax into a
and sewn into
length of cloth that could be used as a covering, or cut
a shirt or a tunic.
The
heavier cloth called
hearth
felt.
The wool
came from the shearing done
fleece could
weigh
as
much
as 18
wool became worsted, became the matted and teased
finer strands of
the coarse hairs of the sheep woven and beaten
peasant in
women worked by
the winter
the previous spring or summer.
One
pounds, but almost half of that was grease.
So the peasant woman's first task was to clean, beat, and then reoil the keep the fibers elastic enough to spin and weave. Then they picked
fleece to
the fleece clean, carded the
fields.
it,
wooden paddles with metal wool
in
separating the strands with a teazle (thistle) from
After the thirteenth century, they might have carding boards: two
between.
into thread. spindle, or
With
teeth that passed one over the other
these they
A peasant woman
sit
on
made
might walk about her
a stool like the
woman
combing the
light fluffy rolls that could
in
be spun
tasks with the distaff
and
the Book of Hours of Catherine
As the spinning of one rofl into thread was completed, she would end together with the next and make enough to fill a skein forty rolls. The tighter she spun, the stronger the thread. A good spinner could complete five skeins in a day. Five skeins would be enough to make a sweater. In the earlier centuries, peasant women wove the threads, but from the fifteenth century on, they might choose to knit them. Peasant women made linen from flax, an annual that they and their families harvested in the fafl. The stem became the fiber that could be spun and woven into cloth. A peasant wife began by removing the seeds, soaking the stalks in water, and then drying them to make the outer layer rot and crack, a ten-day to two-week process called retting. Having pulled off the outer covering, she softened the stems by beating them with a mallet. From the fourteenth century, the job was easier, as peasant women used a "flax breaker," two grooved rectangular pieces of wood hinged together, between which the stems were crushed by repeated blows, to break the outer husk. Then peasant women combed and recombed the stems, splitting them into single strands. As with wool, they wrapped the strands around the distaff, drawing out two or three at a time to twist onto the spindle. The resulting thread was stronger than wool, but brittle, making the weaving more difficult. In Greece and southern Italy rural women had cotton as well; they collected and cleaned the bolls, spinning the rolls into thread. ^^ Leaving the wool or the linen thread to their natural grays and browns was the easiest and most common practice. To add color, peasant women collected roots, leaves, and lichens from the forest to use as dyes. They knew which dyes needed to be fixed with mordants to hold the color, and which did not. (Alum and cream of tartar are the modern-day fixatives.) The lichens of Cleves. twist the
—
a
The Constants of northern
Birch bark
Europe gave
made
a yellow. Boiled
a
of the Peasant
brown
rich
With
tones, paler oranges, reds,
greenwood
leaves with a
flag
woad
mordant made
and
yellows.
a green dye. Black-
a richer hue. For black the
women
iris.
the skeins of natural or colored thread, the peasant
ready to go to her loom. Into the nineteenth century in
countrywomen worked looms
woman was then
many
parts of
Europe
similar to those used in the ancient world, a
made
simple rectangular frame
measured
101
brown. Madder gave a pale pink, goldenrod and barberry
berry would give a lavender or blue,
used walnuts or
Woman's World
of wood.
They unwound the
spindle and
the vertical threads in roughly equal lengths. This was the
oflF
"warp" of the future piece of
cloth,
one end of each thread attached
frame, the other to a stone or small clay weight.
The
peasant
woman
to the set the
loom upright,
tilted against
down
wooden frame. A horizontal loom like the ones in Hours might simply mean the frame had been placed on legs,
the wall, and
let
the warp threads go taut, hanging
vertically across the
the Books of like a table
with the warp threads
To weave
running across
still
women
it
and
still
took more thread and
held taut with
wound
it on to which they passed back and forth through the warp threads, thus creating the "weft." This technique turned the spun thread into "plain
stone weights.
the
a shuttle,
weave," a rectangular piece of cloth whose size was determined by the size
two meters. Even
of the frame, perhaps one meter by
took time. In the 1960s in
a
simple weaving
this
south Italian mountain town, a mother and
daughter allowed fifteen to twenty days to make the three pieces of cloth necessary for one sheet, part of the daughter's trousseau. ^^ linen,
women
boiled the cloth in lye
made from
over and over again in the local stream, and then
the
fire's
left it to
To
whiten the
ashes,
washed
it
bleach in the sun
for six to nine weeks. ^^
Anything with more than one
color, with
any kind of pattern, increased
the complexity of the weaving, necessitating more than one shuttle and
At the beginning of the twentieth widow Gna Tidda made fabric of this kind. She worked more complicated horizontal loom with foot pedals. One pedal would lower
requiring that the weft threads be changed.
century in a
half the
Sicily,
the
warp threads, she would pass the shuttle through, then press the
other pedal to reverse the process. By pulling the beater toward her
wooden bar suspended from above, with comblike "teeth" warp threads
—she could tighten the threads
into closely
—
that separated the
woven
cloth.
Gna
Tidda could even widen the cloth, keeping track of the changes she made by putting a kernel of corn into her lap for every twenty-five threads added. '^ In the early centuries peasant selves, treading
on
it
in
water to
to "raise" the fiber, clipping
it
women
finished the
woolen cloth them-
the weave, fluffing the wool with teazles
fill
in
to
make
it
smooth, then drying
it
stretched
WOMEN
102
OF THE FIELDS
on poles to block it. By the thirteenth century the landlord would have a fulling mill powered by water or wind to do this. The linen would be beaten
and trampled but
it
Finally, peasant
did not need to be raised, clipped, or fulled at a mill.
women would be
They took the
ready to
make the
articles their families
them together make sheets, coverlets, tablecloths; they cut old pieces as swaddling for a baby. With a minimum of cutting, with ties rather than buttons, they made needed.
rectangular pieces of cloth and sewed
to
simple undershifts, or tunics to use as overgarments.
A
cape or a cloak with
hood would be just another version of strips of cloth joined together. No one had many clothes. In fourteenth-century Montaillou, the wives and husbands took them off when they went to bed, but otherwise wore the same shirts and tunics over and over again. An agreement between a father and his children in thirteenth-century Weedon Beck promised him one garment and one set of linen drawers for the year.'^o ^he peasants on the Datini estate in northern Italy in the late fourteenth century had one gray tunic each. In fifteenth-century France Joan of Arc spoke of her red woolen dress. Into the 1500s only the length of the garments and the woman's headcloth clearly a
distinguished her clothing from a man's. In nineteenth-century Russia, both
women and men
still
wore the long
shift
and the tunic overgarment
typical
of the earlier eras.
Throughout the year peasant women devoted time and attention to some the special dress for their weddings, or the bedclothes and table linens that would be part of a dowry. As early as the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries in Hungary and other regions of eastern Europe, women embroidered the cloth for their wedding dress, making it look like a fancy woven fabric. In nineteenth-century Sicily young women still embroidered linens; in the 1960s in Vasilika, Greece, they still wove woolen rugs for their trousseaus. Throughout the centuries, the more prosperous the peasant woman's family, the more she would be able to make, the more she would possess. The few English peasant women wealthy enough to make wills, like Christina of Long Bennington in Lincolnshire who died in 1283 and Joan Atkinson of Halam articles like
who
died in 1561, listed linen sheets, towels, pillows, blankets, bolsters,
coverlets,
and
a tablecloth as their valuables. ^^^
In eighteenth-century So-
logne, France, the bolsters, covers, and featherbeds constituted 40 percent of the family's assets.'^^
The Spring and Summer Months In the countryside spring created a special excitement after the long gray
months
of cold,
wet days and
nights.
The margins
of the Books of
blossom with wildflowers: mallows, primroses, cornflowers,
Hours
daffodils,
iris.
The Constants bluebells,
and
leaf.
became
new
Woman's World
the peasant
daisies. In their tales
the supple
flax in flower,
forest
of the Peasant
women
described fields of blue
willow twigs which they wove into baskets.
welcoming place of dappled sunlight and
a
bush when frightened by
The
coming into and hid behind
trees
In their stories the Virgin found wild strawberries there,
a hazel
103
women
a snake. Russian peasant
into the
nineteenth century sang to "mother spring" on March 9 to welcome the returning
birds.'*^
Beginning with the Annunciation (March 25), the feast day of the Virgin that coincided roughly with the vernal equinox (21/22 March), peasant
women and men marked
this
change of seasons
soil.
The
Christian church absorbed
Arc's village of
Domremy
many
had for centuries with and the fertility of the
as they
a series of festivals celebrating the rebirth of the sun
of the ancient rituals. In Joan of
in northeastern France, the
came on the
by the young people
at the "fairies tree"
Spring saint's days,
like Saint Berlinda's of
dancing and singing
fourth
Sunday of Lent.
Belgium, became occasions for
drinking and dancing. Even the holy days of the Passion, Palm Sunday,
Maundy
Thursday,
across Europe,
Good
Friday,
and Easter followed older
from England to Russia, from the thirteenth
century, peasant
women dyed
owed
—
for Easter
word
a
eggs, or brought
similar in
them
traditions. All
to the nineteenth
to the landlord as goods
sound to an Anglo-Saxon goddess of
Monday and Tuesday after Easter, became women leading the men around on Monday,
spring. In England, Hocktide, the
days of playful courtship, the the
men
a "fine."
May Day
survived despite efforts by rulers like
Catholic and Protestant churchmen to ban
it
when young people danced around Maypoles, bonfires.
payment of Charlemagne and
leading on Tuesday, releasing each other only on the
Whitsunday
and continued stayed out
all
to
be
a
time
night lighting
(13 June) occasioned a week's holiday in thirteenth-
The summer solstice (21/22 June) became transformed Day (24 June), and often coincided with the first cutting of
century England. into St. John's
the hay.
Lammas (1 August) peasant women remen had seeded the spring grains. Rarely did popular beliefs anywhere in Europe allow women to sow the fields for fear of endangering the harvest. Instead, beginning as early as April, women had In this season from Easter to
turned to work in the
fields after
the
the more arduous tasks of hoeing, weeding, and mulching the newly seeded
They had to do these in addition to their many other chores. The Thomas Tusser's sixteenth-century guide to husbandry had planted her own garden, the flax, and the hemp by the beginning of March.
crops.
"housewife" of
Into the nineteenth century in Ireland fires in
May.
sheep by
St.
In thirteenth-century
John's
Day
at the
women
cut the turf for the family's
England peasant women had sheared the
end of June.
WOMEN
104
OF THE FIELDS
Spring was the time for the laundry. Lye, the whitener, came from the ashes of the
In nineteenth-century Brittany the
fire.
twice a year, in April and in October.'*'^
women
did a big wash
On the first day the clothes went into
buckets, covered with ashes and then boiling water.
beaten with paddles, the third day spread
The second day they were
the sun to dry and to bleach.
in
In the twentieth century the long water trough in the piazza of a Sicilian village
was a meeting place, the washing the occasion for the countrywomen
and gossip together. summer months brought ways for peasant women to supplement the family's diet and income, in the last lean weeks before to talk, laugh,
Spring and the early
the harvest.
They cared
newly purchased cow about to
for the livestock: the
the goats and sheep giving birth, the
calf,
goslings to raise.
A
Russian peasant
litters
woman
of piglets, chicks,
and
blessed the animals on St.
John's Day. All across Europe into the twentieth century peasant women weaned the nursing young of the cows and goats early and used the milk for making cheese and butter. Some milk, some cheese provided protein for her own family, but most of it had to be sold. As early as the ninth century, Anglo-Saxon women produced enough cheese to make it one of the early exports of England. In Montaillou in southern France in the early four-
teenth century, the wives sold cheese at the market
The method
for
making
this valuable foodstuff
out the centuries. Peasant
ened
it,
—was
whey made
women separated it. The excess
pressed and aged
1654
a
out the cream, soured
at
own
—the
children. In it
4-5 pence
The rhythm of the seasons structured women before them and remained Another constant was
cook.'^^
ji^g cook also
a pint.
those of ries.
thick-
it,
from the pressing
liquid
6 pence a pound to the Countess of Bedford's
bought her cream
on Whitsunday.
much the same manner they became heavy and no longer stuck peasant woman sold her butter in 5 pound lots at
a treat for their
butter, churning the milk until
to the paddle. In
fair
remained the same through-
peasant women's a constant
their reproductive
life.
lives as
it
had
throughout the centu-
As mothers, they bore and
sustained the generations that worked the land from the ninth to the twentieth century.
Children and Nurturing Childbearing and mothering: peasant as seriously
and
women
took these responsibilities
as matter-of-factly as they did the success or failure of the
and the making of cheese. With them lay the come; with their bodies and the care they gave the infants they bore, they created and suscrops, the selling of cream, possibility
and the
responsibility for the generations to
The Constants
new
tained the hope of
life.
Woman's World
of the Peasant
105
Childbirth and child rearing were constants in
the countrywoman's world.
Demographers assume that women's
potential for childbearing remained
Women,
the same throughout the centuries, roughly twenty years. of
(Changes
regardless
began to menstruate between twelve and fourteen.
position,
social
the age of menarche, the onset of menstruation and ovulation,
in
come with extreme century, better diet
variations in diet. In the second half of the twentieth
—
in particular
an increased percentage of body
fat
—has
occasioned earlier hormonal changes and thus earlier puberty. Studies for
Germany
1500 and
in
menarche
for Scandinavia in the nineteenth century indicating
appear to be aberrations
at sixteen or eighteen
pattern, caused perhaps by malnutrition.)'*^
The end
of
in
the
women's
common
fertility,
the
onset of the hormonal changes leading to menopause, appears to have been a constant as well. a
woman
of Bingen, in years to
As
early as the seventh century, Visigothic laws
infertile after forty.
one
fifty.
^'^
relative ease or difficulty of childbearing for
woman might
a half year intervals
perspective, she could for
most of her adult Everything
who
woman's childbearing
The number of children women conceived and term depended on their own susceptibility to disease and the
estimate that a
and
assumed
twelfth-century learned abbess Hildegarde
of her medical treatises, estimated a
be over by
carried to
The
in
if
have
five to
each individual. Demographers
seven successful pregnancies at two
she lived a normal
life span.'*^
From
the
woman's
assume that she would be pregnant or nursing
a child
life.
the peasant woman's world favored and valued the wife
could bear healthy children.
The Church
extolled sexual intercourse for
the purpose of procreation and offered heroines
who
avoided "the shame of
barrenness," like Saint Elizabeth, mother of John the Baptist, and Saint
Anne, mother of the Virgin Mary, both
elderly
women
miraculously able to
Countrywomen made herbs like feverfew into tonics that they believed would make them fertile. Once pregnant, a peasant woman might be given special privileges: One lord of a German manor, eager for more conceive.^*'
potential laborers, allowed pregnant
women
to eat fruit
from the orchard and
grapes from the vineyard, but only "a small branch with two clusters. "^^
They
and game from the lord's preserves and pay less to use his bake oven. They might be allowed to keep the hen due the lord at Shrovetide. might have
fish
Into the late 1930s in Lough in County Clare, Ireland, families expecting an immediate pregnancy excused the new peasant bride from heavy work for the first year of her marriage. Conversely, if her "belly" had not begun to swell by six months, the young woman could expect anger and abuse. Pregnancy and the birth of the baby were times of special female companionship.
The women
of the village performed
many
tasks together
throughout
WOMEN
106
the year, working in the
fields
OF THE FIELDS
weeding and raking, walking to the market
town, washing clothes at a stream, but the time of birthing was their province, the source of a special bond that only they as as
contemporaries called
in
it
and the wisewoman of the delivery. 51
The men
women
shared. "In her waiting"
the thirteenth century, female friends, relatives,
village
would give advice and then help with the had begun, some-
of the family waited once the labor
times adding to the tension.
A peasant woman
her labor in the 1950s; her mother and
sisters
in
southern Italy remembered
had brought the midwife and
they would stand by the bed and wait to see
how
far apart the pains were.
I'd
hear the
one by one. My father, my brothers, my husband's brothers, they all sat there by the fire and drank wine and waited. If you make a sound, if a pain catches you by surprise, or the baby won't come out and you can't stand it and you moan, you've disgraced yourself. You keep a towel shoved in your mouth, and everytime it hurts so bad, you bite down on it and pray to God no noise comes out. I always tied a knot in one end so I could bite real hard, and my sister had a way of crooning and stroking me shuffling in the
room and know the men were
arriving,
that
made
The
ease of childbirth depends on three factors: the physical condition
it
better. ^ 2
of the mother, the size of her pelvis relative to the size of the baby's head,
and the position of the baby in the uterus. A female relative like the Italian sister, or the "wisewoman" (the midwife), was active throughout the birth with words of encouragement, with practical aids. The midwife made herbal teas to hasten the labor: wallflower acted as a diuretic; lady's-mantle and ergot (a fungus found on ripe plants) strengthened the contractions. Herbal ointments might help to soften the cervix. Henbane produced a twilight sleep for a woman in extreme pain. The midwife could determine the position of the fetus from feeling the abdomen and could listen to its heartbeat. With her fingers she measured the dilation of the cervix and thus the progress of the labor. Pushing on the uterus, she helped the final stage of the delivery. In English villages mothers sat up in bed for the first stages of labor, sometimes on straw to absorb the discharges. They went to moon-shaped "birthing stools" for the
peasant
women
Women
left to
last
phase of labor. In nineteenth-century Russia,
gave birth kneeling
in
the
warmth
of the family bathhouse.
themselves favored these upright positions, which gave them
the advantage of gravity and the use of more of their muscles for the expulsion of the head, the final act of delivery.
Though governments and nineteenth centuries
like
those of France and Russia in the eighteenth
tried to decree examinations
wives throughout the countryside,
and found the
fees high. Instead,
women
and
licenses for mid-
of the villages did not seek training
midwives continued to gain their special
The Constants
of the Peasant
Woman's World
107
any formal education but because of their own experi-
status not because of
ences of childbirth, their knowledge of herbal medicine, and their intuitive sense of measures that eased the process.
The midwife
might, as
in
France
seventeenth century, be paid by the village along with the shepherd
in the
and the schoolmaster. In most instances she would be an efiFective guide and aid to the pregnant woman. (Despite numerous stories, especially from the nineteenth century, about "dirty, ignorant hags" doctors rarely,
if
ever,
came
so that well into the twentieth century peasant
midwives and their female
relatives.)
Only
did midwives need extra knowledge and
would be
difficult,
who acted as midwife, women in the villages, women had to rely on
to the aid of pregnant
in
the case of a prolonged labor
skills.
A
long labor meant that
even impossible, for the mother to deliver without
vention. Inaction would
mean death
for the
woman and
it
inter-
probably for the
infant as well.
Prolonged labor occurs because of the
size of the baby's
head
in relation
The among
to the mother's pelvis, or because of the fetus' position in the uterus. first
cause was
peasant
common.
less
women, worked
Malnutrition, a
common
to the advantage of the
condition
mother by lowering the
birthweight and size of the child. But transverse and breech presentations
were not unusual. In even surgery.
later centuries
A breech
both necessitated the use of forceps or
presentation (the most
buttocks or feet emerging
first,
The danger
common
of the two), with the
could be delivered naturally, especially
if
the
mother would come from lacerations to the vagina, unable to stretch gradually to accommodate the head. For the baby, moving backward down the birth canal, there would be the danger of child were small.
to the
strangulation or oxygen deprivation should the umbilical cord entangle
around
its
neck.
A
itself
transverse presentation with the baby lying horizontally
would be virtually impossible for a mother to deliver unasShe could not by her contractions alone force it into the birth canal. Though the midwife chanced infecting the mother, once she discovered the awkward lie of the fetus, she would probably try to reposition it, either from outside or even within the uterus once the cervix had dilated sufficiently. Medical historians have consistently asserted that knowledge of this maneuvering, commonly called "podalic version," was known to Greek and Roman male obstetricians and then forgotten until the sixteenth century when it was rediscovered by a man, the French surgeon Ambroise Pare. This does women across the cervix sisted.
a disservice.
and
if
A
nothing
to intervene
peasant else,
woman,
a midwife, could judge the irregular position,
her knowledge of birthing cows and horses would
and give her ideas of how
tell
her
to help the mother's travail.
Prolonged labor, lasting over twenty-four hours, could cause death. After forty-eight hours the
mother suffered from dehydration. That and exhaustion
WOMEN
108
could lead to heart
OF THE FIELDS
failure. Internal tears
could cause bleeding. After so
hours, the uterus, a muscle, might rupture
many
and hemorrhage. Then the mother
would bleed to death. To save a woman in such circumstances, before so much damage had been done, the infant was sacrificed. The midwife might send for the barber surgeon,
if
one were available
she acted herself, using a variety of hooks and skull
and thus extract
women
it
and the
survived this procedure.
rest of the
If
in
the
hammers
village.
Otherwise
to crush the fetus'
body from the
vagina.
Some
the child could not be extracted or the
mother died before the procedure could be performed, both the Church and custom dictated that her abdomen be cut open and the child taken
out. (This
was the
mouth be
original cesarean section.) Popular belief decreed that her
kept open to allow the infant's soul to escape should
An
it
too be dead.^^
woman she would "lose a tooth for every There might be worse consequences, like danger of infection, or from tearing. A Brittany peasant remembered that his grandmother had left her bed too soon to do the laundry and died of a fever, the old English proverb told a
child you bear."^^
—
principal
symptom
Maria went
—
of such an infection. In Torregreca in southern Italy,
to the fields to heave the
just a
week
death
just as
other peasant
women had
for centuries.
Infections might have lesser consequences.
matory diseases could close
off
for the threshing machine She hemorrhaged and bled to
wheat sheaves
after the birth of her sixth child.
Gonorrhea and
pelvic inflam-
the fallopian tubes with scar tissue and cause
intermittent pain, fever, and exhaustion. Malnutrition, a chronic possibility in the peasant
woman's world, caused
irregular ovulation
and cessation of
menstruation altogether. Malnutrition, especially protein deficiency, could lead to toxemia, to kidney damage, to high blood pressure in pregnant
and thus
to
women
premature birth or the death of the fetus because of abnormalities
from the wall of the had miscarriages. In 1681, Alice
of the placenta or premature separation of the placenta uterus.
Even the most
successful childbearers
George of St. Giles parish in Oxford was 108 years old, still tall for her time and known to have been able to reap as much as a man in her younger years. She had married at thirty, borne fifteen children, and had three miscarriages. In the 1930s Lucia of the north littoral of Yugoslavia told the school-
teacher Darinka Host about her experiences: two miscarriages in the
first
year
and then a son. Eighteen months later she bore another child. Her mother had successfully brought pregnancies to term, but after each birth she "was bedridden for five months." Demographers estimate that even in good health, with easy conception, the harsh conditions of peasant women's lives caused spontaneof her marriage, then five years of barrenness, another miscarriage,
ous abortions
— miscarriages—
a third of the time.^^
^he
records of births for
seventeenth- and eighteenth-century English and French villages show April,
The Constants
of the Peasant
Woman's World
109
May, and June the best months for conception for a successful pregnancy. the mother would have less arduous labor in the first months, and more than enough food in the later months of carrying the fetus. ^^ Care of the newborn infant followed patterns and beliefs as old as ancient Greek, Hebrew, and Germanic customs. Into the eighteenth, nineteenth, and even the twentieth centuries in some parts of Europe, the mid-
Then
wife bathed the infant, then swaddled separately, then
wrapping
a cloth
all
it,
limb
carefully binding each
around. Usually the baby was swaddled
with the wrappings changed two or three times during the day for the four
months
of life.^^
As
late as the
a southern Italian village advised that the a
minimum
first
1960s the elementary schoolteacher
baby be confined
in this
way
in
for
of six months. All believed that such binding protected the
and illness, preserving the straightness of the limbs and the proper placement of each organ. Of all the Europeans, only the Celts were described in the twelfth century by the historian Giraldus Cambrensis as not swaddling their infants and leaving "nature alone" to deterchild from deformity
mine the baby's shape. ^^
Women
breast-fed their infants
castles or the
infants.
The
towns could afford
if
they could. Only rich
a surrogate, a
women
of the
"wet" nurse, to feed their
colostrum and the breast milk, easily digestible and with valuable
survival. Mothers gradually weaned babies between one and three years of age. Early in the infant's life, the mother gave it solid food, pap (a thin flour gruel) or bread soaked in milk
antibodies,
improved the baby's chances of
or water. Peasant
women might
choose to nurse because they believed the
practice prevented conception. In if
a
mother wished
Peasant mothers took If
many communities
the
Church approved
to remain sexually abstinent during this period. all
responsibility for children until about age five.
they had more than one child, they would have the elder watch the
younger. Until the child could walk, care would be relatively easy. Collier,
an eighteenth-century peasant woman, wrote
babies to the
Mary
in verse of taking
the
fields:
[We] wrap them in our clothes to keep them warm While round about we gather up the corn [grain]; And often unto them our course do bend. To keep them safe, that nothing them offend. ^"^ In Brittany in the nineteenth century mothers left their babies in their cribs, or in the family's enclosed box bed, returning periodically in the course of
the day to nurse them.
had to
Once
the child was able to walk, dangers were
Even in the 1980s in Denmark, mothers complained that they watch their children carefully because of potentially harmful farm
ever-present.
WOMEN
110
Women
machinery.
OF THE FIELDS
of earlier times feared hearth
fires,
deep
and
wells,
domestic and wild animals.
Although "A
soft
word
will
open an
iron door"
remained a popular
proverb in Bosnia into the 1930s, peasant mothers probably ruled their children strictly.^^ In fourteenth-century Montaillou in southern France,
mothers put them to bed before serving the husbands their evening meal. is
likely that
mothers beat the younger children, fathers the
1930s in Yugoslavia, Lucia remembered
still
not strong enough to knead
the knuckles.
them
all."^^
it
how hard
it
had been
to care for the
"When first made the bread, firm, and my mother would rap me
other children while her mother was
I
ill:
It
elder. In the
was
I
over
I did the work for all the younger ones and also got beaten for Grandmothers told stories of little girls and boys who suffered
hardship and even death because they disobeyed their mothers.
Hood wandered
off the
Red Riding
path in the woods despite her mother's warnings and
a wolf. "The Wayward Child" of another tale "wouldn't do what its mother wanted. For that reason the dear Lord did not look with favor upon it and let it fall ill." Even in death it would not be still, often reappearing to the mother. In the end she beat the apparition's arm with a switch and, "Now for the first time the child had peace under the earth. "^^ Care of children and the family extended beyond feeding, clothing, and discipline. To peasant women fell the responsibility for comforting and curing a sick child, husband, parent, or grandparent. Peasant women had no scientific names for the afflictions that might come to their families. They knew only symptoms: fever, cough, cloudy eyes, headache, abdominal pain, swelling, bleeding, discharges, rashes. Like their mothers and grandmothers they relied on intuition and on the knowledge passed from generation to generation. They could, like the women in thirteenth- and fourteenth-century southern France, call on the services of the village wisewoman, an elder acknowledged to have special skill with herbs and who knew rituals and
was eaten by
prayers that could cure. village paid
such
The churchwardens of a
women
seventeenth-century English
a regular salary just as others paid the midwife.^^
Healing was a special knowledge. Every symptom from toothache to eye inflammation to convulsions, palsy, and
loss of
remedies, a whole range of practices that the raries believed ritual like
hearing had
its
had curative powers. There might be
a specific prayer or a
wearing red flannel to draw out the "red" heat of a
wisewoman could
appropriate
wisewoman and her contempofever.
Or
the
one woman believed that she could cure consumption by burying an egg in an ant hill the disease would disappear as the ant hill washed away in the transfer the "spirit" of the affliction; for example,
—
rain.^'^
Much of the peasant woman's pharmacopeia remains a
sounds
like
magic, like a spider covered in dough taken as a
mystery.
pill
Some
against ague.
The Constants Other substances
of the Peasant
like digitalis (foxglove),
aspirin (willow bark) are used in
come
Woman's World
111
hyoscyamine (belladonna), and
modern medicine.
In particular, twentieth-
woman's knowledge of and how to preserve the many herbs, roots, and blossoms that she used. Changes in temperature and light from day to night, from season to season, alter the chemical properties of many plants; for example, the yield of poppies is four times greater at nine in the morning than century scientists have
when
to pick,
when
to respect the peasant
to cut,
at nine at night. ^^
Each symptom had its herbal remedy. Children drank calamint tea or smoke of burning coltsfoot leaves to soothe a cough or to relieve congestion. The root of marshmallows, oil of thyme, peppermint, and anise seed are still ingredients in medicinal lozenges. Every headache and fever had inhaled the
its
specific cure.
A
sore throat called for periwinkle tea, or a salt water gargle.
dizziness. Herbs like pimpernel and dill helped digestion and eased abdominal pain. Tansy leaf tea slowed the cramps of dysentery. Celandine and wormwood cleared worms from the intestines. Aloe and marigolds are still used in lotions to soothe injured or burned skin.
Lavender stopped
Centuries of experience, flashes of intuition, acts of
cumulated with the
lore of this herbal
illnesses all
pain, cure,
medicine gave peasant
women
the ac-
faith,
a
way
to deal
around them. They believed that they could ameliorate
and thus take some control of the unknown hazards of their world. all of peasant women's efforts and expertise, death menaced their
Despite
Though rural women bore an average of six children in a lifetime, them died before they were twenty. The tenth- and eleventh-century Hungarian cemeteries show one child in five dead before the first birthday,
families.
half of
two
dead before the fourteenth birthday. ^^ Studies of French and
in five
English village families suggest that until the beginning of the eighteenth
century a
woman
averaging
five births
Twenty-five percent of children died
would see three of her children
in their first year, in
bad times
as
die.
many
^'^
more would be dead before their twentieth birthday. Death was women's special province; just as they oversaw the coming of life, so they waited for its leaving. Peasant women had cowslip wine, herbs like poppy seed, belladonna, mandrake root, and hemlock to ease pain and as 25 percent
give sleep.
Women
prepared the body, whether
it
was an infant,
a child,
husband, parent, or friend. They washed the limbs, wrapped the body white cloth
—
a winding-sheet, or shroud, that they
in
would probably have
woven and hemmed themselves.
In 1895 Nell Chapman, new wife to an made the linen shrouds for herself and her husband as her first act of their new life together. Women had always been the principal mourners, praying over the body, in some villages for nights and
English village shepherd,
days
in succession, despite
the disapproval of the Church, which decried such
WOMEN
112
OF THE FIELDS
"excesses" of mourning from as early as the seventh century. of death in their ballads and told of
it
Women
sang
death of
in their tales, especially the
"The Wife of Usher's Well" lost three of her sons "about Martinwhen nights are lang and mirk."^^ The mother of the German folktale "The Little Shroud" knew quiet acceptance only when her seven-year-old son appeared to reassure her, his shroud soaked with her tears. Then the storyteller imagined him sleeping as he had in life but now "in his little underground bed."^^ Peasant women made offerings at the parish churches, "the children.
mas,
mortuary articles
gift," just as their
tended the
women
gravesites.
Countrywomen took of the precious quality of
and
Germanic and Celtic predecessors had buried
with the bodies of their dead. Into the twentieth century
responsibility for the health of their families. life,
rituals that survived into
of their world
Aware
they honored birth and death with special care
modern
the
era,
long after the worst dangers
had disappeared.
Threats to Survival
The women
of the countryside accepted the vulnerability of
life.
wherever the preindustrial patterns of cultivation prevailed, peasant
and men
For
women
on the edge of subsistence. Bad fortune periodically endanvalued. The natural forces of bad weather, bad harvest and epidemic diseases inevitably broke the rhythm of their seasonal activities, and challenged their ability to sustain themselves and their families. In those gered
all
lived
that
women
women battled for life. women knew that the key to survival
times, peasant
Peasant
was the length of the winter and the success of the summer growing season. Into the eighteenth century, natural disaster and its companion, famine, usually came at least once in a generation. In a good year, a seventeenth-century French family would need a minimum of 2 hectares of land to produce enough grain for food, for rents, taxes, tithes, and enough seed for the next spring's sowing. In a bad year the peasant family needed double the number of hectares to yield the same harvest. ^0 And there was no more land in a bad year than a good one. All of the sources describing the lives of countrywomen and men speak with special respect of the winter families
—
of the cold, the wind, the wet. Peasant
winters."^ ^ The gradual mean temperature of 1 degree centigrade made the winters worse and signaled the
counted the passage of years by the number of
cooling of the climate, a drop in the
by the
late fourteenth century,
"little ice age."'^^
Into the seventeenth century, peasant
Europe saw increased
rainfall that
caused the
rivers
women
and canals
in
northern
to flood
the Baltic to freeze over. In 1690 in Scandinavia, the weather never
and
warmed
— The Constants
of the Peasant
Woman's World
113
long enough for the grain to ripen7^ In Greystoke, England, 1623 was a bad
women and
year for peasant
September, the parish register
their families. In
noted deaths: a son Leonard on the eleventh, the mother on the twelfth
Anthony Cowlman which woman died in Edward Dawwant of maintenance."'^'* Warm, dry weather could mean olive trees in the south of England, figs
"Jaine, wife of
.
.
.
son's barn of Greystoke for
and vines
north of France.
in the
Warming
of the climate in the eighteenth
century brought a longer growing season and bigger harvests. But heat could
drought and
also bring ers
had
move
to
from 1647
Beauvaisis,
Spanish
wildfires. In sixteenth-century Castile,
as the soil
hardened and cracked with lack of
to 1651 recurrent droughts
rain. In
villag-
French
and bad harvests forced lost land and tools, and
tenant families into debt to buy food; they defaulted, starved. "^5
Worst
of
tieth century,
"Many woman
for peasant
all
people die in
Etienne
in
the spring
the 1930s.^^
tell
women and
their families, even into the twen-
were the early spring months before the
The
when food
first
grains ripened.
scarcest," explained a Bosnian
is
seventeenth-century French village records of
of the weaver Jean
Cocu,
his wife
St.
and four daughters. Together
made 108 sols a week. To survive they needed 70 pounds of bread a With bread at Vi sol a pound, they had no difficulty. In 1694 the price was 3.3 sols per pound. By December of 1693 the family had registered at the office of the poor; by March of 1694 the youngest daughter had died; in they
week.
May
the father and then the eldest daughter followed.
For countrywomen changes
in
^'^
the weather had repercussions other than
the success or failure of the harvest. Each season had
its illnesses.
As
early
century in Denmark, the long cold months indoors passed
as the thirteenth
member to family member. The lice gave typhus to the women's children died of croup, diphtheria, whooping cough, from bronchitis, asthma, and rheumatic fever. As women and men passed
smallpox from family adults. Peasant
from
fifteen to thirty-five, they died of tuberculosis. In nineteenth-century
Brittany,
Emile Guillaumin described
his wife's
death after she had helped
with the harvest: I
got Victoire,
we had made
who didn't mind at all,
the day before on to the
to
come with me
cart.
under the downpour which fell unexpectedly and two days later she was dead.^^
Pneumonia,
and acute
to help load the few stocks
She got very early: that
took
hot, then
began to shiver
night she coughed blood,
lives in
the winter. In the
sixteenth century influenza claimed lives in France, Italy,
Germany, and the
pleurisy,
Netherlands. Dysentery with especially
when
tonsillitis, all
its
rapid dehydration killed in every century,
the population was weakened by food shortages. In nine-
WOMEN
114
women and men
teenth-century Brittany
winter months7^
OF THE FIELDS still
dreaded "the cold hell" of the
Warm weather did not necessarily mean health for a family.
The hot moist air bred the mosquitoes of malaria. In the nineteenth century summer droughts left bad water and brought cholera and typhoid fever. From the thirteenth century to the seventeenth century, one disease above all others caused terror. Peasant women and men called it the Black Death and
suffered
in
it
epidemic waves,
first
in the fourteenth
then periodically into the seventeenth century when
The
more
it
century and
or less died out.
European outbreak of the bubonic plague in 1348 coincided with bad weather and food shortages. This made peasant families
first
a long period of
particularly susceptible to the
new
disease strain. In such circumstances the
Black Death flourished.so In 1348 the weather was
woman remembered Day, and
just
that
warm and humid
it
started to rain
never stopped. ^^
The
Europe.
in
An
English peasant
on the 24th of June,
grain rotted in the
fields.
St.
The
John's disease
boats with the rats and their Heas to the ports of Italy and southern France, then across the mountains and rivers and into the fishing towns and villages as people went about their regular tasks, not knowing that they carried the infection with them. First the rats died by the
came off the merchants'
hundreds of thousands. In Dorsetshire, England, by the middle of July, the women and men began to sicken and die. The mortality in the first wave, from 1348 to 1350, was 20-25 percent. A peasant woman lost many of her husband, for adults were the first to contract the disease. In the second wave, which came sporadically from 1351 to 1385, friends, perhaps her parents, her
the children proved the most vulnerable.
The loss of
the young and of another
20 percent of the population caused a downturn
in the
the 1380s Europe had lost about 40 percent of
its
Peasant
women
first
population curve. By
population. ^^
noticed the swelling of the lymph glands under the
Then
spots, sometimes described as blue or black, sometimes as red sores, appeared all over the body. Fever and bleeding from the nose were considered particularly common symptoms of the disease. Death could come in three days. This first wave of the plague developed into the pneumonic form very rapidly, becoming even more deadly. Then the
arms or
the groin.
in
disease was transmitted directly from person to person without the intermedi-
needed by the bubonic form of the disease. There would no swelling, just a sudden onset of a very high fever, inflammation of the lungs, coughing, spitting blood, and death. Without
ary rodent
be
little
and
fleas
or almost
antibiotics,
even
monic plague
is
in a
modern medical
facility,
the mortality rate for pneu-
60 to 70 percent. ^^
Manorial and parish their families. In
officials
recorded the deaths of peasant
1348 on a Suffolk manor of
fifty
women and
holdings, twenty-nine
The Constants families
of the Peasant
Woman's World
had been wiped out.^^ By 1364 around Nice
in
115
southern France only
twelve of the twenty-eight villages had sufficient families to
list
for the hearth
By 1401 two thirds of the rural communes around Pistoia in northern had disappeared from the records, the lands abandoned. ^^ Well into the
taxes. ^5 Italy
seventeenth century, a cyclical pattern of the disease was established. at the
end of the seventeenth century the population's immunity
Then
stabilized,
and the plague ceased to kill. Death and harm might come to peasant women and their families not only from natural disaster and disease, but also from the hands of men. Violence was a part of the life of the countryside, both in individual assaults against women in particular and in the indiscriminate horror of warfare. The customary laws of the Germanic and Celtic peoples, the fourteenth- to the seventeenth-century records of the secular and ecclesiastical courts, show that
women's bodies and
their lives
were supposed to be protected. Prankish law
women. Fourteenth-century ecclesiastical courts of southern France and manor courts in England fined men for rape and put them in the stocks. In 1400 in an Apennines village, a group of men took the priest's sister Bartola, "like a lamb among a pack of wolves" and raped her for two days. Four of them were executed.^'' Along with the ancient traditions that valued a woman's safety and called set wergilds for killing
for her protection,
men from the
however, went the equally ancient tradition of protecting
false accusations.
This
left
the burden of proof of sexual assault on
woman. Burgundian and Lombard customs awarded
fines only
if
the
man
had not been incited. In seventeenth-century Somerset in England, a woman had to cry out, to make her accusation right away, could never have had intercourse with the man before, and must not become pregnant. All across Europe men believed that conception meant enjoyment on the woman's part. If the guilty man was a peasant woman's social superior, she had little recourse. Twelfth-century writings of the elite classes suggested a nobleman "use a
little
compulsion
as a
convenient cure" for a village maiden's "shy-
ness. "^^ In fourteenth-century
Montaillou
in
southern France, the priest
notoriously used his position and his ability to bring charges of heresy against parishioners to exact sex from the all
were young
women
women
inn. In the eighteenth century near
wanted them allowed
M. de
of the village.
living as servants, either in a
visitor, to
of
in a public
Nantes, servants assumed their masters
to accept the advances of their friends:
Kernoel, a
Most vulnerable
household or
have intercourse
Marie Toutescotes
for
"she
felt
that she
should not refuse him being afraid that her master would be angry with her."89
While the helped
religious
and secular customs of the community sometimes
women who had been
assaulted or harassed, nothing could lessen the
—
— WOMEN
116
OF THE FIELDS
impact of war on the countryside and constant in the world of peasant ries
its
Wars remained
inhabitants.
women and men,
a
changing over the centu-
only in the methods and justifications, never in their effects on peasants'
lives.
Until the sixth century, the peasant wives of the
Germanic and Celtic
peoples remained behind to deal with the work of subsistence while the raided the neighboring settlements each spring.
eleventh centuries peasant
women and
From
men
the eighth to the
their families suffered the attacks of
North Africa and Spain, the Magyars from the Vikings from the north. The ninth- and tenth-century invasions
distant invaders, the Arabs from
the east,
led peasant families to seek protectors, to tie themselves to a
and
his followers.
As
his serfs
mounted
warrior
with obligations and payments in kind, they
put themselves under the shelter of his military strength and gained the authority of his "ban" and of his manorial court. Thus they could hope to plant and harvest in relative peace. selves in the eleventh
God, the promise
and twelfth
When
the warriors fought
among them-
centuries, peasants looked to the
would not
of bishops that knights
fight
Truce of
on certain days of
the week, at certain times of the year. As early as the thirteenth century, peasants turned to the
new
royal dynasties
—the
kings, emperors,
and czars
claimed the lands and the wealth as their own, taking taxes but giving the law and order of royal justice in the royal courts. But then from the fourteenth to the eighteenth centuries, the dynasties fought among them-
who
selves.
So the wars continued, as predictable as the coming of spring when and their commanders made their plans for new campaigns. The peasant woman and her husband, her sisters and brothers, her mother and father, her daughters and sons watched the methods of fighting change: The elite professional warriors on horseback gave way to paid foot soldiers and
warriors
in ranks, and then to artillery and massed armies. Occaarmed themselves to try to keep the warring from their but most often they fled, or tried to negotiate to avoid the coming
bowmen marching sionally, peasants villages,
of the soldiers.
From
the fourteenth to the seventeenth centuries, free companies of
soldiers, like
bands of outlaws, menaced the people of the countryside. In the herded their livestock to a fort on an
fifteenth century Joan of Arc's family island in the River
Meuse
to wait out the raiding soldiers of the
Years War. In 1423 Joan's father was the villager
who
Hundred
signed the agreement
with the leader of a band of soldiers, a yearly fee levied on each household paid so that there would be no pillaging.
blackmail payments
New
appati, pati, raencons
wars gave
du
Even such arrangements did not always mean
new names
to these
pays, souffrances de guerre. safety.
A
1439 inquiry into
The Constants
of the Peasant
Woman's World
two French
excesses of the Dauphin's soldiers in
"women
villages reported
and hanged. "^° In
violated, people crucified, roasted
117
their cahier
grievances) to the Estates General of 1484 the peasants reported:
of
(list
"No
region
has been free from the continual going and coming of armed men, living the poor people,
now
now
the standing companies,
now
off
the feudal levies of nobles,
the free archers, sometimes the halberdiers and at other times the Swiss
and pikemen."^! Before the twentieth century, nothing matched the horrors of the Thirty
War of the seventeenth
Years
ing across the
fields:
century
—the troops
of
many
dynasties march-
from Austria, France, Hanover and Saxony
from England, Hungary, Spain, Sweden. The armies came
in
Germany,
in
the spring and
the summer, not just bands of soldiers, but small states with thousands of followers to service the fighting men's needs.
The commanders
Wallenstein between them had armies of 48,000
women and
to live off the land that peasant
—48,000
their families tended. ^^
raped and murdered. They stole the crops and burned the the livestock. In their wake, armies
left
Tilly
and
additional people
fields.
Armies
They
killed
typhus and dysentery. In 1618 the
population in the areas of heaviest fighting was 21 million; in 1648 leaders signed the peace 13.5 million remained. ^^
The
when
the
English ambassador
described Neustadt, Germany, in the winter of 1635-1636 after the troops
had gone through. The children just sat at the doors of their houses. The dead were found with grass in their mouths. In parts of the fighting areas dysentery hit
epidemic proportions and then came the plague.
men, and children died
in four
months. ^^ Even
in
Some
10,000
sional wars of the eighteenth century, the future Joseph
mother, the Empress of Austria, the peasants have been pillaged,
in July of 1778: .
.
.
on
civilian populations;
husbands from starvation,
disease,
women worked the land and draft animals, women pulled the
peasant or
came,
just as in
their valuables,
As
and
still
intact. "^^
and mechanization renewed attacks
women
died with their children and
and exposure. ^^ In World
let their
plows themselves.
cows loose
peasant
War
II
cared for the livestock. Without fuel
the centuries before, Italian peasant
in past centuries
wrote to his
the scale of the revolutions and wars meant conse-
quences never imagined before. Peasant their
II
"The war has begun and
our armies are
In the twentieth century, technology
women,
the well-managed profes-
in
the woods.
women managed
When
women
the armies
hid food, buried
"''^
to survive
and
to provide
Anna Cecchi, wife of the shepherd in a north Italian knew when the bombs were coming because the sheepdog started to
for their children. village,
howl. She and her grandmother took her daughters to a makeshift shelter.
"What
did
I
think during the war?" she was asked.
"To
continue," she
WOMEN
118
OF THE FIELDS
answered. "Just to continue. "^^ Russian
song that described war for the
And I
so
now
women
women
in the
1950s
still
knew the
of the countryside:
the war has ended,
alone remain
alive.
I'm the horse, the ox, the housewife,
And
the
man and
the farm.^^
Into the twentieth century peasant
protected each
new
disasters, disease,
women
generation, though tested
and war.
sustained their families and
many
times over with natural
SUSTAINING
THE GENERATIONS
The Family and Marriage Throughout the centuries a woman and a man survived in the countryside and could hope for the future by hving within a family. Only with others could peasant women and men complete the ever-present tasks that ensured subsistence, and make order of the challenges and the periodic chaos of their lives.
For women,
in theory,
in addition, the protection of a father, a
made them somewhat
less
Following the traditions inherited from
would be expected
She did
husband, a son,
vulnerable to the violence of other men. earlier centuries, a
young woman young man.
to marry, thus creating a partnership with a
not, however, give
up her
ties to
her
own
family and might even keep
her mother's or her father's name. Thirteenth-century English records Ciciley Wilkinsdoughter and
Emma
list
Androsmayden. In fifteenth-century
France Joan of Arc explained to the churchmen who questioned her at her trial that: "I am called sometimes Jeanne d'Arc and sometimes Jeanne
Romee," thus acknowledging ties to both her parents' kin.^ Into the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries in Denmark, Ireland, and France women continued to be known by mothers' and fathers' surnames even though marriage had legally changed them. Both young peasant women and men saw the advantages of the partnermight mean freedom from the bonds of by their union the couple gained a measure of independence from their parents, adult status within the village community, and the opportunity to create their own future. A French proverb, "Mariage,
ship. In earlier centuries, marriage
serfdom. Even as
serfs,
menage," meant that with marriage the couple had created their own house(The evolution of certain words reflects the acquisition of adult status in the languages of both Eastern and Western Europe. Among the thirteenth-century Slavs of Kiev in Russia the words for "woman" and "man"
hold. ^
WOMEN
120
were the same
OF THE FIELDS and "husband." In English the word meaning female spouse, and mann, mean-
as those for "wife"
"woman" combines ing human being.)
the word
wif,
Both wanted to marry. In the 1930s marriage at I
woman
—
a "housewife," as she
practical value
and
significance.
A
the soul of the house.
Here it
is
something
want
I
The
County
to
tell
."^
it.
.
.
For the man, joining with
Sicilian
called
—had the same
proverb explained,
"The man
the primary wealth of the house."^
is
Clare, Ireland, insisted:
you and you can put
in
it
your head and take
back with you. The small farmer has to have an intelligent wife or he won't
last long.
He may do
for a
few years but after that he can't manage.
are a thousand ways an intelligent
woman makes money
getting a wife for one of his sons, he should look to a
an industrious and to
woman remembered her my way, and knowing
would come to be
good wife
In the 1920s a farmer from
Bosnian
a
chance come
a very nice
was poor, wasted no time thinking about
the
is
had
fifteen: "I
work and that
The
landlord
intelligent is
what
is
.
.
.
There
and when he is house where there has been .
.
.
woman, because she has taught her daughters how
needed.'
—the knight
or noble
who
gave access to the
fields
—knew
the importance of the marriage of his female and male serfs or tenants.
could expect more of a couple.
On
Ashcroft in Somerset, the unmarried holder of
two and
a half hens, his
five acres
married counterpart
thirteenth-century
Wantage
hens and an extra
tax.^
He
the twelfth-century English manor of
in Berkshire, the
1
owed V2 pence and
pence and
married
five hens.
In
man owed two more
Manorial agreements forbade marriage outside the
property and required the lord's permission from as early as the eleventh
century in England to as late as the 1730s
marriage off the manor meant the loss of a
cow, as well, for
this
family to the groom). In
was the traditional
some
Poland.
in
To
parts of Europe, in addition to his permission,
the lord used the occasion of the marriage to collect another called
it
merchet,
and
peasant father might
in
owe the
failure to
—
with the
new
first
The
The
English
equivalent of the value of an ox, in the four-
pay
this tax
fields. '^
may have
Celtic epic Tain
Historian Jean Scam-
given
that the landlord could claim the
wife.
always had "the
fee.
the eleventh and twelfth centuries, a better off
teenth century, three months' income from the
mel suggests that jus primae noctis
the landlord a
and progeny, in Poland the dowry (the gift of the bride's
loss of laborers
first
rise to
Bo acknowledges
forcing of girls in Ulster."^
the idea of
act of intercourse
that the king
While no concrete evidence
manorial records of the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries suggest the memory, if not the reality, of the custom. A document of 1419 from Bourdet, Normandy, in northern France, lists the merchet as 10 sols, a joint of pork exists,
121
Sustaining the Generations
a gallon of wedding drink, and continues, "I may and ought, if it pleases me, go and lie with the bride, in case her husband or some person on his one of the things above rehearsed."^ A 1486 account fail to pay to me legal decision of Ferdinand V of Catalonia in northern Spain prohibited lords from taking their peasants' wives on the wedding night. A list of sixteenthcentury customs from Beam, Switzerland, states that peasant men, "before
and
.
know
they
.
.
their wives ... are
bound
to present
them the
first
night to the
do with them according to his pleasure, or else to pay him a certain tribute." 1° In seventeenth-century France the lord exercised the droit du seigneur symbolically by putting his leg in the couples' bed after the feast on lord ... to
The cahiers presented by representatives of the peasants French Estates General of 1789 complained of the right still being
the wedding night. to the
claimed. 1^ In the
German
folktales the
hero usually
fell
in love first,
but before
marrying he would often seek the advice and approval of his parents. The stories mirror the European reality, for throughout the centuries families negotiated the marriage, both the joining of their daughters and their sons and the arrangements for their provision, the dowry from the bride, the dower from the groom. So significant were these arrangements that a thirteenthcentury English father registered the agreement at the hallmote. In nine-
teenth-century Russia the negotiations took place before an
official of
the
village.
Long before churchmen played any the betrothal and marriage
literally
part in the ceremonies, the rituals of
and symbolically
signified the obligations
groom and his family. From the ninth century, the tradition of the Lombards and other Germanic peoples continued throughout Europe: The daughter stood holding her father's hand; he gave it into the young man's.
of the
By
this
simple gesture, her father transferred his guardianship of her and gave
to another
man
the responsibility of protecting and providing for her, for
protection and provision were the ways in which peasant families defined their responsibility to their daughters.
Other
parts of the
ceremony symbol-
ized the gift of the groom's family, the dower, the promise of a portion of his goods,
and access
to his fields, should
he die and leave her
a
widow.
The
English service kept the Anglo-Saxon words and phrases. "Plighting the troth," meant the pledge, but, in its early sense, "plight" also meant danger and thus implied punishment should the terms of the agreement not be met. In the thirteenth century an English groom would "endow" his bride on the as a symbol of the dower. Even the phrase wed" emphasized the traditional promise to the bride, Anglo-Saxon "wed" also meant "pledge."
church steps and give the ring "with for in
this ring
I
The promise
thee
of the bride's family, though not represented in the rituals,
WOMEN
122
was no
less significant.
and chose
as wife for
OF THE FIELDS
The mother
in a
her son the young
German folktale woman who cut
looked to character the cheese without
wasting any. In reality there was the promise of the young woman's labor and
her reproductive capacity, but more would be expected. Throughout the centuries,
all
across Europe, the tradition of the Celtic,
Germanic, and other
ancient cultures continued, and the bride brought goods and later money,
perhaps a house or rights to land, as her contribution to the marriage. This, her dowry, formed the other part of the negotiations between the two families.
Failure to complete the pledge also carried penalties.
teenth-century England, Richard a
house worth 40
manor
A
When
in thir-
Maud did not provide his sister Avis' dowry,
shillings, a dress,
and
a
cow, he was brought before the
court. ^^
daughter was always entitled to a portion of the family's wealth on the
death of her father or mother. Gradually, access to the land tended to go to the sons, and the custom arose of giving daughters their inheritance at the
time of their marriage, and not
as land
century brides from one village
in
clothing, in
one
village, a
but as goods or money. Fourteenth-
southern France brought a dowry of
robe and a tunic; in another
new
village, a richer family
two sets of bedding, and 75 livres.^^ Fathers in sixteenthand seventeenth-century Essex in England gave their daughters money. A poor farmer set aside 26 shillings 8 pence in his will; Ralph Josselin, the yeoman vicar, planned £200 for one girl, Jane, and £500 for the other, Rebecka.i"^ In eighteenth-century France, a young girl might not look to her family at all. Some left at twelve or fourteen to work in the towns and then returned in their midtwenties to marry, having earned the dowry themselves.
also gave a chest,
By the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, the accumulation of the dowry had become a significant burden on the peasant family, yet one willingly undertaken to ensure a proper and adequate future for their daughter as the wife of an appropriately placed young man. There was still the contribution in goods, now sometimes called the bride's trousseau. By the 1930s in Sicily, the numbers of pieces had multiplied to thirty-five or forty. A young woman brought two sheets, four pillowcases, a bedspread, tablecloths, towels, doilies and her lingerie as her corredo. ^^ Her father and brother had worked to
buy the material
as a first obligation,
even before providing for the son's
marriage, for the corredo alone assured the daughter's future.
From
the 1880s
dowry became harder and harder, taking as much as ten to twelve years' rent to gain a match with a man of good status. Eventually, a pattern evolved: The family provided for one daughter; the others emigrated. ^^ In the 1930s in Yugoslavia, goods and money might not be enough. A young woman from a prosperous family, was known to be a good worker, yet the money her mother could offer counted for nothing. She had brothers, in Ireland, raising a
123
Sustaining the Generations
and they, not
she,
would
inherit the rights to the land of the zadruga (the
family-held property), so her mother could not arrange a good match.
mother lamented her daughter's
The
plight:
go ahead, wait no longer. Go ahead little lamb, lower your sights wants it, So she got married, she is all right but 12 acres had had no other are not 25. So you see, if Janja had been my first born, and if God knows our heiress. Then, well, then children. She would have been Janja,
my
as the
good
child,
God
.
.
—
.
1
.
whom it
.
—
.
why
she would have gotten for a husband, but
talk
it,
you know
how
is.i7
In the 1950s in Vasilika, Greece, peasant families
choices for their daughters and sons.
both
about
a son's
They
had
to
make the same money for
sold the land to raise
education and for a dowry of as
much
as
$3,000 to $4,500 to
provide a daughter with a suitable husband. ^^
Throughout the centuries the wedding ceremony celebrated the change the couple and the promise of their sexuality. The bride had a special dress. In eighteenth-century Sicily she wore a multicolored one, with a garland of orange blossoms as a symbol of fertility. In Russia and Yugoslavia the fabric had been intricately embroidered. Before the ceremony in Russia, the young woman was ritually cleansed, her hair rebraided from one plait into in status for
two. Before the altar both she and the
groom wore
special
the occasion. Their friends teased and taunted them.
teenth-century
Champagne
in
crowns kept
Young people
for
in six-
France created distractions during the
ex-
changing of vows, interrupted the couple on their wedding night and would not leave until they had been given money, drink, and flowers. In the Cotes-
du-Nord in nineteenth-century France, the bride's friends surrounded her hoping to claim the bouquet; the groom and his friends took chase and literally tore her away from her friends. The more disheveled and upset she was, the better sign of her virtue and indication of her future faithfulness.^^ From as early as the mid-twelfth century, the priest was present as a witness, to lend
permanence
to the vows, but the
place outside the church door.
come
Only
in
ceremony
itself
usually took
the sixteenth century did the churches
The decrees of the made marriage a sacrament for Catholics and ceremony came to take place in the church, not just the
to play a significant part in the ritual joining.
Council of Trent gradually
all
in the
of the
1560s
celebratory mass. Protestant
churchmen added the requirement
of "posting
the banns," publicly announcing the plan to marry three months before the betrothal. All
were meant to emphasize the factors important to the
tical authorities:
ecclesias-
the consent of the couple and the indissolubility of the
union.
The Church's
intentions did not conflict with those of peasant
women
WOMEN
124
OF THE FIELDS
and men. Marriage was a willing partnership, a union essential for survival. Together couples worked the land on which their lives and the lives of their children depended.
Access
to the
The new
Land
couple could not survive, could not sustain themselves or their
fields, to pasture, and to forest. When by and sons showed themselves old enough to establish a household and thus ready to have their inheritance, rights to the land would be the most significant possession their families could give them. For exam-
future children, without access to
their marriage daughters
ple, into
the eighteenth century in the Waldviertel of Austria,
when
the
young man gained permission to marry, he gained the right to his father's strips. (The fact of transferring strips to a son on the occasion of marriage led to the coincidence of meaning between "husband" and the old term for farmer, "husbandman.") The same custom came to be followed with daughters; at her marriage, a daughter received her inheritance, usually goods and money, but in some parts of Europe, she too received the rights to land. Twelfth- and thirteenth-century records for Lincolnshire and Somerset attest to female landholders in England, with sons known by their mothers' names and wives acting in the manorial court in land disputes on their own, their sisters', or their husbands' behalf.^o In some shires when there were no sons, daughters rather than males of another line held the land. Customs varied all across Europe. Sometimes the land went to the daughter already married, sometimes it was divided equally among them, sometimes held in common. Thirteenth-century peasant mothers like Sarah Howe from Cashio, Hertfordshire, and Catherine Leman of Hendringham in Norfolk granted or willed land to their daughters on the occasion of their betrothal and marriage. Women also leased land. In 1272 Lyna did so with her brother William in Methwold, Norfolk. Julian Joye of Burley, Rutland, bought land in 1299 but by local custom could only hold it during her lifetime; she could not will it; rather, on her death, it reverted to the landlord. Though these women may have acted for themselves, families commonly assumed that the husband would make the principal decisions, consulting his wife only when he wished to "alienate" or give up her rights. Should he mismanage the holding, however, she or her family could appeal to the manor court. In 1280 in Hertfordshire, Margaret asked that her land be given back to her. While he was alive she had, as a dutiful wife, consented to her husband's request to alienate the property,
Other
now
the jury and presiding reeve decided in her favor. ^^
parts of
Western Europe, often Celtic
or formerly
Roman regions, women access
followed an even wider range of customs that sometimes gave
Sustaining the Generations
to lands along with the
men
of the family.
From
125
the sixteenth century into
the eighteenth century in Franche-Comte, land went to those
household, both females and males. In sixteenth-century
Romans
France, a father could divide his land as he chose, giving
it
still
in
in
the
southern
to a daughter
if
he wished. In the thirteenth- and sixteenth-century custumals (collections of local
customs) for Normandy, Anjou, Brittany, Touraine, and Maine, the
among all the children. In parts of sixteenthown names and were listed in the court and having livestock. The same was true in Santander
lands were to be divided equally
century Scotland,
women
records as paying rents in
kept their
northern Spain into the twentieth century; daughters and sons inherited
equally from the family holdings. 22 In the areas
where
servile status
(serfdom)
prevailed into the nineteenth century like Poland, Czechoslovakia,
and
custom prevented the division of the land and favored sons over daughters. In those regions, as in Yugoslavia, it was assumed that a daughter Russia,
rights to the land, but lost them on her marriage when she left her family become part of another. From the earliest European centuries a peasant woman had access to the land in her own right, or as a wife. Over the centuries, however, she ex-
had to
perienced changes in the ways in which access to land was defined and in the
which her labors guaranteed subsistence to her and her family. Into women and men might share communal access as kin of a Germanic chieftain. They would labor with others, free and equal in status, raising ways
in
the 800s,
enough to feed themselves and their kin. By the tenth and eleventh centuries, they might have access as serfs, no longer equal but subject to the warriors who gave them protection. The right to use of their own plowed strips came in return for their goods and services, now owed to the warrior, the manor lord, who in turn held the land as vassal to a duke or a king. By the thirteenth century, the couple probably rented their land from that same manor lord, or they might have
come
to
own
the
fields
themselves.
Then
as tenants or
and services would be exchanged for money in the newly specialized, commercial economy that had come to characterize most of Europe. Worst of all they might have little or no direct ties to the land freeholders, their goods
and thus no control over the value of their labor or the goods they produced. In the earliest centuries, these were the slaves of the Germanic kingdoms. In the later eras, these were the landless day laborers, the poorest villagers, with the right to little more than the use of a hut, possessing only a few tools and bedclothes for themselves and their children. Of all the possible ways a woman might live in the ninth century, enslavement gave her the least; as a "bonds-woman" she was in effect removed from her family, with no protection, no ties.
The Greeks,
liberties,
the Hebrews, and the
only obligations and responsibili-
Romans had depended on
their slaves
— WOMEN
126
for
domestic and
field labor.
OF THE FIELDS
Germanic and Celtic peoples did the same. The
Celtic epic, Tain Bo, showed Irish queens and their kings offering
(never
men) and
cattle as tribute to a conqueror; a stallion. ^^
the equivalent of a
women
bondmaid was considered
Seventh- and eighth-century inventories of
Germany, France, and northern Italy list women and men along with the livestock. The Lombards in the eighth century gave slave women as offerings to the Church. Among the Franks they worked as field laborers, as domestic servants, as sexual partners for their owners. Some women and men of the eighth and ninth centuries put themselves into bondage in estates in
exchange
for protection.
More
often
among
the Franks and with other
Germanic groups, women were captured
in
from Viking
punishment
Danes
traders, bred, or enslaved as
the regular seasonal raids, bought for crimes.
Among
the
of the eleventh century, slavery was a traditional sentence for an
unchaste woman.
Only churchmen opposed
slavery
and
tried to mitigate
some of its worst woman. In the
aspects, especially the sexual vulnerability of the enslaved
decrees and canon laws of their church councils and in their books of pen-
They advanced marriage when had taken place and manumission when children had resulted from the union. Gradually the laws of the Germanic peoples came to reflect their conversion to Christianity and thus made some concessions
ance, they spoke against enslaving Christians. sexual intercourse
to enslaved
women. Lombard law
ceremony making symbolic of her
a
woman
new
are free to choose
of the seventh century described the
"folkfree":
status, she
Taken by the hand
would be
where you wish
told,
"From
to a crossroads as
these four roads you
to go."^^
In the long term, however, altered circumstances, not changes in religion,
ended enslavement. As long as slavery suited the economic and political needs and realities of the Roman, Germanic, and Celtic worlds, it flourished. In the uncertain conditions of the ninth and tenth centuries, when afl found themselves at the mercy of trained and mounted marauder bands of Arabs, Magyars, and Vikings, a household of slaves became a burden, rather than a sign of wealth and status. Landowners freed women and men, gave them use of the fields in return for seasonal work and a portion of their produce. At the same time free women and men gave up their rights to their fields to successful local warriors, allowing themselves "to be delivered into and consigned to [his] protection. "2 5 They too owed occasional labor and goods. Both groups former slaves and former free women and men came to be known as serfs. ^6 Only in Scandinavia, northern Germany, Celtic Ireland and Scotland did the ties of family and circumstances maintain the old freedoms and avoid the
—
institution of serfdom.
Wherever
it
occurred, the relationship between serf and lord lay some-
Sustaining the Generations
127
where between free and slave. A woman and a man had a claim to the land as if they were free, but they did not own the land and could not leave it. They had the warrior's protection (the lord's ''ban'') and the right to judg-
ment
in his court (held in his yard or great hall)
but were
listed
along with
the cattle in the inventories of his goods. In the tenth century the Holy
Roman Emperor Otto
II listed
serving
women and men
in his
wedding
gift,
morgengabe, to his new wife, Theophano. King Louis VII of France
his
in
the twelfth century exchanged his serf like a brood mare in his agreement
with the abbey at Chartres:
We
make known
we have granted to the church Renaud de Dambron, wife of Gilon Lemaire, mayor of Germignonville, who was ours in servile status, and we have given her to be owned in person and perpetually, with all the fruit of her womb. The abbot and the monks of the said church have given us in exchange to
present and future, that
all,
of the Holy Father at Chartres, Havissa daughter of
another
woman
of their familia.
Gradually, as the relationship
men were
^'^
became more
clearly defined,
women and
considered servile but nonetheless had increasing control over the
terms of their serfdom. ries,
their strips
son.
The
and
The
family was tied to the land, but over the centu-
their rights of access
became
heritable for a daughter or
landholder merely required a payment on accession, the chevage of
French manorialism centuries,
when
tion, those
in
the twelfth century. As early as the tenth and eleventh
families
with oxen, or
commended a
themselves to the warrior for protec-
plow, were able to specify what goods and services
they would give in return. Such specifications gradually became the custom on manors throughout Europe. By the twelfth century in central Germany, peasants heard such a document, the Weistum, read each year. In England in
the fourteenth century, the harvest bylaws recorded the duties and goods
the serfs
came
owed and the monetary
to legislate
on the
value assigned each one.
stances. State law of seventeenth-century
to the land
were
Denmark
between the ages of fourteen and
tied the
thirty-six,
changed circum-
woman and man
but after that they
free to leavers
In Eastern fears,
When governments
subject, they also allowed for the
Europe the same kinds of circumstances, the same needs and
occasioned the evolution of servile status but centuries later than
West. In the 1400s
in
Brandenburg
in eastern
Germany,
in
the
princes competing
for power favored the efforts of the nobility to control the peasantry. By the end of the fifteenth century, women and men had to find others to replace them should they leave the manor. As a result of the Thirty Years War, many others found themselves forced to accept servile status to survive. In the
sixteenth century, statutes in Poland and
Romania defined serfdom
as
having
— WOMEN
128
ties to
OF THE FIELDS
the land and gave protection to the landlord against complaints from
his serfs. In Russia
and Yugoslavia, serfdom developed around the special mir and the zadruga. Both bound the woman and
village institutions of the
the man, not as individuals, but as part of the family belonging to the
community.^^ Serfdom,
like slavery,
because of changes that rendered
obsolete.
it
died out in the countryside of Western Europe not
in attitude,
relationship to the land
then to freeholder and
From
but because of new economic circumstances the twelfth century on, women's and men's
and the landholder changed
its
first
opposite, the landless laborer.
to that of tenant,
These changes came
with the transformation of their world from relatively isolated agricultural
communities to
a diverse,
interdependent mercantile economy spanning
communities, regions, and kingdoms. of goods
and
services as the
means
Money
paid and earned took the place
of exchange
Specialization, not self-sufficiency,
and the reward of production.
became the
best use of labor and the
land.50 In these
owing
new circumstances women and men became tenants with leases, goods and services. From the twelfth century on, they no
rents, not
longer gave days for certain tasks, but paid the landlord to be excused from fields. Old money payments like the chevage of Burgundy and the taille of Maconnais became fixed taxes owed at set times of the year, not payments at the will of the landlord with their connotations of dependency or servility. As early as the thirteenth century in France and England landholders eager for money freed whole villages of obligations in return for what English peasants called "liberty pence." By the beginning of the fourteenth century, percentages of the harvest owed at Michaelmas had become money payments, rents, all across Western Europe.^ ^ Other circumstances accelerated the changes. Shortages of population from the Black Death of the fourteenth century, from the French religious wars of the sixteenth century, from the Thirty Years War of the seventeenth century caused the landlords to agree to leases and rents to attract peasants to their
the days of work in the
—
untilled lands.
The changes
in
production and the
solidation of holdings.
The
by the lord or by one of pasturage for
all
new circumstances
also favored con-
crosspatch of family strips evolved into fields held
his enterprising tenants.
Common lands turned
families into enclosed fields for one.
enterprising couples gained from these changes.
The
The women
of the
from
more
couples adept at market-
ing their produce or increasing the yield of their strips ceased to be tenants
and came to own land, as the fermiers of France, as the yeomen of England and the Bauern of the German countryside. These, however, were the minority. The others, the vast majority, the cottars of England, the metayers and
Sustaining the Generations
129
Germany and the mezzadri of northThough they still had access to land and were released from the most onerous services and rents, they owned too little and owed too much to be able to support a family from their fields. They ceased to be self-supporting tenants and became sharecroppers and day laborers, dependent once again on those who owned the land and controlled the manouvriers of France, the Holdner of ern Italy lost rights and status.
distribution of produce.
Gradually the same economic changes came to Eastern Europe, but with
women and men. There, increased specialand production had the effect of perpetuating not ending serfdom. For example in fifteenth- and sixteenth-century Hungary, the lords, not the peasants, first took advantage of the improvements in cultivation techniques and technology to increase yields. The landlords not the tenants marketed the resulting surpluses. Peasant women and men found their customary payments in kind and days of labor owed enforced with new vigor. As serfs they lost their rights to use the common lands and forest as their lords consolidated holdings and cleared new fields. All was done to increase production for the local and export markets that had evolved. All made survival for peasant women and their families more difficult. Serfdom and servile status came to different consequences for peasant ization
an end
in
Eastern Europe only by royal decree. In the eighteenth century,
Empress Maria Theresa on her own authority dues, and limited services. ^^ This polarization division of the rural population was already evident by the thirteenth century in Western Europe. In one English village the yeoman family had thirty acres, the cottar wife and her husband, five.^^ Economists estimate that by the beginning of the fourteenth century, 40 percent of Europe's peasants had been reduced to such small holdings that for instance, the Austrian
created tenants, set
maximum
—
—
they could not support their families. ^"^ In
New
Gastile in Spain in the last
quarter of the sixteenth century, 60 percent of the population had fallen to
the status of laborers,
The system in
northern
just to
some with no claim
of mezzadria
Italy.
to land at all.^^
had evolved by the
Couples held so
little
fifteenth century in
land that they
owed
Tuscany
half their harvest
pay for the use of the oxen and to buy new seed. Families could not
survive in such circumstances. In eighteenth-century Altopascio, just in one
decade (the 1740s) 20 percent of the families emigrated to the nearby towns. ^^ For those
left
who
the land altogether and
stayed,
from the renters of
small holdings to the poorest and most vulnerable with no access to land at all,
the traditional ways of
across
life
did not provide enough. Peasant families
earning this
money
fell
to their other tasks.
to the
all
The
responsibility for
women. Peasant wives added
this responsibility
Europe needed additional income to
survive.
WOMEN
130
OF THE FIELDS
Additional Income In the seventeenth century, the French aristocrat,
Mme.
de Sevigne, was
charmed and excited by the sight of the peasants on her country estate coming in with bags of small coins to pay their rent, 30 francs all in sous.^'^ What she found so picturesque meant laborious accumulation of the money sou by sou by her tenants.
To
raise
sum took
such a
energy and enterprise. In the 1670s
in
all
of a peasant couple's
the French villages of Goincourt,
Esparbourg, and Coudry St.-Germer, three quarters of the families held
than two hectares of land (about
Mme.
landholders like
meet
their obligations
income. ple,
A
five acres).
their
for rent,
rent that
de Sevigne took the proceeds of
and
to survive, peasants
had
had
to
less
be paid to
1.5 hectares.^^
To
to find other sources of
contemporary's description of an eighteenth-century French cou-
Marguerite and Covin, explains
from
The
how
they managed.
two hectares and the wine from
and
all
other cash payments,
They kept the wheat The money
their small vineyard.
came almost completely from Marguer-
—
and vegetables all and the garden she tended. She spun, and both she and her husband wove, "piece work" probably, arranged by an itinerant merchant from a nearby town. This was the solution shown from the earliest manorial records: Peasant women more often than men earned the extra money to ensure the survival of the family as the new commercial economy evolved. Women worked in ite's efforts.
She
sold eggs, milk, butter, cheese, wool,
produced from the livestock she cared
the
fields,
performed services
what they could of their
own
raise or
in
for the wealthier
make
—
tasks peasant
members
of the village, sold
women knew from
households, from the old manorial obligations,
others as paid labor.
working
for
the
from the
money came from women's wages
sale of the
farm animals they raised and the
produce they grew. Katherine Rolf, employed by the nuns of in
Cambridge, England,
for
extra
Most commonly,
fields,
the work
now done
in the year
St.
Radegund's
1449-1450, earned 4.5 pence
for four
days weeding and 18 pence for twelve days of thatching with the male
The next year she sold chickens to the nuns, helped the candlemakcombed and cleaned wool, in addition to the field work of threshing and
laborers. ers,
winnowing the
grain. ^"^
As
a
day laborer she was probably given a midday
meal along with her pence. century, women and young girls moved with the needs and harvesting, traveling to pick fruit, to glean in the mown At the beginning of the twentieth century in northern Italy around
By the eighteenth of the planting fields.
women came from the surrounding areas to weed the May to the beginning of July.'^o In 1961 in Vasilika, and women from the neighboring villages came to help with the
Pavia almost 40,000 rice paddies
Greece,
girls
from
late
Sustaining the Generations
cotton crop, hoeing and mulching
had
In the old days they
131
the spring, picking in the late summer.
in
lived with the family for the time they worked, but
by the 1960s they could be brought and taken home tractors. That had changed, but nothing else had. Teresa village of
wish
I
we
you count what
I
bet
if
I've
had
a pig
in the last ten years
could
Some
ever say Paolino didn't get on because he had a lazy wife!
could add.
and those years
more
the trucks and the south Italian
Torregreca was proud of the ways she coped:
Nobody can I
in in
and
all
my
I've got off the
hired work, why,
than Paolino has, that
is,
days
land and the chickens I
bet I've brought in
money we could spend
or food
come from
hiring
eat."*^
Extra sous for a peasant woman's family could always
duties for the landlord, for the richer tenants
women performed household and freeholders. The Countess
of Leicester's household accounts for 1265
list
out for tasks other than
alewife
who came
in
field
work. Peasant
and brewed
the five shillings paid the
noble family and
ale for the
In the fourteenth century Jehanneton, a farmer's wife,
its
worked
retainers. ^^
milkmaid
as
on the country lands of the Menagier of Paris. She would have supervised everything from the care of the cows to the making of butter and cheese. Four women worked for the sixteenth-century Bedford landowner, John Gostwick, as laundress, waitress,
pence the
manor
Widow
and dairymaids. In seventeenth-century Sussex,
of Herstmonceux."*^
Daughters commonly went to work the richer families.
man
for 6
Lewis gathered herbs and attended the sick wife of the
vicar, sent his
Even Ralph
in
the households of relatives or of
Josselin, the
seventeenth-century Essex yeo-
daughters out to service, Jane at ten and
Anne at
fourteen.
In eighteenth-century France anywhere from 2 to 12 percent of the rural
population (depending on the region) worked as servants."*^ As early as the sixteenth century in England, as a result of the Statute of Apprentices, the
constable (the local government
organized a
official)
Mop
Fair,
where the
young gathered and waited to be chosen for work. In the nineteenth century, sisters and brothers stood in the marketplace on the Saturdays of Whitsuntide and Martinmas hoping to be hired with the wages set for six months. Whatever the task, wherever the place, whatever the century, when it came to her wages, a woman earned one third to one half less than a boy or man. The Englishman, Walter of Henley, in his twelfth-century manual of husbandry, gave the traditional justification used into the modern era. He called women "half men" because he reasoned that they worked more slowly at jobs considered less valuable.
a female's job.
The
He
paid
1
pence
for three acres of
early fourteenth-century southern
the weeder one eighth the wage of the male
who
weeding,
French monastery paid
mowed.'^' Only a catastro-
WOMEN
132
OF THE FIELDS
phe as extreme as the Black Death occasioned more equal wages for English and French peasant women. In the plague years the female grape pickers of Languedoc made four fifths the wage of the men, when usually they received only half as much."^^ The intervention of parliaments and kings in England affirmed these inequities; the 1 563 Statute of Artificers set the women's wages at one third to one half of the men's, though they worked the fields the same
number
of hours, at jobs just as arduous.'^'^
As household
servants,
women
no
fared
for the
Countess of Leicester
and
female labor, was the worst paid of
as
century
all
only £1.^^
Worst
work, such as the
thirteenth century, tasks:
better. Petronella, the laundress
the thirteenth century, earned all
the household
1
oflF
Fells'
still
of
flax,
The male
seventeenth counterpart,
throughout the centuries was the maid of
Peggy Dodgson, who,
made
laundering, beating
all
pence a day,
staff ."^^
who worked for Margaret Fell of Swarthmore in the made up to £4 a year while Ann Standish, his female
servant
made
in
only
1
to 2
like
her counterpart in the
pence a day
for a
whole range of
spinning, knitting, and work outside at carting
and spreading manure, weeding, collecting peat.^^ When peasant women were not working their own fields or someone else's, tending their own or someone else's household, they found yet other sources of income, especially in the cold, dark times of winter when there was little outdoor work to be done. Usually countrywomen did "piece work," especially that associated with the manufacture of cloth, the earliest of Europe's specialized, commercial enterprises. In the ninth century, peasant women produced everything from the thread to the finished cloth and article of clothing or bedding for their families or for the landlord in his workrooms. With specialization and the expansion of fairs and markets, the landholder ceased to require the female tenants' skills, and even for peasant women's own needs
many
tasks passed out of their hands.
From
the middle of the eleventh
century, male dyers and fullers finished the cloth.
By the
early fourteenth
century in the southern French village of Montaillou, the weaver was a
and the
tailor
man
an itinerant craftsman.
In these changed circumstances, weaving ceased to be a household task
except for the family's simplest needs and became, instead, a way to earn
income.
Women
heads of households on the Medici lands of eighteenth-
century Altopascio
in
northern Italy spun and wove to supplement their
income. At the beginning of the twentieth century ployed
Gna Tidda
ported herself this
in Sicily, a
mother em-
make her daughter's trousseau. The old widow supway and worked the three pairs of bedspreads on her
to
fifty-year-old loom.^i
Into the eighteenth century, spinning, not weaving, would be the favored task for
most women; with
a spindle
and
distaff
they could work at any time.
133
Sustaining the Generations
sitting
by the
fire
or walking the
cows to pasture. From the thirteenth century
on, they might have a spinning wheel, and with
its
capacity to spin the thread
and wind it on the spindle at the same time, women could work much faster, and fill more spindles in many fewer hours. A single woman might do nothing else. At the end of the 1600s a Picardy spinner could earn 5 sous a day.'^ In the eighteenth century, Swiss peasant families with
little
land valued their
"spinster" daughters over their sons, for they could earn more.^^
When
spinning became mechanized and work for townswomen, peasant
wives, mothers,
and widows already had other ways of making cloth that they
adapted to supplement the family's needs. Sometime in the fourteenth century, a peasant woman invented knitting, weaving the yarn on wooden needles instead of
on
a loom.
A late fourteenth-century German altar panel shows
the Virgin knitting a sweater for Jesus. She has worked the wool on four needles and Italian
and
from other Knitting rise of
just finishing
is
women
Sicilian tasks,
the neck. Into the nineteenth century southern
knitted as they had once spun, while going to and
and they used the needles
to
became piecework and another source
make
holes for the macaroni.
of income, especially with the
the professional armies. In the mid-eighteenth century a Danish retired
soldier's wife
supported them both with her spinning and knitting. By the
sixteenth century in northern Italy, Belgium, and parts of France, lace making
and straw
plaiting (for hats) developed as regional specialties.
Normandy, Valenciennes, and Malines intricate
in
Women
France sold white cotton lace
combination of knotting, weaving and knitting
—
in
—an
that, like spinning,
could be done in the midst of other chores. In seventeenth-century England,
an estimated 100,000 with this
made from
women and
a piece of cloth to efforts
girls
earned extra
money
for their families
Into the twentieth century, Sicilian peasant
lace in the traditional
by such skills
craft. 54
peasant
manner and
also sfilato
women
still
— removing the threads
produce intricate patterns. Into the twentieth century women used their energy, their ingenuity, and their
to ensure the family's survival.
Impossible Choices Life on the subsistence level of famine, war,
A
and
peasant couple
meant
disease, with disaster
made
a life always vulnerable to the forces
coming at
least
once
in a generation.
order out of this potential uncertainty and chaos not
only by altering their legal status, but also by working however and whenever
they could. Together they worked for survival. Together wife and husband,
mother and
father, they
planned
for the continuation of the family
provision for their daughters and sons survival of this
and
a
new
when they reached
generation, peasant
maturity.
women and men
and
To ensure
kept both the
WOMEN
134
definition
and the
centuries.
A woman
OF THE FIELDS
size of their family relatively constant
lived
first
as a child
marriage, as a wife and mother in a
and
sons.
ily,"
throughout the
with her parents, then by her
new household with her own daughters
This pattern of two generations living together, the "nuclear fam-
existed throughout Europe. It has
been documented
in ninth-century
Prankish lands, the manorial settlements of tenth-century Provence and
around
Castile, thirteenth-century Picardy, the north Italian countryside
fifteenth-century
Arezzo,
seventeenth-century
genhoe, Clayworth, and Chilvers, land. Exceptional circumstances
in
English
eighteenth-century
villages
Co-
like
Germany and
might enlarge the family
for a time.
Po-
For
example, in fifteenth-century Tuscany, fathers-in-law remained on as the capo di famiglia, retaining authority over the fields even after sons
brought their wives home.^^
A
In eighteenth-century Austria
had married and
brother-in-law might stay and work the land.
and other parts of central Europe,
household might pass through several phases,
a
woman's
with infants, parents, and
first
grandparents together, then deaths of the old people, then births to her
own
children.
two generations of the nuclear family remained women clothed, fed, and cared for averaged four to six members, parents and their offspring. Historians long held the idea that peasant women and men had lived many generations But
overall, the pattern of
unchanged. The family that peasant
together, as an "extended family" of aunts, uncles, grandparents, parents,
children and so on. In fact, studies of communities have erational families in parts of Russia
and the zadruga of
shown
that multigen-
Serbia, having
up
to
eighty people living together as one household, are the only significant variations
from Europe's nuclear family pattern. In the
households could not be accommodated
in the
early centuries such large
West;
it
was only
in the
relatively prosperous twentieth century that rural families, like those studied in
the Netherlands and England,
came to live with more than two generations
together (20-35 percent of the households). ^6
A
family of four to
more than
six
people meant that the peasant couple had done
establish a separate
themselves and their children.
household to guarantee the quality of
They had
when to marry, when and how often many infants would survive. Always numbers
also
made
life for
conscious choices about
the wife would conceive, and about at risk, always practical, they
how
wanted to
and their labors would have to support. and disease, of famine and extremes of weather affected a woman's reproductive capacity. Demographers estimate that a peasant woman would lose one in three of her pregnancies from control the
Natural factors
—
their land
—times
of shortage
malnutrition or disease, in most instances. ^^ Yet even with such natural factors,
Europe's preindustrial population should have grown, and
it
did not.
— 135
Sustaining the Generations
Until the industrial age the statistics show a population in balance, with a relatively equal ratio of births to deaths,
twice
— from the eleventh
3 percent. '8
approximately
to the thirteenth centuries
and again
in
Only
the eigh-
— there sustained and, the second by peasant women and men —by not marrying, by marrying and thus the venting conception —determined the teenth and nineteenth centuries
in
is
in-
stance, dramatic growth. Evidence from as early as the ninth century shows pre-
late,
that
lack
size of their families
of population growth
all
over Europe.
From the 800s to the 1900s peasants allowed their families to grow only when conditions improved. When conditions worsened family size, either
On
disaster, contracted.
from choice or natural
the ninth-century manses
(peasant holdings) of St.-Germain-des-Pres, for instance, where there was land, or status improved, there were more in the household. Similarly, from the eleventh to the thirteenth century with the end of slavery and the relative equality of status in English and French villages, better food and more
more
land, families
had more
children. In Pistoia in
Tuscany
in
catasto of 1427 (a census for tax purposes) shows that the
northern
number
Italy
the
of children
born increased with the richness of the land the family held and the amount the land was taxed. A poor woman and man living in the middle hills typically
had one child. The householder and his wife in the more prosperous mountains and on the plains would have three or four.^^ Unusually high mortality rates encouraged the birth of more children as well. After the Black Death had decimated these same villages in the fourteenth century, the birth rate rose as
The same happened
War
in
if
in
response to the excess mortality.^o
seventeenth-century
took almost half the population. In
less
Germany when
the Thirty Years
than a century the numbers had
been restored to the countryside. ^^ More income also meant larger families. Statistics for 1693-94 in three French villages of the Beauvaisis region show correlations between high wheat prices and the number of marriages and
more opportunities for and thus more income showed greater population growth than the towns supplying the work.^^ Then in the eighteenth and nineteenth
conceptions. In the seventeenth century, areas with
home
industries
—
relative peace, centuries with all of the circumstances favoring survival higher yields from improvements in cultivation practices, better distribution
of food, extra wages
from specialized trade and
industrial
manufacture
couples allowed the size of their families to increase. ^^
The
characteristic pattern that normally results in continuous population
growth has
women
marrying
in their early
twenties and bearing five to seven
children at two and a half year intervals over a period of twenty years of fertility. ^'^ This did not happen in Europe before the eighteenth century. Couples intervened to prevent the normal increase, a phenomenon known as
^
WOMEN
136
frustrated fertility.
The account
of the interchange
between
of police suggests
how
OF THE FIELDS in a
a striking
1901 newspaper from Lomellina,
Italy,
female rice weeder and the commander
couples intervened. She justified the strike for extra
wages because they were not children. His response to her
but to pay debts and to feed her
for herself
and
all
the
women was
"that they should not
have married and should not have had children. "^^ j^ fa^t what the police
commander ant
suggested so patronizingly had been the stratagem used by peas-
women and men from
not marry, or they married fertility.
As
Once
before recorded history. In hard times they did thus curtailing the period of the woman's
later,
married, they limited the
early as the ninth century,
number
German
of their offspring.
records of manses
show only 28.6
percent of the population married; in northern France at St.-Germain-des-
Remi
Pres, 43.9 percent; at St.
allowed brothers and
sisters to
of Reims, 33.4 percent. ^^ Families often
remain within the household,
as they did in
fifteenth-century Languedoc, but on the condition that they did not marry,
number the land had to support and preventing division new families. ^'^ When in the late sixteenth century statistics of peasant couples' lives are available, they clearly show
thus controlling the
of the strips to establish
more exact
the effect of delaying marriage. In the English village of Colyton, from the sixteenth to the nineteenth century, the shift from twenty-seven as a
age at her
then back
first
marriage
down
in
1
woman's
560 to almost thirty between 1647 and 1719, and
to twenty-five
by 1837, exactly coincides with periods of
The same happened in a Tuscan village from 1650 to 1750 when the marriage age rose from 21.5 to 26.1.^^ Irish
population decline and growth. ^^
families at the end of the nineteenth century continued to make such choices. Only one girl and one boy could marry and then the girl had become a woman of thirty, her husband thirty-eight. '^^
Once
married, with land, having established the
new household,
the
couple did not leave the size of the family, the number of offspring, to chance.
As best they could, they controlled the intervals between and the frequency of the woman's pregnancies. Records of French and English villages in the sixteenth and seventeenth century indicate a correlation between good times and the frequency of births, bad times and a decline. In the seventeenth and eighteenth century, the villages of the Basse-Meuse region show net population losses and the key factor appears to be longer intervals between births."^ In the same centuries in Tourovre-au-Perche the relative wealth of the family affected the couples' decisions. The yeomen, craftsmen, and merchants' wives gave birth every two years, the laborers' wives waited another four months. '^2
Women when
and men prevented conception through sexual abstinence and,
they had intercourse, by withdrawal {coitus interruptus, removing the
137
Sustaining the Generations
penis and ejaculating outside the vagina). Like Giles Barnes of Cricket St.
Thomas
in
Somerset
to restrict fertility.
seventeenth century, the
in the
He
married the
woman he made
man might be
the one
pregnant, but after that
he explained to the Church court, "he spent about the outward part of He wanted no more children and threatened to "slit the gut out of her belly" if she conceived. "^^ Peasant women had their own ways of avoiding conception and, once pregnant, of aborting the fetus. They believed in douches and purges, spermicides like salt, honey, oil, tar, lead, mint juice,
as
her body."
cabbage seed; some abortificants
With enough
ous.
and ergot were
like lead
lead ingested, a
effective but danger-
woman became permanently sterile. Other
substances might purge her system but would not directly affect the preg-
nancy, such as douches or teas of rosemary, myrtle, coriander, willow leaves, balsam, myrrh, clover seeds, parsley, and animal urine.
More
effective
would
be the cervical caps and vaginal blocks mentioned in German and Hungarian sources, like beeswax or a linen rag. Peasant women believed actions prevented conception: drinking cold liquids, remaining passive during intercourse, holding one's breath,
jumping up and down afterward. "^"^ testify to the choices they made. Twen-
Individual women's experiences tieth-century peasant cies.
women
speak matter of factly of limiting their pregnan-
Vuka explained that she had always hated her stone when he gets on me." After the death of her
In Serbia in the 1930s
husband.
He
daughter
just five
was
"like a
days old, she vowed not to have any more children:
I
get rid of them.
I
massage myself.
Twice I
get
In a Bosnian village the
now
a year these seven years
away.
it
I
women
boil herbs
.
.
.
How? Oh by
myself.
comes
away.'^'
and steam myself and
it
spoke of drinking vinegar, of opening the
cervix with a spindle. '^^ Peppina, a twentieth-century peasant
southern sions.
Italy,
When
became pregnant twelve
her husband was away, she
their clothes,
and went
to
town
times.
left
Then
she
woman from
made
other deci-
food for the children, laundered
to abort the fetus.
She came home, spent
three days in bed, and then went back to work.
The
Catholic Church approved sexual abstinence, even setting aside holy To do anything else, Peppina and the
days as inappropriate for intercourse.
women
before her, whether Catholic or Protestant, went against
teachings.
As
official
early as the ninth century. Christian theologians in their peni-
tentials, their decretals, their
commentaries, their papal decrees and encycli-
taught that by intervening in the process of insemination and pregnancy a woman acted as a murderess. Abortion was the first act to receive such harsh condemnation. Using Aristotle's distinction of the animate and inanimate, cals
1140 made
infanticide to abort a fetus after
Gratian
in his Decretals of
sixty-six
days for a female and forty days for a male
it
— the periods
of time
WOMEN
138 Aristotle believed
it
OF THE FIELDS
took to create a
formed infant
fully
in
the
womb.
In the
enthusiasm for uniformity and purity of the Counter Reformation, Pope Sixtus
V in
1
588 declared
by Innocent XI and
all
abortions murder, a definition reaffirmed in 1679
1869 by Pius IX.
in
Christian theologians had always insisted that intercourse without hope of procreation was sinful, First, Saint
illicit,
an act of
lust,
not an act for God's purpose.
Thomas Aquinas condemned
Augustine, then Gratian, then
withdrawal. As early as the sixteenth century
some Catholic theologians
acknowledged the need of the poor to limit the number of but nothing changed Pius
XI
in
in
their offspring,
the Church's policies. In the twentieth century. Pope
1930 was but one of the leaders to condemn any form of contracep-
tion. Until the
twentieth century, the views of the Protestant Churches were
the same as the
official
Catholic doctrine (now most sects of Christianity
leave limitation of births to individuals to decide).
When
had yet another way to limit the number and the land would have to support. Studies of ninth-century manorial rolls at St. Germain-des-Pres, of fifteenth-century Canterbury Church courts, of seventeenth-century Somerset parish records, and interviews with women of twentieth-century Bosnian zadrugas all show the same choice. Let the child be born and then let it die. In particular, let it die if all
else failed, couples
of people they
it
female.
is
The
"^"^
evidence for this selective infanticide comes from the astonishingly
disproportionate ratios of females to males living in the countryside
Europe from the ninth
to the seventeenth century.
females to males at birth
is
all
over
average ratio of
100:105 with the numbers evening out in adoles-
cence and early adulthood, and the old age.
The
women
achieving the higher numbers in
On the rich fertile lands of St. Germain-des Pres in the ninth century,
an area of intense demographic pressure, the 100:115.7-117.1.
The
ratio of females to
males was
poorer the family the more exaggerated the
ratio."^^
Fourteenth-century English manorial records show ratios of 100 females to 133 males. '^^ For the year 1391-92 a
list
of the serfs
on the southern English
lands of John of Hastings shows forty-six females to seventy-eight males. ^°
Studies of infant mortality in Somerset in the seventeenth century even suggest the consequences to the next generation:
females born would
live to
bear her
own
Only one
of the three
children, yet another effective
way
of curtailing population growth. ^^ In contrast, during the relative prosperity of the thirteenth century,
women and men could provide for more children, and the population grew accordingly. Significantly, the ratio of females to males then became peasant
roughly equal. Expansion
came because more
could grow to adulthood and bear their
own
of the
little girls
children. ^^
j^,
survived,
more
fact survival of
Sustaining the Generations
more
much
infant females probably explains
of the population expansion of
the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, for
number
that increased, but the in
of children
the late nineteenth century, couples
139
it
was not the number of births
who
survived. In
commonly had
most of Europe
four to five surviving
children. ^^
Secular and religious records controlled the ratio of
custom might simply mean ninth-century manse of
weaned
after
one
year,
St.
tell
women and men
of other ways peasant
boys and the size of their family. Accepted
girls to
less care.
For example, the
little girls
on the
Victor of Marseille would die because they were
making them more susceptible
to disease, while their
brothers nursed until they were two.^"^ Fifteenth- and sixteenth-century court cases
of mothers
tell
and fathers prosecuted
the Essex Quarter Sessions of
and desperate about how
One
women
Violence
Church
like this
records
tell
is
it
of "overlaying," a silent
For the unmarried servant birth of an illegitimate child, Its
in a field,
rare in the records, however.
daughter "lying [dead] between them
communities.
At
woman
in
fell
the third left
it
More commonly
and perhaps unintentional
asleep and
woke
to find their
bed."^^
with no prospect of a betrothal, the
whether female or male, meant disgrace
in
most
death meant that she could continue to work and
that the
shame
woman,
the death of her infant might also have indirect benefits.
of her
infants.
(probably unmarried
to deal with an illegitimate child) killed their babies.
death. Joan and Stephen Tiler of Rochester
village
murdering their
for
570 three servant
the infant's throat, another abandoned
slit
in a ditch.
the
1
pregnancy might be forgotten. For
a married peasant If
she could
maintain her breast milk, she had another source of income; she could
become
wet nurse. Into the seventeenth century, the wealthier families of
a
the manors and the towns employed countrywomen to breast-feed their babies. In the fourteenth century the merchant's wife, Margherita Datini of
Prato, periodically found
She suggested
1
wet nurses
for the wives of her
2 florin a year for the wages,
husband's friends.
about the same
as for
any female
servant. ^^
She her
listed the qualifications in
own
child,
breasts so that she
pregnant
easily,
her
no matter how much
and
The wet
nurse must not favor
cried, should
have moderate-sized
letters: it
flatten the child's nose,
must not become
ideally should look like the biological
mother. In August
would not
one in Pizza della Pieve, whose milk is two months old; and she has vowed that if her babe, which is on the point of death, dies tomorrow, she will come, as soon as it is buried."^''' Still in the 1960s when Peppina from a south Italian village had breast milk, she went to Rome to be a wet nurse. Instead of the wet nurse joining the household, babies might be sent to of 1398, Margherita Datini wrote: "I have found
WOMEN
140
OF THE FIELDS
the country. At the beginning of the fifteenth century, the Florentine mer-
chant Antonio Rustichi noted
in his diary that
he had sent successive children
out to the wife of a farmer, then to the wife of a baker. Increasingly this
became the practice, especially in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries when town and Church authorities took over the care of abandoned children. The older children stayed in the foundling homes in the town, infants went to foster homes in the countryside. No one questioned the high mortality of in the summer months of the nineteenth century as high children at nurse
—
The wet nurse could not breast-feed all the abandoned money paid would not feed them, and so they died. Even the infants whose parents were known might be expected to die. French
as
75 percent. ^^
children in her care; the
artisans sent their babies to
them
—not
wet nurses and then simply stopped paying
necessarily out of callousness but simply a harsh choice: the death
one to preserve the lives of the older siblings. In such circumstances the home and the foster home (also called the "baby-farm") made the impossible easier, the infant's death more distant and thus less painful. ^^
of
foundling
Survival Outside the Family
The rural
circumstances that particularly tried the ingenuity and strength of
women came when
then became a widow
woman
or an old
countryside had years, she
they outlived their husbands.
—perhaps
with few,
if
many widows,
tended to
live
a
The
peasant
woman
young woman alone with small children
members
any, family for
if
longer than
to help her. Europe's
woman survived her the men in her village. a
child-bearing In fifteenth-
century Tuscany in the villages around Arezzo a disproportionate 6 percent of the population were widows. in a
From 1574
to 1821, 22 percent
were widows
group of English parishes studied by demographers. "'^
The
Red Riding Hood's grandmother what English peasants called "the hue and cry" of the village, too far for her screams to be heard when the wolf attacked her. John Langland in his poem of peasant life Piers the Ploughman compared the folktales portray her vulnerability.
lived alone outside
widow
to Jesus, forsaken
by God.
woman at the time of her betrothal
In theory the dower negotiated for the
was meant to sustain her and any young children should she be widowed early. The various local practices followed the Germanic customs of the earlier centuries closely.
A widow
had access
to a portion of her husband's lands
during her lifetime or until her remarriage
would take on
—when —and
in
responsibility for her provision
theory the
new husband
a portion of the movables,
the furniture, bedding, whatever articles of the household the couple had. In
England
in Kent, in
Normandy, France,
in the
Austrian Heidenreich she
— Sustaining the Generations
141
inherited one third to one half of the land and the household movables.
A
1919 Russian statute guaranteed her one seventh of the movables.^ ^ Cus-
meant
tomarily, her holding of the land was
male could assume the
to
be temporary,
until
responsibility, usually her eldest son. In
another
Warbleton,
widows to "hold bondage as their bench [right] until the younger son is fifteen and then widows ought to surrender to the younger son, as heir,
Sussex, in southern England, in 1322 the custom was for
tenements years old,
in
a moiety [half] of the inheritance.
And
they will hold the other moiety as their
bench
.'"^^
Into the twentieth century in
they remain widows.
if
.
.
Clare, Ireland, a mother held the land until the heir
on what
widow might do with the land
a
in particular the desire to assure that,
dead husband would not lose their
came
reflected concern for the
rights.
For example,
to her.^^ In seventeenth-century Berkshire a if
named
it
bequeath
A
it
heir,
woman
in the lease,
a Russian charter of
was
specifically willed
free tenant
might hold
but the preferred heir would
be named, giving her no right to alienate the property
also
male
should she remarry, the children of the
Pskov took the land from her on remarriage unless land on her remarriage
County
of age. Restrictions
—
that
is,
sell
or
to another.
death duty, called the heriot
widow's obligations as
heir,
owed
in
England, would be
just
the
first
of the
in return for access to the land that she
and
her husband had worked together. Customarily the landlord took the family's best beast.
the way of
When Thomas of Merdens in Halton, Buckinghamshire, "entered all
flesh" in 1303, the lord claimed his
had been too poor
to
have livestock,
two
oxen.^"* If the couple
in thirteenth-century
England or
in
widow owed one third to one half of their even tunics. The Church also claimed a "mortu-
fourteenth-century Flanders, the
movable goods:
pots, chests,
ary gift" in theory to
make up
Priests in sixteenth-century
for tithes not paid in the
France refused burial
husband's lifetime.
until they
had received the
"best blanket."95
More
significant,
throughout the in
year.
however, would be the regular tasks and payments owed
For the year
1
266-67 Matilda on the manor of Clifford
Gloucester had the right to hold the family's twenty-four acres, but as
widow she alone owed hired a
man
through the
all
— —with the mowing
to help her with the days of plowing
fall,
winter,
a
the services, goods, and payments. She probably
and spring
half an acre a
week and
of the lord's fields
the carting of the lord's produce. She herself had done the two days of
weeding and the days of
lifting
presented herself for the days
hay onto the wooden
carts,
and perhaps even
— three each week between June and August
She owed almost 1 1 shillings at different times of the a day of "manual service" was valued at only 3 half pence. This money she would have to raise from her fields, from her labors.
of unspecified labor.
year
— 122 pence when
WOMEN
142
OF THE FIELDS
Of her produce, the lord claimed "eggs at Easter at will."^^ To earn extra money Matilda brewed ale. The widows of fourteenth-century Montaillou in France sold cheese, ran the inn, and sold at the fairs. The necessity continued into the twentieth century.
The
manors were skeptical of the widow's ability to fulfill the went with the strips of field she held in trust for a male. In Ashton, Wiltshire, in 1262 she had to pay sureties of 18 and 20 shillings to Landlords preferred a widow guarantee that she would uphold her duties. to marry, to acquire in its literal sense "a husband who can maintain the lords of the
obligations that
"^"^
land."^^ Sixteenth-century Danish
widows
bailiffs in
them
to remarry, excusing
Funen and Jutland
tried to force
of the inheritance payment, the "relief"
owed to renew the lease, on the theory that the new husband could pay it. (Though landlords wanted widows to marry, in England they punished those who did so without their permission. In Mapledurham, Hampshire, in 1281 Lucy, widow to Walter le Hurt, lost the claim to her land for "fornication" and marriage "without licence of lord."^^ Others paid
fines into
the mid-
seventeenth century.)
As soon
as there are records in
England,
ried
much
less
France, in Spain, from the
in
show
sixteenth to the twentieth centuries, they
that peasant
often than their male counterparts.
women
remar-
They might remain unwed,
but that did not mean that they always chose to cope with the responsibilities if their children and grandchildren had come of age. "Agnes ate Touresheade" at Hindringham in Norfolk in 1310 "came into full court and said that she was powerless to hold one messuage and one yardland after the death of said Stephen [her husband]." She of servile conditions assigned the land to a granddaughter and her new husband on the under-
of the land, especially
.
.
.
standing that they would provide for her during her lifetime. ^^^ In 1320 in the court
rolls
of
Dunmow, Essex,
Petronilla's son
John pledged that he would
provide during her lifetime reasonable victuals, in food and drink, as befit such a
woman, and more over
Petronilla will have a room, with a wardrobe, at the Eastern to dwell therein during
.
.
.
[her] lifetime,
end of
and one cow, four sheep, and
going and feeding on said half-yardland as well in winter as
said
said messuage,
summer
a pig,
... for her
clothing and footwear. ^°^
Local custom might guarantee her care in return for giving over her rights to the family fields. In
Haute Provence,
traditionally the land
went
to the
children but the house to the mother, thus ensuring inheritance for the offspring, service widow. ^02
A
for
the landlord, and subsistence and shelter for the
peasant woman's husband before his death might have
made
arrange-
Sustaining the Generations
143
ments with the children. In sixteenth-century England Wilham Brasier left the house to his son but on the condition that his widow have "free bench" (literally the right to a bench before the fire) and food, or £3 a year so that she could live separately. ^^^
To be in
the care of one's children and grandchil-
dren might also mean hardship, the neglect and humiliations of old age.
Widows
northern Tuscany
in
sons, but
became
in
the fifteenth century usually lived with their
and
subject to the heir
his wife.
The
region reflect their reduced status, the assessor listed
tax records for the
them
after the chil-
dren. ^^"^ In nineteenth-
and twentieth-century Yugoslavia, even though the
communal
zagruda guaranteed a widow a place,
living of the
as she
became
older and older she lost her authority as female head of the household.
women
Peasant
without family, without access to enough land, perhaps
too old for extra labor, had few alternatives to choose from in order to survive.
A woman
alone might be a widow, a wife abandoned by her husband in bad
times, a female
member
Denmark, the majority
of the wandering poor. In seventeenth-century
of the indigent in villages were
widows with
children.
member of the village community was the beggar woman, her eyesight gone at fifty, her fingers too stiff to make lace. In eighteenth-century France a regular
Until the late sixteenth century landlords and the
Church provided some care in Brunswick and Bremen
for
such people. In 1315 and 1316 the Cistercians
in
northern
harvest. 1^5
Germany
A
are said to have fed 4,000 a day from Lent to the
harvest code of 1329 for England gave old
"glean," the right to gather whatever they could in the
the animals were released to graze on the stubble.
women
mown
the right to fields
before
A landlord's wife appointed
an almoner, a member of her household whose job it was to distribute alms and the scraps from the table each day. The Countess of Bedford in the seventeenth century had an almoner who gave shillings to a "poor mad woman," and a "poor distracted woman." ^^^ On the whole, by the end of the 1 500s local and royal governments had taken over what charity there was from individuals and religious orders. The English Poor Laws required the poor to petition the quarter sessions. In the seventeenth century this might be more than a woman could manage. The parish records list "a poor walking woman" and "a poor woman name unknown, who had crept into Mr. Miller's barn." Both died of starvation. ^^'^ The eighteenth-century records for the bureaux de charites of France give sums to feed a child and an adult woman, but there was not enough to provide for them all. In the village of Mende the records show 1 ,000 poor but sufficient funds to give only 100 of them one
meal twice
What or a thief. selves. In
a
week.^^^
other recourse did
They could Somerset
women
have?
They could become
a prostitute
turn to violence against those better off than them-
in the
seventeenth century a peasant
woman
could
sell
WOMEN
144
OF THE FIELDS
the use of her body for 50 faggots of wood, 6 pence, a 9 shilling coverlet and half a bushel of wheat, but she then risked being brought before the local
court for "fornication. "^^^ Peasant
women
could infringe on the rights of the
landlord and steal goods from their neighbors. These crimes brought to the courtyard of the lord's chateau or castle because they
them
had broken the
rules of the manor. The accounts of peasant women's violations increase in bad times, and increase as the lords expanded their privileges into the common lands and the forest. In Tooting, Surrey, in 1246 two widows were fined 6 pence each for encroaching on the lord's land. The next year Lucy Rede let her cattle stray into the lord's pasture. At Ruislip in the same year Isabella, a
widow, had to pay the 18 pence
woods
—probably
Weldon and the
manor
fine
when
Agnes
her three children stole eight sheaves of grain at the harvest.
of Wakefield during the famine of 1315-1317, a
prosecuted for stealing from her neighbor's
accused
her son went into the lord's
to collect fuel.^^^ In fifteenth-century England,
woman
in a
toft, or
of
On
woman was One
household garden. ^ ^ ^
seventeenth-century Somerset court milked a cow, an-
other took a loaf of bread.
The
royal courts of these early centuries heard accusations not
manorial crimes but for crimes against the King's peace,
when
for
peasant
—
women acted not alone but with a man a husband, a father, a lover or sons. The women watched the roadside while the men robbed; the women stopped travelers
women
on a bridge; they sold the stolen goods. In the eighteenth century bands of their own. In Brittany, Marion de Faouet and her
led
children robbed travelers on the highway. Marie Jeanne Bonnichon worked
the region near Bourges, luring merchants into ambush. Consistently, how-
women chose crime less often than their male counterparts. Sometimes peasant women became desperate and enraged. They joined in the rioting and mob violence of the countryside. Women marched into London with John Ball in the rising of 1 38 1 Women marched in the German
ever, rural
.
Peasants Revolt of 1525. In the Heilbronn area in the village of Bokingen,
the Black
Farm
Women
(schwarze Hofmdnnin), as they were called by their
contemporaries, were thought to have magical powers to inspire others.
They
town council and were with the 8,000 peasants who took Weinsberg.i^^ in England women joined the men to protest enclosures; in June of 1641 in Lincolnshire mothers and their sons broke down the fences around the commons to let the cattle in. Near Maldon in Essex, Captain Alice Clark led the male and female weavers in a grain riot. In France in the seventeenth century the same kinds of anger inspired the women led by Branlaire in Montpellier in 1645 to rebel against the royal tax collectors. She insisted that the tax money would take bread from their children's mouths. ^^^ The same cries against unfair privileges and payments led the countryside against the local
Sustaining the Generations
could be heard at the end of the eighteenth century
145
when women
records in the early
months
of the
In the late nineteenth
1896
watched
and the
in
lost to
machines.
early twentieth centuries, collective protest
strikes, a diflFerent tactic
Tuscany
in
men
French Revolution. In the nineteenth
century countrywomen joined the protests against work
turned to
joined
on the chateaux of the nobihty and the burning of manorial
in the attacks
occasioned by the same desperation. In
the Brozzi region of northern
Italy,
as the price for their different types of labor
the straw workers
dropped from 10 to 7
Of the almost 85,000 peasants involved in this women. ^^^^ Fifty initiated a strike and, led by went into the countryside. ^^^ From May 15 to 30 they
centesimi, and from 20 to 15. craft, ninety-five
percent were
Darsena Conti, they
mobilized crowds, stopped wagons and
anyone who would not
them
joined
—over 38,000
trains,
burned materials, and harassed
them. By the seventeenth of
join
May
the
men had
people. ^^^
thirtieth, the government in Rome had called for a commission Accommodations involving the establishment of cooperatives did not help to regularize the prices at an acceptable level, and in September of 1897 the women struck once more to demonstrate their dissatisfaction. With
By the
of inquiry.
the support of the Socialist Party, another group, the rice weeders of Tuscany, struck in 1901 for
more pay
as their first
demand, then
local elite,
by the
who
police.
national
bill
long term,
could in the
last resort
mercy
of the
home
In 1907 after a third set of strikes
was passed about their
it
However
situation.
signified
acknowledgment
difficult
the
lives of
for a nine-hour day.
have them rounded up and sent
Because the majority were migratory workers, they were
at the
and work stoppages,
Though
of their plight.
married peasant women, survival alone
presented even greater challenges. Throughout the centuries peasant in this situation
a
of limited value in the
women
looked to village customs and to the secular and religious
on their own strengths. and spiritual life of others
institutions for assistance. In the last resort they relied
These
less
tangible qualities enriched the emotional
as well.
Giving Value In addition to providing for their family's physical survival, peasant
women
also provided moral, emotional,
they told their children,
in
gave value to the choices they
ment
and
spiritual sustenance. In the tales
the ideals and rituals of their faith, countrywomen
made and
a sense of
purpose and accomplish-
to the life they lived within the narrow confines of their circumstances
and the roles allowed. There would be much in the harshness of life to justify and explain. As a daughter, as the female, the peasant woman's life would
WOMEN
146
OF THE FIELDS
never be without responsibility. She would be the first child picked to work and the one always expected to assist in the maintenance of the family. In Limousin at the beginning of the nineteenth century, a French woman described herself as having no children even though she had three daughters "for a daughter is merely a daughter, whereas only a boy has the privilege of being a child." ^^'^ As a wife and mother the peasant woman's responsibilities to her husband and her children consumed her energies. There would be much in the attitudes of her world that a rural woman would have to ignore or endure. Both the customs of the culture and the Church insisted on the female's innate inferiority, her naturally subordinate status, and the need for her obedience to male authority. Peasant women rarely questioned these assumptions and expectations, or the male fears and
ambivalences that underlay them. Rarely did they allow them to break their spirit.
Instead, rural
and what they
demanded
did.
women
found ways to value what they could aspire to
They learned
to
make
virtues of the
dependent
qualities
of them.
Peasant daughters heard the denigrating proverbs and
tales,
the ones
and refined through the centuries of Europe's oral tradition, from mother or grandmother. They learned the assumptions of their inferior
selected their
nature, their failings of character. Peasant
—carrying the
women
believed that favorable
no morning sickness, and rosy cheeks meant a boy. Proverbs and tales derided women's intelligence, mocked them as careless, criticized them for speaking too much, and promised punishments for disobedience. But each traditional denigration could be countered in the peasant girl's imagination with other stories. Folktales told of barren couples rewarded with a daughter like Snow White, so beautiful and good that she was as flawless as the white snow that inspired her name. For the dutiful little girl, the patient, devout, and industrious, or the quickwitted and enterprising heroine, the rewards were without measure. Snow White's marvelous innocence gained her the love of a prince. Cinderella's goodness and beauty won the king's son. Beauty's loyalty turned the Beast into a handsome young lord. The obedient daughter who sacrificed her hands for love of her father earned a royal husband. ^^^ Clever, courageous maidens who performed incredible tasks also won this prize, not just marriage, the expected goal of a young girl, but a marriage way above her station and the promise of a life of riches and love.^^^ As well as folktales. Christian peasant daughters learned the basic premises and tenets of the faith from their mothers. In fifteenth-century France, Joan of Arc recited the Lord's Prayer (Pater Noster), the Creed, and the Prayer to the Virgin (Ave Maria) to her mother. Her family attended the parish church in Domremy, listened to a sermon, and received communion, signs in a
—
pregnancy
fetus high,
Sustaining the Generations
147
perhaps once a year at Easter, confessing to the priest as had been required
by the Church Council of 1215. (The formal outlines of the service existed by the end of the seventh century, though there was
and
belief.)
much was
in Latin,
vernacular.
the
still
variation in ritual
Before the sixteenth century and the advent of Protestantism,
From
but the homilies, the exemplary
woman
these a peasant
stories,
were told
men.
the
and of her
sinner, of the uncleanness of her reproductive organs,
first
divinely ordained subordination to
in
learned of her descent from Eve,
Women
found ways to transform or
to mitigate each premise, each tenet.
Eve, so often the symbol of in
became the image
evil,
of the dutiful
children unequally.
The
window
cathedral
at Erfurt
from the second half of
the fourteenth century showed an Eve spinning with her
swaddled
Mary
who watched
in a central Italian hill title
her seven sons tortured before her eyes,
Christian peasant
Meme
town
a
pregnant
woman
women meant
Santerre from the
them
new apron from her white
of France, born in 1891 to
communion, "Oh, remember it." She was for a new dress from her first
still
I
godfather, material
wear and
veil to
and
of sin, of their inherent im-
Nord province
was'a day like any other, but so beautiful that
a
honored with the
into the twentieth century participated to cleanse
a poor family of country linen weavers, wrote of her
godmother,
felt
"Madonina."^^^
believed in the rituals
given a
the child
Mother of Heaven, the Virgin Mary. Tales and ballads portrayed the model of motherly virtues, compassion, and forgiveness. Into the
affectionate
purity.
distaff,
ideals for all Chris-
first
as
1970s
became
beside her. Other mothers
in a cradle
tians: Saint Felicitas
and the
it
mother
peasant women's folktales, questioning the Lord for rewarding her beloved
a gilt candle to carry in the procession
to the church. After the service
returned to the cellar to weave until time for vespers. When we returned my mother let me wear my new apron. That was the greatest pleasure of the day. I was eleven years old.^^^
we
With
the onset of menstruation, peasant
women
accepted the tradition
not approach the altar or
From the earliest days of Christianity, they did receive communion on those days of the month.
County
Clare, Ireland, girls sat apart from the boys. Into
of their physical uncleanness.
Into the 1920s in
the twentieth century in some parts of Europe, peasant birth to a child followed a tradition as old as Leviticus.
women
community and did not attend church until ritually cleansed, in a ceremony called churching.
In Russia a
keep apart from her family altogether. In Brittany
in
the
a
woman went
silently
and alone
after giving
They kept
apart from
blessed by the priest
and
woman had
to
the nineteenth century,
to the church, her friends pretending not
WOMEN
148
made her way
to see her as she
OF THE FIELDS in
her funeral cloak. Blessed by the
priest,
she removed her cloak and went outside to be welcomed by the people of the village,
who
acted as
she had just been too busy to see them
if
this
all
women waited for the pastor to come to their Spanish women in a twentieth-century village knelt in the
time. 122 Danish Protestant
door to bless them.
church with
a candle
and allowed the
priest to bless
them and then
them
lead
to the altar.
With equal willingness peasant women embraced other beliefs and rituals made some sense of the hardships of life and gave comfort and hope. From the earliest books of penance, Christian women accepted the idea of sin, of human transgression and the means offered by the Churches to restore them to grace, to Cod's favor. By the sixteenth century, a Catholic woman that
could confess privately to her priest and expiate her sin through a penance
he
set.
She might pay "indulgences"
century, peasant (or chaplet) of
women
as a
penance. As early as the fourteenth
said the Virgin's special prayer with a rosary, a string
beads that could be carried everywhere.
bility for trips to
Women took responsi-
the shrines of local saints, and for the prayers and rituals
that had once honored former deities and spirits of their locality.
Women of the countryside remained loyal to their faith long after peasant men and
long after both
women and men
of the towns.
Well
into the
twentieth century, countrywomen went to church and took part in the ritual
because Christianity seemed to give a hardships and conditions of their
spiritual value
lives.
and significance
to the
In the sermons heard in the parish
who suffered and mourned were blessed, their miseries transformed into sources of salvation and eternal life. Thus, a woman of the Bocage region of Normandy in the 1970s could speak of misfortune as "good suffering." 123 Deprivation, self-sacrifice, humility, all were virtues that guarchurch, those
anteed honor and reward to a Christian. Above
all,
the Catholic faith asked
most devout followers, and the life of a peasant woman was often synonymous with obedience, learned as a child with her parents, then practiced as a wife to her husband. The rituals of the marriage ceremony established the relationships. In France the bride knelt before the groom; in Russia she took off her new husband's boots at the wedding feast. The exchange of vows, the passing of her hand from that of one male to another, obedience of
all
its
signified the male's guardianship
protected and subordinate position.
would remember "As the a peasant to his Lord, a
tsar
and authority, her acceptance of the
A
seventeenth-century wife of a serf
answers to Cod, so a boyar answers to the
woman
to her husband." 1^4
A prayer book from
tsar,
1946
used in a Santander village in northern Spain reminded a wife of her circumstances.
When
making her confession, she was
obeyed the dictates of the Church and
to consider
society:
how
well she
had
149
Sustaining the Generations
Esteem your husband Respect him as your leader Obey him as your superior Reply to him with humility Assist him with diligence. ^^^
1.
2. 3.
4. 5.
Little in the peasant
woman's
society supported deviation
from
this ideal
condoned her husband's right to punish her if she and French proverbs warned men of the consequences should they
of behavior. Everything did. Irish
be lenient with their wives: if
you
let
"Do
tomorrow."^26 of his village
j^a^
y\j^y
ass.^^'^
Both
men who
him
in
the eyes
of the charivaris (local festivals), forced to ride religious
and "chastisement,"
twelfth century.
allowed his wife to rule over
y^\^Q
became the butt
backward on an rection
not give your wife authority over you, for
her stamp on your foot to-night she will stamp on your head
as
and secular authorities condoned
was called
it
Gustoms and laws
all
across
cor-
in Gratian's Decretals of the
Europe accepted and pardoned
bloodied or even killed their wives.
A
sixteenth-century French
proverb expressed the attitude that continued to be voiced into the twentieth century: a
"A good
A
horse and a bad horse need the spur.
bad woman need the
stick/'^^s
Lean
Lizzie, the scold in a
woman and German folktale,
good
found herself thrown to the bed, her arms held together, her head pressed into the pillow by her husband, "until she tion. "^29 In
fell
asleep from extreme exhaus-
the 1930s in rural Yugoslavia husbands beat their wives because
of complaints from parents, for disobedience, or just to
them. In the 1950s
in
show
their
wife was unfaithful. Pietro's parting words to Ninetta as he
the north were "I warn you you.
Do
The
power over
southern Italy a husband could threaten murder
you understand?
you put horns on
if
I'll kill
majority of peasant
me
left to
come back and
I'll
his
if
work
in
kill
you."^^°
women
throughout the centuries accepted the
circumstances, the attitudes, and the necessities of survival even though they
were
left
vulnerable and subordinate. Occasionally a
teenth-, fourteenth-,
from England world.
They
tell
and fifteenth-century
of peasant
women who
killed their children
religious
woman
lost control
and husbands. They
1226 the coroner inquired whether or not Alice de
madness or maliciously and intentionally"
killed
could not. Thir-
and secular court records
and turned on
their
killed themselves. In la
Lade had "from
her child. ^^^ Margery, the
wife of William Galbot, knifed her two-year-old daughter to death and then forced her four-year-old son on to the hearth flames. ^^^
woman whipped her ten-year-old killed her son Adam during what of insanity." In 1316
Emma
le
A
Northamptonshire
to death. Agnes, the wife of
Roger Moyses,
the court called "one of her frequent bouts
Bere, though
ill
and
restricted to her bed, in
WOMEN
150
a "frenesye" killed her children
hanged
OF THE FIELDS
by cutting their throats with an
Bitter, despairing, enraged, peasant
The
ax.
Then
she
herself.
women
turned on their husbands.
and fifteenth-century English records tell of the wife who waited until her husband slept and then cut his throat with a small scythe. Another woman, while sick with fever, killed her husband and then claimed she could not remember anything when she recovered two weeks thirteenth-, fourteenth-,
later. 1^^
The
children, but
English judges showed some compassion in the murder of none with violence toward a husband. This threatened the most
basic relationships of the society.
The
fourteenth-century court records called
husband "petty treason," similar to a servant killing a master. In 1726 Catherine Hayes was the last Englishwoman convicted of the crime. She was executed in the traditional way, burned at the stake. Into the
murder
of a
eighteenth century Europe's
men
chose such a dramatic death because burn-
seemed the fit punishment for women who had defied the basic premises, patterns, and authority of the culture. Such openly defiant women were the exceptions, however. The vast majority of European countrywomen found ways to adapt and accommodate, ways that gave them a sense of value and purpose despite their subordinate relationship to men. ing at the stake
THE EXTRAORDINARY
Joan of Arc Joan of Arc (1412-1431), the extraordinary sixteen-year-old daughter of French peasant family, defied almost every tradition of the peasant woman's world. She disobeyed her parents, importuned those above her station for a
help,
and
insisted that she
must act outside accepted female God to join the army
everyone that she had been sent by
France and to
raise the
roles.
|oan told
King of
of the
English siege of the town of Orleans. Everything
about her manner, her demands, and her actions was unorthodox. In normal circumstances, the very personification of the insubordinate, disobedient female, she would have been
But
in
the midst of the
left to
the reprimands of her mother and father.
Hundred Years War, the
secular
of fifteenth-century France listened to the unorthodox.
and
religious leaders
They came
to agree
God
through
maiden
warrior,
with Joan's vision of herself as the young virgin granted access to her voices.
They came
to perceive her as a heroine: the holy
zealous and strong, sent for the salvation of the kingdom. So perceived, Joan's passion, energy, persistence,
and ingenuity gained her power and success men and to men of higher caste as well.
in
roles traditionally reserved to
Joan
is
remarkable for other historical reasons. Unlike every other
woman
documents abound to describe and explain her life. By her unorthodox actions and assertions, Joan defied the acknowledged authority of her day, and that authority, literate and careful, recorded the words of her childhood friends, the memories of her family, and or
man
of the early fifteenth century,
of those she fought with.
Most
unusual, there are also her
own
words, pages
and pages of questions and answers, cross questions and explanations in French notes, in Latin prose. These are the records of her trial, and then of her rehabilitation, a "retrial" twenty years
later,
when
the
Church
reconsid-
ered her case and reversed the condemnation of her as a schismatic and
— WOMEN
152
heretic (as
OF THE FIELDS
one who would not accept the paramount authority of the
Church).!
much like that of other young girls in Her godmother Beatrice, wife of the mayor, remembered her spinning, and working at harvest time, even though her father was the most prosperous of the farmers in Domremy. Her friend, These sources
a
French
reveal a life initially
village of the early 1400s.
Jean Waterin, said they drove the plow together.
not think her especially pious.
Then
The
priest,
Michael and the angels appeared to her, "towards noon, father's garden. "^
Jean Colin, did
at thirteen she believed that Saint
No, she had not been She heard them in the
in
summer,
in
her
fasting, she explained to the ques-
forest, when the bells of the parish From that moment on, as she explained in March of 1430, "they often come without my calling," and "she had never needed them without having them."^ The church at Domremy and the one across the river in Maxey had statues of Saints Margaret and Catherine, and soon she saw their faces crowned with light and heard their voices. With the first appearance of her voices, Joan made a vow of virginity, increased her devotions, made frequent pilgrimages to the next villages, and to the hermitage dedicated to the Virgin Mary, Our Lady of Bermont.
tioner at her
church
Her one so
trial.
tolled.
voices never spoke of a
life
of contemplation, the usual response for
religious, rather of a life of actions inconceivable for a
female in the
context of fifteenth-century France. Yet their message was clear; Joan
peated
it
Dauphin
(the Valois heir)
crowned
to regain the loyalty of Paris.
do anything other than work set
re-
over and over. She was to relieve the siege at Orleans, to see the
Joan apart and
made
To
in
at
Rheims, to
free the
Duke
of Orleans,
attempt even one of the voices' tasks
the
fields or in
—
to
the household and to marry
her a disobedient rebel at
female outside the
risk, a
and patterns of fifteenth-century village life. Though she kept her visions to herself, by sixteen she had focused all of her energy, her quick intelligence, her strength, and her perseverance on accepting the challenge of their commands. In the spring of 1428 she lied to her parents in order to try to see Robert de Baudricourt, the local lord her voices had said would take her to the Dauphin. Joan persuaded Durand Laxalt, her mother's cousin, to accompany protective confines
De
her to the castle, but
Baudricourt dismissed her request, telling Laxalt "to
give her a good slapping
and take her back to her
father."'*
stay away. Catherine le Royer, the family friend with
remembered the her as for a
tension, Joan's sense of urgency,
woman
only one year to
convinced her
"how
Joan refused to
whom
she stayed,
the time lagged for
pregnant. "^ Joan chafed at the delay, insisting she had
fulfill
the tasks set by her voices. In January of 1429 she
listeners
finally
with the simplicity and directness of her assertions:
The before
we
153
Extraordinary
must be at the King's side, though I wear my feet who can recover is nobody in all the world France. And there will be no help ... if not from me.^
are in mid-Lent,
1
to the knees. For indeed there
the kingdom for
De
.
.
.
Baudricourt changed his mind, and with his safe conduct and
six
of his
knights at arms to accompany her, riding a horse bought for her by Laxalt,
Joan traveled at night across the English-held territory, covering the 500 kilometers to Chinon, the Dauphin's castle, in just eleven days.
Joan had badgered help from in
De
Baudricourt, but others already believed
her and her visions. Jean de Metz,
the men's clothing she wore
Dauphin from
a
crowd
of
when
who
rode with her to Chinon, gave her
she burst into the court and picked the
women and men.
There, with one gesture after
another, with one statement after another, this seventeen-year-old peasant
woman
convinced the religious and secular
elite of
France that she was the
instrument of their salvation. She reminded them of Merlin's prophecy, revived by the peasant visionary
Maxine Robine
at the
century, "that France would be ruined through a restored by a virgin."'^
appeared as
if
A
end of the fourteenth
woman and
afterward
gold crown and a buried sword she described
miraculously.
Churchmen
of the University in Poitiers ques-
became convinced of her sincerity. The dean of the faculty, a Dominican, remembered the interview. When asked if she believed in God she replied, "Yes, more than you do."^ The Dauphin's mother-in-law, Yolande of Aragon, Queen of Sicily, and her ladies, examined tioned her on her faith and
Joan's claim of virginity herself,
and established that she was
in fact as
she described
Queen Yolande offered money for the expedition. In the churchmen of Poitiers and the King's Council unanimously
"the maid."
end the learned endorsed her and her mission.
The war between
the feudal monarchies of France and England had
Duke
come
Burgundy allied to the powerful English Earl of Warwick. The French Dauphin Charles's commanders gave him conflictto a stalemate with the
ing advice.
The
of
English held the capital, Paris. Plans to raise the siege at
Orleans had foundered. Joan stood before the Dauphin, a stocky seventeenyear-old peasant, her hair "cut round above her ears" in her rough wool tunic,
hose and leggings, assured, brusque, determined, clear on what should be done. She claimed she was a virgin sent by still
God
to save France.
doubted she answered impatiently, "But lead
me
show you the signs was sent to make."*^ The Dauphin As she had convinced the learned and the courtly, I
soldiers of the
let
scribed himself as "bedazzled."
I
who will
Joan go to Orleans.
One
commander, the Duke
(He had given her
any
and
so Joan convinced the
army, then the citizens of the towns.
supporters, the twenty-five-year-old
To
to Orleans
a horse
of her earliest
of Alen^on, de-
when he had
seen
WOMEN
154
OF THE FIELDS
her, the evening of the second day at
He remembered
tilt.)^°
campaign, .
.
at last
Chinon, wield
a lance
and run
the march to Orleans, with about 4,000
enough
troops.
men
at a
for the
A later chronicler marveled "We had plenty
because everyone was following her/'^i At Orleans the crowds pressed
.
around her, and
"felt
themselves already comforted and as
if
no longer
besieged, by the divine virtue which they were told was in the simple maid.''^^
Winds changed
as
if
by a miracle, and supplies came into the besieged town.
Perhaps most significant of
all,
Joan convinced the English soldiers, and
the citizens in the other towns they held, of her powers. Alengon remembered the evening she had taken the standard and shown herself on the parapet at
Orleans "and the terrified. "^^
"four or
arrival
moment
she was there the English trembled and were
Dunois, another of the commanders, insisted that after Joan's five
hundred
soldiers
and men-at-arms could
fight against
what
be the whole power of England. "^"^ In June of 1429 and July the towns of Meung and Troyes surrendered just because she arrived.
seemed
to
As a peasant daughter, Joan knew nothing of fighting and warfare except what she had experienced as a villager with soldiers passing back and forth across her valley, the Meuse. When she was thirteen, the soldiers had burned the church. Twice she had helped to herd the livestock to fortified places of safety. "For fear of the soldiers" her parents would no longer let her tend the livestock alone. ^^ In May of 1428 she, her family, and the others of the village had fled Burgundian troops, who burned what they could. It was Joan's vitality, her confidence, her faith in her visions, and the beliefs of those around her that transformed her into an able warrior and a leader among men.
The young peasant woman participated The King's Councillor wrote of six
ments.
in at least seven military
engage-
days and nights with her in the
and commented, "She bears the weight and burden of armour incredibly ."^^ At Orleans she fought on horseback in an attack on a stronghold. "The first to place a scaling ladder on the bastion of the bridge," she remembered of one encounter in May of 1429. ^'^ She appeared fearless in battle; Dunois told of one of the assaults at Orleans when she had taken up a fallen standard, rushed to the top of a trench, and then been followed by the men. At St. Pierre le Moutier in October of 1429, her squire, Aulon, described rushing to assist her, when she was fighting almost by herself, and field
well.
.
.
taking her helmet from her head, she answered that she was not alone, that she still
had
fifty
thousand
men
in
her
company and that she would not leave that moment, whatever she might say, she
spot until she had taken the town. At that
had no more than four or
five
men
with her.
Joan took punishment like the other in
.
.
.^^
soldiers. In
the assault on Jargeau
June a blow on the head cracked her helmet. Twice she was
hit
by
The crossbolts
—once
at
Orleans
Extraordinary
155
the neck and once in the thigh during an
in
attack on one of the gates of Paris in September of 1429.
None of
this
stopped
her.
new methods
At Troyes in July and clearsightedness" and drew the praise of experienced commanders like Dunois and Alengon.i^ Yet, contrary to subsequent popular memory, Joan never actually took command, rather she assisted, advised, and, perhaps most important, She had
a natural gift for the
of warfare.
of 1429 she placed the artillery; she advised with "prudence
chided those
charge
in
when they delayed
or appeared to lose their zeal for
"Do not have doubts, when God when God wills it. Act, and God will
the fighting. At Orleans she told Alengon: pleases, the
hour
is
We
ripe.
must act
act."20
came from the simple contradictions of her situation: a pious virgin, moving confidently and unmolested
Joan's authority also a
young peasant woman,
in the
midst of an army. Joan was never shy with her companions at arms.
When
she
met Gobert Thibault, one
"she clapped of
my sort
me on
of the King's squires,
he remembered,
the shoulder, saying that she would like well to have
[fighting with her]."^!
But
at the
same time, she impressed
all
men with
her piety and her virtue. She prohibited pillage, organized confessions and
women who accompanied and and encouraged the wounded. She fasted and
masses for the troops, and dismissed the
She
serviced them.
received
communion
she inspired no lust a
woman
be.
visited
twice a week.
in
the
sleep with her
From her
first
men
Most miraculous
she served with. In
whenever
days alone in the
possible, field
but
this
to her contemporaries,
camp
she tried to have
why they let her men believed that them. The two knights
is
not
with soldiers, the
which they could not explain deterred King assumed they would have intercourse they were so much with her, "but when the moment came to speak to her ." Even though she lay between them in the ashamed that they dared not. fields at night, they explained that they had felt no desire. ^^ Both her squire Aulon and Alen^on, her commander, dressed her wounds, helped to arm her and had, therefore, seen her breasts and bare legs. Aulon described himself as "strong, young and vigorous," yet never "was my body moved to any carnal ."^^ Dunois remembered the effect of her presence: "As for desire for her. myself and the rest, when we were in her company we had no wish or desire to approach or have intercourse with women. That seems to me to be almost something
who
else
originally escorted her to the
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
a miracle. "2^
How then did she lose her power? How did she come to be captured and abandoned by her king? The very circumstances and qualities of character that had given Joan power led to her capture by the English. At first the Dauphin drew on her strength and rewarded her success. Two days after the
WOMEN
156
army lifted the
OF THE FIELDS
siege at Orleans, his treasurer entered
on the accounts
for
May
armor for her: "complete harness for the Maid, 100 livres tournois."^^ But his crowning in July of 1429 signaled a new period of 10, 1429, a suit of
military inaction. Joan could not accept this.
Of
her original tasks, only the
recapture of Paris remained.
Joan did not go home. She acted on her own authority. At Compiegne
King and kept fighting
in spite of the in
May
of 1430 her remarkable powers
She and three to four hundred of her men found off from the gates of the town walls. She was forced back to the bridge near the walls and stranded outside when the town fathers decided to close the gates. A Burgundian account said that Joan was pulled from her horse. Unable to remount, she surrendered to a nobleman. The commander, Jean, Prince of Luxembourg, set her ransom at 10,000 gold crowns, a king's fortune in those times. ^6 The Dauphin, now King Charles
seemed
to leave her.
themselves drawn out and cut
VII, and his councillors never tried to free her. Instead the English gained custody of the Maid. a
Duke
fearsome opponent. In 1429 the
Joan's special
They perceived her
as
had acknowledged
of Gloucester
power and ordered that the captains and
soldiers, deserters
"by the Maid's enchantments," be captured and punished. ^'^ Joan's
terrified
unorthodox behavior, her success
in
opposing them, became
in the eyes of
the English sources of terror, "enchantments," and Joan was perceived as the
agent of the Devil, not of God.
God had
favored them.
power she seemed
Now
With
her capture, the English believed that
they must discredit Joan and the supernatural
to hold.
Joan's voices, the source of her extraordinary authority, gave the English
came from God, therefore The English controlled the university. They had proved
the means to discredit her. She claimed the voices
her enemies could allow the Church to examine her. Paris
and thus the learned
allies
among Church
who became
ecclesiastics of
officials, like
chosen and procedures arranged so inquiry
Pierre
Cauchon, the bishop
the principal judge at Joan's
and the
trial. ^^
Thus
as to ensure the desired
reuil left
The
her no privacy and vulnerable to sexual assault. Instead of the
Church, Joan had slept.
hoped
own power and
five
to
conditions of her imprisonment at the castle of Bouv-
usually assigned for a female prisoner, or at the least
she
be
to the
stretched or ignored every rule of ecclesiastical
procedure to weaken Joan, to force her to denounce her voices.
outcome
trial.
Cauchon and the English deny her
of Beauvais,
inquisitors could
men
women
associated with the
when Cauchon
English soldiers, three in the room with her even
At night they
fettered her to "a great block of wood."^^
to see her intimidated, confused,
January to the 30th of
May
and confounded. From the ninth of
1430, he and the inquisitors questioned her,
The sometimes twice
Extraordinary
157
morning, beginning at eight, in a room She had no counsel. When two of the participating friars offered advice, Cauchon reprimanded them, and they fled back to their monaster)-. Sometimes it was two or three questioners, sometimes the whole panoply of two judges, a prosecutor, eight examiners, three notaries, the bailiff, and forty-eight assessors, all the priors, bishops, and canons who would a day, usually in the
of the castle or in her
cell.
give the final verdict.'^ In the questioning d'Estivet, a
Cauchon and
canon of Bayeux, skipped from topic
by altering the context of her remarks, and threatened Joan withstood
all this.
tradition of her saints,
and
their allies.
Perhaps the
From
first
torture.
days of her capture, in the best
Margaret and Catherine, she had defied the English
She had e\en
li\es
the
his prosecutor, Jean
to topic, tried to trick Joan
tried to escape twice before the trial
of her tvvo heroines inspired her.
had begun.
Both of these
early
Christian mart\TS captured the popular imagination of the thirteenth, fourteenth, and fifteenth centuries, with the tales of their purity, faith, and bravery.
The
powerful threatened their
Margaret fought
off
virginity-
and tortured them. Saint
dragons and demons. Saint Catherine converted the
learned with the cogency of her arguments.
As her
trial
progressed, Joan could easily have
made
parallels
with her
own
situation: her virginity imperiled, torture threatened, the learned sent to
her, and the prospect of a "glorious martyrdom" for the faith. The churchmen examined her on more than sixty charges. To explain how she could have had such impact, Cauchon and his friends hoped to prove her a witch,- a heretic who had made an unholy pact with the Devil. They could not. Nothing she said gave evidence of such an alliance. This did not mean, however, that other equally damning charges could not be found. Throughout Joan answered as she always had, in straightforward, simple
confound
words, speaking as an equal. She questioned the validity of the tribunal, asking
an equal number of churchmen loyal to France. She recognized Cauchon as her enemy and like the legendar>- Catherine and Margaret warned him early in the questioning: "... you say that you are my judge. Consider well what you are about, for in truth I am sent from God, and you at first for
are putting yourself in great danger."^
might
gi\-e in
when shown
She admitted on
^
May
9 that she
the instruments of torture, but, she bravely added,
"I should always thereafter say that
you had made
me
speak so by force," thus
negating the validity of the confession as evidence. ^^ Twice, on April 18 in
her
cell,
on
May
2 in the
courtroom
set
up
in
the castle, in the presence of
the whole group of sixty-three churchmen, she refused to submit to the list
of twelve charges. ^^
She continued to
insist that
final
she was right, and they
were wrong.
To do
this in the context of
1430 meant,
as
Master Jean de Bouesque,
WOMEN
158
OF THE FIELDS
Doctor of Theology, explained, "She is schismatic of the unity, authority and power of the Church. "^"^ The simple stratagem of allowing Joan to speak and react in the formal world of an ecclesiastical inquisition and trial had worked. By the facts of her birth, her words, her actions, she had condemned herself. To the hostile, learned churchmen she appeared a young, illiterate peasant woman who had dressed and fought like a man, all the while insisting that she had received divine revelation. The burden of proof, of justification of such unorthodox behavior and assertions lay with her. Nothing she could say or
do would convince them.
The
bishop of Lisieux thought "the
vile
conditions of her person"
made
everything she claimed and had accomplished suspect. ^^ ^er voices became "lies," "delusions," errors of faith that
caused an endless display of disobedi-
now toward
the wisdom and authority of Her manner of speaking showed Philipert, the bishop of Coutances, that she had "a subtle spirit, inclined to evil, excited by a devilish instinct. "^^ Her refusal to wear female clothing throughout her imprisonment became symbolic of her blasphemous attitude and behavior. Even when offered the chance to hear mass and to receive the sacrament at Easter (a request she had made continually since her capture), she refused when told ence,
toward her parents and
first
the Church.
"it was not in her adding that this attire did not burden her soul and that the wearing do it of it was not against the Church. "^^ As with everything that passed between Joan and the churchmen, the issue was simply one of authority: Would she or would she not obey? Again on the 23 rd of May she refused to recant when presented with the charges. The next day she was taken to the cemetery of
she would have to dress appropriately. She explained that to
.
.
.
the abbey of
St.
Ouen
for the public reading of her sentence.
The
pyre for
her execution had been prepared in the market square.
The
source of her remarkable strength lay in her
those days,
faith. All
standing before the churchmen in her gray tunic, the knee-length cloak, the
long black hose and boots, she had been confident of God's presence, his
guidance
in all
she did and said through the mystery of her voices. Perhaps
to save her. When she had asked her voices "whether I be burnt" they "answered me that I should trust in Our Lord and that he would help me."^^ But there in the cemetery, on the high scaffolding before the resplendent assemblage of the representatives of the Church, of
she expected
God
shall
the English King, of the Prince of Luxembourg, her assessors, the crowd, she
doubted. She heard the condemnatory sermon, heard herself declared cast out.
Suddenly she spoke up and asked
of the Pope. Refused, she told
judges of the
every
them
Church wanted her
command and
desire. "^^
if
she might submit to the judgment
that "she
to say
and
wanted
to hold
to maintain
She made her mark on
and
all
to
that the
obey their
a shortened
list
of
The
charges confessing her most grievous tions
my
from
God and
his angels St.
159
Extraordinary
sin:
"claiming lyingly that
Catherine and
words and acts which are against the Church
remain
in
I
had
Margaret, and
St.
revela-
all
those
do repudiate, wishing to union with the Church, never leaving it."'*^ Cauchon announced 1
imprisonment, a "salutary penance that you may weep and never thenceforth commit anything to occasion weeping.""*^ Manchon, the notary who had kept the minutes of the trial, remembered that she seemed almost gay remarking, "Come now, among you men of the Church, take me to your prisons and let me be no longer in the hands of these English." But Cauchon ordered the guards, "Take her to where you found her."^2 That afternoon they shaved her head, she put on the dress they gave her to wear, and then she found herself chained with the same guards in the same cell. Historians can only speculate on her thoughts in the next days. She had saved her own life, but to what end? The life of solace, confession, and penance she had been promised had proved a fraud. She remained in chains, in the hands of the English soldiers. Three days later on Sunday, May 27, her sentence,
life
.
.
.
for your faults
Cauchon
Twenty years churchmen how she Joan stood again before the churchmen in a
learned that she had put on men's clothing again.
later at the rehabilitation inquiries,
had come
to find them.
When
no one could
tell
the
man's tunic, she declared herself indisputably an unrepentent relapsed heretic.
The
only appropriate punishment for such behavior in 1430 was excom-
munication and death.
For Joan,
this action
meant reclaiming her
faith
and her
special power.
Like Saints Margaret and Catherine, she had chosen the "glorious martyr-
dom"
of the virgin. She must have assumed that imprisonment as Cauchon had arranged it meant the risk of rape at the hands of the soldiers. Rape meant the loss of her virginity. Without her virginity, Joan's religion told her, she would lose her special tie to Cod: the Maid become "slut," a fallen woman, imprisoned for life without hope of heaven. She explained to the two assessors who came to question her that day that "when she put on women's clothes the English had done her great wrongs and violence in prison."'*^ She explained to her questioners that she had given in "for fear of the fire." She told them that now her saints spoke disapprovingly of her actions. "Since Thursday, my voices have been telling me that I have done and am doing a great injury to Cod by making myself say that what did was not well done." She spoke with more humility but the message of disobedience was the same: "If I were to say that Cod sent me, I shall be condemned, but God really I
did send me."'^'*
Cauchon rushed the arrangements and ignored the vations of the thirty-nine assessors
who wanted
objections and reser-
to give Joan
more time
to
WOMENOFTHEFIELDS
160
understand the gravity of her words. At nine the next morning, Wednesday, the thirtieth of May, she was taken, dressed in women's clothes, to the market
Cauchon read the indictment:
square of Rouen.
You
are for the second time a relapsed heretic, like a
of going back to .
.
The
.
We
its
vomit!
.
.
You have
.
discard you as a rotten
member.
fallen
dog which has the habit
back into your former
sins.
."^^ .
.
wood Chambre
executioner took her to stand on the pyre tied to a stake with
piled
all
around
remembered
it
He
her.
set the fire
underneath. Guillaume de
la
took almost half an hour before she stopped crying out to
the saints and to Jesus and "was choked by the carefully disposed of the ashes;
no
trace of her
fire.""^^
The
was to remain
executioner
for the living
to venerate.
But people do not always need relics to venerate a special individual. The power once given proved too strong to take away. As the historian Keith Thomas wrote, the legend of Joan's life became "one of the most resonant
and flexible symbols in the whole of human history. "'^'^ The secular world embraced her first; the fifteenth-century French chroniclers saw her as God's gift for the salvation of their kingdom. Then the Church bowed to the pressure, first in the 1450s at her rehabilitation, and much later in 1920 with her canonization, not for her visions or her exploits in the
but for her exemplary
life.
been "a simple, honest
Honoring her faith,
The Church chose
girl
in this
and
a
name
of the faith
to sanctify her because she
way, the ecclesiastics focused on her piety and her
but they refused to acknowledge a divine source for her voices.
image the Church projected was of a simple shepherd unjustly
burned
had
good Christian."'*^
girl,
The
the brave maiden
between vanished. They excised her
at the stake. All in
energy, her military exploits, her male dress, the whole range of her unorthodox,
"unwomanly" words and
actions.
Not so in the popular
imagination.
The
images that had originally empowered her continued. Sixteenth-century
France named her Jeanne d'Arc and made her
a national heroine.
of subsequent centuries took her story for their plays for their statues.
The men
and poems, her image
She became the spirit of France, the maiden, the holy and Napoleonic symbol for opposition to the English
warrior, the Republican
and for those who would protect France from foreign domination. In the Second World War Charles de Gaulle used her standard, the Cross of Lorraine, as the symbol of Free France. And some women saw what her extraordinary actions meant for them. Perhaps the first was her contemporary, the courtier and writer Christine de Pizan (1364-1430). in
An
old
woman
in July of 1429,
her retreat at the convent of Poissy.
The
siege
she heard of
had been
The Maid
lifted at Orleans.
The Joan became the subject of her
161
Extraordinary
last
known poem: Joan in the woman:
tradition of
Esther, Judith, Deborah, the brave, defiant, powerful
By
whom God
His people
restored
when they were
hard-pressed.
Ah, what honor to the feminine
.
.
.
sex!
Which God
so loved that he showed way to this great people By which the kingdom, once lost, Was recovered by a woman,
A
A
thing that
men
could not
do."^^
The Witchcraft Persecutions Joan's short life demonstrated the quixotic, potent effects of men's fears
confidently claimed authority and who acted independently. Those perceived as supporting men's institutions found themselves honored and valued, those thought of as threatening or opposing dishonored and condemned to death. Joan was one young woman perceived as challenging of
women who
men's authority.
A century and a half later, hundreds of thousands of peasant
women came
be seen
to
in a similar
way
in villages all across
Europe, from
from Scotland to Russia. They became victims of the hunwitchcraft persecutions of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries Finland to
Italy,
—
dreds of thousands of
happen? The answers
women
lie in
accused, tortured, executed.
a horrible coincidence of
How
did this
new circumstances and
old attitudes. All historians of the witchcraft persecutions have searched for patterns
true from
one region to another that
accusations and executions.
accuse?
Why
Why
were particular
will explain
then?
women
Why
the outbreaks of hysterical
there?
Why
did those people
singled out? All regions have not yet
been studied. For the areas analyzed the records are by no means complete. Rarely is there the whole story of the women's ordeals from initial accusation, through questioning, torture, judgment, sentencing, and execution. Historians have only begun to piece together the records of the accusations, the confessions, accounts of judges, reports of inquisitors for
Between 1300 and 1500, there
is
all
parts of Europe.
sketchy evidence of about 500
trials
with
Germany, France, and Switzerland.^^ Then there is an exponential jump in the numbers for the late sixteenth and early seventeenth century for Western Europe, continuing into
original depositions for only twenty-one in
the beginning of the eighteenth century in Eastern Europe. ^^ In
the
1500s
much seemed
to
conspire to create uncertainty and
— WOMEN
162
OF THE FIELDS
sensed impending chaos. All of the traditional means seemed discredited and useless. Religious reformers and prosletyzers questioned the Catholic faith and its rituals. Protestant sects condemned everything from the authority of the Pope to everyday practices like the saying of the rosary. Printing presses carried the doubts and attacks all over Europe. Religious and civil wars in Germany, France, and Scotland with one prince replaced by another, one faith by another, called all princes and all beliefs into question. Locally controlled markets and trade gradually had given way to great trading centers and monopolies protected by the the guildsmen and the regulations of dynastic rulers, leaving town elders wealthy entrepreneurial families without the familiar economic system that had guaranteed them their livelihood and hegemony. upheaval. Learned
men
of establishing order
—
—
The
and religious elite searched for ways to reinstitute a sense of end the questioning and the changing. Townsmen, royal families, churchmen worked to bring order through definition and conformity. The guilds closed their membership to all but a select few and ruled their towns by fiat. Queens and kings codified regional laws and customs and adopted uniform Roman procedures as they expanded their system of royal secular
certainty, to
courts. Leaders of different sects vied in their demonstrations of religious zeal
and
in their efforts to establish
themselves as the founders of the one "true"
faith.
Though by
the
1
550s
all
Europeans had long ago accepted the leadership
—the authority
of the Church and the secular rulers memories of other powers and other beliefs. A prayer to the Virgin or an appeal to the king's court would help, but the old remedies, a spell or a traditional chant, would do no harm. Countrywomen and men believed that this other kind of power was the special province of only a few in the village the "cunning folk" as they were called in England. Always women were seen as having ties to this extraordinary world of charms, incantations, and spirits. Europeans believed that the magic was there for of these institutions
Europeans
also
had
vivid
—
those
who knew how
claimed
this
to call
upon
it
and continued
to appeal to those
who
unorthodox knowledge of and access to the supernatural. For
example, in the 1580s the English churchwardens of Thatcham Berkshire hired the local cunning
the
communion
Women
woman
to help
them
find the thief
who had
stolen
cloth. ^2
with these powers appeared in the traditional stories of the
ancient cultures and in the tales told into the nineteenth century. Their kisses
gave their lovers magical powers, their warnings saved the heroes of the sagas.
The wisewoman helped sisters find brothers and young maidens win back forgetful princes. "The old woman in the forest" gave her heroine a lover by her powers to transform; a tree became a handsome young man. 55 Just as the
The legends and sagas
good, they
tell
tell
Extraordinary
163
women using their special knowledge and skill for who tapped this power to do The Norsemen of old woman to use her second sight but feared that
of
of those
ill.
NjaVs Saga wanted the
her ability to predict the future meant that she could control the white magic of rescues and transformations had potions and curses of black magic: witches
who
its
who would
it.
In the tales,
counterpart
eat Hansel
in
the
and Gretel,
fish, who tried to kill their who could strip a young man of his strength and potency. Many believed that women could harm the livestock and bought and sold charms against their powers. When a young woman married, German villagers feared the oldest woman in the community would be jealous and bring
could turn their stepchildren into a lamb or a
husbands' offspring,
harm with the
A
evil eye.
piece of bride's cake, in which a silver coin was
baked, was given to her to appease her. 5"*
Another aspect
of the old beliefs
and
traditions survived. In villages
all
over Europe this supernatural force for evil was assumed to be available to
women, whether they called upon it or not. Somehow the gift of their made them potentially dangerous. A man could not marry in May, the woman's month, because then he would fall prey to lust
all
reproductive ability
and give her power over him. Women's menstrual blood had an ancient reputation as a harmful substance.
Germans
did not allow a pregnant
woman
Anything having to do with birth seemed to have magical properties, and the midwife privy to its mysteries was thought to possess in the stable.
special powers.
When
peasant
women and men moved
to the towns, they
took these ancient beliefs and traditions with them. In Paris and Florence the fourteenth century,
men
with their potions. Beginning in the sixteenth
They had it
century
in
women
accused in
The
on
lust or
in
impotence
the fifteenth century in French towns and
English towns, midwives
to take oaths against using
in France).
of bringing
came under suspicion. (as the Church called
magic or sorcery
English townsmen persecuted the
women
for "supersti-
tious practices."
From
the earliest days of Christianity,
ancient beliefs and insisted that
women
churchmen had denied these call up such extraordinary
could not
powers. Religious leaders spoke in their books of penance, canon laws, papal
and
conciliar decrees of "delusions"
and "superstitious
practices," of
women
misguided and confused. As the source of misfortune, they offered their believers Satan, the Devil, the personification of evil, the ever-vengeful fallen
angel seeking souls for his kingdom, Hell. He, not the
wisewomen
of the
had the power to harm, and he need not be feared for with Jesus' death on the cross, his power had been broken; everyone knew that the crucifix or holy water would frighten him away.'^ villages,
In the uncertain atmosphere
and conditions
of the sixteenth century, the
WOMEN
164
OF THE FIELDS
attitude of Europe's churches changed. Protestant to
and Catholic leaders came
doubt Christianity's victory over the Devil. They imagined that he had
found an opportunity to religious
and secular
try for
hegemony
again.
And
out of their
fear,
transformed the actions of the wisewomen.
elite
cunning woman's magic, once
more
officially discredited,
became
in
the
The
the imagina-
had ever been before. Embellished with all of the oldest misogynist mythology, the wisewomen's ways, words, and gestures became evidence of the beliefs and rituals of a heresy that threatened to destroy mankind. The learned of the Churches wrote and preached that the Devil was at large in the world. These women, the cunning folk, had made a pact with him, worshipped at his altar, and had tion of Europe's leaders
become
The
real
and powerful than
it
his agents. villagers
and the
citizens of the
towns could accept
this picture of
the Devil and his followers, and this explanation for the misfortunes of the time, for the everyday hardships and mishaps of their lives. In the past they had sought traditional spells and rituals to protect themselves. But in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries the elite of the Church and state offered more than the propitiation and counterrituals that had been the familiar remedies against such magic. They claimed to offer an end to the misfortunes forever. If peasant women and men, townswomen and men, would identify the cunning folk, officials of Church and state with all the paraphernalia of legal procedures and scientific rules of evidence would try and execute them. Thus rich and poor, powerful and powerless, Protestant and Catholic tacitly and actively participated in the persecution and murder of thousands of illiterate
peasant
women.
Jean Calvin, the Protestant leader of Geneva, described Satan and his treachery in his Institutes: lessly
threatens us, an
"We have been
enemy who
is
forewarned that an enemy relent-
the very
embodiment
of rash boldness,
of military prowess, of crafty wiles, of untiring zeal and haste, of every
conceivable weapon and of
skill in
the science of warfare. "'^ Martin Luther,
man think that he himself might have been, and yet may be bewitched by him. There is none of us so strong that he is able to resist him."^^ Catholic leaders like Pope Innocent VIII in his Bull of 1484 had already found evidence of the Devil and of his the
German
worship
in
Protestant leader, warned, "Let every
the north
German
countryside, followers of
what thirteenth- and
fourteenth-century theologians had defined as the heresy of "demonology.''^^
Innocent saw them
up
in
every village: evil people
"who have
given themselves
and "infamous acts," harming animals and crops, giving pain, causing sterility and impotence. ^'^ The Pope had been alerted to these lapses in faith by two Dominicans, Henry Kramer (Instituto) and Jacob Sprenger, who had been sent to inquire to devils" practicing "spells"
The
German
into beliefs in the in
villages.
Now
165
with the approval of their findings
the papal bull, they wrote a treatise for their brother clerics describing the
newest manifestation of in
Extraordinary
this heresy
and
combined the
women's
the magical, and
and
in a Devil, in
result,
published
of the Witches),
which
and the procedures
to deal
the power of the supernatural,
special powers.
condemnations of
traditional
The
believers.
traditional attitudes about heresies
with heretics with ancient beliefs
The
its
(Hammer
1486, was the Malleus Malificarum
women
women
fill
the pages of the church-
sorcery. Witches exist as them is in itself another heresy. It is self-evident that witches are female. As the Churchmen explained: "where there are many women there are many witches. "^° Men, like Jesus, are
men's
treatise
tie all
Not
a matter of faith.
to witchcraft
to believe in
women
protected from the lures of the Devil, but
both
mind and body,"
in
and
because they are "feebler
are easy prey just like their predecessor Eve.^^
like the learned men before them, assumed that own weakness, hated not to rule, and became "a wheeenemy," a creature who "always deceives," bitter, and venge-
Sprenger and Kramer,
women
hated their
dling and secret
who found "an
ful
manner
easy and secret
of vindicating themselves
witchcraft."^^ In the churchmen's imaginations witchcraft
came
to
by be
defined in the broadest terms. Both white and black magic were potentially evil.
Drawing on
writers like
Horace and Ovid, on the Church Fathers
Augustine and Thomas Aquinas, they
filled
out the
list
of
like
what Innocent had
"infamous acts."
called
The idea of women armed with magical powers and using them against men had a long tradition that lasted through writings, through the popular imagination, and went
across Europe.
all
as the ninth century notes, "Particularly
A
Russian chronicle from as early
through the agency of
women
are
enchantments brought to pass."^^ The sermon of Berthold of Regensburg in 1250 warned: infernal
Many .
.
.
of the village folk
The woman
before the child
would come
is
heaven were
it
not for their witchcrafts. .
born, before the christening, after the christening. ...
it is much marvel that ye lose women practice on you!^'*
In the early days of the tices"
to
has spells for getting a husband, spells for marriage;
.
.
spells
Ye men,
not your wits for the monstrous witchcrafts that
Church such women with
their "superstitious prac-
had been declared needful of penances and admonitions from the
parish priest, nothing more.
To
Sprenger and Kramer and their successors,
however, the village wisewomen became the chosen ones of the Devil, his worshippers and his agents.
The
Devil
won
these
women
as
his
worshippers, according to the
WOMEN
166
OF THE FIELDS
fifteenth-century Malleus Malificarum, by playing on yet another supposed
Kramer repeated the traditional belief that more carnal than a man," that she is in fact "insatiable."^^ They imagined women's sexual intercourse with Satan. So joined, these women became the Devil's followers. By calling up his demons, they learned the potions and formulas that gave them their supernatural powers: to fly, to make men impotent and women miscarry, to drive horses mad. These late fifteenth-century inquisitors and those who wrote of this heresy in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries described its rituals. They drew on all of the most pornographic of the Church's traditional vilifications of heresies and heretics. The churchmen described mockery of the mass, desecration of the host, orgies on a Witches' Sabbath, cannibalism of newborns, gluttony, defect in the female. Sprenger and
woman
"is
drunkenness, lewd dancing, intercourse with every variety of creature
in
every
possible position.
Since the Malleus Malificarum appeared so early in the age of printing, historians can only speculate about cal
its
direct influence. In 1487 the Theologi-
Faculty of the University of Cologne endorsed the treatise, sixteen edi-
had been published by 1 520, a total of thirty-two by 1660 with translaGerman and French. ^^ There is no question that what they wrote echoed attitudes that had been part of European culture since its beginnings. tions
tions into
By the mid-1 500s the learned and powerful universally accepted their reasonBy the mid-1 500s no one with secular or religious authority doubted the existence of a heresy of devil worship, no one doubted its practices or denied witchcraft, and all saw its principal believers and practitioners as the illiterate, older peasant women of the countryside. Throughout the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries numerous Catholics and Protestants wrote their own treatises and condemnations, based both on theory and on their practical experience in working to destroy the heresy. ^"^ All agreed that the only way to be rid of the witches and their master, the Devil, was to kill them. As Georg ing.
Pictorius of southwest
the
number of
live safe
Germany
explained: "If the witches are not burned,
immense sea that no one could and charms. "^^ The Frenchman Bodin in his 1580
these furies swells up in such an
from their
spells
demonology warned of the consequences villainous
to those
who
did not root out the
menace:
Those too who
let the witches escape, or who do not punish them with the utmost may rest assured that they will be abandoned by God to the mercy of the witches. And the country which shall tolerate this will be scourged with pesti-
rigor,
lences, famines
and wars.^^
In response, the secular rulers produced laws and ordinances against witches.
The
first
appeared
in
France
in 1490,
then
in
Emperor Charles V's
early
The
Extraordinary
167
sixteenth-century codification of Imperial law, the Carolina, then in English
laws of 1542, 1563, 1736, Scottish law, a Russian decree of 1653, the Danish
King Christian V's ordinance of 1683. All condemned the
onment
or death, as the
means
women
to impris-
to spare their countries the Devil
and
his
agents.
How many women The
executed?
Men
misogyny."
women.
were persecuted?
historian E. fell
How many
victim, but at least
In the waves of panic
and
fear,
two
and beheaded
is
100,000.
Most
time of "lethal
a
it
thirds of those
sometimes
all
times 80 percent or more, always the vast majority. "^^ estimate of the numbers of European
women
how many
accused and
William Monter has called
who
died were
were women, some-
The most
conservative
strangled, drowned, burned,
historians believe there
were many more.
Southern Germany went from extreme to extreme; between 1561 and 1670 Catholics and Protestants executed more than 3,200 people, usually of twenty or more, 82 percent of in
them women. "^^
French Lorraine, accusations ran 90 percent died.'^^ The
in
In the decade
the thousands.
Of
in
groups
1581-1591
the 2,000 accused
in Lorraine,
at the
end
terror in the Jura region of Switzerland of the sixteenth century produced records of almost 900 cases. ^^
Persecution
came
in
two waves in England, in the 1580s and 1590s, then when 490 were executed in Essex, one third of those
again from 1645 to 1647 accused.'^'*
300
Women
suffered in clusters of persecution in Scotland:
identified at a time
1,000 executed. '75 In Italy,
from the 1590s to the 1660s
The numbers go
—over 3,000
into the thousands in Spain
200 and
and and Poland.
Denmark, Sweden, Finland, and Russia the persecution
trials,
lasted into
the late seventeenth century, long after the fear had passed elsewhere. "^^
The
writings of
churchmen produced the explanation
for the sense of
disorder and confusion, and the description of the heresy; princes of both the
Church and state, the men in positions of power and authority, were the ones who encouraged the first accusations and were the most zealous in hunting down the evil ones. Thus they showed their concern for their subjects, their loyalty to the
new
or the old faith. In the years of hysteria in southwest
Germany, 1562-1666,
for instance, the prince
bishop of Trier
first
accused
the Jews, then Protestants, identifying both groups as witches. Other bishops, counts, judges, and margraves worked to clear out the heresies. In the villages of the Jura region, Switzerland,
the better
oflF
who came
and the Cambresis region
of
Namur,
forward to accuse. In 1609 the inquisitors
in
it
was
Navarre
occasioned the spread of panic across the Pyrenees to Spain. In the 1640s
in
Matthew Hopkins initiated and continued the persecutions. Commission sent to hunt out witches caused the craze in the 1 590s
Essex the judge
A Special in
Scotland and gained the help of the local landowners eager to assert their
authority and prove their piety. In Navarre and Besan^on local royal
officials
WOMEN
168
OF THE FIELDS
and the seigneur petitioned the king and the Church for help. In the 1680s in Denmark, the local squire of Djursland made the first accusations. In Russia, the waves of persecution began only with decrees from the tsar in 1648 and again
in 1653.
Once prompted, to
the villagers responded.
name. Neighbors and
relatives
The
witch was always easy
first
Once accused, the named women, often
accused each other.
victim could think of others. Almost always the village
those outcast by choice or by poverty,
women
patterns of their village's expectations.
Sometimes they were married, some-
times widowed, usually they were the to curse those like
who angered
women
living outside the traditional
ready to speak back, to quarrel,
or frightened them.
It
was the wife of
a soldier
Marguerite Tattey or the prostitute Nicola de Galice, a herdswoman, the
priest's mistress. It
woman
was
a diviner,
villagers believed
Dichtline.
Magdalena
Nessler, or
could change the weather.
It
Anna Demut,
a
was the midwife of
(The mythology surrounding midwives comes from
their involve-
ment with the birth process, which in the witch persecutions was transformed into their means of access to infants for the Black Mass. The idea of evil women harming newborns is ancient; for example, Lilith, Adam's first wife, was believed to have taken revenge on the angels
who
took her children by
Throughout Europe the wisewomen known for their cures and their curses were accused. The circles of accusations went ever wider. In Neuchatel in the winter of 1582-83 the woman thief the villagers caught admitted she had attended the Witches' Sabbath and named others, who in turn accused others. Four were named in Ortenau in 1627, who accused others in the neighboring town of Offenberg. By 163 1 in Sasbach 1 50 witches had been identified all the way to the Stadthalter, his wife and daughter. The Scottish commissioners in 1697 found Margaret Atkin, who confessed and then offered her special powers to strangling the infants of others.)
detect other witches.
No
one stepped forward to defend the women. Rather the opposite. women and men sensed the opportunity to be rid of those who had frightened them. Given the opportunity, they came forward eagerly to present compromising memories of the women's activities and words. For example, in March of 1621 Marie Lanechin, the widow of Jean de Baulx, a sixty-year-old woman, had thirteen accusers: a journeyman, a rich tenant, villeins and their wives, and a laborer. They told tales of illness, deaths of husbands, wives, and nursing infants, a daughter. The villagers described all sorts of unusual phenomena: She danced in the woods with her hair all awry, Peasant
when everywhere else the Under torture she named two other women, but the court them. Only she was ordered strangled and burned.
refused to leave her house, walked in a thick mist air
was
released
clear.
'^'^
The
To
execute a
woman
169
Marie Lanechin, the court, whether secular or
like
more than
religious, required
Extraordinary
just
testimony of "superstitious practices."
There must be proof of heresy, of the pact with the Devil, of his worship. Churchmen and local officials readily found women who innocently admitted to having special power and special knowledge. In the sixteenth- and seventeenth-century
trials,
women
spoke of cures, of ointments, of potions, but not
and worship of Satan. Katherine Kepler, the astronomer's mother, spent fourteen months in prison denying such charges. On the other hand, some confessed too readily, and the courts doubted their testimony as well. By the sixteenth century the basic facts of how the Devil looked, what he promised, the fact of intercourse, the power of his charms and potions, had become common knowledge in the small village communities. The inquisitors and judges believed that women might say anything. In the past men would have used the ritual of the ordeal to determine of rituals
the truth of the accused's confession, the innocence or guilt of the
They would have was
left
a different age, a
it
to
new
God era.
to
mark her
The
woman.
or leave her unmarked. But this
learned no longer called for what they
considered divine intervention as in the ordeal. Instead careful procedures of
law and scientific evidence had evolved. But this was an age of law not yet just,
when
men
believed in astrology and alchemy.
judges ordered torture, of science not yet scientific,
As
when
a result, the courts,
learned
whether run
by churchmen or laymen, became places of extraordinary contradictions with the rational and the irrational jumbled together.
On
the one hand, the Catholic courts of the Inquisition and the Protes-
As Sprenger and Kramer had explained in the Malleus Maleficarum "the accused shall as far as possible be given the benefit of every doubt. '"^^ The accused might have an advocate, a defense lawyer. There were printed indictment forms listing the accusatant secular courts followed strict rules of procedure.
tions,
with blanks
left for
the
name
of the accused
and the date of the
there were set questions to be used before and after torture.
allowed appeal to a higher court.
On
Some
trial;
regions
the other hand, Sprenger also believed
had heard voices screaming obscenities, seen animals like monkeys, dogs, and goats at the windows, all during the trials he conducted in northern Germany. He and Kramer warned prosecutors not to let the witch touch them, told them that they "must always carry about them some salt consecrated on Palm Sunday and some Blessed Herbs" to be "worn around the neck. '"7^ A French judge, Nicolas Remy, believed that the witches put poison on their hands and then grabbed the clothes of the presiding officer as if that he
asking his mercy. ^^
Most contradictory the
name
of law
and
of
all
were the kinds of corroboration demanded
science. In fact,
it
in
was not so much corroboration of
WOMEN
170
OF THE FIELDS
charges that was sought as elaboration on them, transformation of simple accusations of harmful deeds into detailed accounts of heretical practices. Just as the authorities
had
initiated the search for the witches, so they
now by
their
intervention assured admissions of heresy and thus the deaths of the accused.
According to the Malleus Maleficarum, the best evidence of confession, for
"common
justice
demands
all
was a
that a witch should not be con-
is convicted by her own confession. "^^ But how power of the Devil be made to confess? The learned believed that torture would free her from the Devil's power. Marie Lanechin of Bazeul, in the Cambresis region of Namur, confessed to relations with the Devil once she had been sent to a higher court and tortured. Commonly in both Catholic and Protestant religious and secular courts, judges ordered use of the strapado, hands tied behind the back, the rope thrown over a beam and pulled so that the accused hung just off the floor, the arms in the air,
demned
to death unless she
woman
can a
in the
—
at the least the shoulders dislocated.
law of the Holy times
it
Roman
Courts that followed the Carolina (the
Empire), or the Inquisition, regulated
could be inflicted
—
in
how many
the Jura, for instance, on three occasions on
three separate days. In Offenberg in 1627 the court used a metal spiked chair that could be heated from underneath. kins, used neither rack
letting
them
The
English judge,
nor strapado, instead he broke the
Matthew Hop-
women by
not
sleep for hours or for days.^^
and secular authorities asked the woman under torture a most requiring only a "y^s" or "no" answer. Drawing on men's pornographic fantasies, they reveal the hysterical and fantastic world of the witch hunters: What is the devil made of when he is having intercourse? Can you see him? What is the source of his semen? Is there a time he favors for the act? Does he choose special women? Was the sex act more
The
religious
series of questions,
or less pleasurable with him?^^
Many women
answered
as their questioners
wished, repeating after their ordeal information about initiation ceremonies, confessing to fornication with the Devil, with animals, with imaginary beasts,
speaking of dead infants, toads in fancy clothes, desecration of the host, transformation, salves
made
of excrement, flying,
all
the mythology of the
heresy. ^"^
Jeanette Clerc, tortured and executed in 1539, gave her all
they could hope
for: a devil
named Simon with whom
Geneva judges
she rode on a stick
to the "synagogue"; unnatural sex, icy cold semen, and a mark from his bite on her face; fancy food of white bread, apples, and white wine at the Sabbath, and meetings on Thursdays and Fridays. They had found Jeanette Clerc
because her neighbor's cow had died.^^ j^ 1587 Walpurga Hausmannin, the
midwife of Dillingen, "having been accused justly,
persistently, uniformly
has been interrogated gently and under torture and has
now
and
confessed
The
Extraordinary
171
her witchery."^^ She said that her association with the Devil began with
own house. It had frightened her when she had seen wooden hand, but he promised to help her, gave her salves against her enemies, and marked her as one of his own under her left arm. In return she killed babies for him, just at birth before baptism when the holy water did not yet protect them (43 1 infant deaths were attributed sexual intercourse in her
his goatlike foot
and
his
to her).
She rode on
homage
to a Devil enthroned,
a pitchfork to the
Sabbath celebration, where she paid
rituals mocking the host, copulated, and gorged on roast pig and babies. The Devil had slapped her when she ^'^ mentioned Jesus. Sometimes the torture did not have the desired effect. A woman like Suzanne Gaudry, questioned in Rieux in 1652, initially described meeting
watched
Satan, his skin like hide, wearing black breeches and a "flat hat." She admit-
ted they had been lovers for twenty-five to twenty-six years. But without the
prompting of the questions like those composed by Sprenger and Kramer, she had little to say of the Sabbath; she spoke of a "guitarist," "some whistlers," and she would admit to no maleficia (acts harming others or their posses-
On
sions).
the third day she said she had killed Philippe Cornie's horse, but
later explained that she
had offered
this
maleficium because she
felt
she must
say something. Stretched on the rack, she denied everything; tortured again,
she refused to speak at
all.
In such a situation, the authorities looked to other kinds of evidence to
Each court had its favored "scientific" "swimming" might prove the the water had rejected her. In Denmark, they
corroborate their assumptions of
guilt.
proof of the pact with the Devil. In England
woman
a witch. If she floated,
tied her before
throwing her
in a Scottish court,
many,
If
she faltered in saying the Lord's Prayer
France, in England and Scotland,
in
woman
in.
she showed herself to be in the Devil's power. In Gerofficials
stripped and shaved the
looking for the "Devil's mark," the spot he had touched after their
when pricked with a needle. The make the test, first on her breasts and found such a mark on Suzanne Gaudry, that and
intercourse that neither bled nor pained village barber genitals.
surgeon was called
The French
judges
in to
the fact that she did not cry proved her an agent of Satan. English courts also
looked for suspicious lumps, believed to be the nipple for the witch's familiar to suck.^^
the 500s some Europe — southwest Germany, No one —the accusations and the hunting were out
By the end for
example
of
who was
1
in
regions of
of control.
and who was not. In Rottenburg in 1602 even the chief prosecutor, Hans Georg Hallmayer, had confessed and had to be executed. The only way to end the random victimization seemed to be to end the whole process. And just as the learned and powerful had begun the panic, could say
a witch
WOMEN
172
SO they
ended
it.
OF THE FIELDS
In southwestern
Germany,
in France, in
Belgium, in the
new
Netherlands, beginning as early as 1613, authorities refused to hear accusations,
made
the rules of evidence
stricter,
stopped using torture, did not
on appeal, and set fines for false had given the power and sown fear of those who held it, so now they began to deny it and to discredit those who claimed it. All still observed the strange behavior of the village wisewomen, but instead of calling them heretics united with the Devil, they began to describe them as "possessed," unwilling souls in need of exorcism and prayer, not execution. Others called the women deluded. ^^ By the 1730s in England, to claim one could use magic constituted "fraud." Events in Spain from 1611 to 1613 heralded the changes in attitude and approach that would come for the rest of Europe in the course of the seventeenth century. In 1611, given a Year of Grace, an opportunity to confess without punishment, over 1,800 people of the Logrono region in Spain (most of them children, ages seven to fourteen) admitted to making carry out executions, reversed sentences
accusations. Just as they
people
sick, to
changing form, to ruining crops. ^° With so many confessions
the authorities called for a special inquisitor to examine this outbreak of heresy.
From May 1611
to January 1612
Alonso de Salazar y Frias traveled
who had conBy October 1613 he had rejected most of the testimony. He wrote: "Indeed, these claims go beyond all human reason and many even pass the limits permitted the Devil. ""^^ His report published in 1614 by the Supreme Tribunal of the Spanish Inquisition concluded, "I have come to believe, and shall continue to do so, that none of the acts which have been attested in this case, really or physically occurred at all."^^ Nothing had happened, so none were guilty: The 1,384 children were absolved; of those fourteen and the countryside and questioned and cross-questioned those fessed.
over,
290 people were reconciled, forty-one confessed witches received absoback their confessions.^'
lution, eighty-one others took
In a time of political, economic,
Europe's
elite
had turned
and
extirpation of an imagined conspiracy of the Devil. tions
The
remain the most hideous example of misogyny
Erupting so suddenly
and the
in
in
witchcraft persecu-
European
history.
the mid-sixteenth century, the persecutions declined
fear died equally dramatically in the mid-seventeenth century.
the religious and secular authorities
honored and that had inspired the
came
new
and killing. By the and powerful looked to new kinds of
explanations for their universe,
scientific place, a place
Both had
to scorn the very beliefs they
hysterical accusations
early eighteenth century, the learned
order, to
men of women and the
religious uncertainty,
for security to the persecution of
now transformed
into a rational,
without need of religion or magic.
But while the learned and the powerful stopped
their persecutions
and
The
moved on
to a
new
Extraordinary
world, one without magic, the
173
women and
the
men
of
the villages did not abandon the supernatural so readily. There was no heresy,
women and men went back to the no one had proved to them that the world was not filled with the irrational, or that the cunning folk had lost their power. Into the twentieth century countrywomen and men continued to rely on the traditional rituals, the combinations of the old religions and Christianity, to guarantee white magic for their families and their property. ^"^ In eighteenth-century Serbia, peasant women and men thought of the plague as an old woman and had special rites to make her leave the village alone. but
left to
themselves once again, peasant
old beliefs in magic and the spirits, for
In nineteenth-century Russia,
when
the cattle sickened, the
men
enclosed the
went into hiding while the women went out into the fields at midnight and screamed abuse to drive death away. (The oldest woman in the community was tied to the plow and made a furrow three times around the village as another part of the ritual.) In 1910 in Sicily a woman would not comb her hair on Friday for fear it would mean a curse. ''^ Into the twentieth century Englishwomen believed that saving hot cross buns from one Good Friday to the next would keep away whooping cough. Irish families in Lough in County herds,
Clare this
or
in
the 1930s
was the
it
left
the west side of the land free of outbuildings, because
fairies' side.
Men could
not go near butter as
it
was being churned
"won't come."^^
Throughout Europe old women were still thought to have mysterious ties They might be midwives. They might have the power of the evil eye. To ward it off, a peasant woman in Greece in the 1950s wrapped her new baby with a special blue bead on a band around its waist, ritually crossed the child, and spat three times when she swaddled it.^"^ Many of these old beliefs, these old ways of the peasant woman's world remained intact even as so much else changed with the economic, social, and political transformation of Europe in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. to the supernatural.
4
WHAT REMAINS OF THE PEASANT WOMAN'S WORLD
Industrialization and urbanization transformed the economic,
political,
and twentieth-century Europe. Familiar institutions and ways disappeared as governments and social service agencies assumed powers and resources unimaginable in earlier centuries. Peasant women and men learned new relationships to the land, new methods of and
cultural patterns of nineteenth-
cultivation. After
World War
the basic routines of their traditional attitudes
II,
lives.
and patterns
modernization and
Yet
its
technology altered
for all of the transformation,
many
prevailed, proving resistant to even such
powerful forces for change.
At the beginning of the 1980s in Italy, France, the Soviet Union, and of Eastern Europe and the Balkans large percentages of the population still worked in agriculture. Women comprised more than fifty percent of the rural population in parts of Eastern Europe.^ Despite peasant women's contribution to the economy as a whole and to the agricultural sector in particular, the old patterns of devaluing and designating their work had not changed. Many tasks, such as care of the household and children, continued to be unpaid labor, not even valued enough to be counted in national economic statistics of goods and services. Such tasks remained part of women's tradiof work in the home as a wife and mother and tional "double burden"
much
—
outside as a
wage
earner. ^
as in centuries past,
When
paid wages for their work, peasant
continued to earn one half to three quarters
as
women, much as
men Another ancient
tradition regarding
countrywomen's work proved equally
comparison with countrymen, Europe's rural women performed the least skilled tasks, and had less access to mechanization
resistant to change. In still
and the technological education needed to make use of magazine for peasant women, Krest'yanka, published grower's account of her work:
it.
a
In 1980 the Soviet
woman
sugar beet
^
What Remains
of the Peasant
Woman's World
Altogether up to 400,000 seedlings are pulled up from each hectare.
175
And you
have to bend over every one of them, have a long look at some of them; you don't choose immediately as if one were as good as another. And from the very first the weeds have to be pulled up. Your back aches and your what it's like, farming the crop."*
feet
grow heavy. That's
In addition, as Soviet Premier Khrushchev explained to a conference of
farmers
in
1961, "It turns out that
it
is
and the women who do the work."^ As 1.5
the
men who do the administering 1975 women represented only
late as
percent of the administrative personnel on collective farms.^ Recent
like using two shifts of women workers at harvest instead of demanding twelve or more hours of labor from one shift, have eased peasant women's lives. Even so, they remained disadvantaged members of the Soviet economy. This inequity was not unique to the Soviet Union and continued to exist in the rest of Europe as well. The expansion of the role of government and the services it provided, which evolved in the twentieth century, changed some of the ways in which
improvements,
countrywomen 1960s
in
dealt with their
southern Italy and
own and
in Sicily,
their families' basic needs. In the
peasant
women
learned to use the
bureaucracy to generate benefits as they had once used private and religious charity.
They procured health insurance for a son's operation, a housing new apartment. Still, when rural women needed extra sources
subsidy for a
of income, they Italian peasant
depended on the same kinds
women baked
wood, and cleaned
women The
of tasks as they always had.
bread, raised, slaughtered, and cured pigs, cut
for the signora,
the wife of the local landlord. Russian
sold the produce of their household gardens. '^
advantages of modernization, the amenities that improved the qual-
ity of a family's
slowly than to
comforts,
women
came
to the
women
in
the countryside but
more
living in the cities of the twentieth century. In the
post-World War II apartments of southern Italian villages, peasant women had a gas burner, but with only two rings, running water but only for two hours a day. Studies done in France in the mid-1960s showed that changes that had become standard in the cities were still rarities in the countryside: 84 percent of peasant homes had no indoor toilet, compared to 48 percent of urban homes; 42 percent had no running water, compared to 1 2 percent of urban homes; 17 percent of peasant homes had a vacuum cleaner compared to 35 percent of the urban homes; 16 percent had a television
compared
to 27 percent in the cities.^
By the 1980s
in
set,
the Soviet Union, nine
out of ten rural households had electricity, half had natural gas for cooking. In the mid-1970s, however, only one third of the country families had run-
ning water, central heating, or access to sanitation mains.
Though by 1980
the vast majority of Europe's rural
women had
all
of the
WOMEN
176
OF THE FIELDS
advantages and services of modern health care for themselves and their families, in logical
some circumstances they
medical
through the
last stages of
new techno-
women went
labor together, on "thrones" arranged in a circle
around the delivery room. Their their backs
the impersonality of the
felt
In the southern Italian towns, peasant
facilities.
legs in leather slings, their
propped up, vaginas uncovered, the
home
the white towel they had brought from
women
in their
abdomens draped,
of Torregreca shoved
mouths,
bit hard,
and
Where before and comfort, now each
prayed that they would not disgrace themselves by crying out. her friends and family had been there to encourage
woman
looked away so that she would not see or be seen.
When
hard times came
in
the modern age, peasant
women
continued to
take solace in their faith and to accept responsibility for their family's
European men stopped going
gious well-being.
women. 10
to
reli-
church long before
In Spain, early twentieth-century Santander was no different from
New
sixteenth-century
Castile with
its
yearly processions of
women, men,
and churchmen carrying the image of the local saint to the church and then to the shrine. But after 1940 in Santander, the men no longer went up the mountain to the shrine. They left it to the wives while they waited halfway up the path. A shopkeeper's widow explained the women's point of children,
view: "Praying
Even with
an obligation,
a job,
is
all
like
washing the
women's contributions
of peasant
society, traditional attitudes denigrating the female lives adversely.
dishes. "^^
to their families
and
their
continued to affect their
Declarations of women's equality in constitutions and laws did
not end misogyny. In the 1970s a Sicilian
woman
explained:
not equal to the man. Among the young perhaps there is a between adults. The woman always feels herself inferior. You're not emancipated just by work. The man continues to treat the woman
Here the woman
is
dialogue, but not .
.
.
like
an animal, capable of working, but not of thinking. ^^
Neither the states nor the churches of the twentieth century have encour-
aged peasant
The
women
to
oppose such attitudes or to seek
less traditional roles.
national report of the Austrian government to the United Nations in
1980 gave the goals of the Ministry of Agriculture and Forestry. The ministry described peasant
women
in traditional terms: within the family, married,
By its efforts the Austrian government hoped "to enrich the personality of farmers' wives" (not of farm women). They hoped to make the "wives" better able to serve in their traditional defined by their relation to men.
capacities.
The
these attitudes
plained
why
sermon, but
teacher in a southern Italian village of the 1950s expressed
much
the it
girls
had in earlier centuries. She exbook about the Madonna: "It wasn't a these girls. After all, why do they need to read
as her counterparts
had only
was right
for
a
What Remains
Woman's World
of the Peasant
177
What they need to know is how they are supposed to act.''^^ and write? Throughout the twentieth century, as in previous ages, countrywomen have always been the last to learn to read. The 1938 League of Nations .
.
.
Yearbook gave percentages of
men;
to 32.7 percent
women
Yugoslavia 57.1 percent
illiterates: in
in Bulgaria
43.3 percent
women,
men;
19.5 percent
in
women, 17.8 percent men; in France 4.2 percent women, 3.4 percent men.^"* Vuka from a village in Serbia in the 1930s remembered how excited she had been after her brother had taught her to read. Her Italy 25.2
mother
percent
her to work and then "I would take a book on
left
blind, not looking at the knitting but reading under it."^'
the love stories of
women I
What Vuka wanted
was
everything.
lap
and knit were
favorites
betrayed. Betrayal in love led her to think of other
kinds of betrayal: "I was sorry for those unfortunate myself, too, because
my
Her
felt
unhappy
to
"have
since
I
girls.
I
was sorry
could not do what
a school education
I
for
wanted."
and learn and know
"1^
would have
to
By the 1920s peasant women began
to
In the twentieth century, to have such opportunity a leave the land
and go
to the cities.
girl
The trend continued after World War II. Parents sometimes encouraged their daughters to seek new kinds of employment away from the farms, like these Soviet parents interleave the countryside in massive numbers. ^'^
viewed Her
in
the 1980s:
father
and
I
have spent our whole
lives in
muck and
filth, let
Zina do some
other work. There's nothing for her to do in the country. ... [In the
can
an
sit in
Into the
last
office,
she can learn bookkeeping by
all
decades of the twentieth century those peasant
remained on the land drew on traditional strengths to their difficulties. in their lives,
Countrywomen
across
she
city]
means. ^^
women who
to reconcile themselves
Europe continued
however circumscribed, and to take pride
to find pleasure
Many Some rural tasks with new
in their tasks.
passed these values on to their daughters and granddaughters.
women
of the twentieth century invested the traditional
importance. Asked her "profession" in the 1960s, a young French peasant
woman
responded proudly,
when asked
''Cultivatrice. "
the same question. ^"^
Some
which husbands and fathers asserted
woman
from
looked at the
their
a village in the south of
men
free to
meet
in
Her mother had answered "none"
rural
women
laughed at the ways
supposed superiority.
France
sat
An
in
elderly
with her neighbors and
the public square. She, a female, as in the
home. The old woman turned the customary restriction into "Up there," she explained, "it's windy and chilly, not as comfortable as on my own front stoop." Her neighbors nodded agreement. ^o Anna Cecchi from an Umbrian village of northern Italy, born in 1913, past, stayed at a
welcome
choice.
WOMEN
178
OF THE FIELDS
had been an orphan since the age of six months. Her grandmother raised her and made the linens for her dowry: sheets, towels, and twelve nightgowns. By the 1980s everything was gone, all but one nightgown which somehow had been spared and kept. This the peasant woman showed to her own granddaughter. Both admired the soft hand-woven cloth, the embroidered pink flowers, the delicate initial on the bodice, and the edges scalloped in lace. 2^ The garment represented the peasant woman's legacy of the beautiful and the
practical, the heritage of painstaking labor.
The French woman's answer women's ter
government questionnaire, the old
to a
laughter, the Italian grandmother's
moment
with her granddaugh-
exemplify the special qualities and strengths that have characterized
Europe's peasant
and custom, the
women
through the centuries. Pride
ability to give value to the
the necessary tasks of
life,
these sustained
In addition, with these qualities
and
most basic
them
in
occupation, in place
realities
in every
and
to
enhance
kind of circumstance.
strengths, Europe's peasant
sustained generation after generation of country families.
women
II
WOMEN
OF THE CHURCHES
THE POWER OF THE FAITHFUL
THE PATTERNS OF POWER AND LIMITATION: THE TENTH TO THE
SEVENTEENTH CENTURIES
The peasant woman's
faith
in
the Church, in the saints, in the power of
the priest, gave her solace and a sense of control over the unpredictable nature of her experiences.
Most Christian women and men, whatever
their estate
and followed this simple path of transgression acknowledged, forgiveness granted, and faith rewarded. Rituals marked their passage from birth and baptism to final in
European
society, held this simple faith in
communion and
goodness and
sin,
the ultimate promise of "life everlasting" in the Christian
heaven. But there were other levels of piety, other levels of religious experience.
European women inherited from the early centuries of Christianity tradiwould enable them to claim much more. In the first three centuries of the Christian era, by her religious enthusiasm, a woman, even more than a man, could break the rules of her society. She could overcome what the ancient Greek, Roman, and Hebrew cultures had decreed as the innate flaws tions that
and
disabilities of
early
Church,
her body and nature. Under the protective mantle of the
women had
the possibility of roles and functions different from
those usually designated for them.
They could by
their faith claim a life
outside the family and marriage.
The
centuries of Christianity had preached "the equality of all making women through their faith equal in potential to men, the eyes of God, powerful by divine authority. Equal and empowered, first
believers,"
equal in a
woman
could reject her traditional function of childbearer, her
life
defined
and mother. In the world of the Church, there was no separate female or male role; instead, both sexes defined their in relation to
men
lives in relation to first
as daughter, wife,
God,
a tie that superseded obligations to
centuries of Christianity, zealous
women
all
others. In the
— Mary Magdalen,
Prisca, Saint
Perpetua, Saint Paula, Saint Melania the Younger, Empress Pulcheria
—had
performed many traditionally male functions. They had preached, studied
WOMEN
182
OF THE CHURCHES
Scripture, prophesied, converted others,
Twice
in
European
and died
the
in
history in the centuries after 800,
name
of the faith.
women would again
have these opportunities. In the twelfth and thirteenth centuries and again in the sixteenth
and seventeenth centuries,
"the equality of
all
the exhilaration of
and func-
name of the
revitalized
and embrace forbidden
tion,
women knew
believers," could forget distinctions of nature
and
roles
activities in the
Christian faith. In the religious enthusiasm of the twelfth-century Renais-
sance and of the sixteenth-century Protestant Reformation,
became
and
rebels
which had motivated the believers and
that
They
protested, they fought
they reformed the old.
For some,
God
But
just as
again
They
and died
proselytizers of the early
as martyrs.
Church.
They founded new
orders,
studied, they preached, they converted others.
spoke through their visions and thus gave them the authority
and
to criticize
women
zealots, seizing opportunities with a fervor as intense as
to prophesy.
the traditions inherited from the early
Church gave legitimacy
and unorthodoxy in the name of faith, so its inherited traditions took it away. The power granted by "the equality of all believers" had come to be limited and circumscribed in the early Church, and so it would be again by the end of the thirteenth century, by the end of the seventeenth century. In each age redefinitions of belief and newly formalized institutions monopolized all access to religious authority in the hands of a male hierarchy. Armed with new dogmas, the ecclesiastics of all Christian sects contained and controlled the faithful of both sexes. Those who did not conform found themto rebellion
selves cast out as heretics
and schismatics.
In these successive ages of definition and conformity, most
women and
in
of special piety accepted the limitations.
They gathered
European convents
in
congregations under the auspices of the male leaders of their churches.
They accepted the religious roles of prayer and charitable works left open to them. Most did not realize that with each cycle of enthusiasm and redefinition, the limits
could
still
had tightened, the range of
justify
an alternative
life
was not what their
activities
had contracted.
Women
outside marriage with their Christian
and ministers praised. Instead, the had etched the disabling and denigrating images of the female's nature and biological function more finely images which reestablished female subordination, not equality, as the ideal. By inference for Catholic women, by direct commandment for Protestants, their Church leaders had glorified the Christian family, a world dominated and demarcated by male authority. By the end of the seventeenth century the preferred life offered to even the most pious and devout of European women lay within this narrow sphere, a life of service to the new hero of society: the faith,
male
but
this
priests
ecclesiastics of the later centuries
—
husband, father, provider
—the
patriarch.
^
2
AUTHORITY WITHIN THE INSTITUTIONAL CHURCH
The Great Abbesses and Learned Holy Communities By the tic
sixth
and seventh centuries, the creation
and monas-
of bishoprics
orders and the definition of Scripture and holy customs by the authority
and Church councils had contained and controlled the enthusiasm Church. Within this new institutional faith, European women could still make a life outside marriage and the family. The Christian Church offered the religious life: membership in communities of women and men
of popes
of the early
pledged to obedience, to poverty and chastity. Within these monasteries, convents, abbeys, and priories, individuals of faith and intelligence could exercise their intellectual
and
spiritual capacities to the full.
mother, a daughter, a woman,
No longer a wife,
man, could dedicate herself to study and to prayer. Though not equal in nature or power to a monk, a nun could nonetheless share equal access to divine favor, to knowledge, and to spiritual a
like a
authority on earth.
The
cloistered life of the
centuries of the Church, together, adopting a
monastery and convent evolved from the
when
common
lay
women and men had grouped
rule to live
and pray
by.
These
earliest
themselves
rules of the
became formalized and the future of the group assured by the endowment of lands for them to live from. Between the seventh and twelfth centuries, royal and noble women, the daughters and fourth, fifth,
and
sixth centuries
wives of the propertied, founded such groups, often joining the monastery or
convent themselves and presiding
From
as abbess.
the seventh to the tenth centuries, privileged foundresses and
abbesses could assume powers usually reserved to bishops, abbots, and the
Many of these communities consisted of adjacent foundawomen and men, which historians have called "double monasteWomen often ruled these communities. As abbess such a woman
ordained clergy. tions for ries."^
— WOMEN
184
exercised both religious
name
and
OF THE CHURCHES
secular power. Because of the lands held in the
of the order, she was responsible for fulfilling the feudal obligations of
and responsible for the administration of the manors and fields upon which the maintenance of the pious group depended. She also supervised the religious life of those living on the monastery lands, the collection of tithes, a vassal
and the choice of the the religious
life
village clergy.
of the
As abbess she assumed
In the exercise of these powers, their
responsibility for
nuns and monks of her order.
some women acted no
differently
from
male contem.poraries. In the mid-seventh century Saint Salaberga of
Laon
in
France founded seven churches and took responsibility
for
300
Her contemporary Saint Fara (consecrated as a child by the Irish missionary Saint Columban) founded a joint community at Brie in the north
nuns. 2
of France, ruled as abbess,
and assumed
and episcopal powers, hearing abbess of Jouarre in France wear insignia usually reserved to
priestly
confessions and excommunicating members.
obtained a papal dispensation in order to
The
bishops. Into the twelfth century at the Spanish abbey of Las Huelgas, the
nuns appointed
their
own
confessors.
Sanchia Garcia blessed the novices
As
late as
like a priest
1230 the abbess Dona and presided at chapter
meetings for the twelve other monasteries under her authority.^ Benefactors and ecclesiastics expected that the principal duty and activity of the holy
women would be
supporters and themselves.
prayer: prayer to exculpate the sins of their
Men
in religious orders, monks, could also preach and administer the sacraments when they had been ordained as priests;
without ordination, women,
in theory, could only pray.
Into the twelfth
century, however, the powerful female leaders of these holy communities
whether monasteries,
joint
communities, or convents for
women
alone
defined the lives and functions of their nuns more broadly. Prayer, yes, but also education. Literacy in these early centuries
Latin,
and
this
tant Latin texts of antiquity shire,
and the
early
England, had become known as
efforts of
meant the
a
Church. By 694 Repton
Abbess Aelfthrith. By the eighth century Chelles
nobility sent their daughters to
in
Derby-
center for education through the
achieved a similar reputation. In ninth-century Saxony
From
ability to read
they wanted for their charges, the ability to study the impor-
in
France had Germany, the in
Quedlinberg or Gandersheim to be educated.
the seventh to the eleventh centuries, male leaders of the Church
encouraged
this learning. Saint
Columban and
the other missionaries of the
seventh-century Irish Church emphasized education as they traveled through
England, France, and Germany. Contemporary theologians
on
virginity extolled the value of reading the Bible
some asserted that through such a "masculine" educabecome literally more "virile," more like a man, and thus
In the ninth century tion a
woman
more
holy."^
could
in their treatises
and the Church Fathers.
Authority Within the Institutional Church
Under the
185
direction of abbesses of particular energy
and
intelligence,
endowed
these religious centers were unique, the equivalent of small
universi-
Saint Hilda (616-680), the grandniece of the seventh-century English
ties.
one and supervised two other monasteShe made Whitby, a settlement of female and male anchorites, into a center of learning. Encouraged and advised by Saint Aidan, the bishop of Lindisfarne, she set the regular schedule of prayers and king,
Edwin
ries in
of Northumbria, founded
the course of her
life.
holy days and then turned her attention to the education of her charges. Five of her
community became
bility for supervision of
When a reeve (the layman given responsi-
bishops.
one of the monastic
estates)
brought to her Caedmon,
on the manor, she recognized the beauty of his verses. Through her encouragement he joined the order and turned to holy subjects for his poetry. Women from other English monasteries and convents from Wimborne a servant
in
—went with
Dorset, for example
—
missionaries to the Continent
and stayed
communities and centers of learning established there. Lioba (d. 782) went to join Saint Boniface on his mission to the Saxons. As his particular friend and adviser, she presided over the double monastery of to administer religious
Bischofsheim and supervised the organization of other communities.
from her monastery
left to
become
teachers in establishments
Women
made by
other
male emissaries of the Pope. Because of her learned reputation, other members of the Church hierarchy, and Hildegard, wife of the Emperor Charle-
magne, sought her advice. Lioba's mother had dedicated her to the Church as a child, reasoning that the religious life would give her daughter "freedom." Thus it must have felt for Lioba and other women of the ninth, tenth, and eleventh centuries. For within these protected and sanctified cloisters intellectual disabilities placed
on
opportunities usually reserved for men.
could read the great
texts;
women
could be free of the
their sex. In this regard, they could enjoy
They could use their minds; they own words and thoughts.
they could write their
Lioba's biographer explained that the abbess had been so eager "to attain perfect knowledge of religion" that even as a
little girl
"she never laid aside
her book." In her adulthood, more moderate though no rested after the after sleep. "^
less
midday meal "for she maintained the mind
churchwomen explored the
In each century
is
dedicated, she
keener for study
different literary forms.
biography of the sixth-century abbess. Saint Radegund of Poitiers, emphasizing "womanly" strengths such as her piety, her motherly care of the community, and her ability to keep peace. The seventh-century abbess, Gertrud of Nivelles, journeyed to Rome for books Baudonivia wrote the
official
and enlisted Irish monks to teach. One of her own canonesses wrote her life. (A canoness took partial vows obedience and chastity, but not poverty.) In the eighth century, the abbess of Heidenheim is considered to have begun
—
WOMEN
186
OF THE CHURCHES
the tradition of English travel books by recording for the bishop of Eichstatt
Near
his recollections of his trip to the
East.
In this sheltered academic environment,
one woman went beyond even
her male contemporaries. Hrotsvit of Gandersheim
known by
a variety of simplifications of her
Roswitha), alone
among
become Otto
I
Founded
a rich,
in
to
all
Europe from the fourth
of
independent nunnery, favored by the Holy
sit
at the
Hroswitha,
i.e.
to the eleventh
the 850s, by the tenth century, Gandersheim had
allowed the abbess her
money and
930-c. 990, popularly
the learned of Saxony, wrote verse, history, and the
only dramas composed in centuries.
(c.
Saxon name,
own
own
court, her
Roman
Emperors.
knights, the right to coin
meetings of the Diet. Hrotsvit entered the monastery
as a child, probably dedicated to the
Church by her noble
family. Rikkardis,
"our learned and kindly teacher" as she called her, taught her Latin; the abbess Gerberga
may have
was familiar with the great
given her Greek. ^ Hrotsvit's works show that she classical
and
religious texts.
(By her time, the tenth
century, a good monastic library would include Virgil, Horace, Lucan, Cicero,
Seneca, Pliny the Elder, Tacitus and the historians of the later years of the
Empire, Ovid, Juvenal, Terence and Plautus, the philosopher Boethius, the
Church
Fathers, Fortunatus, Alcuin, Bede, Isidore of Seville, Legends of the
Saints, the Vulgate, Psalms,
When
and the apocryphal books of the
New
Testa-
came to write, Hrotsvit, like an educated man of her circumstances, composed in Latin: legends of the saints, epics, a poem and her plays. ^ Each demonstrates her inventiveness, her originality with the language, her ability with meter. She created her pen name in the same spirit; it is a word play from Saxon, hroth meaning "sound" and swith "loud" or "strong." Thus she gave herself the title "the strong voice of Gandersheim."^ In her poem she described her flounderings as a novice author working alone: "Sometimes I composed with great effort, again I destroyed what I had poorly written," working on so "that the slight talent given me by Heaven should not lie idle in the dark recesses of the mind and thus be destroyed by the rust ment.)'^
she
.
.
.
of neglect. "^^
Hrotsvit wrote her legends of exemplary saints and her plays to counter
women that she found in the secular and She consciously chose to borrow her plots from the "pagan" playwright Terence, and enjoyed the irony of transforming his stories of deflowered maidens and prostitutes, tales of "the shameless acts of licentious women," into dramas showing "the laudable chastity of Christian virgins." She demonstrated over and over again the victory of the "fragile the images of weak corruptible religious literature.
woman"
over the "strong
man
.
.
.
routed with confusion. "^^
Hrotsvit shared her plays with a few churchmen,
her
efforts,
who encouraged
her in
but they were primarily meant for the nuns and canonesses to read
ir,hiftpar*^JKifi1iiirmac\tf4,„Amt.jaMmm't
1.
The nuns
of the convent of the learned abbess
Herrad of Landsberg, portrayed Hortus Deliciarum c. 1160.
in
her manuscript,
llllMliill,
tin
/''"S ))bnibuRTitjes, in Bndenthal and Koonz, eds
42- Cited in Deen, p
45
Cited
m
\'ol
I,
no 4 (Spnng 1974),
,
p 174-
%
gangenheit (Rembek bei in
Row,
169
43. Barbara Beuv-s, Familienleben in Deutschland.
Cited
&
Nooiun. p. 423, note Ta>^d, p 173
41. Cited in George, p
44
297.
Schnucker, "The English Puritans and Pregnancy, Delivery
and Breast-Feeding," History of Childhood Quarterly; p 651 38. Cited in
p.
The History of an Idea (New York; Harper
105.
Publishers, 1954), p 37. Cited
,
Hamburg
Seue
Rovkohlt, 1980),
Deen, p 325 Bainton, France and England, p 88.
Bilder aus der deutschen Ver-
p 224
.
Notes to Pages 264-271 PART 1
III:
Cited
in
The Legacy
6.
Carole Levin,
Tudor England,"
493
of the Protestant Reformation
"Women
the Book of Martyrs as Models of Behavior in
in
International Journal of
Women
s Studies,
vol. 4, no. 2
(March/
April 1981), p. 202. 2.
Cited
3.
Cited
4.
Cited
5.
Cited
M. Williams, "Women
in E.
Modem
History, Vol.
Preachers of the Civil War," The Journal of
4 (December 1929),
in
Manning,
ed., p. 212.
in
Higgins
in
Manning,
ed., pp. 210, 211.
in
Joyce L. Irwin,
Eden
PART
no.
Higgins
in
R. Brink, ed.. real:
I,
IV.
Female
Press
p.
568.
"Anna Maria van Schurman: The
Scholars:
Women's
A
Tradition of Learned
Star of Utrecht," in
Women Before
J.
1800 (Mont-
Publications, 1980), p. 79.
WOMEN OF THE
CASTLES AND MANORS:
CUSTODIANS OF LAND AND LINEAGE
PART
IV:
1.
From
Warrior's
Wife
to
Noblewoman: The Ninth
to the
Seventeenth Centuries 1.
The
use of literature as a source for a historical period
this section literary sources are referred to
more
when
is
always problematic. In
they can be corroborated from
traditional historical sources such as legal or ecclesiastical
documents.
On
the
women's lives and the attitudes they suggest, see Penny Schine Gold, TTze Lady and the Virgin: Image, Attitude, and Experience in Twelfth-Century France (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1985), pp. xvii, 3-4, 12, 20-26, 37-42, 103-104, 148. By the end of the thirteenth century all of the major oral works had been given written form. Of the longer genres, the epic, saga, chanson de geste, and romance all had been part of the entertainment of the castles, stories sung to the chieftains and their thanes, to the feudal lords and their vassals. The following have been most frequently referred to in this chapter: Joan M. Ferrante, trans., Guillaume d'Orange: Four Twelfth-Century Epics (New York: Columbia University Press, 1974); Jessie Crosland, trans., Raoul de Cambrai (London: Chatto & Windus, 1926); C. K. Scott Moncrieff, trans.. The Song of Roland (Ann Arbor: The University of Michigan Press, 1960); W. S. Menvin, trans.. The Poem of the Cid, and Helen M. Mustard, trans.. The Nibelungenlied, in Medieval Epics (New York: The Modern Library, 1963); Magnus Magnusson and Hermann Palsson, trans., Njal's Saga (New York: Penguin Books, 1977); Chretien de Troyes, Arthurian Romances, translated by W. W. Comfort (New York: Dutton, 1978) including Lancelot, Erec et Enide, Cliges; use of the literature of this period as a source for
Gottfried von Strassburg, Tristan and Isolde with the Sun'iving Fragments of the Tristan of
For
Thomas, translated by A. T. Hatto (New York: Penguin Books, 1978).
a general description of the evolution of the different
teristics, see
Geoffrey Brereton,
Penguin Books, 1968), pp.
12ff.
A
forms and their charac-
Short History of French Literature (Baltimore:
NOTES TO PAGES
494 PART 1.
Constants of the Noblewoman's Life
2.
IV:
Raoul,
150.
p.
2.
See NjaVs Saga,
3.
Cited
in Pierre
McNamara 4.
On
112-116
88; Raoul, p. 126.
p.
Riche, Daily Life in the World of Charlemagne, translated by Jo
Ann
(Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 1978), p. 79.
the origins of the concept of "nobility" by birth, the idea of "lineage," and the
evolution of a clearly defined noble class from the ninth to the twelfth centuries,
Duby, The Chivalrous
see especially Georges
Society, translated
by Cynthia Postan
(Berkeley: University of California Press, 1977), pp. 76-77, 98, 198, 173-75,
85,
and Maurice Keen, Chivalry (New Haven: Yale University
178-
Press, 1984), pp.
24-26. 5.
6.
See Henry
S.
Bennett, The Pastons and Their England (Cambridge: Cambridge
University Press, 1970),
p.
M. H. Keen, The Laws
of
Toronto
119.
War
Press, 1965), gives
a discussion of
all
in the
Late Middle Ages (Toronto: University of
an excellent description of
this last
kind of warfare. For
the changes in fighting and the ways in which they are reflected
in literature, see R.
Howard
Bloch, Medieval French Literature
and Law
(Berkeley:
University of California Press, 1977). 7.
Ferrante, ed., Guillaume,
8.
Edward Noble Stone, ton Press, 1951),
9.
10.
Lancelot,
p.
p.
trans..
267.
The Song of William
(Seattle: University of
Washing-
51.
302.
p.
See Wolfram
Von Eschenbach, Parzival, translated by Helen M. Mustard and (New York: Vintage Books, 1961), p. 125.
Charles E. Passage 11. Erec, 12.
p. 7.
Erec, p. 68. p. 92.
13. Parzival, 14.
Aucassin and Nicolette
in
Angel Flores,
ed.,
Medieval Age (New York: Dell Publish-
ing Co., Inc., 1963), p. 442. 146.
15.
Tristan,
16.
Eileen Power, Medieval English Nunneries (Cambridge: Cambridge University
p.
Press, 1922), pp. 17.
429-30.
Joseph Dahmus, Seven Medieval Queens: Vignettes of Seven Outstanding
Women
Middle Ages (Garden City, N.Y.: Doubleday, 1972), p. 130. Lloyd deMause, "The Evolution of Childhood," in Lloyd deMause, ed.. The History
of the 18.
of Childhood 19.
(New
York: Harper
Geoffrey Brereton, ed. and
&
Row,
trans., Froissart
Publishers, 1974), p. 33.
Chronicles
(New
York: Penguin Books
Ltd., 1978), p. 61. 20.
Dorothy Atkinson, "Society and Sexes
in
the Russian Past," in Dorothy Atkinson,
Alexander Dallin and Gail Warshofsky Lapidus, Calif.:
21.
Stanford University Press, 1977),
Women
in
Russia (Stanford,
p. 78, or JoAnn McNamara and Suzanne Wemple, "The Power of Through the Family in Medieval Europe: 500-1100," in Mary Hartman
See Dahmus,
Women and Lois
W. Banner, eds., Clio's Consciousness Raised: New Perspectives Women (New York: Harper & Row, Publishers, 1974), p. 107.
History of 22.
eds.,
p. 20.
Dahmus,
p.
181.
on the
.
Notes to Pages 276-280
Dahmus, p. 287. in Dahmus, p. Cited in Dahmus, p.
495
23. See 24. 25.
Cited
120.
Dahmus, Eleanor West (Ann Arbor: The UniverOdegaard, "The Empress Engelberge,"
137. For these queens, see in addition to
Shipley Duckett, Medieval Portraits from East and
Michigan
sity of
A
Speculum:
Press, 1972), Charles E.
Journal of Medieval Studies, Vol.
XXVI,
no.
1
(January 1951), pp.
77-103, and the survey history by Pauline Stafford, Queens, Concubines, and
Dowagers: The King's Wife
in the
The
Early Middle Ages (Athens, Ga.:
University
of Georgia Press, 1983). 26.
G. N. Garmonsway,
& 27.
Co., Inc., 1962),
The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle (New York:
trans..
E. P.
Dutton
p. 96.
Wessex and Mercia,
Earlier English queens of for their husbands, also
like
Ine and Cynethyth, had fought
minting their own coins, a symbol of their importance
in
the realm. 28.
See Doris M. Stenton,
Company,
English
TTie
Woman
in
History
(New
York;
The Macmillan
1957), and F. T. Wainwright, "Aethelfled, Lady of the Mercians," in
Scandinavian England: Collected Papers of F.
T
Wainwright, H. P. R. Finberg, ed.
West Sussex; Phillimore and Co., Ltd., 1975), and the most recent work women, Christine Fell, Women in Anglo-Saxon England and the Impact
(Chichester,
on these
of 1066 (Bloomington, Ind.; Indiana University Press, 1984). 29.
Cited
Keen, War,
in
p.
89. See Stenton,
and Marion
sance History,
vol. 5
See Dahmus, pp. 276-327.
3
See Patricia Higgins, "The Reactions of Petitioners," in Brian
in
of
Medieval and Renais-
(1968), pp. 3-48.
30. 1
"A Study
F. Facinger,
Medieval Queenship; Capetian France 987-1237," Studies
Manning,
Women, with
ed.. Politics,
Special Reference to
Women
Religion and the English Civil
(London; Edward Arnold, 1973), and Maurice Ashley, The Stuarts
in
War
Love (New
York; Macmillan, 1964). 32.
Cited
Women
Roland H. Sainton,
in
(Boston; Beacon Press, 1975), 33.
For the
A
women
of the Fronde, see
Feminist Phenomenon
Publishers, 1974),
and G.
in the P.
of the Reformation in France
and England
86.
p.
Dorothy Anne Liot Backer, Precious Women:
Age
of Louis
XIV (New
York; Basic Books, Inc.,
Gooch, Courts and Cabinets (New York; Alfred A.
Knopf, 1946). 34.
See
}.
C. Russell, Late Ancient and Medieval Population (Philadelphia;
can Philosophical Society, 1958),
p. 19;
Market," Medieval and Renaissance Studies, Series No.
(Durham, N.C; Duke University 35.
Margaret
Wade
(Boston: Little,
The Ameri-
and David Herlihy, "The Medieval Marriage 6,
Dale B.
J.
Randall, ed.
Press, 1976), p. 18.
Labarge, Saint Louis: Louis
Brown and Company,
IX Most
Christian King of France
1968), p. 56.
36. Froissart, p. 256. 37. Froissart, p. 257. 38. Froissart, 39.
p.
259.
See Georges Duby, Medieval Marriage: Two Models from Twelfth-Century France, translated by Elborg Forster (Baltimore:
pp. 92,
5.
The Johns Hopkins
University Press, 1978),
NOTES TO PAGES
496
280-282
40. Cited in Johannes j0rgensen, Saint Bridget of Sweden, Vol.
Lund (New York: Longmans Green and Noonan, "Power
41. Cited in John T.
Middle Ages," 42.
Viator, Vol.
to
Co., 1954)
Choose"
4 (1973),
in
I,
translated by Ingeborg
p. 48.
John Leyerle
ed.,
"Marriage
A
For the evolution of Church policy on marriage, see Jean Brissaud, French Private Law (Boston:
Little,
Brown and Company,
A. Brundage, "Concubinage and Marriage in Medieval
Medieval History, Vol. Marriage
in the
Age
I
in
the
247.
p.
(1975), pp. 1-17, and
1912),
History of
p. 99ff.,
and James
Canon Law," foumal
Henry Ansgar
Kelly,
of
Love and
of Chaucer (Ithaca, N.Y.: Cornell University Press, 1975) pp.
Waterworth, trans.. The Canons and Decrees of the Sacred J. and Oecumenical Council of Trent (New York: Catholic Publication Society Com164-78; see also Rev.
pany, 1848) pp. 196-98. 43.
Germanic groups continued sating
them
England the
bride's parents received a gift
See
for the expenses of her upbringing.
The Viking Achievement (New York: Praeger Dorothy Whitelock,
ed.,
sity Press, 1968), p.
431.
Such was Viking practice
to give a gift to her family.
into the thirteenth century. In
P.
Publishers, 1970) pp. 112-13;
English Historical Documents
(New
Early Eleventh)," in Sylvia L. TTirupp, ed.. Early Medieval Society
45.
Dahmus,
46.
For
p.
in
Century to
(New
York:
p. 27.
113.
a survey description of practice see
Dowry
and
York: Oxford Univer-
44. Cited in Lorraine Lancaster, "Kinship in Anglo-Saxon Society (Seventh
Appleton-Century Crofts, 1967)
compen-
G. Foote and D. M. Wilson,
Mediterranean Europe,"
in
Diane
Owen
Hughes, "From Brideprice to
Marion A. Kaplan,
ed..
The Marriage Bargain:
Women and Dowries in European History (New York: Harrington Park Press, 1985); for more specialized descriptions see Diane Owen Hughes, "Urban Growth and Family Structure pp. 13-14,
in
Medieval Genoa," Past and Present,
and Herlihy, "Medieval Marriage,"
47. See for example.
vol.
66 (February, 1975)
p. 7.
The Secular Spirit: Life and Art at the End of the Middle Ages (New
York: E. P. Dutton 48. See Inga Dahlsgard,
&
Co., Inc., 1975)
Women
Danski Selskab, 1980)
p. 23;
in
p.
254.
Denmark: Yesterday and Today (Copenhagan: Det
Atkinson
in
Atkinson et
al., p.
30, note; J.-L. Flandrin,
Families in Former Times: Kinship, Household and Sexuality, translated by Richard
49.
Southern (New York: Cambridge University Press, 1979) pp. 130-33. Meg Bogin, The Women Troubadours (New York: W. W. Norton and Company, 1976)
p.
50.
Cited
in
145.
G. G. Coulton, Medieval Panorama: The English Scene from Conquest
Reformation (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1939)
p.
to
644.
51. Froissart, p. 253. 52.
C. H. Talbot, ed. and
trans..
The Life of Christina of Markyate:
Recluse (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1959) 53. Talbot, ed., Christina, p. 69.
young men, who
A
Twelfth Century
p. 69.
This kind of marriage proved even more significant for
as early as the ninth
and tenth centuries used
it
as a
means
to rise.
See studies by Duby, Medieval Marriage, pp. 10-12, and Constance B. Bouchard, "The Origins of the French Nobility: A Reassessment," American Historical Review, vol. 86, no. 3
(June 1981), pp. 514-29.
Notes to Pages 282-288 54.
We
See for example, Peter Laslett, The World
497
Have Lost (New York: Charles
Scribner's Sons, 1965) pp. 48-49. 55.
See Pauline Stafford, "Sons and Mothers: Family Politics in
56. 57.
Derek Baker,
ed..
Women
Medieval
in the Early
Middle Ages,"
(Oxford: Basil Blackwell, 1978), pp. 96-97.
Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, pp. 256-57. See Elizabeth A. R. Brown, "Eleanor of Aquitaine: Parent, Queen and Duchess," in
William
W.
Kibler, ed.,
Eleanor of Aquitaine: Patron and Politician (Austin, Tex.:
University of Texas Press, 1976) pp. 17-18; Robert Fawtier, Capetian Kings of France, translated by Lionel Butler (London: Macmillan, 1965),
p.
36; Felipe Fer-
Com-
nandez-Armesto, Ferdinand and Isabella (New York: Taplinger Publishing pany, 1975) pp. 119-23. 58.
For examples of laws from the eleventh to the sixteenth century, see the following:
Ludwig von Bar, A History Brown and Company, 1916), p. 70;
for France, Carl
of Continental Criminal
Little,
for Carolingian
History of Italian Law, translated by Layton B. Register
Law
(Boston:
Law, Carlo Calisse,
(New York: Augustus
A
Kelley,
1969), p. 548; for England, Sir Frederick Pollack and Frederic William Maitland,
The History of English
Law
Before the Time of
Edward
I,
Vol.
II
(London:
Cam-
bridge University Press, 1923), pp. 490-91. 59.
Waterworth, Council of Trent, p. 202. Heath Dillard, "Women in Reconquest
60. See
Cuenca,"
Susan Mosher Stuard,
in
University of Pennsylvania Press, 1976), of the Reconquest:
Women
lin:
eds..
Arlen House, 1978)
Norman
in
Women
p.
Town
The
Fueros of Sepulveda and
Medie^'al Society (Philadelphia: Dillard's recent book.
Society,
Daughters
1100-1300 (New York:
1985).
61. Katharine
Donncha O'Corrain,
in
and
p. 80,
in Castilian
Cambridge University Press, Simms, "Women
Castile:
Women
ed.,
MacCurtain and The Historical Dimension (Dub-
Ireland," in Margaret
in Irish Society:
17.
62. Bennett, pp. 31-32.
and Maitland, Vol.
63. See Pollack
64. Atkinson in Atkinson et 65. Cited in
Marc
al.,
Bloch, Feudal Society, Vol.
University of Chicago Press, 1966) 66.
390.
II, p.
eds., p. 30, note. I,
translated by L. A.
(Chicago:
p. 14, and Duby, Medieval Marriage, pp. lS-19. Duby, Medieval Marriage, p. 87, and Joseph and Francis Gies, Life Castle (New York: Harper & Row, Publishers, 1974), pp. 57-60.
See Facinger,
67. See
68. This ritual 69.
Manyon
227.
p.
Hermann
is
in a
Medieval
the origin of the term "curfew," couvre-feu.
Kellenbenz, "Technology
1700," translated by John Nowell,
in
in
the
Carlo
Age of the Scientific Revolution 500M. Cipollo, ed.. The Fontana Economic 1
History of Europe: The Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries (Glasgow: William Collins Sons 70. Alice
1913) 71. 72.
&
Co., 1976)
Kemp- Welch, Of p.
p.
250.
Six Medieval
Women
(London: Macmillan and Co., Ltd.,
93.
Kemp- Welch, The books are
p. 97.
in fact
in 1265.
73. Gies, Castle, p. 105.
parchment
rolls,
called
membranes, and cover seven months
NOTES TO PAGES
498 74.
For
statistics for
Marriage
the "upper gentry" see Miriam Slater,
an Upper-Gentry Family
in
72 (August 1976),
no.
World
75. Laslett,
289-293
in
"The Weightiest
Business:
17th Century England," Past and Present,
p. 27.
Lost, p. 7.
Mother of Quakerism (New York: Longmans, 1949)
76. See Isabel Ross, Margaret Fell: p. 12.
77. See Christine de Pizan,
translated
Virtues,
The Treasure of the City of Ladies or the Book of the Three
by Sarah Lawson (New York: Penguin Books
Ltd., 1985), pp.
128-29. 78. Cited in
James Bruce Ross and Mary Martin McLaughlin,
Medieval Reader (New York: The Viking 79.
The
descriptions of foods
The Portable
a variety of sources: Riche, Daily Life,
\11-11; Coulton, Panorama,
p.
313; Dorothy Hartley, Lost Country Life
York: Pantheon Books, 1979),
p.
232; Margaret Labarge,
(New
the 13th Century 80.
come from
eds..
Press, 1966) p. 128.
A
Baronial Household in
York: Barnes and Noble, 1966).
Labarge, Baronial Household, pp. 90-93, 96, and Ceorges Duby, Rural
and Country Life
Economy
Medieval West, translated by Cynthia Postan (Columbia,
in the
S.C.: University of
pp.
(New
South Carolina
Press, 1968), p. 227;
Medieval Village (Cambridge: Cambridge University 81. See Cies, Castle, pp. 101, 103,
and G. G. Coulton, The
Press, 1926), p. 114.
and Labarge, Baronial Household, pp. 195, 196. and translated by Marian
82. See Lucien Febvre, Life in Renaissance France, edited
Rothstein (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1977), p.
83.
Labarge, Baronial Household,
84.
Kemp-Welch, p. 99. Kate Campbell Hurd-Mead,
85.
86.
p.
96; Keen, War,
205; Ross, Fell, pp. 264-65.
Times
to the
1938)
p.
Cited
in R.
A
Women
History of
in
Medicine: From the Earliest
Haddam
Press,
Southern, Western Society and the Church in the Middle Ages
(New
Beginning of the 19th Century (Haddam, Conn.: The
401.
W.
York: Penguin Books, 1970) 87. See
p. 64.
p.
263.
David Herlihy, "Land, Family and
in Stuard, ed..
Medieval Society,
p. 28;
Women
in
on average
Continental Europe, 701-1200," their donations represented
about
11 or 12 percent of the gifts, see Table 3, p. 31. 88.
Penny
S.
"Women
Gold,
1000-1249: Problems
and Family
Method and
in
in
the Alienation of Property in Anjou,
Interpretation" Appendix,
p. 6,
unpublished
manuscript, April 1979. See also Gold, Lady, pp. 134-40 for a more complete study of donations. 89. Penelope Johnson,
paper delivered at
Mount Holyoke 90.
Kemp-Welch,
"Agnes of Burgundy:
The
A
Notable Medieval Monastic Patron,"
Berkshire Conference on the History of
Women,
held at
College, South Hadley, Massachusetts, August 25, 1978.
p.
102.
91. Cited in Stenton, p. 33. 92.
Dahmus,
93. Cited in
p.
272.
G. E. Mingay, The Gentry: The Rise and Fall of a Ruling Class (New York:
Longman Group,
Ltd., 1976) p. 136.
94.
Notes to Pages 293-299
499
A
Study of Women's Education Press, 1929) pp. 88-89.
Dorothy Gardiner, English Girlhood
at School:
Through Twelve Centuries (Lx)ndon: Oxford University 95. See Michael Jones
Today, 96.
and Malcolm Underwood, "Lady Margaret Beaufort," History
35 (August 1985), pp. 23-30.
vol.
"Survivors and Surrogates: Children and Parents from
Mary Martin McLaughlin,
De Mause,
the Ninth to the Thirteenth Centuries," in p.
ed.. History of
Childhood,
125.
97. Gardiner, p. 126. 98. Keith
Thomas, Religion and
Sons, 1971)
p.
the Decline of
Magic (New York: Charles
Scribner's
28.
99. R. V. Schnucker,
"The English
Puritans and Pregnancy, Delivery and Breastfeed-
I, no. 4 (Spring 1974), p. 643. The Autobiography of Mrs. Alice Thornton of East Newton, Surtees Society, Vol. LXII (Edinburgh: 1873), p. 95.
Childhood Quarterly, Vol.
ing," History of
100. Charles Jackson, ed.,
Co. York,
m
101. Cited
Koss, Fell, p. 351.
102. Cited in Joseph E. Illick, "Child-Rearing in Seventeenth
America,"
in
De Mause,
ed.. History of
Childhood,
Century England and
305.
p.
103. Jackson, ed., Thornton, p. 125. 104. See Ross, Fell; facing p. 343.
PART 1.
IV:
3.
Power and Vulnerability two
For the evolution of "lineage" and family names, see
in particular
Georges Duby
and "Lineage, Nobility and
Chivalry
in
Medieval Marriage, especially
in
the Region of
and Orest Ranum,
Macon
p.
10,
during the Twelfth Century"
in
articles
by
Robert Forster
Family and Society: Selections from the Annales, translated
eds.,
by Elborg Forster and Patricia M. Press, 1976), pp. 19, 26.
Ranum
This change
in
(Baltimore:
naming and
The Johns Hopkins
University
identifying the family
meant
the revival of the narrower lineal, and thus conjugal, definition of family that had prevailed in Greece and 2.
horses.
By the middle
warriors
in
Thrupp,
to
required twenty-five ounces of gold to buy two war
member
of a
spend twenty-six months' wages
company
for his
of
mounted
mount. See Pierre
and Its Economic Activities," Malcolm Vale, War and Chivalry: Warfare England, France and Burgundy at the End of the Middle
"A Family ed.,
it
of the fifteenth century a
would expect
Bonnassie,
3.
Rome.
In eleventh-century Spain
of the Barcelona Countryside
Early Medieval,
p.
121;
and Aristocratic Culture in Ages (Athens, Ga.: The University of Georgia Press, 1981), p. 126. See, for example, Maconnais in southern Burgundy in Duby, Chivalrous
Society, pp.
73-74. 4.
A
few regions did not
Fuero Jusco of Spain
alter their
in
customs
until after the thirteenth century.
the thirteenth century
still
daughters and sons, as did some parts of Germany. For Spain, see
and Lauro Martines, to the Victorians
see Bloch, Vol. 5.
Cited
in
eds..
(New I,
p.
Not
in
God's Image:
York: Harper
& Row,
204.
Duby, Rural Economy,
p.
383.
The
retained equal inheritance for
Women
in History
Julia
O'Faolain
from the Greeks
Publishers, 1973), p. 148; for
Germany
NOTESTOPAGES
500 6.
299-301
Historians suggest that this was also a period of fewer surviving sons. pressures thus contributed to the
limited offspring; there centuries saw
more
is
phenomenon
of female "lords."
Demographic
Noble
families
a naturally greater attrition of infant boys than girls; the
or less continuous fighting, with estimates of losses in the
Crusades, for example, of from 50,000 to 500,000 European men. See Bogin, pp.
34-35, and JoAnn
McNamara and Suzanne F. Wemple, "Sanctity and Power: The Women," in Renate Bridenthal and Claudia Koonz, eds..
Dual Pursuit of Medieval
Becoming Visible: Women in European History (Hopewell, N.J.: Houghton Mifflin Company, 1977). For general descriptions of the establishment of the right of inheritance and the ideas of "lineage" and "patrimony" see the following: Bloch,
Vol.
Duby, Rural Economy, and Flandrin. For more
I;
Emmanuel Le Roy
specialized discussions, see
Ladurie, "Family Structures and Inheritance
Customs
in Six-
teenth-Century France," and Joan Thirsk, "The European Debate on Customs of Inheritance, 1500-1700," in Jack
Goody, Joan Thirsk and E. P. Thompson, eds.. in Western Europe 1200-1800 (New York:
Family and Inheritance: Rural Society
Cambridge University
Duby, Family and Society and
1978); for France,
Press,
Chivalrous Society; Robert Hajdu, "Family and Feudal Ties in Poitou 1100-1300" Vol. VIII, no.
in the Journal of Interdisciplinary Studies,
(Summer
1
1977), pp.
117-39; for England, Sidney Painter, "The Family and the Feudal System
Century England," Speculum,
vol.
35, no.
different patterns in Russia see Atkinson in Atkinson et 7.
Although historians have found examples of as early as the tenth century, there
and twelfth in
in
women
an increase
II, p.
in
al.,
eds., p. 11.
the numbers during the eleventh
27; for France see
Stenton, pp. 5-6; and Lancaster,
England. In Central Europe
lands and used
them not
so
p.
France and of Spain
Duby, Chivalrous
Society,
34 for Anglo-Saxon and Viking examples
in the eleventh
much
12th
exercising feudal authority from
centuries. See, for example, the study of southern
Herlihy in Stuard, ed., Table
p. 109;
is
in
(January 1960), pp. 1-16; for the
1
and twelfth centuries women gained
for their families as to
enhance the power and
influence of the papacy. For example, Matilda, Countess of Tuscany (1046-1115),
became
heir to the family lands
conflict
between the Holy
used her powers on the
on the death of her older brother and
sister.
In the
Roman Emperor Henry IV and Pope Gregory VII, she side of the Church. With Abbot Hugh of Cluny she oversaw
the reconciliation between the Pope and the Emperor in 1077 at Canossa, one of
her
castles.
The
land she granted the Pope became the nucleus of the future Papal
States. In Spain,
Urraca
(c.
1080-1126) reigned
as
queen of Leon and Castile,
inheriting as her father's heir, later ruling for her son; see the biography, Kevin B. Reilly,
The Kingdom of Leon-Castilla Under Queen Urraca 1109-1126 (Princeton:
Princeton University Press, 1982). 8.
For their
lives see
John T. Appleby, Henry
The Vanquished King (New York:
II:
Macmillan Co., 1962); Facinger, Marion Meade, Eleanor of Aquitaine: A Biography
(New 9.
York:
Hawthorn Books,
She had been named
for her
Inc., 1977);
Brown
in Kibler, ed.
mother Aenor; she was "the other Aenor" or "Alia-
Aenor." 10.
11.
On On
this
reasoning of Eleanor's, see Facinger,
p. 8.
Louis' reluctance to consider divorce, see
Meade,
pp. 108-109;
and Steven
Notes to Pages 301-306 Runciman, A History of the Crusades Vol.
II
501
(New York: Harper & Row,
Publishers,
1967), p. 279. 12.
See Meade,
13.
Meade,
14.
The
144.
p.
187.
p.
August 1153 (died 1156); Henry, February 1155;
children: William, born
Matilda, June
September
1
September
56; Richard,
1 1
161; Joanna, October
1
1 1
57; Geoffrey,
165; John,
December
September 1
166. See
1 1
58; Eleanor,
Brown
in Kibler,
ed., p. 16. 15.
Meade,
16.
Cited
in
17.
Cited
in
pp. 280-81.
18.
100,000
19.
From
Dahmus, Dahmus, silver
p.
225.
p.
225.
marks: Meade,
320.
p.
the eleventh to the thirteenth centuries, outside Europe in the Crusader
Kingdoms There
of the eastern Mediterranean, the great
200 years they lived out
for almost
magnates survived and
flourished.
dream: rich
territories
a warrior's feudal
gained by right of conquest, held by right of inheritance, with their kings too
away
power
to contest or curtail their
world,
women
fulfilled
from pawns to
every role from the most powerful to the most vulnerable,
rulers in their
own
right.
For an account of the Crusades and the
kingdoms established see Steven Runciman's three-volume
Volumes
and
II
far
or their authority. In this complete warrior
especially
history,
For more specialized studies of Agnes of Courtney and Meli-
III.
"Women
sende, see Bernard Hamilton,
in the
Crusader
States: the
Queens
of
Jerusalem 1100-1190," in Baker, ed. 20. Alcuin cited in Riche, Daily Life, p. 204.
For praise of Amalaswintha, daughter of
King Theodoric the Ostrogoth, Judith, Queen of the Franks, Adehlheid, Empress to
Otto
Adela, daughter of the
I,
"The Education
Ferrante,
of
Norman William
Women
in
Fantasy," in Patricia H. Labalme, ed.. Beyond Their Sex. Learned
European Past (New York: 21.
Cited
22.
Harksen,
in Sybille
Herzfeld
(New
New York Women in
Women
in the
University Press, 1980). the
Middle Ages,
York: Abner Schram, 1975),
For descriptions of Mahaut's
M.
the Conqueror, see Joan
the Middle Ages in Theory, Fact and
library see
p.
translated by
Marianne
13.
Kemp- Welch,
pp. 85-86; for her books
and
other women's (into the fourteenth century), see Susan Groag Bell, "Medieval
Women
Book Owners: Arbiters
of Lay Piety
4 (Summer 1982), pp. 747-60. no clear evidence of Eleanor's role
and Ambassadors of Culture,"
Signs,
vol. 7, no.
23.
There that
is
Henry
11 's
more
court had
in this cultural
change. Brown suggests
significance than hers as a center. See
Brown
in
Kibler, ed., p. 19. 24.
Brown
25.
See Chretien de Troyes,
26.
For
in Kibler, ed.,
a description of
introduction, p. p.
6.
270.
gowns such
as these see Tristan,
p.
185.
27. Lancelot, p. 291. 28.
Cited
in
Gardiner,
p.
54, note.
29. Gardiner, p. 62. 30. Secular Spirit,
p.
81.
The
ladies of the sixteenth
and seventeenth century created
.
NOTES TO PAGES
502 the
full
range of stitches preserved
and worked on
all
306-312
the embroidery
in
known
as crewel (wool or linen)
varieties of finer cloth for dresses, wall hangings, upholstery,
and
bedclothes. 31.
Bogin,
32.
See Peter Dronke, "The Provencal Trobairitz Castelloza"
p.
13.
Women
Writers (Athens, Ga.:
1984); see also Matilda
Tomaryn Bruckner, "Na
ed.,
Medieval
dour Lyric,"
Romance
also has a very
women
poets of these centuries.
Bogin,
p. 81.
34.
Bogin,
p.
131.
35.
Bogin,
p.
103.
36.
Bogin,
p.
131.
37.
Cited
in
1977), 38.
Peter Dronke, The Medieval Lyric
p.
Cited
in
39. Cited in
in
Katharina
M. Wilson,
University of Georgia Press,
Castelloza, Trobairitz,
and Trouba-
no. 3 (Spring 1985), pp. 239-53. This
good bibliography on the subject of the
volume 33.
XXV,
Notes, Vol.
The
trobairitz
(New York: Cambridge
and other
University Press,
105.
Dronke, Medieval Dronke, Medieval
a (or the) husband's place"
Lyric, p. 105.
Lyric, p. 106; the literal translation of the passage
and could
also
mean, "as
a
husband
to
is
"in
me." The authors
are grateful to Joan Ferrante for bringing this to their attention. 40.
Bogin,
p.
85; see also Keen, Chivalry, p. 21.
41.
Bogin,
p.
155.
42.
Bogin,
p.
43. Cited in 44.
Bogin,
p.
111.
Dronke, Medieval Lyric,
p.
106.
107.
45. Bogin, p. 85. 46. See Flores, ed..
Medieval Age,
p.
185.
47.
Bogin,
p. 95.
48.
Bogin,
p. 95.
49.
Marie de France, Milun,
50.
Robert Manning and Joan Ferrante,
(New
p.
164.
York: E. P. Dutton, 1978),
edition of her
lais
eds.
p. 29;
TTie Purgatory of St. Patrick,
Aesop
52.
Marie de France, Milun,
16.
1
p.
's
in
Fables.
53.
Marie de France, Guigemar,
54.
Marie de France, Milun,
55.
See Lancelot,
56.
Marie de France, Lanval,
p.
108.
57.
Marie de France, Lanval,
p.
121.
58.
Marie de France, Lanval,
p.
120
59.
Marie de France, Lanval,
p.
108.
60.
Marie de France, Lanval,
p.
112.
61.
Marie de France, Eliduc,
p.
204.
62.
Marie de France, Yonec, pp. 141, 142, 143.
p.
trans..
The Lais of Marie de France
gives biographical information, as does Ferrante's article
French Courtly Poet, Marie de France," 5
and
the Ferrante and Manning translation and
p.
p. 30.
170.
330; Tristan, pp. 276-277.
Wilson, ed.
"The
.
Notes
to Pages
63.
Marie de France, Lanval,
64.
Marie de France, Milun,
65.
Marie de France, Equitan,
66.
Marie de France,
Lailstic,
p.
1
67.
Marie de France,
Laiistic,
p.
158.
68.
Marie de France, Eliduc,
69.
Marie de France,
Lailstic,
70.
Marie de France,
Chaitivel, p. 182.
71.
Magnusson and
72.
Ferrante, ed., Guillaume,
p.
312-318
108; see also Yonec;
503
and Guigemar,
p.
45.
176.
p.
p. 60.
57.
226.
p.
pp. 155, 158.
Palsson, Njal, p. 73.
230.
p.
73. Parzival, p. 43.
74.
Tristan, p. 89.
There
no suggestion of eflFeminacy
is
as this description
comes
just
after Tristan has slain a dragon.
75.
Tristan,
p.
110.
76. Lancelot, p. 287. 77.
On
the evolution of the concept of chivalry and
a separate nobility
its
connection to the creation of
based on lineage and a code of behavior, see Keen, Chivalry,
Introduction, Chapter VIII, and Conclusion, especially pp.
2,
42, 143, 145, 160-61.
78. Froissart, p. 67. 79.
The Order
of the Garter in England,
Michael
1469; of the Golden Fleece in 1429; and the Order of the Crescent of
in
c.
1344; of the Star in France in 1351; of
St.
the Dukes of Burgundy in 1448. See Duby, Chivalrous Society, for a description of
the relationship between knighthood, nobility, and heredity, pp. 95-96,
1
58-70, and
Keen, Chivalry, pp. 26, 145-46, 153-60. 80. See Keen, Chivalry, chivalry,
and
for
for descriptions of the evolution of the ethical aspects of
summaries of the principal guides, pp.
2,
4-13. See also Vale, pp.
25-26. 81
Cited
C. T. Allmand,
in
ed.. Society at
War (New
During the Hundred Years
War: The Experience of England and France York: Barnes and Noble, 1973), pp. 26-27.
82. Cited in Painter, p. 145. 83.
Painter, p. 146.
84. Cited in
Johan Huizinga, The Waning of the Middle Ages (Garden City, N.Y.:
Doubleday century,
Ramon
&
men Lull's
Company,
Inc., 1954), p. 75.
From
the late twelfth to the fifteenth
wrote guides and handbooks of behavior, the most popular being
Le Libre
Orde de Cauayleria (written
del
used into the fifteenth); the English Book of
St.
in
the thirteenth century,
Albans gave
levels of gentility
and
the requirements of each. 85. See Keen,
War, pp. 245-47.
86.
Le
87.
Fernandez,
p.
98.
88.
Fernandez,
p.
99; for the analysis of the gradual shift, see Keen, War, pp. 245-47;
fouvengel, cited in Vale, p. 30.
see also Keen, Chivalry,
pp. 238-47. Vale gives an
example from Burgundy, pp.
147-54. 89. Cited in
Regine Pernoud, The Retrial of Joan of Arc, translated by J.M. Cohen (New
York; Harcourt Brace and 90. See
Company,
Duby, Rural Economy,
1955),
pp. 260-61
p.
139.
and Georges Duby, The Early Growth of
.
NOTES TO PAGES
504
318-321
European Economy: Warriors and Peasants from the Seventh
the
Century, translated by
Howard
to the
Twelfth
B. Clarke (Ithaca, N.Y.: Cornell University Press,
1974), p. 221.
91
See Marc Bloch, French Rural History:
An Essay on
Its
and Henry Kamen, The Iron Century: Social Change York: Praeger Publishers, 1971), 92.
Basic Characteristics, trans-
by Janet Sondheimer (Berkeley: University of California
lated
Margaret
Press, 1966) p. 120,
Europe
1 550-1660
(New
p. 73.
For the most complete description of the changes centuries, see
in
Wood, The
in
the design of houses in these
English Medieval House (London: Phoenix
House, 1965). 93.
Kemp- Welch, p. 107. Thomson, Life
94. Cladys S.
Michigan
of 95.
Harksen,
96.
Labarge, Household,
Noble Household,
1 67 1 -1700
(Ann Arbor: University
16.
p.
97. Joan Evans, ed.,
98.
in a
Press, 1959), p. 383.
p. 35.
The Flowering of the Middle Ages (New York: McCraw-Hill Book
Company, 1966), p. 172. Horace Dewey and Ann Kleimole, eds. and trans., Russian Private Law XIV-XVII Centuries: An Anthology of Documents (Ann Arbor: The University of Michigan, 1973), pp. 222-23.
Duby, Family and
99. See
100.
Duby, Family and
101. Bonnassie in
Society, pp. 31-32.
Society,
Thrupp,
pp. 31-32.
ed., p. 121.
102.
Labarge, Saint Louis,
103.
Margaret Fell inherited £3,000 and the manor of Marsh Grange from her father
p.
235.
her marriage portion. Ross, Fell, sixteenth104.
J.
P.
p. 5.
See also Mingay, pp.
1
as
1-12, for examples of
and seventeenth-century bequests to daughters by English gentry
families.
Cooper, "Patterns of Inheritance and Settlement by Great Landowners from
the Fifteenth to the Eighteenth Centuries," in
Goody
et
al.,
eds..
Family and
Inheritance, p. 258.
105. This
in the studies done by Diane Owen Hughes. See "BrideMany historians have contributed to the analysis of these shifting
development emerges
price" in Kaplin, ed.
women's access to land. For summary descriptions, see Jack Goody and J. P. Cooper in Goody et al., eds.. Family and Inheritance, and the two articles by Jo Ann McNamara and Suzanne Wemple in Hartman and Banner, eds., and Bridenthal and Koonz, eds. Monographs have been written for regions of France, Italy, Spain, Germany, England, and Russia. Aside from patterns of European inheritance and their effects on
those already cited in the text see the following: for France, Duby, Rural Economy,
Ralph Giesey, "Rules of Inheritance and Strategies of Mobility France," American Historical Review, Italy,
David Herlihy, "Life Expectancies
Rosemarie Thee Morewedge, N.Y.: for
vol. 82, no. 2 (April
SUNY at Binghamton,
Germany,
Century:
A
K. Leyser,
Historical
ed..
for
The Role of
Women Woman
in
in
Pre-Revolutionary
1977), pp. 271-89; for
Medieval Society,"
in the
in
Middle Ages (Albany,
1975); for Spain, Dillard, "Reconquest," in Stuard, ed.;
"The German
Aristocracy from the 9th to the early 12th
and Cultural Sketch," Past and Present, no. 41 (December
1968), pp. 25-53; for Russia, Atkinson in Atkinson et
al.,
eds.
Notes to Pages 321-329
505
106. Secular Spirit, p. 254. 107.
Dewey and
108. Margaret
Kleimole, eds.,
Spufford,
p.
220.
"Peasant Inheritance Customs and Land Distribution
Cambridgeshire from the Sixteenth to the Eighteenth Centuries," eds.,
Family and Inheritance,
p.
in
Goody
in
et al,
57.
The Origins of English Individualism: The Family, Property and Social Transition (New York: Cambridge University Press, 1979), p. 134.
109. Alan Macfarlane,
110.
Laharge, Household,
111.
Cooper
112.
Flandrin,
113.
in
Goody
et
13.
p.
eds..
al.,
Family and Inheritance,
and Ferdinand were unlucky with
Isabella
p.
256.
14.
p.
their children: Juan the son died at
nineteen in 1497 and only one daughter's male child survived, Carlos, or Charles,
born to Juana
in 1500.
114. See Fernandez, pp. 14, 83. 115. For the
life
of Isabella, see the joint biography
by Fernandez.
116. Cited in Stenton, p. 20; see also Whitelock, ed.,
Documents, pp. 408, 429.
117. Slater, p. 53.
118. Stenton, p. 38-39. 119.
Duby, Rural Economy,
Zemon
234.
p.
Some Features of Family Modern France," in Alice S. Rossi, Jerome Kagan, and Tamara K. Haveren, eds., TTie Family (New York: W. W. Norton & Company Inc., 1978), p.
120. Cited in Natalie
Davis, "Ghosts, Kin, and Progeny:
Life in Early
108. 121. Cited in Stenton, p. 38.
122. Stenton, p. 36. 123. Cited in Stenton, p. 51. 124. See in
Sue Sheridan Walker,
Medieval England,"
"Widow and Ward: The
Feudal
Law
of Child
Custody
in Stuard, ed.
125. Cies, Castle, p. 77. 126. Walker, in Stuard, ed., p. 160. 127. Cited in Duckett, Portraits, p. 215. 128. Cited in Duckett, Portraits, p. 216. 129. Jackson, ed., Thornton, p. 234.
130.
Much
has been written describing the variations in provisions for widows from the
tenth to the seventeenth centuries. See in particular the following: for the Vikings, L.
M.
Larson, The Earliest Norwegian
1935); for Spain,
Lucy A. Sponslar,
Traditions (Lexington, Ky.:
Simms
in
The
Laws (New
Women
in the
York: Columbia University Press,
Medieval Spanish Epic and Lyric
University Press of Kentucky, 1975); for Ireland,
MacCurtain and O'Corrain,
Medieval Russian Laws (New York:
eds.; for Russia,
W. W.
Norton
&
George Vernadsky,
Company,
trans.,
Inc., 1969); for
England, Mingay; and for France, Brissaud.
Walker
131. Cited in
132.
Walker
in Stuard, ed., p. 171, note.
in Stuard, ed., p.
169, note.
133. See Pearl Hogrefe, "Legal Rights of
Men
and
104-105.
Women," The Sixteenth
Tudor
Women
and
Century Journal, Vol.
their
Ill,
no.
Circumvention by 1
(April 1972), pp.
NOTES TO PAGES
506
329-337
134. Cited in Slater, p. 51. 135.
Leyser,
51.
p.
136. Cited in Labarge, Saint Louis, p. 151. 137. Cited in Jones
139. Cited in
140. Cited in
PART 1.
and Underwood,
Dahmus, Dahmus, Dahmus,
138. Cited in
p. 26.
p. 257. p.
260.
p.
260.
The New Flowering
IV: 4.
See Gold, Lady,
of Ancient Traditions
for discussion of this
"ambivalence,"
in law, religion,
and
literature,
and Joan Ferrante and Ceorge Economou, eds.. In Pursuit of Perfection (Port Washington, N.Y.: Kennikat Press, 1975) for discussions of these aspects of lyrics and romances. pp. 145-52. See Dronke, Medieval Lyric,
2.
CitediwrnKiche, Daily Life, p. 98; Ferrante, ed., Gu///c7ume, p. 149; T^aou/, p. 115; Flamenca cited in G. G. Coulton, Life in the Middle Ages, Vol. Ill (New York: The Macmillan Co., 1930), p. 35.
3.
Nibelungenlied,
4.
Lancelot,
p.
5.
Tristan,
p.
172.
6.
Tristan,
p.
280.
7.
Cited
M.
Joan
in
p.
256.
329.
Ferrante,
Twelfth Century to Dante
book explores
Woman
(New
Image
as
in
Medieval Literature from the
York: Columbia University Press, 1975),
this aspect of the lyrics
195; see also p. 230.
8.
Tristan,
9.
In Provencal, the language of the troubadours of southern France, the
p.
times used to describe the lady was res 55 and
p.
10. Lancelot, 11.
—
in Latin, literally "thing."
word some-
See Bogin,
p.
55, note. p.
278. See also Keen, Chivalry,
on
this effect of love, pp.
116-17.
R. H. Bloch, pp. 144-45. For examples of the "pain" of love in the lyrics see for
example: Frederick Golden, "The Array of Perspectives Lyric," in Ferrante
and Economou,
Dronke, Medieval
12.
Cited
13.
Tristan,
p.
294.
14.
Tristan,
p.
227.
15.
For a Danish
in
in
Early Courtly Love
73-80.
Lyric, p. 134.
Legends of the North (Boston: Hough-
1951), pp. 146-47.
Ferrante, ed., Guillaume,
17. Erec,
eds., pp.
version, see Olivia E. Coolidge,
Company,
ton Mifflin 16.
p. 68; this
and the romances.
p.
151.
p. 33.
18.
Lancelot,
19.
Tristan,
p.
p.
279.
277.
20. Nibelungenlied, p. 300. 21.
Tristan,
p.
277.
22.
Tristan,
p.
280.
23.
Flores, ed., p. 152.
24.
Cited
in Claire
Richter Sherman, "Taking a Second Look: Observations on the
Iconography of a French Queen, Jeanne de Bourbon (1338-1378),"
in
Norma
Notes to Pages 337-341 Broude and Mary D. Garrard, Litany
(New
York: Harper
&
Feminism and Art
eds.,
Row,
507 History: Questioning the
on the
Publishers, 1982), p. 112. See Facinger,
diminution of the French queen's power, pp. 18-19, 20. 25. Froissart, p. 118. 26. Froissart, p. 109. 27. Froissart, p. 109. 28.
A
study of the use by noblewomen of seals from 1150-1350, the symbol of the
landholder's authority, reveals the
documents
member
in
of the family by the thirteenth century.
to identify the
the
same changes: From
woman on
affixing their seal to their
woman
The emblem on
the seal continued
with her husband's or her father's lineage, but the image of
the device changed: from a queen or
noblewoman standing
as
authority to a "lady" with her hawk, her body posed gracefully at ease. Brigitte
Rezak "Women, Seals and Power at
Fordham
own
the twelfth century to using their seal in conjunction with a male
University,
New
in
Medieval France
York City, March
1
if
in
Bedoz
150-1350," paper delivered
16, 1985.
29. SeeCalisse, p. 519. 30.
Cited
in Ian
Maclean, The Renaissance Notion of
of Scholasticism
and Medical Science
Cambridge University 31.
Cited
Study of the Fortunes
Intellectual Life
(New
York:
Press, 1980), p. 76.
Hogrefe, "Legal Rights,"
in
Woman: A
European and
in
p. 98.
32. See Atkinson in Atkinson et al, eds.
Coulton, Panorama,
33.
Cited
34.
See Stenton, pp. 30-31.
35. See
in
p.
McNamara and Wemple
617.
in Stuard, ed., pp.
103-104, and Riche, Early Life,
pp. 54-56, for discussion of the evolution of these policies. 36.
Marriage had not been considered a sacrament before. Augustine had disallowed because
it
led to sexual intercourse. See
Waterworth, Council of
it
Trent, for provisions
of Council of Trent canons, pp. 194-95. 37.
details of these and similar incidents see McNamara and Wemple in Stuard, ed., Duby, Medieval Marriage, and Angela M. Lucas, Women in the Middle Ages: Religion, Marriage and Letters (Brighton, England: The Harvester Press Ltd., 1983).
38.
The
For
control of marriage had always been an issue of
religious
and secular
and Marriage
in
rulers.
Jack
Goody
in his
hegemony fought over by
book, TTie Development of the Family
Europe (New York: Cambridge University
Press, 1983), suggests
that the Church's policies on marriage, adultery, and divorce had been intended to
create
more
heirless families
property, on which
ment 39.
and thus more opportunities
power ultimately
all
rested.
Church
for the
See especially pp. 32-47
to acquire for state-
of this argument.
Protestant sects would
make other compromises. For Catholic
Duby, Medieval Marriage,
McNamara and Wemple 40. See Eleanor
Como
Woman
2;
the policy of
policy, see especially
1215
is
summarized
in
in
in Stuard, ed., p. 112.
McLaughlin, "Equality of Souls, Inequality of Sexes:
Medieval Theology,"
Images of
Chapter
Rosemary Radford Ruether,
in the Jewish
and Christian
ed..
Traditions
Woman
in
Religion and Sexism:
(New
York:
Simon and
Schuster, 1974), pp. 227-28; Duby, Medieval Marriage, pp. 41-42; Maclean, Ren-
aissance Notion,
p.
15.
NOTES TO PAGES
508
341-346
41. Froissart, p. 243.
example the laws of thirteenth-century Languedoc
42. See for
in
Leah Lydia Otis,
Medieval Society (Chicago: University of Chicago
Prostitution in
Press, 1985).
43. Dillard, "Reconquest," in Stuard, ed., p. 85. 44. See
Waterworth, Council of
Trent, p. 203.
45. See Atkinson in Atkinson et al, eds., p. 21. 46. Froissart, p. 309. 47. Froissart, p. 310. 48. Froissart, p. 312.
49. In this instance the sort of reasoning
husband was victorious and the wife vindicated, but
and the
it is
this
such dishonor that led suspicious husbands of the
fears of
fourteenth, fifteenth, and sixteenth centuries to speak of chastity belts for their wives.
The
idea of "belt"
is
misnomer,
a
as the first illustration
manuscript of 1405 shows a leather-covered metal contrivance
wear
and protection
for support
of their genitals.
A
from
much
like
a military
what men
few examples of the apparatus
museums of Europe. There is, however, no evidence of their use. See Harvey Graham, Eternal Eve: The History of Gynecology and Obstetrics (Garstill
exist in the
den City, N.Y.: Doubleday
& Company Inc.,
Iconographia
A
Gyniatrica:
Pictorial
1951), pp. 122-23, and Harold Speert,
History
of
Gynecology
and
Obstetrics
(Philadelphia: F. A. Davis, 1973), pp. 452-53. 50.
For
stories of adulterous wives
and Venus,
Meaning 51.
An
Historical
of Courtly
See Michael
in
52.
Backer,
53.
Cited
54.
See Fawtier,
p. 53.
55.
See Stenton,
p.
56.
Cited
57. Njal,
their fates, see especially
of Courtly
Love (Albany, N.Y.:
M. Sheehan, "The
Women
Married
and
View
Love"
SUNY
Influence of
in F.
John F. Benton, "Clio
Newman,
X.
ed..
The
Press, 1968).
Canon Law on
England," Medieval Studies, Vol.
the Property Rights of
XXV
(1963), pp. 110-16.
245.
p.
in Slater, p. 44.
in p.
67.
Coulton, Life, Vol.
Ill, p.
16.
267.
58.
Tristan,
p. 66.
59.
Tristan,
p. 278.
60. Erec, p. 32. 61. Erec, p. 64.
62. Ferrante, ed., Guillaume, p. 278. 63. Raoul, p. 32.
64. Nibelungenlied, p. 281. 65. See Tristan, pp. 148, 147. 66.
For
a clear
and complete survey of
this didactic literature, see
Lady in the Tower: Medieval Courtesy Archon Books, 1983).
Literature for
Diane Bornstein, The
Women (Hamden,
Conn.:
67. Cited in Bornstein, p. 49. 68. Cited in
Rosemary Barton Tobin, "Vincent
Women," Journal of the History of Ideas,
vol.
of Beauvais
on the Education of
35 (July-September 1974),
69. See Bornstein, pp. 59-60.
70. See Coulton,
Panorama,
p.
617; Coulton, Life, Vol.
Ill, p. 7.
p.
486, note.
Notes to Pages 346-353 71.
Thomas Wright, Paul, Trench,
72.
La
The Book of the Knight oj La Tour-Landry (Lxjndon: Kegan
ed..
& Co.,
Trubner
Tour-Landry,
p.
509
Ltd., 1906), p. 79; note that there
is
a
1973 reprint.
10.
73. Cited in Gies, Castle, p. 79.
74. 75. 76. 77.
La La La La
Tour-Landry,
p.
Tour-Landry,
p.
128.
Tour-Landry,
p.
55.
Tour-Landry,
p.
58.
117.
"Book Owners,"
78. Bell,
pp. 756-57.
79. Cited in Bennett, p. 42. 80. Cited in Gardiner, p. 119. 81. Cited in
David Hunt, Parents and Children
Life in Early
Modem
France
(New
in History:
York: Harper
The Psychology of Family
& Row,
Publishers, 1972), p. 73.
82. Cited in Slater, p. 34. 83.
For discussion of
seeming contradiction see Sylvia Huot, "Seduction and Subli-
this
mation: Christine de Pizan, Jean de
Meun, and Dante," Romance Notes,
Vol.
no. 3 (Spring 1985), pp. 361-73; for the full text see Pizan, Three Virtues. are in
ies
Ruth
Kelso, Doctrine for the
Lady
XXV,
Summar-
of the Renaissance (Urbana,
111.:
University of Illinois Press, 1956), pp. 236-46, and in Bornstein, pp. 68-69, 85-87. 84.
Pizan, Three Virtues, p. 161.
85.
Pizan, Three Virtues, p. 68.
86. See Pizan, Three Virtues, pp. 86-105. 87. See Pizan, Three Virtues, pp. 45-48, 55, 58. 88.
Pizan, Three Virtues, pp. 55, 56.
89.
Anne de Beaujeu
1441-1522), the
(c.
late fifteenth-century regent for
her brother
Charles Vlll of France, had two copies of Christine de Pizan's book (Bornstein,
90.
When
p.
came to write a similar treatise for her daughter Suzanne, de Beaujeu repeated the same attitudes and presented the same image of the ideal wife. See summary in Kelso, pp. 212, 227, 246-47 and Bornstein. Lucy (Apsley) Hutchinson, Memoirs of the Life of Colonel Hutchinson, edited by 71
).
she
Rev. Julius Hutchinson (London: John C.
Nimmo,
1985), p. 24.
91. Hutchinson, p. 25.
92. Hutchinson, p. 35. 93. Cited in Stenton, p. 166. 94. Cited in Stenton, p. 166. 95.
Pizan, Three Virtues, pp. 62-64.
96.
Pizan, TTiree Virtues,
PART
p.
64.
WOMEN OF THE WALLED TOWNS:
V.
PROVIDERS AND PARTNERS
PART
v:
1.
The Townswoman's Daily
Life:
The Twelfth
to the Seventeenth
Centuries 1.
Fernand Braudel, 18th Century,
TTie Structures of
Vol.
\,
Everyday Life: Civilization
translated by Sian Reynolds
Publishers, 1981), p. 51.
(New
(5-
Capitalism ISth-
York: Harper
&
Row,
.
NOTES TO PAGES
510 2.
Carlo
M.
353-356 European Society and Economy
Cipolla, Before the Industrial Revolution:
W. W.
1000-1700 (New York:
&
Norton
Company
1976), p. 283. For
Inc.,
population figures, in addition to the works already cited, see Fernand Braudel,
(New
Capitalism and Material Life translated by Miriam Kochan
York: Harper
&
Row, Publishers, 1973), pp. 414-17, 431; Henry Kamen, The Iron Century: Social Change in Europe 1550-1660 (New York: Praeger Publishers, 1971), p. 19; J. C. Russell "Population in Europe 500-1500," in Carlo M. Cipolla, ed., TTie Fontana Economic History of Europe: The Middle Ages (Glasgow: William Collins Sons and Co. Ltd., 1975), pp. 34-35; Fritz Rorig, The Medieval Town (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1967), pp. 112-13. See these texts also for descriptions of urban
3.
development
in these centuries: Braudel, Structures,
Pope Pius
cited in James Bruce Ross
II,
(New
Portable Renaissance Reader 4.
Pietro Aretino cited in Ross
5.
See Braudel, Capitalism,
6.
Vol.
Chapter
I,
III.
and Mary Martin McLaughlin,
York: Penguin Books, 1980),
and McLaughlin,
p.
Renaissance Reader,
eds..
(New
and
the
in the
Age
Row,
Publishers, 1973), p. 427, for relative populations; see
&
York: Harper
241.
p.
435.
p.
Braudel, Capitalism, pp. 375-76 and Fernand Braudel, The Mediterranean
Mediterranean World
The
eds..
211.
Roger Mols, "Population
in
of Philip
II,
Vol.
Europe 1500-1700,"
I,
in
translated by Sian Reynolds
Carlo
M.
Cipolla, ed..
The
Fontana Economic History of Europe: The Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries (Clasgow: William Collins Sons & Co., 1976), pp. 43-44, for population densities. 7.
For comparisons of north Herlihy,
Maurice Clogan, 8.
Italian
"The Tuscan Town ed.,
towns and those
in
Medievalia
et
Humanistica,
p.
A
Demographic
n.s.
series,
Profile," Paul
(1970), pp. 84-85.
1
in
Rural Pistoia 1201-
Vol. XVIII, no. 2 (August 1965),
231.
See Richard Goldthwaite, "The Florentine Palace
American Historical Review, 10.
other parts of Europe, see David
See David Herlihy, "Population, Plague and Social Change 1430," The Economic History Review, 2nd
9.
in
the Quattrocento:
Geoffrey Brereton, ed. and
vol.
Domestic Architecture,"
as
77, no. 4 (October 1972), p. 997.
trans., Froissart
Chronicles
(New
York: Penguin Books
Ltd., 1978), p. 239. 1 1
Marcelin Defourneaux, Daily Life
in
Spain
in the
Branch (London: George Allen and Unwin 12.
Sylvia L.
eds..
translated by
Thrupp, The Merchant Class of Medieval London
Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 1977 ed.),
13.
Golden Age,
Renaissance Reader,
p.
p.
1
30,
3
(Ann
;
188.
p.
1
( 1300-1 SOO)
41 see also Ross and McLaughlin,
See for descriptions of houses: Braudel, Structures, Vol.
Thrupp, Merchant,
Newton
Ltd., 1970), p. 96.
1
,
note; for
Amsterdam and
I,
pp. 266-82; for
London,
Paris, Braudel, Capitalism,
pp. 201-203, 218; for France, The Secular Spirit: Life and Art at the End of the Middle Ages (New York: E. P. Dutton & Co., Inc., 1975), pp. 16, 17; for Nuremberg, see Gerald Strauss, Nuremberg in the Sixteenth Century: City Politics and Life
Between Middle Ages and Modern Times (New York: John Wiley
&
Sons
Inc.,
1966), p. 25. 14.
See Goldthwaite for a description of the evolution of the "private house," pp.
982-89 and
his book:
The Building of Renaissance Florence: An Economic and The Johns Hopkins University Press, 1985), pp. 13-26;
Social History (Baltimore:
Notes to Pages 356-359 for Datini, see
Origo, The Merchant of Prato: Francesco di
Iris
(London: Jonathan Cape, 1957), 15.
511
See Barbara Beuys, Familienleben
Marco Datini
136.
p.
in
Deutschland: Neue Bilder aus der deutschen
Vergangenheit (Reinbek bei Hamburg: Rowohlt, 1980), pp. 140-41; Secular
Spirit,
pp. 15, 19; Defourneaux, pp. 61-62. 16.
Kamen,
17.
For south German towns, see Merry E. Wiesner, Working
52.
p.
Germany (New Brunswick,
N.).:
Women
Rutgers University Press, 1986),
p.
in
Renaissance
191; Christiane
Klapisch, "Household and Family in Tuscany in 1427," in Peter Laslett, ed., House-
hold and Family
in
Past Time
(New
York: Cambridge University Press, 1974),
273. In Pistoia in 1427 female-headed households
Town,"
households; see Herlihy, "Tuscan 18.
p.
made up
p.
21.2 percent of the total
101.
D.V. Glass, "Notes on the Demography of London Century," Daedalus: Historical Population Studies,
at the
vol.
End
of the Seventeenth
97, no. 2 (Spring 1968), pp.
584, 586. 19.
See Mols
in Cipolla, ed.. Sixteenth
and Seventeenth
Centuries, for the traditional
description of the overall pattern; for specific ratios for towns in land, France,
and Spain see
J.
(Philadelphia: Transactions of the
David Herlihy, "Life Expectancies
Thee Morewedge,
SUNY
American Philosophical Society, 1958), p. 16; Women in Medieval Society" in Rosemarie
for
The Role of
ed..
Germany, Switzer-
C. Russell, Late Ancient and Medie^'al Population
Women
in the
Middle Ages (Albany, N.Y.:
Binghamton, 1975), pp. 12-13, 22; Glass, "Demography," pp. 584, 586; Benjamin Z. Kedar, "The Genoese Notaries of 1382: The Anatomy of an Urban at
Occupational Group," TTie
Working Women, 20.
21.
in
Harry A. Miskimin, David Herlihy, A.
Medieval City (New Haven: Yale University p.
Press,
L.
Udovitch,
eds.,
1977), p. 9; Wiesner,
5.
Mary Stenton, The English Woman in History (New York: The Macmillan Company, 1957 ed.), p. 85. Martha C. Howell, "Working Women in Early Modern Europe: A Cross-Cultural Approach," paper delivered at The Berkshire Conference on the History of Women, Doris
held at Vassar College, Poughkeepsie, N.Y., June 1981. 22.
Eileen Power, Medieval
Women,
University Press, 1975)
p.
23.
See Wiesner, Working
Women,
24.
Emmanuel LeRoy 1979),
25.
edited by
M. M. Postan (New
York: Cambridge
109. pp. 83-84.
Ladurie, Carnival in
Romans (New
York: George Braziller, Inc.,
p. 4.
Sarah C. Maza, Servants and Masters in Eighteenth-Century France: The Uses of Loyalty (Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1983),
p.
61, note.
26.
By the eighteenth century the relationship would have changed to the less familial one of wage contract between servant and employer. See Maza, for description of this change, p. 14, and Cissie Fairchilds, Domestic Enemies: Servants 6 TTieir Masters in Old Regime France (Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins University Press,
27.
Eileen Power, trans.. The
1984), pp. 17-18,
28.
Goodman
of Paris (Le Menagier de Paris) (London:
George Routledge
&
Sons, Ltd., 1928), pp. 16-17.
Origo, Merchant,
p.
206, note; Herlihy, "Tuscan
Town,"
p.
109, note. Slavery
NOTES TO PAGES
512 reemerged
"Women
Origo, Merchant,
30.
Cited
&
Row,
31.
Cited
32.
On
Mediterranean Europe
as a practice of
of the Fields," for a description of the
29.
in
359-362
Gene
in
end of
period. See Part
this
II,
slave labor in rural areas.
254.
p.
(New York: Harper
Brucker, ed.. The Society of Renaissance Florence
Inc., 1971), p. 223.
in
Origo, Merchant,
p.
209.
women, see for example, David Nicholas, The Women, Children and the Family in Fourteenth
the sexual vulnerability of servant
Domestic Life of a Medieval
City:
Century Ghent (Lincoln, Neb.: University of Nebraska Press, 1985), pp. 67-68; Fairchilds,
Domestic Enemies, pp. 86-88, 165. From the fourteenth century on, in this predicament were a staple of popular tales. See especially the
young maids
Italian versions in
liam 33.
(New
Giovanni Boccaccio, The Decameron, translated by G. H. McWil-
York: Penguin Books, 1975), fourth story on the tenth day.
In fourteenth-century
Ghent, the child could
inherit
from the mother and her
kin.
See Nicholas, pp. 154-55. 34.
See Susan Mosher Stuard, in
Susan Mosher Stuard,
"Women in Charter and Statute Law: Medieval Ragusa," Women in Medieval Society (Philadelphia: University
ed..
and Julius Kirshner and Anthony Molho, "The Dowry Fund and the Marriage Market in Early Quattrocento Florence," TTie foumal of Modern History, vol. 50, no. 3 (September 1978), p. 429; Yvonne Maguire, The of Pennsylvania Press, 1976)
Women
of the Medici (London:
& Sons, Ltd.,
George Routledge
1927), pp. 45, 62;
Jacob Bronowski and Bruce Mazlish, The Western Intellectual Tradition
(New York:
&
35.
Row, Publishers, 1962), p. 5. See Walter Minchinton, "Patterns and Structure of Demand 1500-1750," Cipolla, ed.. Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries, p. 97.
36.
Gene
Harper
Two Memoirs
Brucker, ed..
of Renaissance Florence: the Diaries of Buonac-
corso Pitti 6- Gregorio Dati, translated by Julia Martines Publishers, 1967), pp. 26-27. 37. Mary Elizabeth Perry, " 'Lost
Women'
Early
in
Prostitution," Feminist Studies, vol. 4, no.
(New York: Harper & Row,
Modern
the Politics of
Seville:
(February 1978),
1
p.
38.
Kamen,
39.
See James Bruce Ross and Mary Martin McLaughlin, Medieval
200.
p. 69.
lished manuscript, pp. 38-39; Natalie
Modem
in
Zemon
Davis, Society
France (Stanford: Stanford University Press, 1975),
Women, unpub-
and Culture
p.
in
Early
291, note; for South
see Wiesner, Working Women, p. 93. and Dati, pp. 26-27. Maryanne Kowaleski, "Exeter, Bristol and Dartmouth," paper delivered at The Berkshire Conference on the History of Women, held at Smith College, Northamp-
German towns 40. Pitti 41.
ton, Massachusetts, June 1984. 42. See Strauss, pp. 7-8. 43. Cissie C. Fairchilds, Poverty
The Johns Hopkins 44.
and Charity
Ross and McLaughlin, Medieval
45. Davis, Society
and
in
Aix-en-Provence 1640-1789 (Baltimore:
University Press, 1976),
Women,
p. 75.
p. 39.
Culture, p. 291, note.
way bye
46.
Historians call manufacturing organized in this
47.
Historians are just beginning to collect information on the extent of this informal
industries.
Notes to Pages 362-365 retailing. In
for
Leyden
century 15 percent of the
in the sixteenth
pay were involved
in
513
some kind
women who worked
of retailing. For Leyden, see
Martha Howell,
"Working Women," unpublished manuscript, and her book Women, Production and Patriarchy in Late Medie\>al Cities (Chicago: The University of Chicago Press, 1986), pp. 87-94; for English towns. Pearl Hogrefe, Tudor Women: Commoners and Queens (Ames, Iowa: The Iowa State University Press, 1975), p. 44; for Paris, see Ross and McLaughlin, Medieval Women, p. 12, and p. 27 for Brussels; for Florence, Judith Brown, "Working Women in Early Modern Europe," unpublished manu-
Woman (New Company, 1971), pp. 42-43, and Wiesner, Working Women, pp. 111-42; a good summary for English and French towns is in Louise A. Tilly and Joan W. Scott, Women, Work and Family (New York: Holt, Rinehart script, pp.
German
3-4;
towns, in Hannelore Sachs, TTie Renaissance
York: McGraw-Hill Book
and Winston, 1978), p. 49. and McLaughlin, Medieval Women,
48. Ross
"Women
49. See Barton C. Hacker,
A
Reconnaissance," Signs,
p.
and Military
195. Institutions in Early
Brucker, ed.. Renaissance Florence, pp. 191-92.
50.
Cited
51.
Brucker, ed, Renaissance Florence, pp. 190-91.
52.
in
G. R. Quaife, Wanton Wenches and Wayward Wives: Peasants and Early Seventeenth Century England 1979,
53.
Modern Europe:
4 (Summer 1981), pp. 643-71.
vol. 6, no.
p.
(New Brunswick,
N.J.:
Sex
in
150.
For Florence see Brucker,
Renaissance Florence, pp. 196-98, 200-201; for
ed.,
Venice, Fernando Henriques, Prostitution and Society:
and
Illicit
Rutgers University Press,
Oriental, Vol.
Rich and Poor
II
(New
York:
The
A
Survey, Primitive, Classical
Citadel Press, 1965),
p.
89,
and Brian Pullan,
Renaissance Venice (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press,
in
1971), p. 382; for Seville, Perry and
Ruth
Pike, Aristocrats
and
Traders: Sevillian
Society in the Sixteenth Century (Ithaca, N.Y.: Cornell University Press, 1972), pp.
201, 208. 54.
See Lydia Leah" Otis, Prostitution
Chicago 55.
For information on sance
in
Medieval Society (Chicago: University of
Press, 1985), p. 64.
(New
York:
Rome
see Georgina Masson, Courtesans of the Italian Renais-
Martin's Press, 1976), pp. 25-26.
St.
56.
See Henriques,
p.
50; Otis, p. 54.
57.
See Henriques,
p.
78;
Prostitution
Vern and Bonnie Bullough, An
(New York: Crown
Illustrated Social History of
Publishers, Inc., 1978), p. 136; Otis, pp. 20-37, 54n,
201, 203, 210. 58.
See Andrew McCall, The Medie\>al Underworld (London: Hamish Hamilton, 1979), p. 191, note, for streets in
indicating areas
where
Gattecon (Scratchcunt 59. Pitti
and
fourteenth-century
London and
sixteenth-century Paris,
prostitutes practiced their trade, like Slut's
Hole and Rue
Street).
Dati, p. 190.
60. See, for example, Henriques, pp. 47-52, 83-85; Ladurie, Carnival, p. 224; Sachs, pp.
52-53; Strauss,
German towns
p.
212; Otis, pp. 30-31, 55-59, 79-83, 94-98; for regulations in other
see Wiesner,
Working Women,
61. See Bullough, Prostitution, p. 142, 62. Cited in Sachs, p. 53.
and
pp. 98-104.
Otis, pp. 42-43.
.
NOTES TO PAGES
514
365-369
63. Cited in Perry, p. 206. 64. Otis, pp. 84-88. 65.
Henriques, pp. 52-53, Defourneaux,
p.
224; see also Perry, pp. 207-10, and Pike,
pp. 204-205.
and Lauro Martines,
66. Cited in Julia O'Faolain
eds.,
(New
History from the Greeks to the Victorians
Not
in
God's Image:
&
York; Harper
Row,
Women
in
Publishers,
1973), p. 294. 67.
Masson, pp. 1 29, 1 37. The Venetian house was attached to the hospital and between 1553 and 1620 had between 220 and 400 members, Pullan, p. 378. See also Mary Martin McLaughlin, "Survivors and Surrogates: Children and Parents from the
Ninth to the Thirteenth Centuries," in Lloyd de Mause, ed., The History of Childhood (New York: Harper & Row, Publishers, 1974), p. 159, note. James A. Brundage, "Prostitution in the Medieval p.
68.
Hugo Rahner, 1960),
69.
Canon Law,"
Signs, vol.
1,
no.
4 (Summer 1976),
842; McCall, pp. 189-90; for French foundations see Otis, pp. 72-76.
p.
S.J.,
Saint Ignatius Loyola
(New
York: Herder and Herder Inc.,
80.
For information on Venice's refuges, see Pullan, pp. 386-90; on Rome, see Rahner, pp. 13-20, Masson, pp. 132-33; for Florence, see Brucker, ed.. Renaissance Flo-
and Ruth
pp. 211-12;
rence,
Repentant Prostitutes
P.
Conference on the History of
Nuns and
Liebowitz, "Voices from Convents:
Late Renaissance
in
Women,
Italy,"
held at
paper delivered at
Mount Holyoke
The
Berkshire
College, South
Hadley, Massachusetts, August 1978; for Aix-en-Provence, see Fairchilds, Charity, p.
19; for Seville, see Perry, p. 198.
Hogrefe, Tudor
71
Carlo Calisse,
Women,
70.
A
p. 90.
History of Italian Law, translated by Layton B. Register
Augustus Kelley, 1969),
p.
72. Cited in Stenton, p. 65. In south
they
stole.
(New York:
373.
German towns, women rarely attacked Women, pp. 108-109.
people
when
See Wiesner, Working
73. Cited in Ross
and McLaughlin,
eds..
Renaissance Reader,
543.
p.
74. Origo, Merchant, p. 68.
75. Natalie
Zemon
Davis,
Studies, vol. 8, no.
76.
Maza, For
Italy,
"Women
in
the Crafts in Sixteenth-Century Lyon," Feminist
(Spring 1982);
p. 52;
Davis, Society
and
Culture, p. 332, note.
82.
Maza,
77. See
78.
p.
1
p. 64.
see Klapisch in Laslett, ed.. Past Time, p. 277; for
Germany,
Russell,
Medieval Population, pp. 53, 55; for France, Ladurie, Carnival p. 3; for England, Peter Laslett, The World We Have Lost (New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1965), p. 1.
For
a discussion of
the recent literature on family size and the persistence of
the "nuclear" family pattern, see Nicholas, pp. 7-12. 79. See Braudel, Capitalism, pp. 201-202. 80.
81.
G. G. Coulton, Medieval Panorama: The English Scene from Conquest tion
(Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1939),
The
information on women's participation
comes from lin,
studies of individual
Medieval Women,
for
town
in guilds
p.
on
this
Reforma-
and subsequent pages
records. See in particular Ross
Germany and
to
310.
and McLaugh-
France; for Germany, Howell,
Women,
Notes to Pages 369-375 Rudolf Hiibner,
Company,
A
(Boston: Little,
Brown and
1918), Nicholas, and Rorig; for France, Davis, "Crafts," Frances and
Joseph Gies,
Women
in the
Middle Ages (New York: Thomas Y. Crowell Company,
1978); for England, Hogrefe, Tudor
Women
Law
History of Germanic Private
515
in the
Seventeenth Century
Women, and Alice Clark, Working Life of (New York: Harcourt, Brace & Howe, 1920).
82. See Rorig, p. 115.
and McLaughlin, Medieval Women, pp. 24-26.
83. See Ross
Miriam Usher Chrisman, Lay Culture, Learned Culture: Books and Social Change in Strasbourg M80-1S99 (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1983), pp.
84. See
22-23; Clark,
p.
167.
"Widowhood and Remarriage in SixteenthThe Berkshire Conference on the History of
85. See for example, Barbara B. Diefendorf,
Century
Paris," paper delivered at
Women,
held at Vassar College, Poughkeepsie,
New
York, June 1981.
Working Women, Chapter 4; Sachs, p. 42. See for example, Ross and McLaughlin, Medieval Women, pp. 32, 27; Davis, "Crafts," pp. 62-64; Nicholas, pp. 94-95, 99, 102, and Steven Ozment, When Fathers Ruled: Family Life in Reformation Europe (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard
86. See Wiesner, 87.
University Press, 1983), 88. Clark, pp. 89.
p.
13.
201-208, 215-19.
Joan Evans, Life in Medieval France
(New
York: Phaidon Publishers, Inc., 1969),
p. 48.
90.
Ross and McLaughlin, Medieval
91. See
Thrupp,
and Scott,
92. Tilly 93.
Merc/jflnf,
Women,
p. 24.
172.
p. 35.
Marian K. Dale, "The London Silkwomen of the Fifteenth Century," Economic History Review, Vol.
IV (1932-1934),
pp. 326-27.
and McLaughlin, Medieval Women,
94. Ross 95.
p.
Maria Fowler,
"Women
manuscript,
10.
p.
as Secular
p.
in
Medieval France," unpublished
and McLaughlin, Medieval Women, pp. 24-26;
96. Ross
Women, (New
York: Octagon Books, 1969),
Ross and McLaughlin, Medieval
98. See Ross
for
Cologne see Howell,
pp. 95-97, 124-29; for Frankfurt-am-Main, see Beuys, pp. 147, 150; for
Frankfurt, Ernest McDonnell, The Beguines
97.
19.
Musicians
and Beghards
Women,
100.
79; for
London, TTirupp, Merchant,
Thxu^^, Merchant,
101. For information
p.
Medieval Culture
pp. 7-10.
and McLaughlin, Medieval Women,
p.
13.
99. For Ragusa, Stuard in Stuard, ed.. Medieval Society, p. 200; for p.
in
p. 85.
p.
Nuremberg,
Strauss,
51.
139.
on the houses,
living arrangements, and possessions see the followGermany, Beuys, p. 141; for Italy, Goldthwaite, "Palace," p. 1004; for England, Thrupp, Merc/idnf, pp. 132, 138-41 and Braudel, Ca/JiWzsm, pp. 213-25, and Secular Spirit, pp. 21-22. ing:
for
;
102. Origo, Merchant, pp. 260-63, 270-71. 103. Cited in Maguire, pp. 64, 65.
104. Origo, Merchant, pp. 281-88.
NOTES TO PAGES
516
375-382
105. Menagier, pp. 36, 310. pp. 30, 32; Janet Shirley, trans.,
106. See Secular Spirit,
Clarendon
A
Parisian Journal (Oxford:
Press, 1968), p. 37.
107. See Menagier, p. 21; Origo, Merchant, pp. 289-90; for England,
Dorothy Hartley,
Lost Country Life (New York: Pantheon Books, 1979), p. 101; for Nuremberg, Walter French, Medieval Civilization as Illustrated by the Fastnachtspiele of Hans Sachs (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins Press, 1925), 108.
Ongo, Merchant,
p. 55.
p. 241.
109. Strauss, p. 93. 1
10.
Cited
in Clark, p. 37; for
"Patrician
XXI
Women
other wives see Nicholas, pp. 44, 81-82; Stanley Chojnacki,
in Early
Renaissance Venice," Studies in the Renaissance, Vol.
(1974), p. 198; Maguire; Janet Ross, ed. and trans.. Letters of the Early Medici
as told in their Correspondence (Boston:
Diefendorf,
PART
v: 2.
14; Beuys;
p.
The Gorham Press, Women, p. 67.
Dangers and Remedies pp. 332-33.
1.
Shirley, ed., /ouma/,
2.
Joseph and Frances Gies, Life in a Medieval City
&
Company,
3.
Braudel, Mediterranean, Vol. Shirley, ed.. Journal,
5.
Herlihy, "Tuscan
6.
Henry Vol.
V
Lucas,
p.
Shirley, ed.. Journal, p. 140.
9.
Cited
and
14.
p.
328.
1315, 1316, and I'M! ," Speculum,
Women of the Reformation in Germany and Italy
(Boston:
Press, 1971), p. 263.
See C. V. Wedgewood, The Thirty Years War (Garden City, N.Y.: Doubleday & Company, Inc., 1961), pp. 493-96. Wedgewood, p. 400. Davis, Society and Culture, p. 301, note. Nuremberg had fifty public privies. See Strauss, p. 192. Muriel Joy Hughes, Women Healers in Medieval Life and Literature (New York: King's Crown Press, 1943), p. 29.
15.
See Braudel, Capitalism,
16.
Kamen,
17.
See Philip Ziegler, The Black Death p. 84;
p.
240.
pp. 25, 29.
Braudel, Mediterranean, Vol.
Seventeenth Centuries,
p.
Decameron, pp. 54-56.
19.
Shirley, ed., /oumd/,
20.
Cited
in
Kamen,
21.
Cited
in
Maguire,
p.
131.
p. 30, p.
38.
(New I,
p.
York: Harper
& Row,
Publishers, 1969),
333; Mols in Cipolla, ed.. Sixteenth
and
75; Ladurie, Carnival, p. 3; Braudel, Capitalism, pp. 50,
46, 48. 18.
Y. Crowell
Dati, p. 42.
Roland Bainton,
in
Beacon
13.
Thomas
(1930), pp. 353-54.
Pitti
12.
I,
Town," p. 85. "The Great European Famine of
8.
11.
York:
322.
7.
10.
(New
1973), p. 192.
4.
S.
1911), pp. 10, 48, 63;
Hogrefe, Tudor
Notes to Pages 383-386 22.
Marvin Lowenthal,
23.
See Herlihy
in
(New
York:
51.
p.
Morewedge,
Working Women,
The Memoirs of Gluckel of Hameln
trans.,
Schocken Books, 1977),
517
ed., pp. 14, 22; for
south
German
towns, see Wiesner,
5.
p.
24. Christiane Klapisch-Zuber has suggested that the practice of leaving girls with a
nurse longer than boys
and Ritual
made
Renaissance
in
their survival less sure.
Italy
See her book
wet
Women, Family
(Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1985), pp.
102, 105-106.
and
25.
See
26.
See Klapisch, Family and Ritual,
Pitti
Dati, pp. 112, 127, 128. p.
158; Thrupp, Merchant,
Former Times: Kinship, Household and
Flandrin, Families in
by Richard Southern (New York; Cambridge University 27.
In contrast,
women from
p.
231, and J-L.
Sexuality, translated
Press, 1979), p. 29.
artisan or laborers' families married later (in their twenties)
and brought fewer pregnancies
to term.
The Book of Her Life, in The Collected Works, Vol. I translated by Kieran Kavanaugh and Otilio Rodriguez (Washington, D.C.: ICS
28. Saint Teresa of Avila,
Publications, 1976), 29. Origo, 30. Pitti 31.
Merchant,
and
Cited
Dati,
p.
Family Life Hareven,
in
eds..
1.
230.
132.
Zemon
Davis, "Ghosts, Kin, and Progeny: Some Features of Modern France," in Alice S. Rossi, Jerome Kagan, Tamara K. The Family (New York: W. W. Norton & Company, Inc., 1978),
Natalie
in
p.
p.
Early
p. 99.
Merchant,
32.
Cited
33.
For York, see Ursula M. Cowgill, "The People of York 1538-1815,"
in Origo,
American,
vol.
222, no.
1
303.
p.
Scientific
(January 1970), pp. 104, 106, 110; see Pitti and Dati,
p.
22. 34.
Rates
rise
and
fall
for
Genoa
in
the twelfth century, for Venice from the sixteenth
London from the fourteenth to the sixteenth centuries, in French towns in the seventeenth century, and in Geneva in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. Only the fact of higher mortality among the poorer members of the towns and communes holds consistently. See for example, J. C. Russell, Medie\'al Population, p. 21; Diane Owen Hughes, "Urban Growth and Family Structure in Medieval Genoa," Past and Present, vol. 66 (February 1975), p. 23, note; Elizabeth Wirth Marvick, "Nature Versus Nurture: Patterns and Trends to the eighteenth centuries, for
in de Mause, ed., p. 283; David and Renaissance Pistoia (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1967), p. 98; Herlihy, Pistoia p. 98; Thrupp, Merchant^ pp. 206, note, 231; Richard W. and Dorothy C. Wertz, Lying-in: A History of Childbirth in America (New York: Schocken Books, 1977), p. 20; Mols in Cipolla, ed.. Sixteenth and Seventeenth
in
Seventeenth-Century French Child-Rearing"
Herlihy, Medieval
Centuries, p. 69. 35. Cited in Origo, Merchant, p. 309.
144.
36.
Gliickel,
37.
For a description of the evolution of
p.
Medie\'al and Tudor
Drama (New
this
York:
kind of drama, see John Gassner, ed.,
Bantam Books,
1968), p. 44; and Alfred
— NOTES TO PAGES
518
W.
386-391
and
Pollard, ed., Miracle Plays, Moralities
Interludes (Oxford: Clarendon Press,
1895), pp. xxxi-xxxv. 38.
Granger Ryan and Helmut Ripperger, Voragine,
39.
To
create this composite
Mary meant combining many
thew 26:6-13; 27:56 and 61, 12:1-8, 19:25, 20:1;
Mary's 41.
Mark
end of the
40. Already at the
sister,
Mat-
parts of the Gospels:
Luke 7:37-50, 24:10; John 2:1-10; 11:1-45, and 47, 16:1.
28:1;
15:40,
sixth century
Pope Gregory the Great acknowledged her
and had combined three of the
holiness
The Golden Legend of Jacobus de
trans.,
221.
p.
women
of the Gospels as the
Magdalen
the anointing sinner, and the witness of the resurrection.
Golden Legend on the
In addition to the
stories
and worship of Mary Magdalen,
Helen Meredith Garth, "Saint Mary Magdalene
see for example;
The Johns Hopkins University Studies
in
Medieval
and Political Science, Series LXVII, no. 3 (1950), pp. 12-15, 29, 33-37, 89; A. C. Cawley, ed., Everyman and Medieval Miracle Plays (New York: E. P. Dutton & Co. Inc., 1959), pp. 82, Literature,"
in Historical
136; and Perry, p. 205. 42.
Kamen,
p.
12.
43. See Defourneaux.
44.
Edward Noble Stone, I
(New
trans.,
"Adam,"
in Barrett
York: D. Appleton and Co., 1933),
45.
Golden Legend,
46.
The
stories
p.
H. Clark,
ed.,
World Drama, Vol.
312.
p.
205.
came from the many apocryphal works such
as the Protevangel of
and the pseudo-Matthew omitted from authorized versions of the 47.
In the eighteenth century Benedict XIII oflEcial
48.
49.
made
James
Bible.
the feast day, "Lady of Sorrows,"
and "Stabat Mater" commemorating Mary's sadness part of the
liturgy.
Mary was emphasized even at Vatican II with the additional title granted to her in 1964, "Mother of the Church." Gregory of Tours made the first collection at the end of the sixth century. The tales multiplied in the fifteenth century, Voragine's Golden Legend and Johannes HeIn the twentieth century this maternal image of
rolt's
Miracles of the Blessed Virgin becoming the collections most widely dissemi-
nated and repeated. 50.
Marina Warner, Alone of All Her Sex: The Myth and the Cult of the Virgin Mary (New York: Pocket Books, 1978), p. 115. See also on the meaning of her worship.
Penny Schine Gold, The Lady and
the Virgin: Image, Attitude
and Experience
in
Twelfth-Century France (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1985), pp. 68-75. 51.
Cited
in
Ross and McLaughlin,
eds.,
Renaissance Reader, pp. 228-29. Despite the
popularity of this image, the Assumption
did 52.
"Queen
of
Heaven" become one
became dogma only
of the Virgin's official
For descriptions of the evolution of the popular worship and the Virgin and her
many
faces, see Part III,
"Women
in 1950; only in
1954
titles.
official
veneration of
of the Churches,"
and
in
addition to the works cited in the text, the following: Yrjo Hirn, The Sacred Shrine:
A
Study of the Poetry and Art of the Catholic Church (Boston: Beacon Press, 1932);
GeofTrey Ashe, The Virgin (London: Routledge ern, TTie
Making
of the Middle Ages
Emile Male, The Gothic Image: Religious Art translated by
& Kegan
Paul, 1976); R.
(New Haven: Yale in
Dora Nussey (New York: Harper
W.
South-
University Press, 1963);
France of the Thirteenth Century,
&
Row,
Publishers,
1958); Ian
Notes to Pages 392-395
Woman
Maclean,
Triumphant: Feminism
Clarendon
Press, 1977).
PART
The World
v:
3.
in
519
French Literature 1610-16S2 (Oxford:
Commercial Capitalism: The Thirteenth
of
to the
Seventeenth Centuries 1.
See Braudel, Mediterranean, Vol.
Northern
p.
I,
427, and Braudel, Capitalism, pp. 375-76.
was the exception. By the end of the thirteenth century and the
Italy
beginning of the fourteenth century, 26.3 percent of the region's population lived in ten of its towns; see Herlihy,
that 10-15 percent of
England's population in
"Tuscan Town," pp. 84-85. Demographers estimate lived a town life in 1340, 10 percent of
Germany's people
in
1377, Beuys,
p.
"Tuscan Town,"
125; Herlihy,
the 1700s in France, 16 percent of the people had
the urban areas. In addition, before
1
p. 84.
the land and
left
Even
moved
to
500, 90-95 percent of the towns had only 2,000
inhabitants or fewer. 2.
See Georges Duby, The Early Growth of the European Economy: Warriors and
Howard
Peasants from the Seventh to the Twelfth Century, translated by (Ithaca, N.Y.: Cornell University Press, 1974), p. 263; as fact
that the capitalist system
is,
Panorama, 3.
p.
is
far older
than
has often been represented,"
it
652.
Martha C. Howell, "Citizenship and Gender: The Problem Status in Late Medieval Cities of Northern Europe,"
March
sity,
16, 1985, unpublished. Historians
ism caused
They
New
of
Women's
York:
have suggested that the
identify the cause of the diminution of rights, status,
Political
Fordham Univerrise of capital-
and the other adverse developments. Howell and Wiesner
this
capitalism as
B. Clarke
Coulton remarked: "The
disagree.
and opportunity not with
broadly defined, but with the specific shift from household produc-
it is
tion to large-scale enterprise that
was characteristic of
4.
Women, pp. See Howell, Women,
5.
Menagier,
6.
Decameron,
7.
Robert Hellman and Richard F. O'Gorman,
Howell,
early capitalist industry.
Women,
30-36, and Wiesner, Working
p.
See
3.
pp. 36, 43.
p. 88.
135.
p.
France (New York:
Thomas
8.
Gliickel,
9.
See concluding sections
p.
Y. Crowell
eds.. Fabliaux:
Company,
Ribald Tales from Old
1965), p. 151.
2.
in
Howell,
Women, and Wiesner, Working Women, on
the
significance of the "ideology of patriarchy." 10.
On
and Seventeenth Centuries, p. American Historians, Materials on Women, "The European Marriage Pattern," unpublished manumarriage ages see Mols
in Cipolla, ed.. Sixteenth
72; Cowgill; Thrupp, Merchant,
p.
193; Organization of
script.
11.
See Diane
min
Owen
Hughes, "Kinsmen and Neighbors
Medieval Genoa,"
in
in
Miski-
Rene Girard, "Marriage in Avignon in the Second Half of the Fifteenth Century," Speculum, Vol. XXVIII, no. (January 1953), passim, pp. et
al.,
eds., p. 26;
1
485-98. 12.
Owen Hughes
13.
Girard, pp. 488,486,
14.
Tilly
in
and Scott,
Miskimin
p.
et
al.,
eds., p. 23.
43; for Paris examples, see also Diefendorf,
p.
32, note.
NOTESTOPAGES
520 15.
395-398
For information about marriage customs and statutes Stuard
16.
Pittiand Dati,
17.
A
p.
46.
nineteen interrelationships; see Lawrence Stone, The Family, Sex and
total of
Marriage (New York: Harper 18.
Tilly
19.
The
and Scott,
&
Row,
Publishers, 1977), p. 131.
p. 41.
By the
practice began as early as the twelfth century in Pisa.
exclusio propter gift of
Ragusa/Dubrovnik see
in
in Stuard, ed.
dotem
her dowry
"Women,
— the exclusion
—had become common throughout
Dowries, and Capital Investment
ion A. Kaplan, ed.,
thirteenth century
of a daughter from inheritance because of the
in
See Eleanor
Italy.
S.
Thirteenth-Century Siena,"
Riemer, in
Mar-
Women and Dowries in European History 1985), pp. 62, 65, and Diane Owen Hughes,
The Marriage Bargain:
(New York: Harrington Park Press, "From Brideprice to Dowry in Mediterranean Europe,"
Kaplan, ed., pp. 32-35.
in
women from
Fourteenth-century Florentine statutes specifically excluded
all
inheri-
tance except their dowry. Susan Mosher Stuard comments, "Law, Society and
Women
Medieval and Renaissance
in
Italy,"
New
York, Convention of the Ameri-
can Historical Association, December 28, 1985. 20.
Cited Past
ed.. Beyond Their Sex: Learned Women of the European New York University Press, 1980), p. 3. In addition to the works the text, see Owen Hughes, in Miskimin et al., eds., pp. 16-19; J. P. Cooper,
Labalme,
in Patricia
(New
cited in
York:
"Patterns of inheritance and settlement by great landowners from the fifteenth to
the eighteenth centuries," in Jack Goody, Joan Thirsk and E. P.
Family and Inheritance: Rural Society
21.
in
Thompson,
eds..
Western Europe 1200-1800 (New York:
Cambridge University Press, 1978), pp. 280-82. See Pitti and Dati, pp. 1 14, 123, 134; see also Riemer in Kaplan, ed., p. 64, and Susan Mosher Stuard, "Dowry Increase and Increments in Wealth in Medieval Rugusa (Dubrovnik)," Journal of Economic History, vol. 16, no. 4 (December 1981), pp. 795-812.
22. See Alison
Hanham, ed.. The Cely Letters 1472-1488 (New York: Oxford
University
Press, 1975), p. xv. 23.
Cited
Maurice Ashley, The Stuarts
in
pany, 1964),
in
Love (New York: The Macmillan Com-
26.
p.
24.
See Girard,
25.
Gliickel,
p. 96.
26.
See
and
27.
See Kirshner, and Molhs, especially pp. 409, 435-38; Klapisch-Zuber, Family and Ritual, pp. 213-24.
28.
See Pullan, pp. 164-65, 184-85.
29.
Pitti
486.
p.
Dati, p. 17.
For Spain, see Heath Dillard, Sepulveda and Cuenca," ed., pp.
"Women
in
in Stuard, ed., pp.
Reconquest
200-04; for Prato, see Origo, Merchant,
Women,"
Castile:
The Fueros
77-78; for Ragusa, see Stuard p.
of
in Stuard,
203; for Venice see Chojnacki,
and Stanley Chojnacki, "Dowries and Kinsmen in Early Renaissance Venice," Journal of Interdisciplinary History, vol. 4 (Spring 1975), p. "Patrician
572; for Siena, see 30. See
Ozment,
Medieval
p. 194,
Riemer
in
pp. 28-30; for
City,
Kaplan,
p. 66.
Genoa, see
Owen Hughes
in
pp. 18-19; for Florence, Lauro Martines,
Miskimin
"A Way
of
et
al.,
eds..
Looking
at
Notes
Women
in
399-403
521
Renaissance Florence," The Journal of Medieval and Renaissance Stud-
vol. 4, no.
ies,
to Pages
(Spring 1974),
1
p.
20, note;
French towns, David Hunt, Parents and
Children in History: The Psychology of Family Life in Early
&
York: Harper
Row,
Geneva, William E. Monter,
p. 107;
Signs, vol. 6, no. 2 31.
Publishers, 1972), pp. 60-61,
(Winter 1980),
For marriage ages, see Klapisch
"Women
p.
Modem
and Davis
in Calvinist
Geneva (1550-1800),"
194.
in Laslett, ed..
Household and Family,
Khpisch-Zuher, Family and Ritual, pp. 110-11
for the Florentine
towns see the following: Riemer
p.
in
France (New
in Rossi et al., eds.,
Kaplan, ed.,
69; Herlihy,
272, and
p.
example; for other
"Tuscan Town," and
David Herlihy, "The Medieval Marriage Market," in Dale B. J. Randall, ed.. Medieval and Renaissance Studies Series, no. 6 (Durham, N.C.: Duke University Press, 1976); Chojnacki "Patrician
Women"; Thrupp,
Merchant;
for Protestants see
J.
Hajnal, "European Marriage Patterns in Perspective," in D. V. Glass and D. E. Eversley, eds.. Population in History (London: E. Arnold, 1965), p. 114. 32.
Maguire, pp. 70-72.
33.
Sachs, of
p. 22;
see also Origo, Merchant, pp. 265-66; Herlihy, Pistoia, for descriptions
more modest weddings.
34.
Medici
Letters,
p.
108.
35.
Medici
Letters,
p.
110.
36.
Medici
Letters, p. 133.
37. See Maguire, pp. 139-41. 38.
See for
Law
582; for France, Jean Brissaud,
Italy, Calisse, p.
(Boston: Little,
Brown and Gompany,
A
History of French Private
1912), pp. 171-72, and Diefendorf, p.
Germany, Hiibner, pp. 632-38, 643, and Beuys, p. 144. Germany and Switzerland, Ozment, pp. 92-93, 83-85, Davis, Society and Culture, p. 90, note, and Jane Dempsey Douglass, "Women and the Gontinental Reformation" in Rosemary Radford Ruether, ed.. Religion and Sexism: Images of Woman in the Jewish and Christian Traditions (New York: Simon and Schuster, 5; for
39. See for
1974), pp. 303-04; for England, Stone, Family, pp. 37-38. 40. See Girard, pp. ed., p. 36,
41. See 42.
Kamen,
See Pullan, of
493-97
for
Avignon examples;
and Ghojnacki, "Patrician
for Italy, see
Women,"
p.
Owen Hughes
in
Kaplan,
188.
pp. 389,410.
p.
390; Strauss,
p.
197,
and
Fairchilds, Charity, p. 19, for other examples
dowry and trousseau contributions.
43. Harold Speert, Iconographia Gyniatrica:
A
Pictorial History of
Gynecology and
Obstetrics (Philadelphia: F. A. Davis, 1973), p. 497. 44. Gited in Ross
and McLaughlin,
45. This shift in attitude
eds.,
good, to fear and charity as a
405-406;
Renaissance Reader,
—from sympathy with the poor and order— way to insure
in Braudel, Capitalism, p. 40,
is
p.
351.
charity as a
means of doing Kamen, pp.
discussed in
and extensively documented
in Fairchilds,
Charity, see especially ix-x. 46. Gited in Pullan, p. 299. 47. See Davis, "Grafts," p. 51.
48. See Fairchilds, Charity,
pp.
29-34
for Aix-en-Provence; Pullan, for
239-40; Davis, Society and Culture, pp. 39-51, for Lyons. 49. Pitti
and
Dati, p. 233.
Venice, pp.
NOTESTOPAGES
522 50.
When
the English town of Norwich did a census of the indigent poor in
of the 832
women were
destitute because they
pp. 38-39,
bands. See Stone, Family, Charity, p. 73, 51.
Cited
403-404
in
and Kamen,
many
570,
1
had been abandoned by
their hus-
389. See also Fairchilds,
p.
on the other categories of poor.
Richard C. Trexler, "The Foundlings of Florence 1395-1455," History of
Childhood Quarterly, Vol.
no. 2 (Fall 1973), p. 269.
1,
"Foundlings,"
52.
Cited
53.
Eighteenth- and nineteenth-century accounts from these institutions indicate that
in Trexler,
relegation to the foundling
the wet nurse, the to feed
and care
surprised.
woman
275.
p.
home meant
in
the country
for the infants. In fact,
some money
leaving the baby and
who
to pay
contracted with the town authorities
most of these babies died, and no one was
SeeOlwen H. Hufton, The Poor of Eighteenth-Century France 1750-1789
(Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1974), pp. 326-32, and William L. Langer, "Infanticide:
A 54.
Historical Survey," History of
Childhood Quarterly (Winter 1974), pp. 353-65. A Case Study,"
For Nuremberg, see Merry E. Wiesner, "Early Modern Midwifery: International Journal of 39; for English
Women's
towns see M.
J.
Studies, vol. 6, no.
1
(January/February 1983),
p.
Tucker, "The Child as Beginning and End: Fifteenth
and Sixteenth Century English Childhood," de Mause, ed., p. 244, and Barbara A. Kellum, "Infanticide in England in the Later Middle Ages," History of Childhood Quarterly, Vol.
I,
no. 3
(Winter 1974),
p.
371.
55.
Cited
56.
For descriptions of young women's choices and circumstances see Quaife, pp. 60-63; David Levine and Keith Wrightson, "The Social Context of Illegitimacy in Early
in
Quaife,
p.
52.
Modern England," unpublished manuscript; 57.
Fairchilds, "Sexual Attitudes," pp.
628-29 and 635; Langer gives figures for Nuremberg, see p. 356. See Ceorge C. Homans, English Villagers of the Thirteenth Century (New York:
W. Norton & Company, A Comment," in Goody
W.
Thompson, "The Grid of Inheritance: et al., eds., p. 351, note; Carl Ludwig von Bar, A History of Continental Criminal Law (Boston: Little, Brown and Company, 1916), pp. 1975),
p.
172; E. P.
166-67. 58.
See R. H. Helmholtz, "Infanticide
in the
Province of Canterbury during the Fif-
teenth Century," History of Childhood Quarterly, Vol.
382-83; Kellum,
p.
II,
no. 3
(Winter 1975), pp.
M. Gamer, Medieval and Studies No. 29 (New
370; and John T. McNeill and Helena
Handbooks of Penance, Records of Civilization Sources York: Columbia University Press, 1938), p. 96, for an example assigned. For the severe attitude see Inga Dahlsgard,
59.
Women
in
of the penances
Denmark
Yesterday
and Today (Copenhagen: Det Danske Selskab, 1980), pp. 24-25; McLaughlin in de Mause, ed., p. 158, note; Pitti and Dati, p. 147. This custom is evident among the Germanic peoples of the eighth century, and continuing in Scotland and Norway, and into the 1930s in Yugoslavia. Surveys of English parish records from 1550 to 1820
list
1,855 brides for
whom
the baptismal
records of their first-born children suggest that almost 50 percent of
them were
pregnant at the time of their marriage. See P. E. H. Hair, "Bridal Pregnancy
England
in Earlier
Centuries," Population Studies,
Vol.
1966), pp. 235-36. 60. See Fairchilds, "Sexual Attitudes," for these conclusions.
XX,
no. 2
in
Rural
(November
Notes
405-410
to Pages
523
61. Cited in Origo, Merchant, p. 93.
Nuremberg, Langer,
62. See for
towns, R. V. Schnucker,
p.
356, and Wiesner, "Midwifery,"
"The English
38; English
p.
Puritans and Pregnancy, Delivery and Breast-
Feeding," History of Childhood Quarterly, Vol.
4 (Spring 1974),
no.
I,
p.
654, note;
France and Switzerland, Monter, "Geneva," pp. 196-97.
for
63. Cited in Quaife, p. 103. 64.
Much
of the information that follows
comes from the round-table
discussion,
"Working Women in Early Modern Europe: A Cross-Cultural Approach," with Merry Wiesner Wood on Nuremberg, Natalie Zemon Davis on Lyons, Judith Brown on Florence, Martha Howell on Dutch and Flemish cities, and Nancy Adamson on London, The Berkshire Conference on the History of Women, held at
Vassar College, Poughkeepsie,
Wiesner
New
see a relative increase in
as long as production
York, June 1981. In their books Howell and
women's
guild
pp. 43, 87, 152-55, 161-62, and Wiesner, 65.
The major
membership
was tied to the household. See
entries are cited in Ross
for
in
the early centuries
example, Howell,
Working Women,
Women,
pp. 3, 33.
and McLaughlin, Medieval Women,
p.
20.
66. Clark, p. 155.
67.
Davis, "Crafts," p. 68. For the pattern of gradual exclusion in fourteenth- and fifteenth-century
Cologne see Wiesner, Working Women, pp. 133, 137, 157, 185,
and Howell, Women, pp. 115-16;
for
Chent
see Nicholas, pp. 98-101.
68. Clark, p. 167. 69.
For
a discussion of the
phenomenon
in
the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, see
the following: for Geneva, Monter, "Geneva,"
70.
p.
200; for France, Tilly and Scott,
Germany, Jean H. Quataert, "The Shaping of Women's Work in Manufacturing Guilds, Households, and the State in Central Europe 1648-1870," The American Historical Review, vol. 90, no. 5 (December 1985), pp. 1126-33. for descriptions of this practice in the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries see Ross p.
49; for
and McLaughlin, Medie\>al Women, pp. 6-10. and McLaughlin, Medieval Women,
71. See Ross
pp.
30-33, and Gies and Gies,
Women. 11.
For descriptions of
his firm, see
Ross and McLaughlin, Medieval
Women,
pp.
35-36, and Florence Edler de Roover, "Andrea Banchi, Florentine Silk Manufacturer in
and Merchant
in
the Fifteenth Century," in William
Medieval and Renaissance History, Vol.
Ill
M. Bowsky,
ed.. Studies
(Lincoln, Neb.: University of
Ne-
braska Press, 1966), pp. 241-43, 260-61. 73. See Roover, p. 248 74.
Roover,
p.
and note.
247.
75. Figures for 1663 dramatically
show the
shifts in
Though
only 38 percent of the workers in wool,
weavers
in
employment from women
men
one section of Florence and 65 percent
percent of the 14,034 of the workers in
silk,
in
Florence," Journal of
men.
in another.
They represented 84
78 percent of the master weavers, 59
percent of the weaver apprentices. Judith C. Brown and Jordan
and Industry
to
represented 96 percent of the
Economic
History,
Goodman, "Women XL, no. 1 (March
Vol.
1980), pp. 79-80. 76. For
Leyden see Howell, Women, pp. 1\-11, 88-90; see
Women,
pp. 174-85.
also
Wiesner, Working
NOTES TO PAGES
524
410-419
77. For descriptions of these developments see the following: for Italian towns, Ross
McLaughlin, Mec/zeva/ Women, pp. 34-35, Roover, pp. 251-53; Dale, pp. 331-32, 331, note, Kowaleski, pp. 11-12, Clark,
79.
and Enghsh towns.
158, Power, Medieval
"Working Women." See for example, Davis, Society and Culture, p. 291, note; Kamen, pp. 361-62, 384. Cited in E. A. McArthur, "Women Petitioners and the Long Parliament," English Historical Review, no. XCIII (January 1909), p. 701. See also David Weigall, "Women Militants in the English Civil War," History Today, Vol. XXII, no. 6
Women,
78.
p.
for
p.
60; for
(June 1972), 80. Cited in
German and Dutch
towns, Howell,
435.
p.
McArthur, pp. 202-203.
81. Cited in Patricia Higgins,
"The Reactions
of
Women,
with Special Reference to
Women Petitioners," in Brian Manning, ed., Politics, Religion and the English War
(London: Edward Arnold, 1973),
201, see also
p.
p.
203; McArthur,
p.
Civil
707.
82. Cited in Higgins, p. 203. 83. 84.
in McArthur, p. 708. Germaine Creer, The Obstacle Race: The Fortunes
Cited
of
Women
85.
Work (New York: Farrar, Straus & Giroux, 1979), p. 160. Cited in Ann Sutherland Harris and Linda Nochlin, Women (New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1978), p. 25.
86.
On
the unorthodoxy of the painting, the
the details of the
Susanna,"
in
trial
artist's identification
of her accused rapist, see
Painters
and Their
Artists 1 550-1 9 SO
with the subject, and
Mary D. Garrard, "Artemisia and
Norma Broude and Mary D. Garrard, eds.. Feminism and Art History: (New York: Harper & Row, Publishers, 1982), p. 165.
Questioning the Litany 87.
The husband
disappears from the historical records; there are references to one
daughter Prudentia and perhaps another,
listed in the
Roman
census of 1624 as
Palmira. 88.
Cited
in Harris
and Nochlin,
p. 119.
89.
Cited
in Harris
and Nochlin,
p.
90.
Longhi, Tintoretto, and
Others married and began the
artist
120.
Van Dyck
all
had daughters and trained them
artistic dynasties.
Jan Breughel. See Greer for the
Mayken Verhulst
list
as painters.
trained her grandson,
of factors that deterred
women
artists
before the nineteenth century. 91. Cited in Harris
and Nochlin,
p. 25.
92. Cited in Harris
and Nochlin,
p. 31.
93. Cited in Harris
and Nochlin,
p.
94. 95.
Harris and Nochlin, p.
Most
of the
names
the monograph by
1
107.
59.
women medical practitioners listed in this section come from M. J. Hughes, pp. 139-47; her classifications have not been
of
followed, however. 96. See Kate
Times
Campbell Hurd-Mead,
to the
A
History of
Women
in
Medicine from the Earliest
Beginning of the Nineteenth Century (Haddam, Conn.: The
Haddam
Press, 1938), p. 521.
97.
M.
J.
Hughes,
98. Cited in 99.
Mead,
p.
M.
J.
p. 83.
Hughes,
p. 83.
404.
100. For the description of the trial
and her remarks see James Bruce Ross and Mary
Notes Martin McLaughlin, Press, 1966), pp.
M.
101. Cited in
419-425
to Pages
525
The Portable Medieval Reader (New York: The Viking
eds.,
636-39.
Hughes, pp. 85-86, note.
J.
102. Cited in Clark, p. 260. For other English examples see p. 260; for
see
Mary Chamberlain, Old Wives'
Tales:
(London: Virago Press Limited, 1981),
p.
Church
edicts
Their History, Remedies and Spells
43; for France see Davis, "Crafts," p. 69.
103. See Speert, pp. 102-16. 104. For fees, see Wiesner, "Midwifery," pp. 27-28, 29, 36,
Women,
pp. 55-64; see R. L. Petrelli,
"The Regulation
the Ancien Regime, "Journal of the History of Medicine, passim; see also
Thomas Benedek, "The Changing
and her book Working
of French Midwifery during vol.
26 (1971),
281 and
p.
Relationship Between Midwives
and Physicians During the Renaissance," Bulletin and History of Medicine, no. 4 (Winter 1977), pp. 550-64.
vol. 51,
105. Speert, p. 71. 106.
Mead,
107.
Scholars have argued over female authorship. Given the knowledge of
395.
p.
—
ailments and of childbirth
even master physicians
tioners,
involved in the writing even
was
this
need
for
women
women's
areas usually closed to thirteenth-century male practi-
if
—an experienced female
practitioner
must have been
she was not the sole author. Trotula explains that
to deal with
women's
ailments, given the sex's modesty
it
and
reluctance to speak with a male physician, that brought her to the study of medicine.
See for example, John F. Benton, "Trotula, alization of
Medicine
in
Women's
Problems, and the Profession-
the Middle Ages," Bulletin of the History of Medicine,
vol.
59 (1985), pp. 30-53. 108. Elizabeth
Mason-Hohl,
trans..
The Diseases of
Women
by Trotula of Salerno (Los
The Ward Ritchie Press, 1940), pp. 1, 2. usually known by her maiden name "Bourgeois."
Angeles:
110.
She is Mead,
111.
Mead,
109.
420.
p.
fn. p.
112. Bourgeois
429.
had
lost favor at
court
when one
of her patients, the
Duchess of Orleans,
died of puerperal fever, probably because the surgeon had not removed placenta.
She wrote her
of the
all
text to prove her expertise.
113. See Trotula, p. 23. 1
14.
Cited tific
in
Carolyn Merchant, The Death of Nature:
Revolution
(New
York: Harper
115. See James Hitchcock, ed.,
History of Medicine,
vol.
"A
&
Row,
Women, Ecology and
the Scien-
Publishers, 1980), p. 153.
Sixteenth Century Midwife's License," Bulletin of the
41 (January/February 1967),
p.
76; see also
Thomas
Forbes, "Midwifery and Witchcraft," Journal of the History of Medicine, (April 1962), p. 280,
and Chamberlain, Remedies,
p. 54, for sixteenth-
teenth-century restrictions and prosecutions; see Wiesner, Working for
vol.
R.
17
and seven-
Women,
p. 69,
examples from Germany.
116. Cited in Clark, p. 282. 117. Called the widow's portion, the donatio propter nuptias, the sponsalitium. 118. Cited in Davis, "Crafts," p. 54.
119.
Russian customs into the seventeenth century remain the exception, giving the responsibility for the
widow
to the son.
The
charters for
Novgorod and Pskov
in the
NOTES TO PAGES
526
century enjoined sons to act and care for widowed mothers. In Pskov
late fifteenth
a son could be disinherited
Norton
&
Hughes
in
Company,
he did not provide
if
See George Vernadsky,
old.
425-428
trans.,
for
both parents when they were
W. W. Owen
Medieval Russian Laws (New York:
Inc., 1969), p. 86.
For other information on widows,
Kaplan, ed., gives a complete analysis of the evolution of the widow's
portion, tracing
Morgengabe
to the
it
"Marriage,"
p. 8;
of
Germanic and Celtic marriages,
Owen
Hughes, "Urban Growth," pp. Maguire, pp. 132-33, Calisse, pp. 579, 625;
examples see
for Italian
15,
pp. 29-30;
24-25; Herlihy,
for France, Girard,
Goody et al., eds., p. 225, John H. Mundy, "The Influence of Women in the Medieval Economy Comments," paper delivered at The Berkshire Conference on the History of Women, held at Mount Holyoke College, South p.
487, Cooper in
—
Hadley, Massachusetts, August 24, 1978; Diefendorf, pp. gland,
Cooper
leski, p. 2; for
6,
8-9, 10-12; for En-
Goody et al, eds., p. 296, Thrupp, Merchant, Ghent in Belgium see Nicholas, pp. 28, 119. in
"Women,
120. See Eleanor S. Riemer,
Century Siena,"
p. 106,
Dowries, and Capital Investment
in
and Kowa-
Thirteenth-
Kaplan, ed.
in
and
121. For Italy, see Pitti
Dati, p. 50, Chojnacki, "Patrician
Women,"
199; for
p.
Yugoslavia (Ragusa/Dubrovnik) Stuard in Stuard, ed., pp. 200-203, Riemer in
Kaplan, ed., pp. 64-65, 75; for France, Diefendorf, pp. 18-25, Davis, Society and Culture, 122.
London
p.
69, Brissaud, p. 157.
wills studied for
of the survivors.
the years 1271-1330 show wives to have been 61.4 percent
The 1427
environs identifies
women
catasto (census for tax purposes) for Florence
as
and
its
heads of 21.1 percent of the households. In Florence
the percentage increased as the population aged, from 11.2 percent ages 33-37, to 25.2 percent ages 43-47, to over 50 percent over the age of for
1
527 show
1
2 percent of the
Seville the percentage rose to
A. Miskimin,
Klapisch-Zuber,
Town,"
20 percent
"The Legacies
Women,
fifty.
Parisian tax rolls
households headed by females. In sixteenth-century in the
1
534 census. See the following: Harry
London 1259-1330,"
of
in
Miskimin
et al, eds.;
pp. 120-21; Herlihy, Pz'stow, p. 117; Herlihy,
"Tuscan
97; Herlihy in Martines, ed., p. 149; Diefendorf, p. 3, note; Pike, p.
p.
7.
123. See Clark, pp. 32-34. 124. Sachs, p. 42.
125.
Monter, "Geneva,"
126. See
Owen Hughes
Hogrefe, Tudor
p.
in
201.
Miskimin
Women,
et al, eds., p. 142; Harksen, p.
p. 37,
1
1,
Kowaleski,
p.
5flf,
Dale, pp. 327-28, Clark, pp. 30-31.
127. Beuys, p. 147.
Tudor Women, pp. 40-41. Ann Crabb, "Motherhood and Power
128. Hogrefe, 129.
in
cinghi Strozzi and her Sons, 1441-1471,"
March
Renaissance Florence: Alessandra
Fordham
University,
New
Ma-
York City,
15, 1985.
130. Cited in Martines, p. 25. 131. Cited in Martines, p. 25.
132. See also Richard A. Goldthwaite, Private
Wealth
in
Renaissance Florence: Four
Florentine Families (Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1969), especially pp. 45-59.
133. Ross, ed.,
Medici
Letters, p. 245.
S
.
Notes to Pages 429-434
527
134. Gluckel, p. 34. 135. Gluckel, p. 255. 136. Gluckel, p. 264.
PART 1.
v: 4.
"Adam,"
The
showing the
and Visible Bonds of Misogyny
Invisible
H. Clark,
in B.
Fall.
ed.. Vol.
For example,
I,
313. This
p.
is
message of the plays
typically the
another cycle, the York Coopers play of the
in
and sixteenth centuries, Adam realizes his sin and his nakedness right away. He quickly accuses Eve of "this bad bargain," and is sorry that he believed her stories.
fifteenth
Cawley, 2. 3.
p. 23.
"Adam," See Bede
Jarrett, O.P., Social Theories of the
Newman
Bookshop, 1942),
in B.
H. Clark,
ed.. Vol.
p.
81,
311.
p.
I,
Middle Ages (Westminster, Md.: The ed.. The Exempla
and Thomas Frederick Crane,
or Illustrative Stories from the Sermones Vulgares of Jacques de Vitry
(New
York:
more important because of its wide circulation in these centuries as a source of anecdotes and parables used by priests and friars was the Gesta Romanorum (c. 1340). It gave the same picture of the female sex. Burt Franklin, 1971),
4.
Cited
in E.
T. Healy,
p.
235; even
Women According to Saint Bonaventure (New York:
Georgian
Press, 1955), p. 46. 5.
The
first
versions of the fabliaux are from the thirteenth
In their crudest form, they appeared in the towns
women
as a group, rarely as individuals,
negative lesson about the female sex.
all
and fourteenth
centuries.
They them to
across Europe.
and almost always use
A number of articles
portray
teach a
have been written on the
audience for the fabliaux and their misogyny. See the bibliography by Roberta L.
Krueger and E. Jane Burns
mance Notes, Vol. XXV, Lacy, "Fabliau
for
Women,"
in
White, "Sexual Language and tive
Studies in Society
discussion of
them
"Women
in
Medieval French Literature,"
no. 3 (Spring 1985), pp.
375-90 and
in
Ro-
especially Norris
J.
the same volume, pp. 318-27, and Sarah Melhado
Human
and History,
vol.
as a source for
Conflict in
Old French Fabliaux," Compara-
24,no. 2 (1982), pp. 185-210. For historians'
townsmen's attitudes toward women, see
for
example Howell, Women, pp. 181-83. 6.
Menagier,
7.
See Judith C. Brown, Immodest Acts: The Life of a Lesbian (New York: Oxford University Press, 1986), pp. 133-34.
8.
See examples
9.
p.
50.
for Nuremberg in Strauss, p. 113. M. Margaret Newett, "The Sumptuary Laws of Venice
Nun
in
in
Renaissance Italy
the Fourteenth and
Fifteenth Centuries" in T. F. Tout and James Tait, eds., Historical Essays by
Members of Owens p.
College, Manchester (London:
Longmans Green and Co.,
1902),
247.
Renaissance Florence,
10.
Cited
1 1
For additional examples see the following:
in Brucker, ed..
242-43,
Owen Hughes
Germany, Herzfeld
Sybille Harksen,
(New
Kaplan, ed.,
Women
p.
in the
York: Abner Schram, 1975),
Philippe Erlanger, The
(New
in
York: Harper
&
p.
181.
for Italy, Klapisch-Zuber,
42, Origo, Merchant,
Middle Ages, p.
Women,
pp.
pp. 260-69; for
translated by
Marianne
22, Sachs, p. 33, Strauss, pp.
1 1
3-14,
Age of Courts and Kings: Manners and Morals I S 58- J 71 Row, Publishers, 1967), p. 257; for England, Thrupp, Mer-
NOTES TO PAGES
528
pp. 146-48; for France, R.
chant,
434-438
Turner Wilcox,
York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1944), 12.
Cited
13.
See Katharine M. Rogers, The Troublesome Helpmate:
Hiibner,
in
Cited
Origo, Merchant,
in
Costume (New
in
p. 67.
Literature (Seattle: University of 14.
Mode
TTie
96; for Spain, Defourneaux, pp. 56-58.
p.
Washington
A
History of Misogyny in
Press, 1966), p. 70.
259; for other examples, see Henriques,
p.
p.
45, Sachs,
p. 52.
15.
Decameron,
p.
201.
16.
Decameron,
p.
318.
17.
See "The Miller and the
image of
humor
insatiability
to old
Two Clerics,"
women. "Unchastity"
Charterhouse near Avignon
Hellman and O'Gorman,
is
Garrard, eds.,
p. 79.
The
their
portrayed in relief on the twelfth-century
of
a goat.
Women,"
Medieval
in
See Henry
Broude and
popular storytellers of the fabliaux and the clerical author
mocked the
of the Fifteen Joys of Marriage lusting in a decrepit body.
The
old
woman
no
old widow,
less insatiable
but
now
always rejoices in her husband's death,
ready for "the delight and pleasure of young flesh." Elisabeth Abbott, trans.,
The Fifteen Joys of Marriage (London: The Orion Hellman and O'Corman, eds., pp. 148, 152, 156. 18.
The
eds., p. 57.
when men turned
naked hag having intercourse with
as a
"Eve and Mary: Conflicting Images
Kraus,
now
in
took a particularly loathsome form
The term "cuckold" came from
the cuckoo,
who
Press, 1959), p. 192.
See also
lays eggs in other birds' nests
and
they, unsuspecting, raise them. 19.
See Hellman and O'Gorman,
20.
For examples of laws see
21.
eds., pp.
171-77.
for Italy, Calisse, pp. 438, 571; for France, Girard, p. 495,
Brissaud, pp.
138-40; for England, Stone, Family,
Dahlsgard,
42; for Switzerland, Monter, "Geneva," p. 192.
p.
pp. 22, 145; for
abandoned babies
In the years of famine 1430-1439, 66.3 percent of the rence's girls
San Gallo were female. Trexler, "Foundlings,"
was higher than that
New
for boys.
p.
Denmark,
268.
The
See Richard C. Trexler, "Infanticide
in Florence:
Sources and First Results," History of Childhood Quarterly, Vol.
(Summer
24.
The
no. 7
"Tuscan
101.
p.
23. Kirshner
I,
1973), pp. 101-102.
22. See Herlihy in Martines, ed., p. 146; see also the figures for Pistoia, Herlihy,
Town,"
at Flo-
mortality rate for
and Mallio, "Dowry Fund,"
p.
420.
attacks continued into the next year,
when he was
accused, convicted, and
executed. Brucker, ed.. Renaissance Florence, pp. 152-53. 25. Cited in Ross 26.
and McLaughlin, Medieval Women,
York:
The Devin- Adair Company,
27. See cases
from Brucker,
ed.,
13.
Brucker, ed.. Renaissance Florence,
29.
See Clark,
30. Cited in
p.
Butler-Bowden (New
p.
121.
191.
Ozment,
"About the
W.
1944), p. 49.
Renaissance Florence.
28.
31.
p.
Margery Kempe, The Book of Margery Kempe, edited by
p. 3.
Men Who Came
to
translated by Peter Rickard, Alan
Heaven," Brewer
ed., in
Medieval Comic
Tales,
Deyermond, Peter King, David Blamires, Michael
Notes to Pages 438-443 Lapidge, and Derek Brewer (Cambridge, Eng.: D,
529 S.
Brewer Ltd., 1972), pp. 53-
54.
32. Abbott, Fifteen Joys,
pp. 43, 137.
35.
Hans Sachs, Seven Shrovetide Plays, translated by E. V. Ouless (London; H. F. W. Deane & Sons, The Year Book Press Ltd., 1930), p. 33. Cited in Davis, Society and Culture, p. 116. See for example. Crane, ed., Vitry, pp. 222-23, 231; William Woods, England in
36.
Decameron, pp. 715-17.
33.
34.
the
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of
37. Menagier, p. 150. 38. Menagier, p. 145. 39. Menagier,
52.
p.
White, "Sexual Language,"
40. Menagier, p. 168; see
an
for
earlier version, p. 201.
41. Brucker, ed.. Renaissance Florence, pp. 38-39.
Eugene
42. Cited in
F. Policelli,
Women: A
"Medieval
Women's
Preacher's Point of View,"
(May/June, 1978), p. 287; Leah King, "Caldiera and the Barbaros on Marriage and the Family: Humanist Reflections of Venetian Realities," The Journal of Medieval and
International Journal of
Studies, Vol.
I,
no. 3
see also Margaret
Renaissance Studies,
vol. 6, no.
(Spring 1976), pp. 32-34, for
1
baro's secular view in his treatise
De
summary
of Bar-
re uxoria.
43. Cited in Origo, Merchant, p. 25}. 44. Hogrefe,
Tudor Women,
45. Cited in
James Bruce Ross, "The Middle-Class Child
p.
147.
Mause,
to Early Sixteenth Century," in de
in
Urban
Italy,
Fourteenth
ed., p. 204.
46. Cited in Policelli, p. 286. 47. Menagier, pp. 40, 147. 48. 49.
"Adam," "Adam,"
in B.
ed.. Vol.
ed.. Vol.
Origo, Merchant,
50.
Cited
51.
Menagier,
52.
This image and
in
H. Clark,
H. Clark,
B.
p.
p.
I,
I,
p.
p.
305.
305.
194.
108. this theory of political hierarchy
became
a
commonplace
of seven-
teenth-century political writing. 53.
Decameron,
54.
Sachs, Shrovetide,
55.
See
56.
Menagier,
p.
188.
57.
Menagier,
p.
189.
p.
721.
Policelli, pp.
p. 53.
286-87.
58.
See Origo, Merchant,
59.
Menagier, pp. 171-72.
p.
385.
60. Menagier, p. 173. 61. Menagier, pp. 171-72. 62.
Gliickel,
63.
On
p.
142.
girls, see the summary in Phyllis Stock, Better Than Rubies: A History of Women's Education (New York: G. P. Putnam's Sons, 1978), Chapter II; for Florence, see Jacques LeGoflF, "The Town as an Agent of
the establishment of schools for
NOTESTOPAGES
530
443-444
1200-1500," in Cipolla, ed., The Middle Ages, p. 85; Harksen, p. Thrupp, MerchanU pp. 156, 171, and for Paris, see 304. Douglas in Ruether, ed.. Religion and Sexism, p.
for
London, see
Civilisation
64. Menagier, p. 43. 65. Titled "Patient Griselda" in English tale, see
Klapisch-Zuber,
Women,
and French
p. 228, note.
versions.
^ On
17; for
Geneva,
i r ..u the popularity ot the ,
..
.
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3.
General works (part by
1
and
is
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many
by part)
(part
information about
in
narrative.
women
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References to primary sources and to very specialized
be found
and
essential to the analysis
part), including
where or giving necessary context
arranged as follows:
It is
parts.
articles
and monographs may
the Notes.
Works About
Women
Useful to All Sections
Women
Atkinson, Dorothy, Alexander Dallin, and Gail Warshofsky Lapidus, eds.
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1
INDEX
Age
Abbesses, 183-93, 203
Abbeys, 73, 292 Abduction of women, of noble families,
of marriage, 399, 473n69,
in early cultures,
in
n70
36
noble families, 284
population control, 136
283-84
in warrior cultures, 279,
Abelard, Peter, 194-95, 255
284
Abortion, 82, 137-38
Aggression, male,
Abraham, Hrotsvit of Gandersheim, 187 Abuse of women, 436-40 female servants, 359 widows, noblewomen, 324-27
Aging, physical difference between sexes, 10 Agnes, Abbess of Quedlinburg, 201
Agnes, Countess of Dunbar, 277 Agnes,
Agnes
Acarie, Barbe (1566-1618), 250
Adela (sister of Henry I of England), 277, 299 Adelaide of Burgundy, Empress (c.93 1-999),
276
Queen
of France,
Adelaide of Monserrat, 277
(14th-century Beguine), 223
(mistress of Philip Augustus of France)
285
by dowries, 397 Accusations of adultery, 343 See also Adultery Acquests, 400, 425 Actresses, in ancient cultures, 47 capital,
Adelaide of Maurienne,
Dame
Agnes, Saint, 71
wives, in peasant cultures, 149
Accumulation of
1
300
Agnes ate Toursheade, 142 Agnes II, abbess of Jouarre, 191 Agnes of Bohemia, 197 Agnes of Burgundy, 292 Agnes of Weldon, 144 Agricultural economy, 318 production, 466-67n24, 471n30 Agricultural societies, 6, 174 yearly cycle,
93-104
Adele of Champagne, 277, 319
Agricultural work by
Adelheid, Empress (c.93 1-999), 276
Agrippina
Adelheid
(sister of
Otto
111),
198-99, 275
II,
women, 130-31
Empress
of
Rome
383-84
Anna (1504^-1564), 262 Admission to convents, 198-99, 202
Ahumada,
Adultery:
Ailred of Rievaulx, 204, 217
Adlischweiler,
early Christian views,
82
in early cultures,
38-39
laws
341^2, 343
of. 22,
339,
punishment for, 435 Northhampton, 277 Abbess of Repton, 184
Aelfgifu of Aelfthrith,
Aeneid, Vergil, 32
(15-59 ad),
43 Beatriz de,
Aidan, Saint, 185 Aix-en-Provence:
403 domestic servants, 368 prostitution, 366 charities,
wages, 361 Alais (sister of Philip Augustus of France),
285
282
Aethelfled, ruler of Mercia (d.918), 277
Alais (12th-century troubadour),
Afra, Saint, 71
Alamanda (early 12th century), 307, 308 Alberti, Leone Battista, 440, 442
Age Age
at betrothal,
399
of consent to marriage, 284, 398
Albigensians, 215, 226, 234-35
5
1
554 Albrecht IV,
Duke
of Austria, 364
Alen^on, Duke
153-55
of,
Apostolic Church,
461nl4
Apothecaries, 417
Alcantara, Peter de, 208
guild membership,
419
Alfonso V, King of Castile, 390
Apprenticeship of women, 371
Aliscons, 314
Aquinas. See TTiomas Aquinas, Saint
Allin, Rose,
Arbaliste, Charlotte d', 325
242
All Saint's Day,
Archaeological indication of women's status,
97
Almshouses, noblewomen as founders, 292 Alternative authorities, in monarchies, 339 Alvastra, Cistercian convent, 219
Amazons, 54 Ambrose (Church Father), 81 Amsterdam, 355 plague deaths, 382 Anabaptists, 243, 258-59
persecution of, 242 visionary
women, 244
Anastasia, Saint, 71
Anatomical differences, gender-related, 9-1 The Ancren Riwle, 194, 255
Andromache, 19 Androsmayden, Emma, 119 Anduza, Clara d', of Languedoc, 307 Angela Merici, Saint (1474-1540), 238-39 Anglican Church, Elizabeth 1 and, 232 Anglo-Saxons, 31
5-8 Architecture, urban, 356
Aretaeus of Cappodocia, 29 Aristophanes, 51
The Congresswomen, 32 137-38, 451n4 and age for marriage, 36 on reproductive process, 29-30 Aries, tradeswomen, 370 Arms, restriction of access, 3 1 Arranged marriages, 284, 399-400
Aristotle, 27, 28, 30, 41,
37
in early cultures, in
peasant societies, 121
Arsinoe
II,
Queen
of Egypt, 57
Art: in
medieval convents, 201
of Virgin Mary, 216 Artemis (Diana), 17, 18, 53 temple dedications, 35
adultery laws, 39
Artevelde, Philip van, of Ghent, 341
marriage agreement, 281
Artisans, 355,
widows, laws protecting, 324 Anguissola, Sofonisba, 415
Anne, Duchess of Brittany, 325 Anne, Saint, 105
Anne Anne
of Austria,
Queen
of France, 278, 391
Bohemia, Queen of England, 293, 305
of
Annulment
among
of marriage,
nobility,
339-40
342
See also Divorce Annunciation: Feast
of,
98, 103
portrayals of, 216, 389
Anthropological basis of male dominance,
13-15
birth rate,
in
367-73 517n27
412-16, 424, 524n90
Artists,
ancient cultures, 60-66
Art of the Ancient World, 41 Arundell, Lady, 291 Asceticism, early Christian, 73-77
Aspasia (5th century
Assumption, Feast
B.C.),
47
391, 518n51
of,
Astralabe, 194, 195
Athena (Minerva), 17 Athens, divorce laws, 40 Atkin, Margaret, 168 Atkins, Alice, 235
Atkinson, Joan, 99, 102
Anthropological view of Mariolatry, 486nl
Atropos (Fate), 52 Audland, Ann, 237
Anticlericalism, 16th century, 247
Augusta, Empress (388-450), 59
Antigone, 34 Antonia, Monna, 409
Antonia (1456-1491) (daughter of Ucello), 412 Antony, Mark, 58 Antwerp, 16th century, 355 Anyte of Tegea, 63 Aphrodite (Venus), 16, 17-18 statues of, 54
Apocrypha, 455n80 and Virgin Mary, 216 Apollo, 18
Augustine, Saint, 75, 79, 138 views of marriage, 82
Augustinian convent. Avila,
Augustinian
Aulon
Our Lady
of Grace,
207-8
sisters,
nursing by, 239
(squire to Joan of Arc), 154, 155
Aurelian, Emperor, 56
Austen, Jane, Northanger Abbey, xiv Austin, Anne, 236 Austria:
family patterns, 134
landholdings, 124
1
555
Auvray, Anne, 368
Behavior, handbooks, 503n84
Ave Maria, 390
Belers, Margaret,
Avice
(sheriff of
Nottinghamshire's daughter),
292
203
Belgium, religious communities, 75, 196 Ben Azzai, Rabbi, 32 Benedicti, Jean, 256
Avignon:
Benedictine orders, 76
dowries, 397
marriage documents, 395 Azalais de Porcairages (born c.1140), 309
St.
Michael's at Stamford, 204
St.
Redegund, England, 202
Benincasa, Catherine Bacchanalia, 457-58n3
Bachofen,
J.
J, 4
Baking, by peasant
women, 95
Baldino, Giovanna
di,
Ball,
250-51 Bernardino, Saint, 434, 440-41, 443
of,
Bernard of Clairvaux, 189, 196, 255, 388 view of Virgin Mary, 216, 389 Berry, Duke de. Book of Hours, 96
398
Baptism: in early
Church, 461 n26
of infants, in noble families, 294
Duchess
277
of,
Bertha, Bertha,
Baptists, 228, 235
Bar,
1347-1 380), 220-21
Bernadette of Lourdes, Saint (1844-1879),
438
John, 144
Banns, posting
(c.
ben Sirach, Joshua, 50 fieowu//, 38, 50, 334 Berkshire, Thatcham, 162-63
Babylonian Talmud, 32
Bertha,
Queen Queen Queen
of Franks (8th century),
of Kent, 73
Barbara, Saint, 71
Berthold of Regensburg, 165
Barbaro, Francesco, 441-42
Beruriah, 62,
459n34 Bessof Hardwick(b.l518), 329 Betrothal, 279, 280, 398-99
Barber surgeons, 417, 419
Barking Abbey, England, 200 Barnes, Giles, 137
in early cultures,
and divorce, 455n83 grounds
Bible:
marriage annulment, 340
for
37
Beverages, of peasants, 96
Barrenness, 20, 29, 39-40
as
Basel, persecution of Beguines,
226
New
Testament, 69, 78, 460n2 15, 22, 24, 26
Old Testament,
Bath houses, 381
Genesis, 20, 21
Baudonivia, 185
Hosea, 44
Baudricourt, Robert de, 152-53
Isaiah,
Bauem, 128 Baulacre, Elizabeth (1613-1693),
426
Bayeux, marriage contract, 395
Bayeux
tapestry, 201
Beaseley, Elizabeth, 371 Beatas, Spanish, 222
Beating of wives, 149, 259-60, 338 Beatrice (godmother of Joan of Arc), 152 Beatrice of Savoy, 275 Beatriz,
Countess of Dia (born c.1140), 307-9
Beaufort, Margaret (1444-1509), 293, 329
Anne
de,
(c.
1441-1 522), 509n89
Beauty, feminine, 35, 333
Beck,
Weedon, 102
Bedding, 319 Bedford, Duchess
of,
34-35
male dominance, 20, 21, 77 Proverbs, 37-38, 41 Bidun, Alice de, 325 Biology, and status of women, 8-1 Birth rates, 134-36 in artisan families, 517n27 control of, in noble families, 298 and female infanticide, 138-39 Black Death, 114, 382-83
and birth rate, 135 and women's wages, 132 Farm Women, 144 Blanchard, Antoine, 260 Blanche de Laurac, 227 Blanche of Castile (1187-1252), 329, 347 Blanche of Namur, 219 Black
Beaufow, Alice de, 325 Beaujeau,
319
Blandina, Saint, 71
Beer, peasant, 96
Blaugdone, Barbara, 236
Beggar women, 143 Beghards, 224, 225 Beguinages, 222
Bloodletting, 417
Catholic Church and, 224-27
223 Beguines, 215, 222-24, 410, 487n23, n24, n26 support
for,
340 276
of France (11th century),
The Bloody
Theater, van Braght, 242
Boccaccio, 360, 441
Decameron, 382, 435, 439, 443-44 Bocchi, Dorotea, 416
Bodin, 166
1
556 Body, female, early Christian views, 82-83 Boinbroke, Jehan, 408-9 Boke of St. Albans, prioress of Sopwell, 247 Boleyn, Anne,
Queen
of England,
229
Boylet, Nicolette, (1381-1447), 251
Brabant, Duchess
279, 282
of,
Bracton, Henry de, 322 Braght, Thieleman van. The Bloody Theater,
Bologna, fourteenth-century population, 357 Bolton, Robert, 257
Branchi, Andrea, 409-10
Bonaventure, Saint, 432, 433
Brasier,
Bondswomen, 125-26 Bone structure, physical
Breast-feeding, 109
difference between
sexes, 10
Boniface, Saint, 75, 191
Boniface VllI, Pope, 193
Bonnichon, Marie Jeanne, 144 of Crafts, Boileau, 372 of Divine Works, Hildegard of Bingen, 188-89 Book of Hours, 87, 92, 95, 96, 347, 390 of Catherine of Cleves, 100 harvest time, 94 horizontal loom, 101 peasant life, 98 spring season, 102-3
Book Book
women's work, 361 Book of Life s Rewards, Hildegard
Bride
gifts,
36
Bridget of Sweden, Saint (1303-1373), 199,
218-20, 289, 330 wedding of, 280-81 Brigid, Saint (c.450-523), 72, 75 Briseis (Iliad),
21
Bristol, fourteenth-century
wages, 360
Bromyard, John, 434 Brothels, 46, 363-64 Beguines, 224 Brunhild,
Queen
of Franks (6th century), 43
of Martyrs, Foxe, 264
Brunhild (heroine of Nibelungenlied), 345
of Medicine Carefully Arranged,
Bruno, bishop of Olmiitz, 225 Brussels, women's work, 361-62
Hildegard of Bingen, 189
Book Book Book
Protestant views, 260 Breech presentation childbirth, 107 Breslau, bishop of, 226 Breteuil, Eustace de, 275 Brethren of the Common Life, 226
Bruges, 355 of Bingen,
189
Book Book
William, 143
of Proverbs, 37-38, 41
of St Albans,
503n84
of Simple Medicine, Hildegard of
Bingen, 189
The Book of Special Grace (Liber specialis gratiae), IQl Book of the City of Ladies, de Pizan, xiii, 56 Book of Three Virtues, de Pizan, 289, 348 Books, medieval, 304 illuminated manuscripts, 201-2 Booty, in war, 317 Bora, Katherine von, (1499-1550), 261-62,
258, 264
Bubonic plague, 114, 382-83 and birth rate, 135 and women's wages, 132 Bucer, Martin, 262 Bulgaria, literacy rates, 177 Bull of Suppression (1631),
249
Bull Periculoso (1293), 193, 200, 202,
214
Bullinger, Henry, 262
Bures, Idelette de (?-1549), 262
Burgundians, status of women,
Burgundy, Duke
Book
3
362
of,
of Hours,
98
Busch, Johann, 248, 250
Borgia, Lucrezia, 384
Business functions, of merchant wives, 376-77
Bornelh, Giraut de, 334
Butchering season, 96
Bossuet, Jacques-Benigne, 191
Butter, 104
Boucicaut, French Marshal, 315-16
Boudica (d.62 a.d.), 52, 56 Bouesque, Jean de, 157-58 Bourbon, Antoine de, 232-33 Bourbon-Conde, Anne-Genevieve de, Duchesse de Longueville, 278 Bourgeois, Lxjuise (1563-1636), 421-22,
525nll2 Bourges, France, 356, 381 Bourges, Cathedral, 385 Boursier, Martin, 421
Bowes, Elizabeth, 263 Bowes, Margery (1538?-1560), 263
Caedmon, 185 Caesar, Julius, 42, 57 Caesarius, bishop of Aries, 76
Calbot, Margery, 149 Caldiera, Giovanni, 441
Calenda, Costanza, 416-17 Caleston,
Gena
de,
329
Caligula, 43 Calpurnia (Julius Caesar's wife), 42 Calvin, John, 262
and celibacy, 256 and child-bearing, 260
1
557 Catholic Church (cont.)
Calvin, John (cont.)
Inquisition, 169, 227
164
Institutes,
Isabella of Castile and,
views of marriage, 256, 258
women,
views of
246, 254-55, 257
2M
Calvinists, 228, 230,
and women's roles, 246 Cambi, Helene, 397 Cambridge, endowment of Camerino, Duke of, 230
colleges,
293
and and and and and and
323
Joan of Arc, 160 marriage, 123, 258, 401, 507n38
Mary Magdalen, 387 mysticism of women, 213 peasant values, 148 procreation, 105, 137-38
Camm, John, 237 Camp followers, 362
reform movements, 162 religious practice,
146-47
Candlemas, 98
and remarriage of and slavery, 359 and Virgin Mary, and women, 182, See also Church;
widows, 326
Canonesses, 185
Canonization of women, 251
Canute, 325 Capital, access by widows,
424-25
388-89 214-15, 238, 263, 265-66 Protestant sects
Capitalism, 373, 392-430, 519n2, n3
Catholic women:
Capito, Wolfgang, 262
and Protestantism, 234 and Reformation, 238-41 Caton, William, 237 ne Cattle Raid of Cuchulainn, 28
Capuchin
order,
230
Caranza, Lady (12th-century troubadour), 282 Carlisle,
Joan^415
Catullus, 34
Carmelite convents, 197 Carrouges, Jean de,
Car\ing, prehistoric, Cary,
341^2
Cauchon, Pierre, bishop of Beauvais, 156-57, 159-60 Cauer, Minna, xv Causae et curae (Liber compositae medicinae. Book of Medicine Carefully Arranged),
3
Mary (Rande), 245
Castel del Rio,
Mona
Fiore da, 367
Castelloza (born c.1200), 307
Hildegard of Bingen, 189
Caster, Drutgin van, 372 Castles, 286-87, 288,
318-19
Cazalla, Maria, 241
Castration, fear of, 12
Cecchi, Anna, 117-18, 177-78
Catechism of 1566, 258 Caterina (mother of Leonardo da Vinci), 360 Cathari, 226, 234-35
Cecilia of Oxford,
sculptural depiction of
Catherine,
Queen
women, 432
of England (wife of
Henry
Cellini,
Benvenuto, 367
Celtic cultures, 26, 27, 28, 32-33, 35, 36, 38 child care, 109
Catherine, Saint, 71, 157
Catherine (daughter of Isabella of Castile), 283
Catherine de' Medici, Queen of France (1519-1589), 233, 278 Catherine de Parthenay, Madame de Rohan,
230 Catherine of Aragon, Queen of England, 323 Catherine of Bologna, Saint, 412 Catherine of Cleves, 100 Catherine of Siena, Saint 220-21
(c.
1347-1 380),
Catholic Church, 76, 183
and Beguinages, 223, 224-27
women, 251
255-56 charitable gifts to, 291-92 charitable orders, 402 and education, 443 celibacy of clergy,
feast days,
255-56
Cellier, Elizabeth, 421
V), 291
canonization of
Celibacy, 80 of priesthood,
Cathedrals, 385, 391
418
Celebrations, religious, 388
93-94, 103
customary laws, 39, 450-5 ln2 female heroes, 56 and prostitution, 46 slavery in, 45, 126 Cely family, marriage prospects, 397 Ceres (Demeter), 18, 53, 457n3 Cesarean section, 108 Cettina of Torregreca, 88 Chaitivel, Marie de France, 313
Chansons, 306, 307-9 Chansons de geste, 270, 272, 314, 334, 344 portrayal of widows, 327
Chapman,
Nell,
1 1
Character traits, gender-related, Charitable orders, 239-40 Charity, 143 church-administered, 402
401-2 noblewomen, 291-92
individual, in towns,
of
9, 14
558 Christian V, King of Denmark, 167
Charity (cont.)
by nuns, 238 public, 393, 402
Christianity, 24, 91, 181,
Charlemagne, Emperor, 24, 191, 339 education of daughters, 304 marriage of daughters, 283 wives of, 42, 340 Charles I, King of England, 278 Charles II, King of England, 234, 237, 244 Charles V, Emperor, 166-67, 405 and Mary Tudor, 231 Charles V, King of France, 337 Charles VI, King of France, 279, 282 Charles VIII, King of France, 325 Charles the Bald, King of Franks, 276 Charybdis, 50
Chastisement of
386
views of death, 385
women's role in Church, 247 Charivaris, 438-39 as
Women, Robert
of Blois, 346
Chastity, 33, 38-39, 346
Chastity belts, 508n49 Chatelaines, 270, 285-96, 318
Chaucer, Geoffrey, portrayal of women, 435 Cheese, 104 Chester, Alice, 427 Chidley, Catherine, 234, 236, 264 Childbearing, 9, 12-13, 20, 39-40, 440 early Christian views, 81
noble families, 294-96
mysticism, 204-13
peasant values from, 146-49
54
priestesses,
and
slavery,
spread
of,
status of
126
women's
women,
roles,
229, 243-44
25, 67-77, 181-82,
226-27, 244, 253 subordination of
and
superstition,
women, 77-84
163-64
Christian texts, 450-5 ln2
Christina of
Long Bennington,
99, 102
Christina of Markyate, Saint (c.ll23), 198,
205-6, 210, 282, 284 St. Trand, 223 Christmas, 97-98
Christina of
Chrysostom, John, 79, 81, 82 Church, 76 branches of, 491nlO and charity, 402 and education, 443 and illegitimate children, 404, 405 and procreation, 105 view of prostitutes, 365-66 regulation of marriage, 326, 339-43, 398,
507n38
See also Midwives Child care, 13
323 and slavery, 126, 359 and sorcery, 163-64 and warfare, 316-17 and weddings, 123-24, 280 See also Catholic Church; Protestant Church Fathers, 74-75 subordination of women, 77-83 Churching, after childbirth, 80, 147-48 of queens, 294 Cibo,Caterina( 1501-1 577), 230 Cicero, 27, 45-46 The Cid, 275, 276 ideal women, 344
Childhood, gender differences, 10
Circe, 50
in
women, 104-12
of peasant
and
power, 303-4
political
prayers to Virgin Mary, 390-91
Protestant views, 260 of urban
women, 383-85
in warrior cultures,
38
Childbirth, 14, 31, 36, 41-42, 106-9, 147-48,
383 early Christian beliefs, in
contemporary
Italy,
ritual impurity, 23,
Childlessness,
80 176
463n65
39-40
Cistercian convents, 196, 197, 219,
of,
483n39
Clare, Saint, 196-97
293
mortality rates, 295
Clark, Alice, 144, 406
urban, guardianship of, 425
Class, socioeconomic, xix
of
sects
Citizenship, 393
Children;
education
royal control,
widowed mothers, 326, 328
Chilperic, King of Franks, 276
Chimera, 50 Chivalry, 271, 304-16
Chodorow, Nancy, 11-12 Chretien de Troyes, 305, 306 Erec et Enide, H'\-l'^, 335 Lancelot, 11 '\, 314, 334 portrayal of
women,
333, 344
Claudius, 43
A Godly Form of Household Government, 259, 260 Clement VI, Pope, 220 Clement VII, Pope, 230 Clement of Alexandria, 78 Cleopatra VII, Queen of Egypt (69-32 b.c), Cleaver, Robert,
44, 52, 57-58, 59
Clerc, Jeanette, 170
5
559 women, 255 Climate conditions, 112-1? Elizabeth, 260 Clinton, Cloistered communities, 77, 183-85, 192-93, 198-204, 214 and Reformation movement, 238, 247-50 Cloistering of nuns, 197-98 Clergy, and sexuality of
Clothar
1,
Coningsby, Judith, 278 Consanguinity, as grounds
marriage
to marriage, 82, 280, 281-82, 398
in early cultures,
36
Constantine, Emperor, 72 divorce laws, 40
Construction work, 361
King of the Franks, 75
Clothilde (6th century), 72-73
Conti, Darsena, 145
Clothing:
Contraception, 136-37
in chivalrous courts,
for
annulment, 340
Consent
in ancient cultures,
305
46 82
of merchant wives, 374
early Christian views,
of peasants, 102
Protestant views, 260
regulation of, 433-34, 477n37 Cloth making, 40-41, 99-102, 132 symbolic of fate, 52 See also Textile manufacture
Convent Convent
Clotho (Fate), 52 Clovis, King of the Franks, 72-73 Cluniac convents, 197 Cocorde, Madeleine, 397 Coe, Mary, 91 Coeur, Jacques, 356 Coitus intemiptus, 136-37
198-204 366 Protestant views, 247 Conversion to Christianity, women's roles, 229 Convertite Rule, 366 Conway, Anne, 230 Cookbooks, 375 Cornelia (wife of Julius Caesar), 42 Corpus Christi celebrations, 209, 388
of the Penitents, 366 Convents, 73, 182, 183, 195, 248-49 from Beguinages, 226 cloistered,
for prostitutes,
Calvin's views on, 260
Coke, Edward,
Institutes,
of St. Lucia, 401
338
122
Colin, Jean, 152
Corredo,
Colinet, Marie, 417
Corvinus, Antonius, 229
Colleges, establishment of, 293
Cossutia (engaged to Julius Caesar), 42
Collier,
Cottars, 128, 129
Mary, 109
Cologne, 353, 379 archbishop of, 226 Beguinages, 222
membership, 369, 372, 407 tradeswomen, 370
guild
Columban, Saint, 184 Commercial economies, 130, 318, 373, 392-430 and feudal society, 298 and peasant life, 125
Common
property, 425
Communities
of devout
women. See Beguines;
Cloistered communities
Community Companion
of acquests, 400, 425 roles, in warrior cultures,
Courtoisie, 313, 315
274
Courts, chivalrous, 305-6
Craft guilds, 367-73
Conception, 29-30 prevention of, 136-37 after rape, medieval beliefs,
Cotton thread, 100 Council of Chalcedon, 73-74 Council of Lyons (1274), 225 Council of Mainz, rulings on Beguines, 225 Council of Nicaea, 73-74 Council of Trent, 123, 451 n4 celibacy of clergy, 256 and marriage, 123, 280, 284, 340, 341 and nunneries, 248-49 and priesthood, 238 Council of Vienne (1312), 225-26 Courtesans, 46-48, 366 Courtly love, 313-16
1 1
See also Childbearing; Contraception Concerning Female Training and How a Daughter Should Guide Her Conduct and Life, Bullinger, 262 Concerning the Disorders of Women, Trotula, 421 Concubines, 22, 44, 341 Congregationalists, 228, 235 The Congresswomen, Aristophanes, 32
dowry funds, 397 Craftswomen, 392-93, 406 urban, 355,406-12
Creation myths, 21,49-50 Crespin, Jean, 242 Crete, 7-8, 15 art of, 447nl7 Crewel embroidery, 501-2n30 Crime, by peasant women, 144 Cromwell, Oliver, Lord Protector
236. 244, 245. 321
of England,
560 Crusader Kingdoms, 501 n 19 Crusades, 277, 304-5, 500n6
and Eleanor of Aquitaine, 300-301 Cuckolds, 341-42, 528nl8 Cultural basis of gender characteristics, 9 Cultural influences on status of
women, 24-25
empowering, 52-66 subordinating, 26-51
Cunning
162-64, 173
folk,
Custody of children of widowed mothers, 326, 328 Custumals, French, sixteenth century, 338 Cybele, 53
Deborah (Hebrew prophetess), 52, 55 Decameron, Boccaccio, 382, 435, 439, 443^H Decretals, Gratian, 280 Decretals, Gregory IX, 342 Defense of towns, 379 Defense of Women, Dentiere, 246 Deity, female aspects, 70, 209-10, 228, 463 n66 Demeter (Ceres), 18, 53, 457n3 Demonology, 164, 166, 478n58 Demosthenes, 39 Demut, Anna, 168 Denmark, 109, 113, 147,330-31 servitude laws, 127
widows, 142, 143, 328
Dairy products, 104
Damian,
witchcraft persecutions, 167, 168, 171
Peter, 293
Dent, Joan, 426
Dangers: to
noblewomen, 283
in
peasant societies, 112-18
to urban
Dentiere, Marie, Defense of Women, 246 Dependency of women, in warrior cultures,
279 Les Deus Amanz, Marie de France, 313 Devil, powers of, 163-66 Devout women, Catholic, 239-41 Virgin Mary as role model, 217-18
women, 378-85
in warrior cultures,
275-76
Danish culture, slavery in, 126 Dati, Bandecca, 384 Dati, Berta, 383 Dati, Ginevra, 383, 384
Dexter, Alice, 235
Dati, Gregorio, 383, 384, 397, 399 Datini, Francesco, 365, 375, 376, 384, 404-5,
Diaz, Maria, 222
410 slave trade,
Dido, 32
359
Datini, Margherita, 139, 374, 375, 376, 379,
385, 440, 442, 443 rosaries,
Daughters, 33-35, 199
524n90
of craftsmen, dowries, 395
forced marriages, 284 illegitimate, in towns,
359-60
ancient cultures, 59
education marriage
of, of,
in
293-94 282-83
Discipline:
398
peasant societies, 145-46
Dauphin
merchant households, 375 noble households, 290 Dirks, Elizabeth, 242 Discalced Carmelites, 211, 250 in in
of noble families, 320-23
parents' control of maniages,
and age of puberty, 105 of merchant families, 375 in noble households, 290 of peasants, 95-97 Dietof Augsburg (1530), 229 Dietrich, Justina (c.l645-?), 422 Dinner:
inheritance rights, 122, 124-25, 320-23 in
Diemud(c.l057-1130), 201 Diet:
390
Datini family, domestic servants, 368
artists,
Dhouda, wife of Bernard of Septimania, 327 Diana (Artemis), 17, 18, 53
of France, 153, 155-56
of peasant children, 110 of wives,
439-40
Disease, in towns, 381-83
Davia, Saint, 71
Dishonorable roles for women,
Davies, Eleanor, 245
44-49 Dissenters, women, 234
Day
laborers, 129,
Death
130
ancient
Dissolution of marriage, 339, 342, 401
duties, 141
aspects, 342-43, 401 See also Annulment of marriage; Divorce
economic
Deaths.
from bubonic plague, 114-15 in childbirth, 294-96, 384 children of poor people, 403 in peasant societies, 111-12
Distaff side, 41,
99
Division of labor, gender-related, 13-14
Divorce, 339, 401, 455n83, n85 for barrenness,
from plague, 382 religious views of,
in
cultures,
385
See also Infant mortality; Mortality rates
39
Biblical regulations, in early cultures,
463n73
21-22, 40
1
561
Dubrovnik, dowries for illegitimate daughters, 359
Divorce (cont.) by Jewish women, 450n77 among nobility, 342 in Protestant sects,
Dunois (French commander), 154 Diirer, Agnes, 370 Diirer, Albrecht, 412
492n27
Doctors, 416-19
St.
Catherine of
Dolni \ estonice, Czechoslovakia,
3,
xvi
noblewomen, 318 in religious orders, 184 See also Responsibilities of
Documentation of Joan of Arc, 151-52 Doddington, Edith, 426 Dodgson, Peggy, 132 Domestic
women,
Duties of
in early cultures, 61
Doctors of the Church, Siena, 220-21
women
Dyeing of thread, 100-101 Dynastic function of wives, 42-43
5-6
Dynasties, 273
322
royal, 316,
servants:
dowries, 394-95
Dysentery, 113
404-5 peasant, 131, 132, 472n50 urban, 358-59, 367
Earnings of prostitutes, 363
illegitimate children of,
Dominance
patterns, gender-related, 8,
Easter, 94, 97, 103 1
Dominic, Saint, 196, 197 Dominican convents, 196, 201-2 St.
Catherine's of Nuremberg, 203
Eastern Church, 491 n 10 Eastern Europe: property rights, 125
serfdoms, 127-28, 129 utensils, sixteenth century, 374 Echidna (mythical monster), 50 conditions, 162, 287-88, 298, 316, 360 of castles, 290-91 in convents, 202-3
Dominican monasteries, and women's groups,
Eating
226 Dominicans, and Ave Maria, 390 Domremy, France, 103, 152
Economic
Doria, Andrea, 355-56 textile industry, 408-9 Double burden of women's work, xvi, 41, 174 Double monasteries, 183, 185, 481 nl Double standard of sexual behavior, 39, 436 in ancient cultures, 45, 46 in warrior cultures, 21-22 Dowdall, Katherine, 284 Dower, of noblewomen, 281, 324 Dowries, 36, 42, 199, 281, 399-400 in ancient cultures, 454n64 charitably provided, 402 in commercial economy, 396, 397 control of, 400 for convent endowment, 202-3 for illegitimate daughters, 359-60 and inheritance, 520nl9 of noblewomen, 321 in peasant cultures, 120, 121-22 royal, 319-20
Douai, Flanders,
of urban
women, 395
servants,
Dowry
279
426 199, 397-98
Drax, Frances, 295 Dress: in chivalrous courts,
305
of merchant wives, 374 of peasants, 102
regulation of, 433-34,
477n37
Droit du seigneur, 120-21
Drought, 113
membership, 407-10
population growth, 135-36 serfdoms, 128-29 slavery,
126
Economic opportunities of women, 392-93 Edicts of Persecution, 461n24 Edmund, Agnes, 235 Education: in
ancient cultures, 60-62
in
convents, 184-93, 201, 203, 239, 250
in feudal societies,
304-5
of guildswomen, 371 in
Hebrew
culture, 32
442-44 merchant wives, 376 of noblewomen, 293-94 of ideal wives, of
reformation
movement
and, 264-65
townswomen, 424 345-49
in warrior cultures,
rights, 324,
trusts,
family size, 384 guild
of wealthy
368
in warrior cultures,
widows'
and and and and and
The Education of His Daughters, Geoffrey de la Tour-Landry, 346-47 Edward II, King of England, 282 Edward III, King of England, 275 Edward IV, King of England, 326 Edward VI, King of England, 231 Edwards, Thomas, 257, 264 Edwin, King of Northumbria, 73 Egypt, ancient, divorce, 455n85 Eighteenth century, 113, 117, 134-36, 139 artists,
416
562 Embroiders guild, 371, 406 Embroidery, 501-2n30
Eighteenth century (cont.) consent to marriage, 282 dowries of servants, 368
Employment,
folk magic, 173
Empowerment
in
towns, 358, 412, 418
of
women:
ancient cultures, 52-66
highway robbery, 144
in
peasant
Christianity and,
life,
95, 102, 115, 120, 121, 122,
124, 129-33
67-77
by mysticism, 211
rebellions, 145
in
serfdom, 129
noble families, 297-99
in religious
241
Sisters of Charity,
Engelberge,
communities, 194
Queen
of Franks (d.891),
wages, 361
Engels, Friedrich, 4, 6
wedding
England:
dresses, 123
Eighth century:
birth control, 136
education, 184
birth rates, 135
marriage, 36
charity, 291
martyrs, 72
childbirth, 106,
communities, 75
religious
rule of queens, slavery,
294-95
chivalrous courts, 305
Church subjugation
276
283, 284
death duties, 141
Eleanor of Aquitaine (1122-1204), 196, 198, 269-70, 273, 276, 283, 299, 300-304
employment
dowries, 321-22
education, 184 regulations,
estate
Fontevrault, 292
marriages of daughters, 283, 284
Eleanor of Provence,
Queen
of England, 306
folk magic, 173
forced marriages, 284
Eleusinian Mysteries, 457n3
gentry, 289
Eleventh century, 297-98
guild
birth rates, 135
membership, 369, 371, 406, 407 139 inheritance patterns, 320-21, 322 infanticide, 138,
286-87
feudal obligations, 288
land holdings, 124, 129
foundations, 292
legal status of
illuminated manuscripts, 293
licensing of doctors,
338 marriage agreement, 281 marriage laws, 341, 342 peasant life, 96, 132 queens, 277, 336 slavery, 126 trade, 392
literacy,
legal status of wives,
warfare, 273,
499n2
women, 338
mortality rates of mystics,
names
women,
119, 337
noble households, 318-19 peasant
life,
93-96, 98, 99, 102, 103,
108-11, 113, 120-22, 128, 131, 133 political protests,
Eliezar, Rabbi, 32
queens, 277, 337
Elisabeth of Braunschweig (1510-1588), 229,
religious conflict,
rights,
410-11
powerful abbesses, 191 prostitution, 363
234
serfdom, 127
264 Elizabeth, Saint (mother of John the Baptist),
105 1,
noblewomen, 294
221-22
of
324 Elfled of Northumbria, 198 Eliduc, Marie de France, 310, 312-13
Elizabeth
418
264
plague, 114-15
wet nurses, 295 widows'
410
entrepreneurs, 426
management, 289 family patterns, 134, 369
court of, 305
castles,
women, 246-47
abolished, 247 cunning women, 152
Henry III of England), 328 Eleanor de Montfort, 288-89 Eleonore de Roye, Princess de Conde, 230, 278 (sister of
gifts to
of
convents, 75, 185, 195-96, 200, 202
126
Eleanor (daughter of Eleanor of Aquitaine), Eleanor
Queen
of
England (1533-1603),
231, 232
Elizabeth of Hungary, Saint (1207-1231), 218, 294
276
sumptuary laws, 434 tradeswomen, 370-71,427 urban life, 357, 519nl violence, 149-50, 438 wages, 131-32 warfare, 275, 278
1
563 England
Faith (cont.)
(cont.)
widows, 141-44, 324-26, 328
yeomen, 128 English Civil
noblewomen, 291-93 women, 385-91 Families, 9, 256-63 economic factors in size, 368-69 female roles, 31-44 in feudal societies, 298-304 in peasant societies, 119-24, 133-40 Famine, 112, 113, 469n75, 528n21 in towns, 378 Faouet, Marion de, 144 of
witchcraft persecutions, 167, 171-72
War, 278, 410
English proverb, fourteenth century, 90 Entailed lands, 320, 396
and inheritance by daughters, 322 Entrepreneurs, 373, 424-30
noblewomen, 318 Environmental stress, and male dominance, 14 Epics, 270, 313-14, 333 negative portrayals of women, 334, 335 Epiphany, 97-98
of urban
Fara, Saint, 184
Farming
cultures, status of
women, 6
Fates, in early cultures, 52
Fatherhood, 12
Equality:
of Christian believers, 181-82
Fathers, power over daughters, 34
Platonic philosophy, 62
Faustilla
Quakers and, 236, 238 in Reformation movement, 243-44, 246 Equitan, Marie de France, 312 Ercherde convent, 250 Erec et Enide, Chretien de Troyes, 274-75
by Church in
(sister of
Este, Beatrice D',
196
335 93-94, 97-98, 388, 390
literature,
Feast days, religious,
Count
of Foix), 227
384
Felicie
de Almania, Jacoba, 418-19 147
Felicitas, Saint,
60 Margaret (1614-1702), 132, 234, 236-38, 289, 295, 504nl03
Este family, marriage alliances, 395
Felix, Julia,
Estrus cycle, in primates, 8-9
Fell,
Ethelberga,
leaders, 192,
medieval
Annunciation, 98, 103
Erikson, Erik, 12
Esclarmonde
(Pompeiian moneylender), 60
Fear of women, 12, 44, 161, 253-55, 271, 431 in ancient cultures, 49
Queen
of Northumbria, 73
291
Ethelbert, King of Kent, 73
Fell, Sarah,
Etheldreda, of Northumbria, 218
Felt fabric, 100
Eucharist, mystics and, 209
Female figurines, prehistoric, 5-6 Female guilds, 371, 407-8 Female-headed households, 357, 426, 511nl7, 526nl22 Female infanticide, 138-39 Female organs, early beliefs, 29 The Female Tatler, 55 Female warriors, 54-56 See also Warfare, by women Feminine beauty, ideals, 333 Feminism, questions of, xiv-xv
Eudoxia, 72
Eugenius, Pope, 189
European texts,
culture, influences,
24-25
15-23
Eurydice (d.390
B.C.),
61
Eustochium (4th century), 74-75 Evans, Katherine, 236 Eve, 20, 21,34,49-50, 192,347 Church Fathers' views, 78-80 folktales, 147 Gnostic view, 463n66 poetic views, 335
symbolism Evidence,
of,
Ferdinand of Aragon, 'i22-2'i 128 Ferrara Inquisition, 230
Fermiers,
431-32
Fertility goddesses, 53
in witchcraft trials, 171
Evolution, primate, selection patterns, 8-9
Executors, widows
as, 425 Exemplars, 218-20 The Expert Midwife, McMath, 423-24 Exposure of infants, 30-3 Extended families, 134
Extramarital relationships,
Church
views,
340-41
Fertility of
women, 39^W)
early Christian control, in
82
noble families, 294
Fertility rituals, ancient
Greece, 457n3
Festivals, 94, 103
ridicule of
women, 438
See also Feast days, religious Fetti,Lucrina(c. 1614-1651), 202 Fetus, physical difference between sexes, 10
Fabliaux, 431, 433, 438, 527n5, Fairs,
97
Faith, religious:
and heresy, 224-25
528nl7
Feudalism, 272, 273, 287-88 decline of, 316-17 status of
women, 297-304, 500n7 fulfilled by women, 299
Feudal obligations,
564 Mary, Duchess of Hamilton, 295-96 Fieldof the Cloth of Gold, 315 Fielding,
Fifteen Joys of Marriage, 433, 438,
528nl7
Fifteenth century, 318, 360, 378 artists,
412, 413
401-2
control of
of
women,
81
54
communities, 73
religious
Mary (1584-1659), 366-67
Fisher, John, 293
315-16
women, 215
Fisher,
Mary, 236
Fishing, by peasants, 97
convents, 200, 202, 203 doctors,
priestesses,
Firth,
chivalrous courts, 305, 306, 314,
Church
Church views
property rights, 60
birth rates, 135 charities, 292,
First century:
Flagellants,
416
217
Flax, 100
113,378
dowries, 397
Floods,
education of children, 294
Florence, 353, 354, 356, 357, 378, 526nl22
entrepreneurs, 426
brothels,
family patterns, 134, 368-69, 511nl7,
charity,
526nl22
economic conditions, 360 guild membership, 407 inheritance patterns, 520nl9 merchant wives, 376 mortality patterns, 383, 437 property rights, 396, 426 prostitutes, 362-63, 366 slavery, 359 sumptuary laws, 434
food shortages, 378, 528n21 membership, 371-72, 408
guild
hostages, wives as,
275-76
inheritance patterns, 322
landholdings, 316 legal status of Russian wives,
338
marriage, 283-84, 321, 395, 399
merchant
elite,
373-77
midwives, 420 mortality rates, 138, 139, 382, 383,
names
of
437
women, 119
wages, 360
wedding
celebrations,
399-400
Folk remedies, 110-11
146-47 political protests,
410
women,
Folktales, 91, 97, 110, 112, 121, 122, 140,
345, 348
prostitution, 362-63,
punishment
409-10, 523n75
textile industry, 372,
trade, 361
noble households, 289-90, 291, 319 peasant Hfe, 87, 94-96, 102, 120-21, 129,
portrayal of
364
401-2, 403 dowries, 360, 397
for adultery,
religious sects,
146, 149, 163
Fontana, Lavinia (1552-1614), 415 Fontevrault abbey, 198, 199, 248, 269, 292
364
436
227
Food:
30-31
serfdom, 127
in ancient cultures,
sumptuary laws, 434 urban Hfe, 353-57
of merchant families, 375
warfare, 116-17, 317,
499n2
by women, 277-78 warrior cultures, 273
widows, 140, 143, 144, 326, 329, 425
work of women, 361-62
Fornication, 82
Fifth century:
Church views
of
women,
78,
79
Fortifications of towns,
female martyrs, 72 religious
Fort
communities, 75
Fifth Monarchists, visionary
women,
244, 245
Figurines, prehistoric, 5-8
Filipowska, Regina, 235 Filippo Macinghi, Alessandra de (1406-?),
Filles
in noble households, 290 wartime supplies in towns, 379-80 Food sellers, 370-71 Foorde, Steven, wife of, 370 Forced marriages, 283-84 Forest, in peasant life, 92
427-28 du Bon Pasteur, 366
la
Latte, 285-86,
379 288-89
Fortune (personification of), 53 Foster homes, 140 Foundling homes, 140, 402, 403, 522n53 Four Ages of Man, Philip of Novara, 345 Fourteenth century, 112, 316-17, 361, 378, 519nl adultery accusations, 343
Finland, witchcraft persecutions, 167
Beguines, 223, 225-26
379 First Blast Against the Monstrous Regiment of Women, Knox, 255
charity,
Fires in towns,
Bibles,
293
403
chivalrous courts, 305-6, 314, 315
1
565 France
Fourteenth century (cont) convents, 198 doctors,
(cont.)
landholdings, 125, 128, 300
416-18
338 418 264
legal status of wives,
domestic servants, 358
licensing of doctors,
exemplars, 218-20
literacy rates, 177,
food shortages, 378
marriage, 123, 148, 280, 321, 396
membership, 369-72, 406-8, 410 husbands' names taken by wives, 337 independent abbeys, 191
midwives, 107
guild
infanticide, 138
inheritance patterns, 321, 322, 512n33,
life,
520nl9
nineteenth century, 89
115,382
plague,
marriage, 280, 282, 284, 342, 395-96 elite,
women,
119, 337 93-95, 97-99, 102, 104, 108-11, 113-15, 120-22, 128, 130, of
peasant
131, 133, 146-47, 175
infant mortality, 384
merchant
names
Protestantism, 227, 230, 234
queens, 276-77, 336-37
373-77
mysticism, 206
rebellion by
noble households, 279-50, 289, 319 peasant life, 89, 93, 94, 97-99, 102, 110,
religious
120, 122, 128, 129, 131-33, 141
personal possessions, 319, 369 plague,
women, 345
widows, 141-43, 325, 328, 425 witchcraft persecutions, 167-68, 171
364
queens, 336-37 religious extremists,
women, 438-39
warfare, 275, 278
property rights, 396 prostitution, 362,
ridicule of
serfdom, 127
urban life, 356, 370, 519nl wages, 131-32
114-15,382
portrayal of
women, 144
communities, 75, 184, 191, 202, 240-41, 248-50
217
Monna, 403
Francesca,
serfdom, 127
Francesco, Angela de, 362
359 sumptuary laws, 434 urban life, 353-56
Francis, Katherine,
slavery,
violence toward
99
Francis, Saint, 197
Franciscan convents, 196, 226
women,
115, 438
Francis de Sales, Saint, 239
wages, 131, 360, 361
Francis of Assisi, Saint, 196
warfare, 275, 317, 380
Franco, Veronica, 366
by women, 277 warrior cultures, 273 wet nurses, 139
Frankfurt-am-Main, 381, 382 Frankish cultures, slavery, 126
widows, 142, 143, 328, 329, 425 witchcraft accusations, 163
Fredegund, Queen of Franks, 43, 45 Frederick I Barbarossa, Emperor, 190 Frederick
II,
Emperor, 341
Fourth Lateran Council, 197 Fox, George, 230, 236-37, 247
Free Spirit followers, 215, 224, 225 Fremely, Isabel, 371 Fremyot de Chantal, Baroness Jeanne-Fran?oise (1572-1641), 239 French Religious Wars, women's roles, 278
Foxe, John, 242
French Revolution, and
Fourth century:
Church views
of
women,
81
divorce laws, 40
Book
of Martyrs, 264
birth control, 136
Freud, Sigmund,
birth rates, 135
Frigga, 38
292 churching after childbirth, 147-48 charity, 291,
Church subjugation
Sisters of Charity,
241
Fresco paintings, by nuns, 202
France, 144
of
women, 246
1
Froissart, Jean, Chronicles, 119, 1^1, jousts,
341^2
315
noblewomen, 337 urban life, 355, 360 warfare in towns, 380
domestic servants, 358 education, 184 estate management, 289
Fronde, 278
family patterns, 134, 368-69
Frustrated
infanticide, 138, 139
Fuel used by peasants, 98
inheritance patterns, 320, 322
Fugger, Barbara Basinger (d.l497), 428
fertility,
136
566 Fulbert (canon of Notre
Dame
cathedral), 194
Germany
(cont.)
communities, 75, 196, 483-84n43
Funeral tributes for wives, 37
religious
Furies (Erinyes), 50
serfdom, 127
Furniture, 319
sumptuary laws, 434
in castles,
287
superstitions, 163
of guild families, 369 of merchant
elite,
of peasants,
98-99
widows, 143 witchcraft persecutions, 167, 168, 171-72
374
Gertrude, Saint, 75 (sister of Ekbert, Margrave of Neisse), 329 Gertrude the Great (1256-1302), 206, 207, 209 Gertrude of Nivelles, abbess, 185 Gesta Romanonim, 527n3 Ghent, 370, 512n33 Beguines, 224
Gertrude Galen, 29, 30 Galice, Nicola de, 168 Galla Placidia (388-450), 59 Galswintha, Merovingian queen, 36
Gandersheim convent, 186, 481n7
Dona
Garcia,
Sanchia, abbess, 184
Gardens, 95, 375, 376 Garzoni, Giovanna (1600-1670), 416
Gifts:
Gathering-hunting societies, 5-6, 13 Gaudry, Suzanne, 171 Gender identity, female, 11-12 Gender-related
roles,
charitable,
292
288 280-81, 369, 396, 399, 496n43 36 warrior cultures, 279, 280-81
in feudal households,
at marriage,
31-44
in ancient cultures,
Genealogies, in ancient texts, 20
in
See also Dowries
Genesis, 20, 21
Giovanna of Anjou, Queen of Naples, 221
Geneva, 407, 426-27, 436
Giraldus Cambrensis, 109
marriage regulations, 398, 401
Genevieve, Saint, 386
Gisela (daughter of Charlemagne), 304
Genitals, early symbolism, 29
Giunta, Niccolo
Genoa, 355-56, 395, 427
Gloucester,
Gentileschi, Artemisia (1593-1652?), 56,
Gluckel of
413-14,437
marriage of daughter, 397
Geoffrey (son of Eleanor of Aquitaine), 314
Geoffrey of Anjou, 283
George, Alice, 108
A
Gerberga, abbess of Gandersheim, 186 folktales, 91, 97, 112, 121, 122,
149
Saxony, religious communities, 75 cultures, 26, 31, 32, 50,
customary laws, 39, 450-5 ln2
455n83
Gnosticism, 70, 81, 463n66 God, female aspects, 70, 209-10, 228, 463n66
Goddesses, 16, 449n74 worship of, 6, 7-8, 52-54
GeolTrey Plantagenet, 299
divorce,
55-56
Godly Form of Household Government, Cleaver, 259 The Golden Legend, Voragine, 386, 389 Goldsmith, woman as, 372 Goretti, Maria, Saint (1890-1902), 491
Gorgons, 50
New
Testament, 460n2
marriage customs, 36
Gospels,
property rights, 59
Gostwick, John, 131 Gotteshduser, 111
prostitution,
385,
betrothal of daughters, 399
Gentry, 289
Germanic
1
394, 429, 443
Gentileschi, Orazio, 413
German German
363
di,
Duke of, 56 Hameln (1646-1724), 382-83,
46
roles of wives, 38,
Gottfried von Strassburg, 344
slavery in, 45,
Tristan and Isolde, 333, 335 Gouge, William, 246, 258, 260
birth rates, 135
Cough, Kathleen,
charitable gifts, 292
Goussault,
Mme.
education, 184 family sizes, 368-69
Governing Gracedieu
priory,
landowners, 128
Grain, harvest
42 125-26 Germany, 360, 519nl birth control, 136
legal status of wives,
licensing of doctors,
mysticism, 206-7
338 418
Of Domesticall
Grain
riot,
Duties, 261 xxiii
de,
of,
355
203 95
Lyons, 410
Giatian, Decretals,
280
240
families, urban,
137-38, 149, 191, 192,
567 Great Mother (Cybele), 53 Grebill, Agnes(d.l512), 241 Greca, Angela, 366 Greece, ancient, 15, 24, 28-29, 31-32, 39,
450n2 Amazons, 54-55 divorce, 40, 455n85 education of
Hammer
of the Witches,
165-66
Handelsgesellschraft, Ravensberg, 427
Hangings, 319
Hannah (Old Testament), 40 Harding, Alice, 235
Harems, 341 Harlots, 46
women,
61
See also Prostitutes
female writers, 63-66
Harold Harefoot, King of England, 277
457n3 goddesses, 16-18, 52-54
Harpies, 50
marriage, 36, 37
Harvest season, peasant
misogyny, 49, 50
Harvester Vase, Gretan, 7
fertility rites,
prostitution, slavery,
Hat makers
women, 24-25, 30-31, 34 women, 41
Hatred of women 49-51
Greece, modern. 93, 95, 102, 123, 130-31 folk magic, 173
Greenaway, Margaret, 427 Gregory IX, Pope, 223, 366 Decretals, 342 Gregory of Nyssa, 76 Gregory of Tours, 43 Gregory the Great, Pope, 80 Grendel, 50
Grey, Jane, 231, 243
guild, 371
ancient cultures, 23,
in
See also Misogyny Hausmannin, Walpurga, 170-71 Havissa (12th-century
serf),
127
Hawisa, Countess of Aumale, 325 Hayes, Catherine,
1
50
Haynes, Margery, 426 Healing crafts, 417-18 in
peasant societies, 110-11
274-75 contemporary peasant 175-76 Heaven, images of, 385 Hebrew culture, 24-27, 32, 44, 451nlO Health care,
in
societies,
444
Groote, Gerhard, 226 Grosseteste, Robert, 223
female heroes, 55
book of household management, 289 Grumbach, Argula von (1492^,1563), 235, 246
ideal wives,
Guardianship of children, 425 Guardianship of women, 33-35, 400
Gudmarsson, Ulf, 218-19 Gudula, Saint, 72 Guiburc, 274 Guicciardini, Isabella, 376 Guidebooks to behavior, 503n84 Cuigemar, Marie de France, 310 Guilds, 355, 367-73, 392-93, 402, 406-8
416 dowry funds, 397 healing crafts, 417
37-38
male dominance, 18, 20 marriage roles, 36 misogyny, 49-50 and prostitution, 46 work of women, 41 Hebrew laws, 34, 39, 40
female subordination, 27-28
Hebrew
texts, 15, 450-5 ln2 See also Old Testament
Hector, 19
Hedwig, Saint, 196 Heidenheim, abbess
artists,
Heinrich,
medical, exclusion of
women, 419
operation of brothels, 364 religious holidays,
94-97
in warrior cultures,
Grey, Elizabeth, Duchess of Kent, 275 Griselda,
activities,
Harvey, William, 423
45
status of
work of
45-47
Harrison, William, 249
388
Cuillaume d 'Orange, 274, 334
Duke
of,
185-86
of Freiberg, 229
Helena, mother of Constantine (c.248-328?
72 Helen of Troy, 40 Helfta convent,
Germany, 206-7
Hell, images of, 385
Hadewijch of Flanders, 223 Hagar (Old Testament), 22 Halkett, Anne, 418 Hall, Mary, 426 Hallmayer, Hans Georg, 171 Hambly, Loveday, 241 Hamilton, Duchess of, 295
Hellenistic era, 61
Heloise (1101-1163), 194-95, 483n32
Queen of England, 278 King of England, 275, 299
Henrietta Maria,
Henry
I,
marriage of daughter Matilda, 283
Henry
II,
King of England, 269, 284, 300,
301-2, 325
2
1
568 Henry
Holland, merchant's wives, 377
II (cont.)
court of, 305, 310
Holy Family,
marriages of daughters, 283
Homage, in chivalrous Homer, 15-18,26
regulation of brothels, 364
Henry Henry Henry Henry Henry Henry
II,
III,
King of France, laws of, 405 King of England, 326
263
roles of,
society,
305
55
Iliad,
Odyssey, 34
IV, King of Castile, 322
Honorius, Pope, 223
VI, King of England, 227, 277 VII, King of England, 329
Hooten, Elizabeth (b.l600), 236, 244-45 Hopkins, Matthew, 167 Horace, 48-49 Horatia, 34 Horenbout, Susanna (1503-1545), 412
VIII, King of England, 196, 231, 235
Protestant wives, 229
419 Hera (Juno), 16-18 The Herald of Divine Love, Gertrude the Great, 208 surgeon's guild,
Herbals, 375
Heresy, 215, 224-27 religious dissent as, 241, as,
differences,
1
Hosea (Hebrew prophet), 44 Hospitals, charitable, 402 noblewomen as founders, 292
Herbal remedies. 111, 275 in childbirth, 106, 107
witchcraft
Hormonal
Hortus deliciarum, Herrad of Landsberg, 187, 201
Hostages,
244
164-66, 169, 172
women
Hotel Dieu,
as, in
Paris,
warfare,
275-76
239-40 420
training of midwives,
Hernandez, Francisca, 222 Herodotus, 55
Household duties, in ancient cultures, 40-41 House of St. Martha, 366 Housework. See Domestic servants
Heroes;
Housing:
Herlind, 201
313-16 394
chivalrous,
merchants
as,
Heroines: Christian,
71-72
negative portrayals, 334
romantic, 314
Heron, Isabella, 284 Herrad of Landsberg, abbess of Hohenberg (1167-1195), 187 Hortus deliciarum, 201 Hersend (c.l250), 418 Hersende of Champagne, 196 Hesdin, hospital at, 292 Hesiod, 23,41,49, 50, 51 Hestia (Vesta), 17, 18
Heylwig of Prague, 226 Highway robbery, 144
286-87 merchant elite, 373-74 of peasants, 92-93, 98-99 urban, 355-56, 369 Howe, Sarah, 124 Howell, James, 377 Hrdy, Sarah Blaffer, 8 Hrotsvit of Gandersheim (c.930-c.990), 186-87, 481n7, 482nl4 writings about Virgin Mary, 216 Huguenots, 230, 264 Jeanne d'Albret, 232-33 Humanist views of women, 257 castles,
of
Humorous misogyny, Hundred Years War,
ancient, 51 116, 317, 380
chivalry in, 315
Hippolyta, 55
inheritance claims, 322 Hungary, 111, 129 Hunting-gathering societies, 5-6, 13 Hus, Jan, 293 Husbands, 394 authority over wives, 338-39, 400 Hussites, 227 Hut, Katherine, 242 Hutchinson, John, 349 Hutchinson, Lucy Apsley, 236, 348-49 Hymn to Demeter, Homer, 18 Hypatia(c.370-415), 62-63
Historia Arcana, Procopius, 48
Hypnos, 16
Hilda, Saint (616-680), 185
Hildegard, Empress (wife of Charlemagne),
185
Hildegard of Bingen (1098-1179), 188-90,
210-12 Scivias,
201
Hincmar, bishop of Rheims, 339, 340 Hipparchia (3rd century B.C.), 62 Hippocrates, view of women, 30 Hippocratic Corpus, 28, 29
Hoby, Mary, 292-93 Hocktide, 103
laia of
Holidays, religious, 388
Ice age, fourteenth century,
Cyzicus, 61 1 1
1
569 Inheritance patterns (cont.)
Ideal wives: in
ancient cultures, 37-38, 44, 271
81-82
early Christian views,
See also Ideal
women,
in feudal societies,
297-304
of noble rank, 315, 320-23,
women
Innocent Innocent
II,
Christian ascetics, 74
III, Pope, 190, 340 Innocent VIII, Pope, 164
in early cultures, 33
Innocent XI, Pope, 138
Ideal
332, 431
250-51 warrior cultures, 343-50
Inquisition, 227
in religious orders, in
Homer, 15-19, women's work, 40
Iliad,
in
witchcraft persecutions, 167, 169
21, 55
Illegitimate children, 359-60,
403-5
Church
Illness, in
views, 340-41
Church
Rome,
for
marriage
Independents (English Congregationalists), 228 women's roles, 236, 245, 246 Indigent women, 143-44 Industrialization, 91
forced marriages, 284 legal status of wives,
peasant
people, 403
communities, 75 widows' rights, 141, 328
Empress (c.753-803),
Irene,
Queen
Isabel,
peasant societies,
in
towns, 384-85, 403
Isabella, Isabella,
Isabella
Countess of Arundel (d.l282), 328 Queen of Denmark, 230 (born c.1180, noblewoman), 308 (13th-century peasant), 144 of Aragon, 294 of Bavaria, 279, 282
Queen
of Spain
children of, 283, 505nll3
See also Infanticide; Mortality rates Infections, in childbirth, 108
women, men's
Isaiah
(Old Testament), 34-35
Iselda, beliefs,
253-55
Infidelity:
Isidore, Isis,
Church
72
(1451-1504), 292,317,322-23,324
1 1
views,
of wives, 38-39, 339,
59,
of Portugal, 198
Isabel (daughter of Isabella of Castile), 283
Isabella of Castile,
in
338
105, 147
life,
religious
Isabella
Infant mortality, 383
340^1
342-43
Lady (12th-century troubadour), 282 bishop of Seville, 80
53-54
Italy,
134, 135, 519nl
artists,
413
charitable gifts, 292
Influenza, 113 St. Bridget,
Queen
199
of France, 285,
340 Inheritance patterns, 499n4, 520nl9 ancient cultures, 59-60
commercial economy, 396 and dowries, 321 in
birth control, 136
Isabella
Ingeborg of Denmark,
453n43, 469n75
Ireland, 27, 72,
Isabella
138-39,437
laws of, 405
Ingeborg, daughter of
374
Iphigenia, 34
folk magic, 173
annulment, 340 Imprisonment of Joan of Arc, 156-57 Impurity. See Ritual impurity of women Incest, as grounds for marriage annulment, 340 Income, from women's work, 130-33
Infanticide, 30-31,
views, 82, 137-38, 256 gender differences, 12 Interior decoration, 319,
dowries, 122
23, 61
Impotence, as grounds
in
389-90
Intercourse:
Imbalance of populations, 14th- 17th centuries, 357 Immaculate conception, 251-52 Immigration of women to towns, 356-57
of husbands.
447n24
Intercessory function of Virgin Mary,
Illuminated manuscripts, 201-2, 293, 412
Inferiority of
Intelligence:
psychological studies,
464n2
peasant societies, 110-11,
among poor
45-46
cultures,
113-14
Imperial
Coke, 338
and gender, 9
peasant societies, 139
Illiteracy rates, 177,
Calvin, 164
Institutes,
449n74
ancient cultures,
Illicit sex,
Institutes,
Institutionalized prostitution, in ancient
daughters, sent to nummeries, 199 in
336
Pope, 194
contemporary health
care,
176
control of wives, 149
convents, 196 dowries, 398
inheritance patterns, 520nl9
marriage alliances, 395 nuns, 202
570 Italy (cont.)
peasant
life,
105, 108, 109, 117-18, 129-31,
133, 136, 137, 175, 177-78
twentieth century, 87-89, 90 rebellion
by women, 145
Ivo,
Ralph, 122, 131
Josselin,
Rebecka, 122
Jouarre, abbess of, 184 Jousts, 273,
Juana (daughter of Isabella of Castile), 211, 283
Huy, 222-23
bishop of Chartres, 340, 341
Judaism, 481 nl Judith,
Jacommette (15th-century bride), 395 Jacqueline de Rohan, Marquise de Rothelin, 230 Jacqueline de Sainte, 198 (Old Testament heroine), 55 Jael Jean, Prince of Luxembourg, 156 Jeanne d'Albret, Queen of Navarre (1528-1572), 230, 232-33 Jeanne de Bourbon, Queen of France, (1338-1378), 294, 336-37 Jehanneton (14th century), 131 Jerome, Saint, 74-75, 76, 80, 204 views of virginity, 83 Jesuits,
views of
women,
209-10 and Mary Magdalen, 386-87 mystics and, 210 teachings on marriage, 82 teachings on sexuality, 80 Jewish
Julia
Julian of
Hebrew
culture
450n77
Joan (daughter of Edward
Kamen, Henry, 382 Katherine of Mecklenberg, 229 Keller (Humanist), 262
Kempe, Margery (c.l373-after 221-22, 437
1438?),
Kineburga (sister of Osric, King of Northumbria), 75 King's peace, 273 Kitchen gardens, 95 Knights, 314, 315
287-88
Knitting, 100, 133 III of
England),
Know
319 Joan (daughter of Eleanor of Aquitaine), 283 Joanna (daughter of Eleanor of Aquitaine), 275
Joanna (daughter of Edward III), 306 Joanna (New Testament), 69 Joanna (widow of William II of Sicily), 324 Joan of Arc (1412-1431), 102, 116, 119, 146, 151-61, 213, 381, 476nl, n9, 477n37,
n43 of Bourbon, 315 King of England, 302-3, 325, 326 John, John XXII, Pope, suppression of Beguines, 226 John of the Cross, Saint, 211 Jointures, 328 of noblewomen, 281 Jongleurs, 305, 343 Joseph, Saint, 263 Josephus, 27 Josselin, Anne, 131 Josselin, Jane, 122, 131
Norwich (c.1343-1416?), 206,
labor required for,
Joan, Pope, 193
Duke
of Flanders), 293
208-10 Juno (Hera), 16-18 Justinian, Emperor, 47-48, 365-66 Jutta of Sponheim, 188
witchcraft persecutions, 167
John,
Count
(daughter of Julius Caesar), 42
Khrushchev, Nikita, 175 Kidnapping of noblewomen, 283-84
women, 386
right to divorce,
of Franks (d.891), 276
Kepler, Katherine, 169
of,
Jewish culture. See
Queen
Judith (Old Testament heroine), 55
Judith (sister of
Kelly, Joan, xviii
255, 366
Jesus of Nazareth, 67-69, 77, 80, 388
female image
314-15
Joye, Julian, 124
witchcraft persecutions, 167 Ivetta of
Josselin,
Ways of the Lord, Hildegard of Bingen, 188, 189
the
Knox, John, 254 First Blast Against the Monstrous Regiment of Women, 255 marriage of, 263
Kore (Persephone), 457n3 Kramer, Heniy, 164-66, 169 Kriemhild {Nibelungenlied heroine), 274 Labor, gender-related division
of,
13-14
Labor, prolonged, in childbirth, 107-8
Labor movement, peasant Lacemaking, 133
women
and, 145
apprenticeship, 371 la
Chambre, Guillaume
de, 160
Lachesis (Fate), 52
Cruz, Isabel de, 241 Lactation, 9
la
Lacy, Margaret, Countess of Lincoln, 289
Ladies of Charity, 240
Lady Day, 98 La Fontaine, Jean
de,
435
5
1
571
Lais, 270,
la
Laws
306
Lais narratifs,
B09-10
(cont.)
widows'
Lade, Alice de, 149
328
rights, 324,
against witchcraft, 166-67
Lammas, 93-94, 103
Lancelot, Chretien de Troyes, 274, 305, 334
Laws, Plato, 62 The Law's Resolutions of Women's Rights, 338 Laxalt, Durand, 152-53
Landed
Lead, Jane (1624-1704), 245-46
Mme.
Lamoignon, Lancaster,
Duke
de,
of,
240
341
cultures, infidelity of wife,
339
Landholdings, 128, 317-18, 332 access by widows, 140-41 in feudal societies, 287-88, 297-99 and marriage, 396 by noblewomen, 320-23, 336 in peasant societies, 122, 124-29 Landlessness, 125, 128-29
Landlords:
Leah (wife of Jacob), 22 Leander of Seville, 83 Leavins, Elizabeth, 236 le Bere, Emma, 149-50 Lecavella, Mabilia, 427 LeClerc, Agnes, 420 Lefevre d'Etapes, Jacques, 387 Legal status:
and marriage of peasants, 120 and widows, 141^2 Landoccio dei Pagliaresi, Neri de, 221 Landscape, peasant, 92-93 Lane, Jane, 278 Lanechin, Marie, 168-69, 170 Langland, John, Piers the Plowman, 140 Langres (French Protestant martyr), 242-43 Langton, Jane, 427 Lanval, Marie de France, 310-11, 313 Lapo, Ser, 384 la Porte, Suzanne de, 293, 348 La Pringe, Margary, 328 la Quentine, Jehanne, 442 Las Huelgas, Spain, 184, 191, 200 Lateran Council (1215), marriage laws, 340, 341 Latimer, Hugh, 229, 254
Tour-Landry, Geoffrey de, 346-47 La Touroulde, Marguerite, 381 Tremoille, Katherine de, 248
la
la
in
Countess of, 131, 132, 289-91, 293, 318, 319 wet nurses, 295
Leicester, Robert, Earl of,
Marie de France, 312, 313
Lavinia (wife of Aeneas), 32 of the
Twelve Tables, 30
Laws:
415-16 Leman, Catherine, 124 Lemersne, Catherine, 420 Lely, Peter,
Lenore,
Queen
of Castile, 191
94 Leo X, Pope, 365, 366 Lent, season
of,
Leonarda, Isabella (1620-1704), 200
Leonardo da Vinci, 360 Lepensky Vir, 6 Lerner, Gerda, xviii Royer, Catherine, 152
le
Lesbianism, 433 Levellers, English, 228,
women's
roles,
234
411
236, 246, 264
Levy, Cerf, 429 Lewis,
Widow
(17th century), 131
Leyden, work of women, 513n47 Leyster, Judith (1609-1660), 414, 415
of abduction of in
322
Leisure activities, in chivalrous courts, 306
political protests,
Laundry, of peasants, 104
Law
Gris, Jacques,
Leicester, Eleanor,
Laundresses, 361
Laiistic,
commercial economies, 393-401 424-25 341-42
of urban widows,
Le
women, 284
ancient cultures, 21-22, 39, 450-51n2
Liber divinorum operum (Book of Divine Works), Hildegard of Bingen, 188-89
consent to marriage, 282, 398 and crimes of women, 366-67
Liber vitae meritorum (Book of Life 's Rewards), Hildegard of Bingen, 189
dowries, 398
Liberty pence, 128
illegitimate children,
405
inheritance, 299, 320
property rights of of prostitutes, of rape,
Libraries, 186, 201
Le
Libre del Orde de Cauayleria, Lull,
women, 400-401
436
Licensing of midwives, 420
1 1
Saxon, inheritance of books, 304
women, 20-21, 33-34, 336-43,431,433-36
subordinating
in warrior cultures,
503n84 Licensing of doctors, 418
273
Life expectancies, 11,31
of
noblewomen, 294
in
peasant societies,
in
towns, 357
1 1
572 Lorymer, Johanna de, 328 Lothar (grandson of Charlemagne), 42 Lothar II of Lotharingia, 340
Lighting: in castles, in
286
peasant houses, 98
Ligny, Charlotte de, 240
Louis (grandson of Charlemagne), 42
Lilburne, John, 234
Louis VI, King of France, 276, 300
Louis VII, King of France, 269, 300-1
followers of, 411
Louis IX, King of France, 279, 320, 329
168
Lilith, 50,
Limoges, capture
of,
380
education of
Lineage, 298-304
Louis XII, King of France, 325
20
in ancient cultures,
property issues, 339 and remarriage of widows, 325
Louis de Bourbon (Prince de Conde), 278
Louise de Coligny, 230
Linen thread, 100 Lioba (d.782), 185 Lippa,
Monna
women, 345-46
physician of, 418
Louise de Marillac
Cras, Saint (1591-1660),
le
239-41
(14th-century peddler), 403
Louis the Pious, King of Franks, 276, 339
Lisbon, brothels, 364
Louvain, food shortages, 379
Lisieux, bishop of, 158
Love:
464n2
Literacy, 184,
in ancient cultures,
of peasant
negative portrayals, 334
women, 177
Protestant Reformation and, 264-65 in warrior cultures,
270
Liibeck, guild
305-16
Lucretia
369 373-74 of peasants, 92-93, 98-99 Livy, 32, 34, 60 Locke, Anne, 263 Lollards, 215,
Lombard
46
Luther, Martin, 164, 228
elite,
and child-bearing, 260-61 and literacy of women, 264 and marriage, 256-58, 261
227,235
culture, 31, 34,
369
Ludwig IV, Landgrave of Thuringia, 218 Lull, Ramon, Le Libre del Orde de Cauayleria, 503n84 Lust, views of, 255-56
286-87
merchant
of widows,
legend), 39
Lucy, Alice, 291
for guild families,
of
membership
(Roman
Lucretius,
facilities:
castles,
portrayals, 333
Lucian, "Dialogue of the Courtesans," 46
493nl portrayals of women, 332-36 Livestock management, 96, 97, 104 Living conditions, urban, 354-56 as historical source,
Living
Lovemaking, literary Love poetry, 63 of Sappho, 65-66
Loyola, Ignatius, Saint, 212, 255, 366
Literature:
of chivalry,
37
in marriage, early cultures,
61-62
in feudal societies, 304
views of
women,
246, 254, 259
Lutheranism, 228
126
laws of, 26, 33, 36
London, 354-55, 357, 379, 381 brothels, 364 charities, 402 domestic servants, 358 education, 443 guild membership, 355, 369-70, 372, 406, 408 merchant elite, 373 midwives, 421
spread of, 229-30 Luxury, medieval, 304-5 Lyna (13th century), 124
Lyons, France:
domestic servants, 368 grain riot,
410
public charity, 402-3
tradeswomen, 370 rights, 425 Lyrics, 306, 333 widows'
plague deaths, 382
McMath,
396 410-11 234
political marriages, political protests,
Protestant sects,
Macrina, Caelia, 31 Macrina the Younger, Saint
surgeons, 417
widows, 425, 526nl22
London
Stationers
(c. 3
27-379), 76
Madrid, 355, 356, 381 Magdeburg synod, and Beguines, 225 Magic, 162-63
Company, 407
Long-distance trade, 427 Longueville, Anne-Genevieve de
Boubon-Conde, Duchesse
James, The Expert Mid-wife,
in
de,
278
peasant societies, 173
Magna
Carta, protection of widows, 326
1
573 Mahaut, Countess of Artois, 288, 291, 292 Mahaut, Countess of Burgundy, 286, 319, ?04 Maiden's Disease. See Bubonic plague Mainz, persecution of Beguines, 226 Malaria, 114 evolution theories, 4
Mallersdorf convent, 201
Malleus Malificarum (HammeT of the Witches), 165-66, 169-70 Malnutrition, and childbirth, 108 of property, in peasant
marriages, 124 Manchester, England, food sellers, 370-71 Manley, Mary de la Riviere, The Female Tatler,
55
Manor
houses, 319 Manorial systems, 125, 127, 286-87 widows' rights, 141-42
Mansfeld, Elisabeth and Burchard von, 206 Manuscripts, illuminated, 201-2, 293, 412 Marcella, Saint, 72, 74
Margaret, Countess of Lincoln, 290 Margaret, Saint, 71, 157
Margaret Mary Aiacoque, Saint (1673-1675), 213 Margaret of Anjou, Queen of England (1429/30-1482), 277-78 Margherita (niece of Antonio di Tome), 437 Margrethe, Queen of Denmark (1353-1412), 292, 329-31 Marguerite, Princess of France, 284
Queen of France, 346 Marguerite of Oingt (d.l310), 209 Marguerite of Provence, 279 Marguerite of Valois, 233 Marguerite,
Queen of Hungary, 229-30 Maria (daughter of Isabella of Castile), 283 Maria Teresa, Queen of France, 241 Maria Theresa, Empress of Austria, 129 Marie, Countess of Champagne, 305 Marie-Blanche, granddaughter of Mme. de Maria,
Sevigne, 199
Marie de France, 309-1 Marie de I'Incarnation (1566-1618), 250 Markets, 290-91 urban, 354, 370 Marriage, 256-63 in ancient cultures, 35-40 annulment of, 339-40 Church views, 263, 339-41 in commercial economies, 393, 394-401 delayed, population control, 136 early Christian views, ideal,
nobility,
in,
437-40 279-85
See also Divorce Marriage brokers, 397 Marriage contracts, 281, 319 of craftswomen, 395 of
noblewomen, 321
widows' rights, 425 Marriage portions, 321
Martha of Bethany, 68-69 Martyrs, 70-72, 241-43
The Martyr's Mirror, van Braght, 242 Marxism, theory of women's status, 6 Mary, mother of Jesus. See Virgin Mary Mary Magdalen, 69, 72, 386-57, 518n40 Mary of Bethany, 68-69 Mary of Oignies(d.l213), 223 Mary Tudor, Queen of England (1516-1558), 230-32, 234, 488nl2 Mater della Misericorde, 389 Mater Dolorosa, 217, 389 Maternal instinct, 9 Mathematics, of merchant wives, 376 Matilda, Countess of Tuscany (1046-1115), 500n7 Matilda, Queen of England, (1102-1167), 203-4, 299 Matilda (daughter of Eleanor of Aquitaine), 283 Matilda (13th-century widow), 141-42 Matilda (wife of William the Conqueror), 277 Matriarchy, prehistoric, 4 Matthias (canon of Linkoping cathedral), 219
Maud,
Avis, 122
Maximilla (Montanist prophet), 70
May
Day, 103 Mechthild of Magdeburg (c.l210-c.l282), 206, 207, 209-12, 226, 251 Mechtild of Hackeborn (c. 1241-1 299), 206, 207, 209, 210
Medb
(Maeve), Queen of Cruchan, 28, 32-33, 56
Medical training, exclusion from, 419 Medici, Clarice de', 396 Medici, Contessina de', 377, 381-82 charity of, 401 Medici, Cosimo
de', illegitimate children,
360 Medici, Lorenzo de', 381-82, 396, 399-400,
428 Medici, Lucrezia Tornabuoni de' (1425-1482), 374, 399-400, 428
342
in peasant societies, as
82
440-44
among
violence
in warrior cultures,
Male dominance, 11-14, 26-51
Management
Marriage fcont) sexuality in, 256 of urban women, 360, 367-68
119-24, 148-49
sacrament, 507n36
Medici, Piero de', illegitimate children, 360
Medici family, marriage
alliances,
396
1
574 Medicine, practice
of,
in early cultures,
61
in
416-24
Ministry of Agriculture and Forestry, U.N.,
176
peasant societies, 110-11
Minnesingers, Bavarian, 334
Melania the Elder, 75, 76
Minstrel's guild, 371
Meleager, Garland, 66
Miracles, of Virgin Mary, 390-91
Men:
Miramion,
fear of
women,
as midwives,
161, 253-55, 271
422-23 184
in religious orders,
Menagier of
Paris, 367, 394,
441, 442
family possessions, 369 instructions to wife, 223, 375, 376, 387,
389, 433,
439^0
servants of, 131
Mme.
de,
240
Mirepoix, Furneria de, 227
Miriam (Old Testament heroine), 18 The Mirror of Simple Souls, Porete, 225, 487n30 Miscarriage, 108 early
Church and, 82
Mishnah, 27 Misogyny, 431-44
Menarche, 35-36, 105 Menopause, 105
in ancient cultures,
Menstrual blood, superstitions, 163 Menstruation, 8-9, 11-12
early
in
49-51 176 Christian, 79-84
contemporary
Italy,
in early writings, 23 in
Jewish culture, 459n34
medieval views, 192
in
medieval literature, 335
peasant women's views, 147
of witchcraft persecutions, 164, 167, 172
early beliefs, 28, 29,
ritual impurity,
80
22-23
72-73 Cermany, apprenticeship, 371
Missionaries, early Christian,
Mercantile associations, 427
Mittelrhein,
Mercantile economy, 318
Mixailov, Agrafena, 319
and inheritance patterns, 320 and serfdoms, 128-29 and women's work, 130 Mercenary soldiers, 379 camp followers, 362 Merchant bankers' wives, 373-77, 393, 427
Modernization, and peasant
childbearing
of,
383
living conditions,
Merchant
356
Taylors' School, 443
Merchet, 120-21 Messalina, Valeria, 43 Metellus, Egnatius, 21-22
(Fate), 52 Molineux, Katheryn, 347 Monarchies, and legal status of women,
316-24, 339 Monasteries, 73-75, 183
founders
Monastic
of,
292
libraries,
tenth century, 186
Monetary economy, and feudal Monks, 184 Mons, capture of, 380 Monsters, mythological, 50
See also Guilds Metz, Jean de, 153 Mezzadria, 129 Michaelmas, 93-94 Middle Eastern texts, 15
Montanists of Phrygia, 70 Monter, E. William, 167
Midsummer
Duchesse de, 278 Montsegur castle, 227
day, 94, 103
419-24 405 witchcraft persecutions, 168 See also Childbirth The Midwives Book on the Whole Art of Midwifery, Sharp, 422 Migration of women to towns, 356-57 Milburne, Barbara, 426 Milton, John, 441 Milan, Marie de France, 310, 312 Minerva (Athena), 17 Mine work by women, 361, 426 Miniature portraits, 415-16 at illegitimate births,
175
Moira
Metiers, 369
Midwives, 41-42, 106-7, 163, 384, 418,
life,
Moilier, Pernette, 370
society,
298
Montfort, Simon de, 227, 328 Montpellier, France, brothels, 364
Montpensier, Anne-Marie-Louise d'Orleans,
Mop
Fair, 131
Moralia, Plutarch, 44-45
Morata, Olympia, 380 Morely, Jean, 246 Morgan, Ann, 363
Morgan, Lewis Henry, 4 Morgengabe (morning gift), 36 Mortality
rates:
from bubonic plague, 114-15 437 of noblewomen, 294 of children, 295,
in
peasant societies,
in towns, 383,
1 1
384-85, 403
2
575 Morton, Richard, wife of, 371 Morungen, Heinreich von, 334 Morwin, Isabel, 235 Mother, Mary as, 388-91
Neuchatel, witchcraft persecutions, 168 Neuss, siege of, 362
Mother Earth, 53
Newborns:
Motherhood,
12,
Nessler, Magdalena, 168
Netherlands, natural disasters, 378
care of, in peasant society, 109-10
20
early Christian views, 81
327
See also Childbearing
Nibelungenlied, 11^,
11(>,
God, 209-10
negative portrayal of
Mothers, noble, education of daughters, 347 Mourning: in peasant societies, 111-12
Nineteenth century, 424 birth control, 136
Motherhood
of
birth rates, 135
Moyses, Agnes, 149
infant mortality, 140
Mulberg, John, 226
landholdings, 125
Mulcaster, Thomas, 443
peasant
Munstdorp, Elizabeth, 242, 243 Murder, 438 Murray, Anne, 278 Music, in convents, 200 Mycenae, 7, 15 The Mystery of Adam, 432 Mystery plays, 386, 431-32, 441, 527nl depiction of Virgin Mary, 388
87, 89, 94, 95, 97-99,
life,
102^,
109, 111, 113-14, 121-23, 131
population growth, 135, 139 rebellion by
women, 145
Sisters of Charity, 241
widows, 143
Ninth century, 83 birth control,
1
36,
1
37
birth rates, 135
education, 304
Mysticism: in convents,
as heresy,
333, 345
women, 335
folk magic, 173
275
in warrior cultures,
sexes, 10
Newdigate, Richard, 289 New Testament, 69, 78, 460n2 See also Bible
Protestant views, 260 in warrior cultures,
between
physical differences
women, 104-12
of peasant
204-13
family patterns, 134 infanticide, 138, 139
225
of Hildegard of Bingen, 188
inheritance patterns, 299, 320
and subjugation of women, 244-46 of St. Bridget of Sweden, 219-20
marriage laws, 341
of St. Catherine of Siena, 221
religious
Protestant,
marriage of daughters, 283 peasant
life,
94, 125, 132
communities, 75, 76 276
rule of queens,
Names, 20
slavery,
of husbands, taken
by wives, 337
of peasants, 119
widows'
use of surnames, 298 salt tax protest,
writings,
of Charity,
241 Nativity scenes, 389
Natural disasters,
1 1
urban life, 378-79 Nausicaa (Odyssey), 34 in
Nea Nikomedia, Greece, 6 Needlework: in chivalrous courts, in
306
convents, 201
Negative portrayals of women, 332, 334-36,
431,432,435-36, 527n5 Negotiated marriages. See Arranged marriages Nero, 43 Nerra, Fulk,
Count
Ness (Tain Bo), 38
rights,
326
witchcraft, 165
410 Napoleon Bonaparte, and Sisters Naples,
126
warfare, 272-73
of Anjou, 342
327
NjaVs Saga, 163, 270, 313-14, 327, 335 ideal woman, 344
Noblewomen: Church roles, 229-34 in warrior cultures, 272-96 writings of, 270 Norbert of Xanten, 196, 197
Norns, 52 Northanger Abbey, Austen, xiv Norway, widow's rights, 328 Norwich, England, poor people, 401 Nossis of Locri, 63
Notre Dames des Saintes abbey, 292 Nuclear families, 134 Nuns, 183. 194, 214 Aquinas' view, 194
576 Nuns
Padua, teaching clinic for midwives, 420
(cont.)
and Reformation movement, 238 regulation of, 192-93 Nuremberg, 354, 357, 361, 381, 387, 516nl3 brothels, 364 charity, 402 convent
library,
373-74 Talmud, 32 Pandora, 49, 79 Palazzos, 356,
Palestinian
Panthia (2nd-century epitaph), 61 Paphnutius, Hrotsvit of Gandersheim, 187
201
Pare, Ambroise, 107, 423
foods available, 375 harvest festivals,
Paintings, by nuns, 202
94
Parental authority, and consent to marriage,
markets, 370
282, 398
marriage regulations, 401
Parente, Marco, 399
merchant elite, 373 soldiers, 379 street plays, 438
Parenting
9
roles,
charities,
402
418-19
Nursing:
doctors, 417,
by nuns, 238 by peasant women, 110-11 Nursing orders, 239-41, 250
education, 443
Oaths of fealty, 287-88 Obedience, 33-34 Protestant views, 258-59 Occupations, 41, 371-72, 406-8 Octavian, 58
Homer, 15, 17-20, women's work, 40
388 female-headed households, 526nl22 foods available, 375 food shortages, 378 guild membership, 371, 372, 406-9 midwives, 420, 421 patron saint, 386 plague deaths, 382 poor people, 401 possessions of guild families, 369 property of women, 396 feast days,
Nymphs, 449n74
Odyssey,
21,
34
Oecolampadius, Johannes, 262 Of Domesticall Duties, Gouge, 261 Offices of the Virgin, 390 Oil paintings, by nuns, 202 Olai, Petrus, 219 The Old Game, Sachs, 441 Old Testament, 15,22,24,26
366 tradeswomen, 370 prostitutes, 365,
wages, 361 rights, 425 Matthew, 325-26 Parr, Katherine, 229 Parry, Margett, 423
widows'
Paris,
llA, 275
Genesis, 20, 21
Parzival,
Book
Paston, Agnes, 329
of Proverbs, 37-38, 41
Hosea, 44
Paston, Elizabeth, 284, 294
34-35 male dominance, 20, 21, 77 See also Bible Oppian Law, 60 Orange, Raimbaut d', 333 Orchards, of merchant families, 376 Ordeal, ritual, in witchcraft trials, 169 Order of St. Mary Magdalene, 366 Order of the Visitation, 239 Isaiah,
Ordination, disqualification of
women, 191-93
Paston, Margaret, 289-90, 347
Paston family of Norfolk, 318-19 Pastoris, Perrenette,
395
Paterfamilias, 21
444 257 Patrimonies, 320, 396 Patient Griselda, Patriarchies, 4,
given to daughters, 322 Patristic
Age, 74
Paul, Apostle, 69-70, 80
and sexual intercourse, 82
Origen, 78 Original sin, 79
Orleans, Anne-Marie-Louise
400, 432
Paris, 361, 378, 380,
subordination of d',
Duchesse de
Montpensier, 278 Orphans, 403 Orsini, Clarice de Jacopo, 384, 399-400, 440 Osnabruck convent, 201 Otto II, Emperor, 276, 281 Our Lady of Grace convent, Avila, 207-8 Ownership of land, 1 28 Oxford, guild membership, 406, 407
women, 77-78
Paula the Elder, Saint (347-404), 74-75,
76 Paul V, Pope, and Ursuline order, 249
Peasant families: servants of,
472n50
in warrior cultures,
287-88
Peasant societies, 87-118
contemporary, 174-78 escape from serfdom, 357
1
577 Peasant societies (cont.)
Pictorius,
Georg, 166
and magic, 173
Piecework, 132-33,408
religion of, 181
Piers the
Ploughman, Langland, 89, 140 Pimps, 363 Pin makers guild, 371 Pistoia, female-headed households, 511nl7 Pitti, Buonaccorso, 384 marriage arrangements, 395-96 Pius V, Pope, taxation of prostitutes, 364
Peasant's Rebellion, 99, 144 Pelagia, Saint, 71
Pellegrino, Donate,
438
Penance, Christian
ideas,
148
Penelope, 18-20
Pentateuch, 15
See also Bible; Old Testament
Queen
Penthesilea,
of
Pius IX, Pope, 138
Amazons, 55
Pizan, Christine de (1364-1430), 160-61, 248,
337, 348, 349-50
Pepin, King of Franks, 42, 276
Book Book
Pepys, Samuel, 359, 376
226
Perfectas, Pericles,
Place of
Periods of history, xviii-xix
Plague,
traditional, xiv
Perpetua
(sister of
of the City of Ladies, 56 of Three Virtues, 289
and Virgin Mary, 217
Funeral Oration, 32
Augustine of Hippo), 75
and
women,
historical organization, xix
114,382-83
birth rate, 135
Perpetua of Carthage, Saint, 71
religious views,
Persecution:
and wages, 132
241-43 of witchcraft, 161-73 Personality
traits,
Plato, 29-30, 47,
62
view of Sappho, 64
gender-related, ancient
Greek views, 31-32 Peter, Hugh, 245 Peter, Saint, 78 Peters, Clara (1594-1657?),
385
Planting season, 103
religious,
Plautus,
The Twin Menaechmi,
Plowing, 98
416
Plutarch, 58
Moralia, 44-45
Peter the Great, Tsar of Russia, 338
Peter the Venerable, abbot of Cluny, 195
Podalic version, 107, 423
Petronella (13th century), 132
Poetry:
ancient cultures, 63-66
Petronilla (14th century), 142
in
Petronius, Satyricon, 48
of chivalry,
Philadelphia Society, 246
ideals of
Luxembourg, 291 Philip I, King of France, 340 Philip II, King of Spain, 212, 231-32, 233 Philiberte de
supervision of brothels, 365
Poitiers abbey, 75
Poland, 120, 127-28 witchcraft persecutions, 167 Political aspects of
303, 340
Coutances, 158
in
Philip of Beaumanoir, 342
Philip of Novara,
Queen
of England, 275,
Philippa of Hainaut,
Queen
in
(13147-1369), 282, 337
of
Philosophers, female, in ancient cultures,
62
Book
Simple Medicine), Hildegard of Bingen, 189 Physical differences between sexes, 9-1
416-19
in early cultures, 61 in warrior cultures,
Pickpockets, 366-67
275
ancient cultures, 43^44
in feudal societies,
Philo, 27
Physicians,
42-43
power:
297-304 noblewomen, 336 and religious communities, 190-91 in warrior cultures, 274 Political protests, 144-45, 410-11
of England,
Physica (Liber simplicis medicinae,
13th-17th centuries, 316
Political function of wives, Political
418
marriage alliances,
395-96 commercial economy, 398
Political changes,
Four Ages of Man, 345
Philippa, Countess of Foix, 227 Philippa,
307-13
feminine beauty, 333
Poissy convent, 199, 202, 248
warfare, 381
Philip IV, King of France, 343
Philip Augustus, King of France, 277, 284-85,
Philipert, bishop of
51
Pliny the Elder, 28
of
Polygamy,
in
Hebrew
culture, 22
Pomeroy, Sarah B., 8 Pompeia (Julius Caesar's wife), 42 Pompey, 42 Ponden, Clare van der, 377 Pontieus, Count of, daughter of, 344 Poole, Elizabeth, 245 Poor Clares, 197, 249, 402
578 Poor Laws, English, 143 Poor people, 354-55, 358-67, 401-6
Princesses:
Church
and disease, 382 Pope Joan, 193
229-34
roles,
in convents,
248
See also Queens
Population:
203
Prioresses,
69-70 401-2
decline, 128
Prisca (Priscilla),
growth, 134-36, 139
Private charity,
imbalances, in ancient cultures, 30
Procopius, Historia Arcana, 48
urban, 353, 354, 357, 392
Procreation, 105
Porete, Marguerite (?-1310), 224-25
Pornography of witchcraft Portraits, 415
early beliefs, 29-30,
170-71
trials,
women:
Portrayals of
527n5 positive, 332-33
471n30 Property rights: access by marriage, 396
59-60 noblewomen, 322 of peasant women, 124-25 of widows, 140-42 in ancient cultures,
Possessions:
of
noblewomen, 319-20 peasants, 98-99
of
Potatoes, in peasant diet, 95
Poultney, Margaret, 329
Prophets, 70, 245
97
Poultry, in peasant diet,
Hildegard of Bingen, 188, 189
Poverty, urban, 354-55, 358-67,
401-6
in
42-44, 56-59
234
356
domestic servants, 368 regulation of
wedding
costs,
398
264-66, 488-89nl9
duty of holy women, 184
for, 292 Mary, 390-91 Preaching, 189-90, 234-38, 246
given
Pre-Christian cultures, status of
views of
Protestant sects, 162, 215
women,
25,
26 before marriage, 404-5, 522n59
peasant society, 105-6, 108-9
of prostitutes, in ancient cultures,
46
Women
and Midwives Rose
's
'
Garden, Rosslin, 423
women, 3-4
contraception, 138 divorce,
492n27
education, 443 marriage, 123, 25^-63, 398-99, 401,
and public baths, 381 roles of women, 258-63 subjugation of
Premonstratensians, 196 Priestesses, ancient, 18, 54,
women,
182,
243-48
witchcraft persecutions, 164, 167, 169
458n8
Protestant
women, 234-38
martyrs, 241-43
Priesthood: disqualification of
women, 191-93
early Christian, 70, 73-74, 83,
exclusion of
and and and and
441
superstitions, 163
The Pregnant
women,
238, 246
Puritan views, 246
and
and adultery, 436 and celibacy of clergy, 256 churching after childbirth, 147
Pregnancy:
Prehistoric
women, 182 women, 254-55
equality of
to Virgin
in
fantasies,
Protestant Reformation, 228-34, 253-55,
Prayers:
money
362
48-49 peasant women, 143-44 regulation of dress, 434 urban, 362-66 violence toward, 436-37 male
See also Queens Prate, Petronella van,
followers,
early laws, 22
500n7
in feudal cultures,
Prato, Italy,
ancient cultures, 45-46
camp
in ancient cultures, 16,
33,41, 44-49
Prostitutes,
Power, Eileen, 196 Powerful women:
as
Rome, 46
Productivity of peasant lands, 466-67n24,
negative, 332, 334-36, 431, 432, 435-36,
of
82
prehistoric comprehension, 6
Procurers, male, in ancient
women, 255
80-81
Protestantism: contradictions of, 265
support by noblewomen, 229-30 Protests,
by women, 410-11
Primates, biological studies, 8-9
Protovangelium of James, 216 Providers, men's roles, 394
Primogeniture, 320
Provisioners guild, Cologne, 407
sexuality of
579 Priiss,
Margarethe, 370
Psychological basis of
Rape
dominance
patterns,
11-13 Psychological view of Mariolatry, 486nl
Psychosexual
fraility
of
men, 11-12
Puberty:
age
of,
105
physical differences
between
sexes, 10
nunneries, 275
townswomen, 437
Ravensberg, Merchant's Society, 427
Raymond
of Capua, 221 Reading, England, tradeswomen, 370
Rebekah (wife of Rebellions, 432
Isaac),
20
peasant, 144-45
Public baths, 381 Public charity, 393, 402 Publishers, 369-70,
(cont.)
in
of
407
Records of women's Rede, Lucy, 144
activities, xviii
Pulcheria (399-453), 59, 72
Red Riding Hood, 140
Punishment of Purgatory, 388
Reformation,
slaves,
359
religious,
228-34
women, 234-38 Regensburg, Germany, fourteenth-century Protestant
Puritans:
views of marriage, 257-58
living conditions,
views of motherhood, 260
Reinhild (Low Country
and women's
Religion:
roles,
246
Pythia, 54
356 artist),
201
women, 32 modern Europe, 176 noblewomen, 291-93 of peasant women, 90-91, 146-48, 181 of urban women, 385-91 Religious communities, 73-77, 483-84n43 See also Cloistered communities; Convents exclusion of in
Quakers, 230, 234, 23^38, 490n67 visionary women, 244 and women's roles, 246-47, 254 of Heaven, Virgin Mary as, 391 Queens, 273, 276 in ancient cultures, 57-59 arranged marriages, 284 charitable gifts, 292 and childbearing, 294 chivalrous courts, 305-6 Church roles, 229-34 in convents, 198, 248 early English, 495n27 education of daughters, 347 in feudal societies, 299-304 and marriage laws, 340 political power, 336-37 warfare by, 273-74 in warrior cultures, 276-79 widowed, 329-31
Queen
Rabbi Ben Azzai, 32 Rabbi Eliezar, 32 Rachel (wife of Jacob), 20, 22 Radegund, Queen of Franks (518-587), 75-76, 218
Radegund
of Poitiers, Saint, 185
Ragusa, Yugoslavia:
Religious orders, 74, 183-213 charitable, 402 Counter Reformation, 238 foundresses of, 489n41 Protestant views, 247
Religious practice,
women, 400
marriage regulations, 401
Rape, 12 34, 115,
341^2, 453n51
of noblewomen, 283-84
Roman
Catholic, 146-47
nineteenth century, 480nl0 Religious sects, 234-38
See also Protestant sects
"The Reluctant Monk," 433 Remarriage: after separation, 401
of widows, 142, 324, 325. 328-29, 426 Remy, Nicholas, 169 Renee of Ferrara (1510-1575), 230, 234,
254-55 Rents, 128
Reproductive process: early beliefs,
29-30
superstitions, 163
Republic, Plato, 62 era,
Rome, 61 women,
Responsibilities of
merchant elite, 373 Raoul de Cambrai, 111, 274, 327 ideal women, 344-45
Uwsof,
Religious instruction of children, 293
Republican
dowries, 398 legal status of
of
xvi
merchant wives, 375-76 in noble households, 285-96 of peasant women, 99-102, 145-46 Resurrection, of Virgin Mary, 391 Retailing guilds, 370 Revelations, St. Bridget of Sweden, 219 of
Revelations (Legatus divinae
pietatis),
Gertrude the Great, 208
580 Rome,
Rheims Cathedral, 385 Richard I, King of England, 302-3, 325, 326 Richard of Devizes, 302-3 Richelieu, Cardinal, 293 Richilda,
Queen
Riddle, Barbara,
Ridicule of
of Franks,
of menstruation, 28 Rituals:
of childbirth, in royal households, of marriage, in peasant societies,
294 121-22
women, 90
Robert, Earl of Leicester, 322 Robert of Arbrissel, 196, 197
Robert of Blois, on behavior of women, 346 Robine, Maxine, 153 Robinson, John, 236 Rogneda (Russian princess), 283 Rohan, Duke de, Book of Hours, 96 Role model. Virgin Mary as, 217-20 Roles of men, in commercial economies,
women,
xvi
in ancient cultures,
37-40
approved, 31-44 dishonorable,
44-49
Catholic Church and, 77 in chivalrous courts,
306-16
in convents,
punishment slavery,
of,
men's views, 257 258-63
Reformation, 229-35, 243-52
communities, 192-94 269-72, 274-79,
in warrior cultures, 16,
285-96, 343-50
work of women, 41 63
Ronceary convent, 199 Rosaries, 390 Rosenblatt, Wibrandis (1504-1564), 262 Rossi, Properzia de', (c. 1500-1 530), 413,
414-15 The Pregnant Women 's and Midwives' Rose Garden, 423
Rosslin, Eucharius,
Rothair, King of Lombards, 26
Rouen, France, houses, 355 Rouge, Jeanne de, 346 Royal courts, 273 chivalrous, 304-6, 314-16 Royal dynasties, female inheritance, 322 Royal families, marriages, 282-83, 284
and inheritance by women, 320 and legal status of women, 339, 393 Royal widows, independence of, 329-31 Rucillai, Giovanna, 399 Ruffo, Antonio, 414 Rulers, 273
feudal,
and marriage
laws,
340
See also Queens Runtinger, Margarete, 377 Rupertsberg, convent of, 188 Rural
women,
lives of,
Empire, marriage customs, 281
childbirth, 106
450n2
famine, 469n75
law, 15, 26,
56-59
72
500n7
87-118
Russia:
Rolf, Katherine, 130
of adultery, 39
folk magic, 173
of divorce, 21-22, 40
hostages, wives
and male dominance, 20-21 of rape, 453n51 status of women, 27, 30, 34 Romances, 270 chivalrous, 305-6, 309-16 portrayal of
363
45
early Christian,
203
in Protestant marriages,
Roman Roman
prostitution, 45-46, 48-49, 365
in ancient cultures,
early Christian, 81
in religious
43
women, 59-60
Royal power:
393-94
in
property rights of
Romans, France, plague deaths, 382 Romans, New Testament epistle, 69
Ritual impurity, 22-23, 80-81
in marriage,
61
political function of wives,
writers,
Rites of passage, male, 12
Roles of
women,
goddess worship, 52-54 marriage, 36, 37
193, 431, 433, 435-36,
438-39, 528nl7 Rigaud, Odo, archbishop of Rouen, 200 Riguntha (daughter of King Chilperic), 276 Rikkardis (10th century), 186 Rings, exchanged at wedding, 37, 121, 281
of peasant
about women, 28-29
education of heroines, 56
276
426
women,
ancient, 24, 25, 30-32
beliefs
women, 333-35, 344
views of warfare, 316, 317
Romania, serfdom, 127-28
legal rights of
as,
275-76
women, 338
marriage, 123, 148, 321, 341,
473n70
multigenerational families, 134
peasant Hfe, 98, 103, 104, 121, 147,
serfdom, 128 warfare, 118
widows, 141, 324, 328, 525-26nll9 witchcraft, 165, 167, 168
174-75
S8\ Russian lullabies, 90, 91
Sects, religious,
Russian nobility, arranged marriages, 284
253-55
227
heretical,
241^3
persecution of,
Russian proverb, 91
Protestant, 228-29,
Rustichi, Antonio, 140
Ruysch, Rachel (1664-1750), 416
234-38
Segovia, Spain, poor people, 401
415
Self-portraits of artists, 414,
by women, 41, 370 Semonides of Amorgos, 23, 50-51
Sachs, Hans, 438
Selling,
The Old Came, 441 Sacrament, marriage as, 280 Sagas, depiction of
Separation, in marriage, 339, 342, 401
women, 327
Separatists (English Gongregationalists), 228,
236
negative, 335
344 Sage, Joan, 405 St. Bartholomew's Eve, Protestant massacre, ideal,
convent, 203 Germain-Beaupre, Marquis de, 342 John's Day, 94, 103, 104 St. Martin's convent, Erfurt, 248 St. Michael's convent, Stamford, 204 Saint Radegund, convent of, 202 St.
Sermons, depiction of women, 432 Servants, 131-32
St.
in
noble households, 288
in
towns, 358-59
Seventeenth century, 112-13, 253-54 adultery accusations, 343
Saints, 71 of,
folk magic, 173 literacy,
Catherine's of Nuremberg, Dominican
worship
Serbia:
177 Serfdom, 125, 126-28, 471n26 escape from, 357 obligations of, 120
230, 233 St.
Sequestration of wives, 341
386-87
Salaberga, Saint, 184
artists,
women,
Salian Franks, valuation of
414, 415-16
birth control, 136, 137
31
birth rates, 135
Salome, 69 Sanday, Peggy Reeves, 14
camp
Sanitation, in towns, 381
Gatholic
San Mateo, Genoa, 355-56
charities, 143, 291, 402,
Santerre,
Meme,
147
403
294-95
convents, 199
Gandersheim, 187 Sappho of Lesbos (b.630 B.C.), 23, 35, 52, 64-66, 459-60n38 Sarah (wife of Abraham), 20, 22
reform
of,
249
cookery books, 375 doctors,
417-19
education, 443
48
of children, 293, 294
Scammel, Jean, 120 Schurman, Anna Maria van (1607-78), 265-64 Scipens, Elizabeth, 412 Scivias (Scito vias domini.
362
women, 239-41
childbirth,
Sapientia, Hrotsvit of
Satyricon, Petronius,
followers,
Know
the
Ways
employment, 131, 410 domestic servants, 358, 359 wages, 361 of
entrepreneurs, 426
the Lord), Hildegard of Bingen, 188,
family patterns, 134, 369
189, 201
guild
membership, 369-70, 406, 407
husbands' names taken by wives, 337
Scotland, 234
Seafood, 97
348 405 independent abbeys, 191 infanticide, 138 inheritance patterns, 320-21
Seal rings, Gretan, 7
legal status of wives, 338, 339, 367,
landholders, 125
ideal wives,
witchcraft persecutions, 167, 168, 171
illegitimate children,
Sculptors, 413 Scylla,
50
Seals, use
by women, 507n28
literacy of
women, 264-65
Seamstresses' guilds, 372
London
Seasonal illnesses, in peasant societies,
markets, 291
113-14 Seasons, yearly cycle, 93-104 Second century, Ghurch views of women, 79
fire,
379
marriages, 282, 340, 395, 401
betrothal age, 399 78,
consent
to,
281-82, 398
dissolution of, 342
401
582 Seventeenth century (cont.) medical guide, 421-24
Sexual behavior, double standards, 39 in ancient cultures, 45,
midwives, 107, 421
noble households, 289, 319
peasant
319 295
life,
93, 95, 96, 104, 108, 110, 113,
men,
Sexuality of
women, 79-80,
in warrior cultures, 21
192,
control of, 346
religious views,
255
and witchcraft, 166
poor people, 401 prostitution, 143-44, 363, 364,
366
Sexual performance, gender differences, 12
Protestants, 230, 234, 236-38 410-11 punishment for adultery, 436 rebellion by women, 144 religious holidays, 388 responsibilities of merchant wives, 376 protests,
Sexual relationships: courtly love, 308-9, literary portrayals,
woman
313-16
333
defined by, 83
Sharecroppers, 129
Sharp, Jane, 421
The Midwives Book on the Whole Art of Midwifery, 422
serfdom, 127
women, 182
by Church, 244, 246-47
Shaw, Hester, 421
in marriage, 257-60 sumptuary laws, 434
Sicily,
101, 102, 132
folk magic, 173
manufacture, 372, 409-10, 523n75 tradeswomen, 370-71 urban life, 353, 356, 366 violence toward women, 438 textile
278,380-81
plague deaths, 382 trousseaus, 122
wedding
dresses, 123
Siegewarfare, 317, 379-80, 393 Siena, rights of widows,
426
warrior cultures, 273
Siggeword, Matilda, 357
wet nurses, 139 widows, 141, 143, 324, 329 witchcraft persecutions, 167-72
Sigurd (Viking monster), 50 Silk trade, 372, 408,
409-10, 523n75
apprenticeship, 371
Seventh century: education, 184
marriage customs, 36
Simon, Angelique, 368 Sinfulness, 385 Christian ideas, 148 symbolized by women, 432 Sion convent, England, 202
martyrs, 72
Sirens, 50
foundressess of abbeys, 184
laws controlling
prostitution, religious slavery,
women,
32, 33
365-66
239^1, 250, 402 Mercy, 241 Sixteenth century, 161-62, 230, 318
Sisters of Charity,
communities, 75, 76 127
Sisters of
views of virginity, 83
apprenticeship, 371
Several Observations on Sterility, Miscarriage, Fertility,
Women
and Illnesses of and Newborn Infants, Childbirth
Bourgeois, 422
412-13, 415
camp
followers,
362
women, 238-39
charities, 291,
402
chivalrous courts, 314-15
de, 130
362
climate conditions, 113
female-headed households, 526nl22 prostitution, 363
convents, 199 abolished in England, 247
reform of convents, 248-49
statue of Virgin Mary, 389
Sex organs, early
artists,
birth control, 136
Catholic
Sevigne, Marie de Rabutin-Chantal, Marquise Seville, Spain, 360,
beliefs,
29
diseases, 113
Sexual abuse of female servants, 359
Sexual activity, and definition of
doctors, 417,
women, 33
Sexual arousal, gender differences, 12 Sexual attraction of
528nl7
44-45, 48-49
depictions of, 435-36
plague, 114
warfare, 117,
Sexuality of
in ancient cultures,
121, 122, 130, 131, 133, 148
subjugation of
21-22
in warrior cultures,
mortality figures, 294 possessions, servants,
46
early Christian standards, 82
women,
feared by
men, 44
418
domestic servants, 358 education, 443 of children, 293
3
1
1
583 Sixteenth century (cont.)
Size differences, gender-determined,
entrepreneurs, 426 equality of
women, 182
Slavery,
471n26
family sizes, 368-69
in
female-headed households, 526nl22
Athenian law, 34 European systems, 125-26 in towns, 359
foods available, 375 guild
1
Skuld (Norn), 52
membership, 369, 406-7, 409
ancient cultures, 44-45
household furnishings, 374 illegitimate children, 405 infanticide, 139
Sleep,
inheritance patterns, 322
Social function of wives, in ancient cultures, 42
landholdings, 125
Societies, families in, 9
legal status of life
women,
in warrior cultures, 21
Greek god, 16
Smallpox, 113
338, 401
expectancy, 381
Society of Friends. See Quakers, 236 Solon, 34, 45
markets, 291, 370
Somerset, England, prostitution, 363
marriages, 282, 321, 401
consent
Song of Roland, ideal women, 344 Sonnenburg convent, 248
forced,
Sophia, daughter of
to, 281-82, 398 284 political, 396 Protestant, 261-63 medical guides, 423 merchant elite, 373, 376, 377 midwives, 420 mysticism, 207-8 noble households, 318-19
peasant
life,
94, 99, 102, 122, 131, 133, 141
plague deaths, 382
Sopwell, prioress of, Boke of
Albans, 248
Sorcery, medieval beliefs, 163
Soubirous, Marie
(St. Bernadette) (1844-1879), 250-51
Souvigny, Countess de, 348
women, 175
See also Russia
women, 396
Spain, 113
366
prostitution, 363, 364, 365,
abbesses, 184
Protestant Reformation, 228-36
beatas.
410 punishment for
charitable gifts, 292
protests,
111
436 religious persecution, 241-43 serfdom, 127-28 subjugation of women, bv Church, 215, 238, 243-50 sumptuary laws, 434
convent
urban Hfe, 354, 355, 360, 368
prostitutes,
wages, 361, 362
religious practice,
adultery,
cost of
life, 200 war horses, 499n2
inheritance patterns, 125, 320 legal status of wives,
licensing of doctors,
peasant
life,
338 418
121, 129, 147
436 176
warfare, 278, 380
royal dynasty,
warrior cultures, 273
sequestration of wives, 341
322-23
weddings, 123
urban housing, 356
widows, 329, 425 remarriage, 325
widows' Sphinx, 50
170-72 work of women, 513n47 worship of Virgin Mary, 390
Spices, 375
Sixth century:
abortion laws, 82
Christian missionaries, 72-73
rights,
328
witchcraft persecutions, 167, 172
witchcraft persecutions, 163-64, 167-68,
Spinning, 40-41, 99-102, 132-33, 410
See also Textile manufacture Sprenger, Jacob, 164-66, 169
Spring season, 98, 102-4 food shortages,
1 1
dangers to noblewomen, 276 marriage gifts, 36-37
Stade, Richardis von, 188
martyrs, 72
Stagg, Anne, 41
communities, 75, 76 Sixtus V, Pope, 1 38 religious
St.
Soranus, 41-42, 452nl9
Soviet Union, status of
poor people, 401 property of
Theophano (10th
century), 198-99
Sophia of Zahringen, 329
"Stabat Mater," 217, 518n47
Standards of behavior, gender-related, warrior cultures, 21-22
in
1
584
in warrior cultures, 336 Sudden Infant Death, 474n85 Suger, Abbot of Saint-Denis, 300, 301
women, 7 Statues, ancient, 54
Cretan, in
7, 8
women,
Sulpicia (1st century), 63
xxii-xxiii
Summa
ancient cultures, 16, 26-51
peasants, in contemporary Europe, 176-77 prehistoric,
(cont)
urban, 400
State systems, prehistoric, and status of
Status of
women
Subordination of
Standish, Ann, 132
Theologica,
Summer
Sumptuary
4-8
Thomas
Aquinas, 192
103-4 433-35
season, laws,
Statute of Apprentices, 131
Supernatural, medieval beliefs, 162-73
Statute of Artificers, 132
Superstitions, of peasant
Steinbach, Sabina von, 412
Surgeons, 417-18, 419
Stephen, King of England, 299-300
Surnames, use
Stephen of
Blois,
298
of,
Surrogate role of
277
women, 90
women,
in warrior cultures,
276-79
Stereotypes, misogynist, 51
Steven of Bourbon, 193
Survival threats, in peasant societies, 112-18
Antonio de Vincenzo, 413 Still-lifes, 415, 416 Stirke, Hellen, 243 Stirredge, Elizabeth Taylor, 234
Susanna (companion of Jesus), 69 Susannah (Hebrew heroine), 39, 455n80 Swaddling of infants, 109, 295
Stiattesi, Pietro
Stone Age cultures, 6
peasant
Stoner, Elizabeth, 290
The Story of a 250
Soul, St.
Therese of Lisieux,
brothel
owned
by,
membership
Protestant
328
Swynford, Catherine, 341 Symphonia armonie cekstium revelationum
364
(Symphony of the Harmony of the
food prices, 378-79 guild
121, 133
rights,
witchcraft persecutions, 167
Beguines, 222, 223-24 of,
life,
Protestant Reformation, 234
widows'
Strasbourg.
bishop
Sweden, witchcraft persecutions, 167 Switzerland, 234
of widows,
Heavenly Revelation), Hildegard of Bingen, 189 Syphilis, 364-65, 381
369-70
women, 235
warfare, 381
Strasbourg Cathedral, 412 Strassburg, Gottfried von, Tristan
and
Isolde,
Street plays, ridicule of
Tacitus, 32, 43
women, 438
Strength differences, gender-determined, Stress,
(New Testament), 69
Tabitha
Tableware, fifteenth century, 374
309 1
Tain
Bo Cualinge (The
Cattle
Raid of
environmental, and male dominance,
Cuchulainn), 28, 32-33, 38, 56, 120,
14
126
Strikes,
Talbot, Elizabeth (b.l518), 329
Strozzi, Alessandra (1406-?),
Talmud, study
by peasant women, 145 427-28, 440 Strozzi, Caterina, 399 Strozzi, Filippo, 396 Stuard, Susan Mosher, 397 Stuart, Margaret, 263 Suarez, Juana, 208 Subordination of women, xvii, 4-5, 253-54, 432-36 by Church, 182 cultural influences, 15-23, 26-51 in early Christianity, 77-84 and environmental stress, 14-15 by laws, 337-43 in marriage, in
256-63, 441
peasant cultures, 146
of,
Tattey, Marguerite, 168
Taxes: of peasants, 128 of prostitutes,
Teaching,
in
convents, 238,
484n59
Teaching orders, 238-39, 249 Telemachus, 19-20
Temple
dedications, ancient Greek, 35
Temples, goddess worship, 54 Tenants, 128
Tensons, 307, 308
Tenth century: convents, 198
in
education of
in
364
urban, 355
in professions,
424 Reformation movement, 243-52 religious orders, 190-93
32
413
Tassi, Agostino,
women, 186
family patterns, 134
5
585 Thirteenth century (cont.)
Tenth century (cont.) heroes, 313-14
medical guide, 421
116-11, 336
rule of queens,
warfare, 272
wedding
gifts,
widows'
rights,
120-22, 128, 131, 133, 141, 159 women, 334, 344-46, 432, 433
281
324
portrayals of
Teresa of Avila, Saint (1515-1582), 205,
207-13, 478n55
mother
of,
women, 119
of
noble households, 288-90, 318, 319 peasant life, 94-96, 99, 102, 103, 113,
women, 283
violence to
mysticism, 206-7
names
serfdom, 127
364 movements, 227, 386
prostitution, religious
383-84
subjugation of
Teresa of Torregreca, 87-88, 90, 131
trobairitz,
Tertullian, 79, 82
urban
Queen
of Lxjtharingia, 340
Textile manufacture, 99-102, 132, 370, 372,
407, 408-9, 523n75
Thecla of Iconium, 70, 73 Theft, 144, 366-67, 514n72
Theodora, Empress (c.497-548), 47-48, 72, 365-66 Theological view of Mariolatry, 486nl Theophano, Empress (d.991), 198, 276-77
wedding
Therese of Lisieux, Saint (1873-1899),
250 Thesmophoria, 457n3 Thibault, Gobert, 155
Thirty Years War,
1
17, 127, 135,
women,
81
Thirteenth century, 317, 378, 392, 519nl
Thomas, Keith, 160 Aquinas, Saint, 138, 192, 194, 204,
254 Thornton, Alice, 294, 295, 327
noblewomen, 283-84 112-18 to urban women, 378-85 in wartime, 275-76 Tibors(bornc.ll30), 307 Tidda, Gna, 101, 132 Time, indications of passage, 387-88 Timothy, Saint, 78 Titus, Saint, 78
abbesses, 184
apprenticeship of
women, 371
412 Beguines, 222-23, 225 castles, 286-87 artists,
charity, 291
childbirth, 105,
294
Tody, Matilda, 385 Tommaso de Jacopo, Antonio di, 403 Torah, study of, 32 Torpell, Acelota, 326 Torture of accused witches, 170-71 Toulouse:
chivalrous courts, 305, 314, 315
convents, 195, 196, 200
custody of children, 326
418
brothels, 364, 365
disease epidemics, 382 Tournaments, 273, 314
Toutescotes, Marie,
1 1
education, 191, 293-94, 304
Town
exemplars, 218
Towns, 353-77. 519nl economic conditions, 392-430 Townspeople, charities of, 402
family patterns, 134 fear of witchcraft, 165
membership, 349, 369, 372, 406-9 independent abbeys, 191 infanticide, 138
guild
inheritance patterns, 320, 322, 520nl9 landholdings, 124, 125, 129, 298, 317 legal status of
380
spread of disease, 381
in peasant societies,
communities, 73
doctors, 417,
widows, 144, 325, 328-29, 426 remarriage of, 142 worship of Virgin Mary, 390
to
Thietmar of Merseburg, 277 Third century: of
wedding gifts, 281 wet nurses, 295
Threats:
Thibaut, Count of Blois, 283
religious
356, 357, 427
warrior cultures, 273
Thomas
127, 281
gifts,
Theosophists, 246
Church views
life,
182, 192
warfare, 273
Testosterone, 11
Tetberga,
women,
307
women,
338, 400
marriage, 340, 341, 342, 395
clocks,
387
Trade, 361-62, 370, 392 Traditional images of
women, 332-33, 343-50
Traditions, 24-25
empowering women, 52-66 subordinating women, 26-51 Training of guildswomen, 371
Training of midwives, 420-41
1
,
586 Trapnell, Anna, 245
noblewomen, 276
Travel, dangers for
Travel books, English, 186
Hemes, 96 by combat, 317 La Trinite, abbey, 292 Tres Riches
Trial
Tristan
and
von Strassburg,
Isolde, Gottfried
270, 275, 333, 335
306-13 Trotula, 525nl07 Concerning the Disorders of Women, 42 1 423 Troubadours, 305, 306-13 portrayals of women, 334, 343-44 Trousseaus, 399 Trobairitz, 282,
Twentieth century (cont.J peasant life, 87-89, 90, 93, 95, 101, 105, 108-10, 113, 117-18, 120, 122-23, 125, 130-32, 136, 147-49, 174-78 rebellion by women, 145 rural populations, 480nl wet nurses, 139 widows, 141-43
The Twin Menaechmi, Plautus, 51 Typhus, 113, 381 Ulfsdotter, Marta, 330
Ulm, Germany,
brothels, 365
Ulpian, 27
Queen
Ulvhild,
of
Sweden, 196
Tuberculosis, 113
Umbertini, Pia, 426 Uncloistered religious communities, 240-41
Tufton, Elizabeth, 295
Underburgh,
Tuscany, fourteenth century, 354
Union
peasant, 102, 122
Tusser,
Juliana, 328 of Kalmar, 330 United Nations Ministry of Agriculture and Forestry, 176
Thomas, 103
Twelfth century, 297, 298, 316 abbesses, 184 castles,
Universities, 191
Urban Urban Urban Urban Urban Urban
286-87 402
charity, 292,
child care, 109
270-71, 305, 314 convents, 194, 195, 198 chivalry,
custody of children, 326 education, 293, 304
women, 182
equality of
festival play,
IV, Pope, cloistering of nuns, 197
V, Pope, 219 VI, Pope, 221 VIII, Pope, 249
and poor people, 402-3 12th-17th centuries, 353-77, 519nl
elite, life,
Urda (Norn), 52
432
Queen
Urraca,
feudal society, 127, 288
(c.
1
of Leon and Gastile 080-1 126), 500n7
inheritance patterns, 320
Ursula of Cologne, Saint, 72
landholdings, 298
Ursula of Munsterberg, 229 Ursuline nuns, 238-39, 249
338
legal status of wives,
282-84 mysticism, 205-6
Usakova, Marica, 324
noble households, 319
Uterus, early beliefs, 29
outstanding women, 187, 188, 277
Uttmann, Barbara, 426
marriages,
peasant
life,
portrayals of trobairitz,
urban
Usebia, Saint, 72
120, 149
women,
Vadstena convent, 219 Valkyries, 55-56 Valor ecclesiasticus, 196
334, 432
307-1
life,
violence to
356, 361
women,
Valuation of females in ancient cultures,
115, 276, 283
wages, 131
31
warfare, 273, 275
warrior cultures,
women's
Values, of peasant roles,
weddings, 123, 280 widows' rights, 324, 325, 328, 329 worship of Virgin Mary, 390
Twelve Tables of Ancient Rome, Twentieth century:
15,
women, 145-50, \11-1%
Velde, Henry van de, 87
273
Velluti, Piccio, 199
Venice, 354, 356, 398 death
20-21
dowry
in childbirth, trust,
women, 400
birth control, 137
plague deaths, 382
204 family patterns, 134
poor laws, 402
convent
life,
folk magic, 173
infanticide, 138
384
397-98
legal status of
prostitution, 363 sumptuary laws, 433-34 taxation of prostitutes, 364
587 Venice
Wages,
(cont.)
water supply, 381
widows'
rights,
in
426
Ventadorn, Bernart de, 334
Venus (Aphrodite), 16 prehistoric figurines, 5-6
131-32, 174, 360-61, 409
Vestal Virgins, 18, 54, 449n57
Victory of Samothrace, 54
Vienna, 354, 364, 379, 382 Viking laws, protecting widows, 324 Villainessess, literary portrayals, 335 Frances, 343
Villon, Francois, 363
Vincent de Paul, Saint, 240, 250, 402 Vincent of Beauvais, 346 Violence:
Waldrada
(mistress of Lothar
peasant societies and, 115-18 townspeople and, 379-81 by women, 54-56, 297, 299-300, 323, 329, 453n43
War
horses, cost of,
Warrior ideal
cultures,
287-88 male dominance, 14-23 noblewomen in, 272-96 status of women, 297-304, 336 women's roles, 38, 269-71 labor requirements,
Watchmakers
and asceticism, 73 early Christian views, 83
34-35
Joan of Arc and, 1 59 Virgin Mary, 69, 147, 263 as role model, 217-20, 251 Catholic Church and, 215-17, 518n48,
n51 immaculate conception, 251-52 urban women and, 387-91 worship of, 214, 486nl Virtuous wives, 38-39
women. See Mysticism
Visions, mystical, 210-11 of Hildegard of Bingen, 188-89
Margery Kempe, 221
of St. Bernadette, 251
Bridget of Sweden, 219-20
of St. Catherine of Siena, 221
of St. Teresa of Avila, 208
432 Vives (Spanish churchman), 402 Vladimir, Prince of Kiev, 283 Voconian Law, 60 Vogelweide, Walther von der, 334, 343-44 Voragine, Jacobus de. The Colden Legend, 386 Vraiville, France, political marriages, 396 Vitry, Jacques de, 223,
499n2
16-23
woman, 343-50
Virginity, 33, 435
of St
of
chivalry in, 315
Warwick, Lady, 291 Waste, Joan, 242
of
II
Walled towns, 356-77, 392-430 Walter of Henley, 131 Wandering womb theory, 29 Ward, Mary (1585-1645), 249 Wardship, abuses of, 326-27 Warfare, 13-15,272-76, 315-17
peasant societies, 115-18, 144, 149-50 toward women, 259-60, 283, 436-40 Viret, Pierre, 246 in
Visionary
towns, 368
Lotharingia), 340
Verdandi (Norn), 52 Vergil, Aeneid, 32 Verhulst, Mayken, 524n90 Verney, Margaret, 342 Verney, Mary, 348 Verney, Susan, 397 Verstralen, Hendrik, 258 Vesta (Hestia), 17, 18
in early cultures,
in
Waldensians, 227, 235
Venus de Milo, 54
Villiers,
xvi,
ancient cultures, 41
domestic servants, prostitutes, 363
guild, 407 Waterin, Jean, 152 Wealthy women, 59-60
childbearing of, 383
domestic servants, 358 urban, 355
Weapons, and male dominance, 15 Weather conditions, 112-13, 378 Weaving, 40, 99-102, 132 in chivalrous courts,
control of industry,
306 409
family participation, 370
See also Textile manufacture
Weber, Maria, 242
Wedding
ceremonies, 37, 123, 148,
279-80 commercial economy, 399-400 regulation of costs, 398 in
Wedding Wedding
dresses, peasant, 102, 123 rings, 37, 121.
281
Weinsberg, Gotschalk von, wife of, 370 Weissenburg, Bavaria, seventeenth century, 357 Wemple, Suzanne Fonay, 196 Wentworth, Anne, 245
Wessobrun convent, 201 Westwood, Sarah, 438
Wet
nurses, 41, 109, 139-40, 295,
Whatley, William, 259
517n24
588 Whether the Study of Christian
Letters Is Fitting to a
Woman?, van Schurman,
265
125-26 4-8
peasant societies,
315-16 207-304 in monarchies, 316-24 supernatural forces, 163-64 as threat, 253-55 urban, daily life, 353-77 in chivalrous society,
in feudal societies,
writings of, ninth century, 327
Womens
140^5
Russian, 525-26nll9
Woolen
urban, 424-25
Work
Widow's
(cont)
slavery of,
status of, xvii,
White, Alice, 357 White, Joan and Wilham, 235 Whitehead, Thomasina, 99 Whitsunday, 103 Widows, 327-31 guild membership, 369-70, 406, 407 noblewomen, 324-31 in
Women
portion, 281
Speaking, Fell, 237-38
100
fabric,
women,
xvi,
130-33, 512-13n47
40-42 commercial economies, 393 crafts, 406-12 in guilds, 369-70, 371-72, 393 in peasant cultures, 88-89, 94-104, 174 urban, 360-61, 368 Works and Days, Hesiod, 49 World War II, 117 Worsted, 100 Writings by women, 270, 327, 348 in ancient cultures, 38,
Wilkinsdoughter, Ciciley, 119
in
Wilkinson, Robert, 259
William X, Duke of Aquitaine, 269, 300 Williams, Elizabeth, 236 William the Conqueror, 277 Willoughby, Catherine, Duchess of Suffolk (1519/20-1580), 230 Winchester, bishop of, 364 Wine, of peasants, 96 Winter, peasant activities, 97-102, 112
Wisewomen,
of
110, 168
Witchcraft, 161-73, 477-78n51, 479n84
in ancient cultures,
nuns, 484n61 Written records,
63-66
early,
15-23
Witches' Sabbath, 478n67
Withdrawal
(coitus interruptus),
136-37, 260
Withypoll, Elizabeth, (1510-1537), 440
Xenophon, 30, 41 Ximenes de Cisneros, 323
Wives, 33 in
ancient cultures, 37-38, 44, 50-51
discipline of,
439-40
44-45, 81-82, 122, 440-44 merchant bankers, 373-77, 383 348-50 peasant, 120, 148-49 Protestant, status of, 258-63 and rape, 341-42 urban, poor, 360 in warrior cultures, 270, 279-85 Woburn Abbey, 319 ideal,
of
noble, 285-96, 316-20, 337-38,
Womb,
early beliefs,
29
128, 129 Yolande of Aragon, Queen of Sicily, 153 Yonec, Marie de France, 310, 311-12 York, England, 381, 384 York Coopers play, 527nl Young, Elizabeth, 242 Young, Sarah, 366
Yugoslavia, 125, 128, 177 control of wives, 149
dowrys, 122-23
merchant peasant
Women: approved
Yearly cycle of peasant activities, 93-104
Yeomen,
of artisans, 370
wedding roles,
31-44
elite,
life,
373
108, 110
dresses, 123
widows, 143
defined by relationships to men, 20, 279
empowering
traditions,
52-66
250-51, 271, 332, 343-50 portrayals in literature, 15-23, 332-33 negative, 332, 334-36, 431, 432, 435-36, ideal, 33,
527n5 Protestant, 228-29, in religious orders,
234-38 183-213
Zell, Katherine Zell,
(1497/8-1562), 235, 228, 258
Matthew, 228, 235, 258
Zenobia, 56 Zepporah (daughter of Gluckel), 397, 399 Zeus, 16-17 Zita, Saint,
386
Zurich, marriage regulations, 401
Illustration Credits
PART
I
1.
Photograph by E. Dania.
2.
Metropolitan
3.
Metropolitan
Museum Museum
of Art, Rogers
Fund, 1964 (64.1
4.
Hirmer Verlag Miinchen (561.1087). Rome, Museo
5.
National
6.
Scala/Art Resource, N.Y. (K50476). Rome,
7.
Fitzwilliam
8.
Reproduced by Courtesy of the Trustees of the
Museum
1.7).
of Art, Fletcher Fund, 1931 (31.11.10). della terre.
Denmark. Photograph by Niels Elswing.
of
Museo
della terre.
Museum, Cambridge, England. British
Museum (BM
Cat. Sculpture
1117). 9.
Autun-Saone
et Loire.
Haut
Relief.
Provenant de
la
Cathedrale "Eve."
©
1987 ARS,
N.Y./Arch. Phot. Paris/S.P.A.D.E.M. 10.
Musee Municipal, Semur-en-Auxois,
PART 1.
2.
France.
II
Italian manuscript:
Crescenzi
It
Rustican. Giraudon/Art Resource, N.Y. Crescenzi:
Les travaux des 12 mois.
MS
603 Chantilly, Musee Conde.
Tacuinum
62.
Bildarchiv der Osterreichischen Nationalbibliothek,
sanitatis,
fol.
Vienna, Austria. 3.
4. 5.
6.
National Museum of Denmark. Photograph by Niels Elswing. Research by Frantz Wendt. Magyar Fotomiiveszek Szovetsege, Budapest, Hungary. Photograph by Erno Vadas. Print: Eric Johnson for American Heritage Publishing Company. "La Vielle" by Fran^oise Duparc. Musee des Beaux Arts, Marseille, France.
7.
Kungliga Biblioteket, Stockholm, Sweden. History Today Archives.
8.
American Russian
9.
Photograph by
by
Ann
Institute, Inc.,
Ann
Cornelisen.
San Francisco, California.
From Women
of the Shadows. Copyright
Cornelisen. Reprinted by permission of Little,
association with
The
Atlantic
Monthly
Press.
©
1976
Brown and Company
in
..
ILLUSTRATION CREDITS
590
PART 1
III
Tracing made from the original manuscript of Hortus deliciarum. destroyed in the Franco-Prussian
2.
War
The work
itself
was
of 1870.
Hildegard von Bingen, Wisse die Wege-Scivias, Otto Miiller Verlag, Salzburg, Austria.
3.
Burgundy
4.
Bildarchiv Foto Marburg.
5.
6.
Breviary, British Library (Harley
MS
2897, F. 340b).
From Livre de la vie active, 1425. C.M.T. Assistance Publique, Paris, France. From HetBloedig Tooneel by Tilleman van Bracht, part II, Amsterdam, The Netherlands, 1685. Beinecke
New
Rare Book and Manuscript Library, Yale University,
Haven, Connecticut. 7.
Portrait
from the Convent of the Carmelites
in Seville, Spain.
Photograph by
MAS,
Barcelona, Spain. 8.
©
9.
National
PART 1
Rijksmuseum-Stichting, Amsterdam,
Museum
of
The
Netherlands.
Denmark. Photograph by Niels Elswing.
IV
From De
nobilitatibus, sapientiis, et prudentiis
regum by Walter de Milemere, The
Bodleian Library. Reproduced by kind permission of the Governing Body of Christ
Church, Oxford, England. 2.
The Hours of Catherine of Cleves,
p.
65 (M. 917). Pierpont
Morgan
Library,
New
York. 3.
"Codex Manesse," Crosse Heidelberger
Liederhandschrift. Co. Pal.
Germ. (848
B1.397v). Universitatsbibliothek, Heidelberg, Federal Republic of Germany. 4. 5.
6.
Bildarchiv Foto Marburg.
From Table
of Christian Faith by Dirck van Delft. Pierpont
(M. 691,
131v).
f.
Musee de Cluny,
Morgan
Library, N.Y.
France. Photograph by Cliche des Musees Nationaux, Paris,
France. 7. 8.
Giraudon/Art Resource (5849). The portals at the Palais de Justice, Bibliotheque Nationale, Paris, France (MS. 5073, Fol. 117v).
Paris, France.
PART V 1.
"The
Birth of the Virgin" by the Master of the Life of Mary, Cologne,
Germany
(1463-1480). Alte Pinothek, Munich, Federal Republic of Germany. 2.
Beggar
Woman
by Jacques Callot. National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C.,
Rudolf L. Baumfeld Collection (1969.15.161). 3.
Tacuinum
sanitatis,
Fol. 105v. Bildarchiv der Osterreichischen Nationalbibliothek,
Vienna, Austria. 4.
©
5.
Skulptuengalerie, Staatliche Museen, Preussischer Kulturbesitz, Berlin, Federal Re-
Rijksmuseum-Stichting, Amsterdam, Netherlands.
Germany. Photograph by Jorg P. Anders. Marvin Lowenthal, trans.. The Memoirs of Gliickel of Hameln (New York; Schocken public of
6.
Books, 1977). Reprinted with permission of the publishers.
591
Illustration Credits
7.
Tacuinum
sanitatis,
Fol. 82v. Bildarchiv der Osterreichischen Nationalbibliothek,
Vienna, Austria. 8.
Fol. 174. Bildarchiv der Osterreichischen Nationalbibliothek,
9.
La II.
Pittura.
Hampton
Vienna, Austria.
Court. Copyright Reserved to Her Majesty
Queen
Elizabeth